SwimMAC Girls Add 17-18 NAG In 400 Free Relay After Breaking 200 Relay

The 17-18 girls of SwimMAC Carolina continued their assault on the National Age Group record books Saturday, breaking the 400 free relay mark to close Speedo East Winter Juniors.

A day after breaking the 200 free relay record in both the 15-18 and 17-18 age groups, the same quartet of Alyssa Marsh, Erika Brown, Christina Lappin and Jessica Merritt went 3:16.62 to take down the 17-18 record in the 400 free relay.

Once again, that group took down their former teammates’ record, set in the spring of 2014. The previous record was a 3:18.55 set by Kathleen Baker, Rebecca Postoll, Heather Merritt and Lauren Rhodes at the Charlotte Sectional meet. The current SwimMAC crew blew that record out of the water, taking nearly two seconds off it, and that is made even more impressive by the fact that the prior record had stood for 23 years before the 2014 SwimMAC crew broke it.

(You can read more about that here – the old record was from 1981 and included a leg by the legendary Sippy Woodhead.)

This time, though, the SwimMAC girls couldn’t quite knock off the 15-18 NAG record, which stands at 3:15.38 from the Carmel Swim Club.

Here’s a look at the splits of the three relays:

SwimMAC 2015 17-18 SwimMAC 2014 15-18 Carmel Swim Club 2015
Alyssa Marsh 48.77 Kathleen Baker 48.20 Veronica Burchill 48.48
Erika Brown 48.72 Rebecca Postoll 49.55 Claire Adams 48.68
Christina Lappin 49.49 Heather Merritt 50.75 Kendall Smith 50.52
Jessica Merritt 49.64 Lauren Rhodes 50.05 Amy Bilquist 47.70
3:16.62 3:18.55 3:15.38

Once again, the 2015 SwimMAC crew rolled on consistency, becoming the first relay in that age group to place all four splits under 50 seconds, including two under 49.

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About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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