Night 1: Prelims Notes, Finals Picks, and Distance Updates

With the first night of World Championship Trials kicking off in just less than an hour, many of us (myself included) are still trying to digest a very eventful opening session (and not necessarily all for good reasons).  While the sprint freestylers came to play, the men’s and women’s 200 butterfly events showed Team USA has some big holes to fill on the international stage.  Before we make some last-minute picks for tonight, here are the biggest stories from the morning…

1) Only one qualifier in the women’s 200 fly?

We knew the 200 fly field was going to be thinner than years past; Kathleen Hersey and Teresa Crippen aren’t entered in the meet, Kim Vandenberg appears to be past the stage of training full time, and Kelsey Floyd is coming off pretty serious surgery.  But I don’t know if anyone guessed the field would have fallen off this much.  Nobody swam under the FINA ‘A’ standard this morning, and the 8th and 16th place times are the slowest they’ve been at a major U.S. championship since 2007.

So what does that mean for tonight?  Looking through the procedures for FINA and USA Swimming, to qualify for Barcelona, you must be a top-two event finisher, and meet the FINA ‘A’ standard (2:09.38) after July 1, 2012.  So far, only Camille Adams and Jasmine Tosky have gone under that time.  If one of the other six swimmers in the A-final tonight takes one of those top two spots but doesn’t hit the ‘A’ standard, it could be the first time the Americans haven’t taken two swimmers in an individual event in… forever?

2) Schmitt and Jones look iffy…

After developing over the last few years into arguably the best mid-distance swimmer in the world, Allison Schmitt has looked a little bit off all season.  Despite leading her Georgia Bulldogs to an NCAA title, Schmitt was well off her best times from the 2011 short course season, and she still appears to be off her game, adding almost a full second from her seed time to get stuck in the 100 free B-Final tonight.  Although there’s a large gap between her and the field in the 200 free, if she doesn’t right the ship, Missy Franklin and Katie Ledecky could steal the individual spots in that event.

What about Cullen Jones?  The veteran sprinter finished a disappointing 18th this morning, and actually failed to break the 50-second barrier.  While this could seem like a cause for alarm, this actually isn’t the first time Jones has had a poor 100 preliminary swim at a big qualification meet.  He has previously failed to make the A-final at Summer Nationals in 2007 and 2010, putting up so-so preliminary times (including a 49.86 in 2010) before rebounding later in the meet to finish top-two in the 50 freestyle.

Notably, returning Olympic Trials A-finalist freestylers Amanda Weir, Lea Neal, and Dana Vollmer also missed the 100 free final.

3) Bolles–specifically Caeleb Dressel–lighting up the pool

I didn’t check meet results until I got to the office today, and pretty much had this reaction when I saw “Dressel, Caeleb, 16, 49.63” on live results.  Dressel dropped the hammer, smashing Joe Hudepohl’s old NAG record of 50.20 and sneaking into the A-Final in what is otherwise an “old man’s” race (Jimmy Feigen is the next youngest in the heat at 23).  How fast is 49.63?  That time is already good for 5th on the 17-18 list.

Three other Bolles-affiliated swimmers posted lifetime bests in this race.  Mid-distance specialist Charlie Houchin finished 9th seed in 49.64,  and incoming college freshmen Santo Condorelli (49.71) and Ryan Murphy (49.96) finished 10th and 17th, respectively.

4) American sprint events look loaded

Eight (yes, eight) women hit the FINA ‘A’ standard in the women’s 100 free, and surprisingly, that group doesn’t include Olympic Trials finalists Allison Schmitt, Lea Neal, Dana Vollmer, and Amanda Weir.

On the men’s side, the top six names shouldn’t come as any surprise: each of them has represented Team USA in this relay at the Olympic games, with the top three seeds all boasting individual Olympic gold medals (Nathan Adrian, Anthony Ervin, and Matt Grevers).  While we can expect Adrian and Ervin to take it out fast tonight, watch for some crazy closing speed from Ryan Lochte and Ricky Berens.

 

FINALS PICKS (in order of finish):

Women’s 200 fly – Adams, Tosky
Men’s 200 fly – Clary, Bollier
Women’s 100 free – Coughlin, Romano, Hardy, Franklin, Vreeland, Geer
Men’s 100 free – Adrian, Grevers, Lochte, Ervin, Berens, Feigen
Women’s 800 free – Ledecky, Sutton
Men’s 1500 free – Jaeger, Gemmell

DISTANCE EVENTS UPDATES:

Not to be shorthanded because of their mid-afternoon timing, we wanted to give a quick update of where the women’s 800 and men’s 1500 frees sat headed into the finals.

The heats began at 4PM local time, and featured the first three heats of women’s races and the first two heats of the men’s races. Unlike other events in this meet, these are not circle seeded, so the fastest 8 swimmers in each heat will go in the finals session after the 200 fly and the 100 frees.

Zane Grothe of Auburn cut almost 10 seconds from his seed to take the top spot in the early men’s heats, finishing in 15:29.81.  Seventeen-year-old Liam Egan was the closest behind, dropping 11 seconds to touch in 15:33.79.

Alicia Mathieu posted the top time in the women’s 800, building to a strong finish out of lane 8 to finish in 8:32.80.  Open water specialist Emily Brunemann proved she can still get it done in the pool, too, dropping three seconds from her seed to finish in 8:35.83.

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cynthia curran
10 years ago

Leverenz not unceratin about her fly style being better or worst for her but like some breaststrokers the fly can be the second best stroke. The only two women swimmers I known that have made a 200 fly and 200 breast final at nationals are Lynn Colletta who got second at the fly in the 1972 olympics in 200 and the next year was in the 200 breaststroke at worlds. Also, Tracey Caulkins won a 200 meter fly I think once in worlds before Mary T came on the scene..

ZYNG43
10 years ago

Arthur frayler looking better than he did short course

WHOKNOWS
10 years ago

well, the first day ended a lot better than I originally thought… Good to see the new names making their mark! Good job coaches and swimmers!

jean Michel
10 years ago

Jaeger is on a solid roll here ! wowwwww he impresses me every time he goes into the water . Maybe he is gonna brake the Us record . He can do it .

ZYNG43
10 years ago

Jaeger Bomb!!

bobo gigi
10 years ago

Gillian Ryan has again started her race only in the last 100 meters. What a finish for her! But her time is disappointing. She had won the US championships in 2011 in 8.27.64. She doesn’t improve since then. I don’t understand why she doesn’t take more speed.

korn
Reply to  bobo gigi
10 years ago

Gillian Ryan moved to NBAC in 2011 right after that swim. Hasn’t been as fast since. They get a lot of move ins and not all are successful. I think Chloe was the only one in the heat with a LTB. Not good.

bobo gigi
10 years ago

Ok. Katie is untapered. I don’t expect crazy things from her in the 200 free this week anymore.

ZYNG43
Reply to  bobo gigi
10 years ago

suprised Becca mann wasnt better

bobo gigi
Reply to  ZYNG43
10 years ago

She was fully tapered for the open water championships a few weeks ago. Very hard to swim the open water races and the pool races. She will have to choose in the future.

bobo gigi
10 years ago

8.22.41 for Katie. She was much faster in Mesa. Just a training for her.

About Morgan Priestley

Morgan Priestley

A Stanford University and Birmingham, Michigan native, Morgan Priestley started writing for SwimSwam in February 2013 on a whim, and is loving that his tendency to follow and over-analyze swim results can finally be put to good use. Morgan swam competitively for 15+ years, primarily excelling in the mid-distance freestyles. While …

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