Stanford, Texas A&M Impress at Art Adamson Invitational

College Station, TX, November 20, 2014 – The evening’s finals session at one of the weekend’s most competitive college meets was indeed fast and furious.  On the whole this evening, the Stanford men and women, along with the Texas A&M women were the primary dominating forces; time will tell if this continues through the remaining two days of the Art Adamson Invitational hosted by Texas A&M.

Women’s Finals

The Stanford women kicked off the night’s finals in an NCAA Qualifying Time of 1:27.25 in the 200y free relay.  Maddy Schaefer led off with a split of 22.00, followed by a swift Simone Manuel with her time of 21.49; Lia Neal kept the Cardinal’s momentum going with a 22.20 split and Janet Hu anchored it up in a strong 21.56.  Texas A&M women were runner-up in the event, scoring an NCAA Provisional Time of 1:29.66, followed closely by the LSU Tigers in 1:30.44.

Texas A&M score their first individual win with Sarah Henry’s commanding first place finish in the 500y freestyle race.  The 2014-15 500y free SEC champion touched the wall in a time of 4:38.99 in tonight’s finals, knocking a little over three seconds off of her prelims time.  Just as in prelims, teammate Sarah Gibson finished in second place, but in a faster time tonight of 4:43.46.  Not far behind, Stanford swimmer Julia Anderson struck the touchpad in 4:43.89.

This morning’s 200 IM prelims saw twenty finishers clock NCAA “B” cuts, so there was a distinct possibility at least one of them would have taken things up a notch to clear the “A” cut of 1:55.35.  Although Sarah Henry pulled an impressive finals double, her time of 1:56.40 fell just short of the standard.  Henry knocked almost two seconds off her prelims seed, so it appears it is just a matter of time until she moves into the “A” cut column.  Aggie teammate, Bethany Galat earned second place in 1:56.51, while a third Aggie, Sycerika McMahon, touched in 1:57.27.

Stanford’s Simone Manuel wowed the audience once again in the 50y freestyle splash-and-dash, improving the “A” time standard she had already achieved in the morning session.  Tonight, Manuel charged to the wall in 21.59, dropping .22 between prelims and finals.  Stanford would round out the top three spots, with Maddy Schaefer finishing in 21.93, just .03 off of that 21.90 “A” cut, and Janet Hu in her third place time of 22.08.

To finish the night, the Stanford women ran away with the 400y medley relay, utilizing a lethal combination of Ally Howe, Sarah Haase, Janet Hu, and Simone Manuel.  Together, they clocked an NCAA Automatic Qualifying Time of 3:29.48.  The fact that three out of these four athletes are freshman (Haase is a junior) bodes well for the future of the medley relay for the Cardinal; especially when the anchor, Manuel split an out-of-this-world 45.81….let that sink in…Freshman….splitting 45.81.  The previous fastest relay split was 46.07 by Megan Romano.  Two additional relays also cleared the automatic qualifying time: Texas A&M “A” (Bratton, McMahon, Gastaldello, Bosma) in 3:33.62 and Stanford “B” (Schaefer, Poppe, Stafford, Neal) in 3:33.95.

Men’s Finals

Stanford led the way throughout the night on the men’s side, earning wins in each of finals events.  The 200y free relay team of David Nolan (19.69), Sam Perry (19.68), Connor Black (19.46), and Thomas Stephens (19.95) collectively clocked a 1:18.78, dangerously close to the Automatic Qualifying Time of 1:18.02.  The men of LSU finished in second with their time of 1:19.91, followed by Grand Canyon University’s 1:20.06.

500y freestyle prelim winner Danny Thomson (Stanford) stepped up again tonight and earned the finals victory with his time of 4:20.31. Cardinal teammate Drew Cosgarea was seeded in the seventh position going into the finals, but surged and ended up with the second place time tonight, 4:24.35.  Jimmy Yoder, also from Stanford, touched in 4:25.09.  In fact, the top six 500y freestyle athletes all hailed from Stanford, creating quite a wall for any team to try to crack in the event tonight.

The 200y IM event followed suit, with the top three spots being claimed by Stanford men.  David Nolan topped the field by over two seconds, winning with a time of 1:43.24.  The fight for second raged between fellow teammates Max Williamson and Tom Kremer, with Williamson just out-touching Kremer literally by a fingernail – 1:45.69 to 1:45.70.

Connor Black (Stanford)  looked impressive in his 50y freestyle win tonight, speeding to the wall in 19.89.  Illya Glazonov (GCU) was the only other swimmer under 20-point, earning second place in a time of 19.93.  Third place went to Stanford’s Sam Perry in 20.07.

Based on how the night had been going, it was unsurprising Stanford claimed the win in the night’s final event for the men, the 400y medley relay.  Stanford’s “A” team of David Nolan, Daniel Le, Andrew Liang, and Tom Kremer put together a solid 3:10.52 to earn an NCAA Provisional Time, the only team of the field to do so.  Stanford’s “B” relay finished in second (3:13.34), while LSU claimed third in 3:14.13.

The meet resumes tomorrow with prelims beginning at 10:00am Central.

Full Meet Results Here


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Jim C
9 years ago

For the 4×100 medley Manuel’s R = +0.04. Probably Hu touched the wall later than expected. In any case Manuel’s time was about 0.2s faster than it would have been with a more typical R.

liquidassets
Reply to  Jim C
9 years ago

Maybe, but she’s not typical, and doesn’t have typical starts and swims. Even if it was 46.0 that would still put her flat start in the ballpark of her 46.7 AR. All In November, during the grind of adjusting to life in the pressure-cooker of one of the country’s most competitive universities, both academically and athletically. She must have a tremendous mental game along with her natural talent and great work ethic.

mcmflyguy
9 years ago

Manuel split an out-of-this-world 45.81….let that sink in…Freshman….splitting 45.81

hahaha I love the “let that sink in”

Hugo Miller
9 years ago

What is also really scary about the Stanford MR is the fact that Katie Olsen, arguably Stanford’s best all around breaststroker is not at the meet and they still covered w/ Hasse (59.13) A, Poppe (59.18) B; it’s like having a bullpen of lefties that throw 90+. The A team could have been all Freshman and only give up .05 w/o Hasse; amazing.

bobo gigi
9 years ago

And as a Frenchman, I’m also pleased to see freshman Béryl Gastaldello’s very good performances.
22.05 anchor relay split/22.26 in the individual race/52.20 fly relay split
She has acclimated very quickly to short course yards and is already a very important card for Texas A&M thanks to her great sprint versatility on backstroke, freestyle and buttterfly.

DanO
Reply to  bobo gigi
9 years ago

I am also very impressed with Gastaldello’s adjustment to SCY swimming. I expect by end of season she will be faster and close to A cuts.

bobo gigi
9 years ago

I believe you missed a little news here.
NAG RECORD ALERT!
Simone broke the 50 free 17/18 NAG record in 21.59!
She already held it in 21.70.
We can bet it’s not the last time she breaks it.
Let’s see if Abbey Weitzeil can respond in the coming weeks.

Race videos please.
Always a pleasure for me to watch Miss Manuel swim.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  bobo gigi
9 years ago

Totally agree with u BOBO ! she is a fantastic sprinter , the best Us has had in eons . Her style is very impressive and lovely to watch . She will surely be very strong at next year LC WC .

liquidassets
9 years ago

You guys totally buried the lead….

Simone Manuel, only a freshman, a 45.81 anchor–and… in November!?? Insanity. I had to check the full results to make sure it wasn’t a mistake.

bobo gigi
Reply to  liquidassets
9 years ago

Freshman or not, she’s the best American sprinter right now. Probably the greatest pure sprint American talent since Dara Torres and Jenny Thompson so it’s not surprising.
She’s fast, very fast.
A sprint diamond!

liquidassets
Reply to  bobo gigi
9 years ago

A 45.81 split, fastest split in history, is definitely surprising from anyone in November, and is probably roughly somewhere in the ballpark of her AR of 46.7 on conversion to a flat start time. In comparison, Lia Neal’s anchor split trailed in 48.2, more of a typical November split. Add that to Manuel’s 21.59 50 and it was a pretty shocking night. I believe you or somebody else on another thread suggested she could possibly go under 21 in the future. Assuming she stays healthy, I agree. Never thought I’d say that in my lifetime for a flat-start, non-techsuit swim!
(At least for an American–Would be interesting to see the Campbells, Kromowidjojo, Sjostrom, et. al. in 100Y free; they’d… Read more »

About Retta Race

Retta Race

Former Masters swimmer and coach Loretta (Retta) thrives on a non-stop but productive schedule. Nowadays, that includes having just earned her MBA while working full-time in IT while owning French 75 Boutique while also providing swimming insight for BBC.

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