Fluidra Race Video of the Week: Virginia Freshman Maximus Williamson Powers To 200 IM NCAA Title

University of Virginia freshman Maximus Williamson had a phenomenal performance at his debut NCAA Championship meet last week in Atlanta, going two-for-two in individual titles while playing a key role on all four of the team’s relays.

After winning the 200 free title on Thursday night out of Lane 8, which came after teammate David King gave Williamson the spot in the final (rather than contesting a swim-off after they tied for 8th in the prelims), Williamson followed up two nights later with an arguably even more impressive swim in the 200 IM.

The 19-year-old set a new personal best time in the prelims, clocking 1:40.06 to improve on his month-old mark of 1:40.78 set en route to a runner-up finish at the ACC Championships, to qualify 2nd into the final behind Indiana’s Owen McDonald.

McDonald was coming in as the pre-race favorite, having finished 2nd in the 200 IM in 2024 and then placing 3rd last year.

In the final, McDonald built a lead of nearly seven-tenths through the first 100, and then Williamson pulled back 25 one-hundredths on the breaststroke leg, leaving him just over four-tenths back heading into the last 50.

Using his freestyle prowess, Williamson ran down McDonald, out-splitting him on the last 50, 23.72 to 24.24, to win the national title in a time of 1:38.48. McDonald was just nine one-hundredths back in 1:38.57.

Split Comparison – 2026 NCAA Final

Williamson McDonald
21.47 20.94
45.71 (24.24) 45.03 (24.09)
1:14.76 (29.05) 1:14.33 (29.30)
1:38.48 (23.72) 1:38.57 (24.24)

RACE VIDEO

Courtesy of NCAA Championships on YouTube

The swim for Williamson marked a 2.3-second best time relative to where he was coming into the meet.

Split Comparison – Williamson

2026 ACC Final 2026 NCAA Prelims 2026 NCAA Final
21.90 21.78 21.47
46.79 (24.89) 46.79 (25.01) 45.71 (24.24)
1:17.00 (30.21) 1:15.78 (28.99) 1:14.76 (29.05)
1:40.78 (23.78) 1:40.06 (24.28) 1:38.48 (23.72)

The 2023 World Junior champion in the long course 200 IM, Williamson now ranks 6th all-time in the SCY event, trailing four previous NCAA champions in the event and Caeleb Dressel, who never swam the 200 IM at the NCAA Championships but did at the 2018 SECs.

Williamson was also within eight-tenths of the fastest time ever produced by a freshman, produced by the current Olympic champion, world champion and world record holder in the event, Leon Marchand.

All-Time Performers, Men’s 200 IM (SCY)

  1. Leon Marchand (Arizona State), 1:36.34 – 2023
  2. Destin Lasco (Cal) / Hubert Kos (Texas), 1:37.91 – 2024 / 2025
  3. Caeleb Dressel (Florida), 1:38.13 – 2018
  4. Andrew Seliskar (Cal), 1:38.14 – 2019
  5. Maximus Williamson (Virginia), 1:38.48 – 2026
  6. Owen McDonald (Indiana), 1:38.57 – 2026
  7. Hugo Gonzalez (Cal), 1:38.72 – 2023
  8. Shaine Casas (Texas A&M), 1:38.95 – 2020
  9. Luca Urlando (Georgia), 1:39.22 – 2022

With his two individual wins, Williamson scored 40 points to help propel the Virginia men to a 9th-place finish in the team standings, their best since 2021 and a dramatic improvement after placing 32nd last year.

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About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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