WATCH: All Race Videos From Night 4 Of The 2025 Men’s NCAA Championships

by Sean Griffin 3

March 30th, 2025 College, News, Race Videos

2025 Men’s NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships

Didn’t catch last night’s action on the closing night of the 2025 Men’s NCAA Championships? No worries, if you weren’t able to tune in, we’ve got you covered with all of the races videos, courtesy of “NCAA Championships” on YouTube.

Men’s 1650 Freestyle

  • NCAA Record: 14:12.08 – Bobby Finke, Florida (2020)
  • Championship Record: 14:12.52 – Bobby Finke, Florida (2021)
  • American Record: 14:12.08 – Bobby Finke, Florida (2020)
  • U.S. Open Record: 14:12.08 – Bobby Finke, Florida (2020)
  • 2024 Champion: Zalan Sarkany, Arizona State – 14:30.57
  • 2024 Time to Score: 14:41.87/14:47.66

Top 8:

  1. Zalan Sarkany (Indiana) – 14:21.29
  2. Rex Maurer (Texas) – 14:25.22
  3. Lucas Henveaux (California) – 14:27.62
  4. Noah Millard (Yale) – 14:28.43
  5. Owen Lloyd (NC State) – 14:29.13
  6. Carson Hick (Kentucky) – 14:30.35
  7. David Johnston (Texas) – 14:30.48
  8. Levi Sandidge (Kentucky) – 14:31.08

After winning this event last year as an Arizona State Sun Devil, Zalan Sarkany repeated as NCAA champion in the 1650 free, this time for Indiana. Facing an uphill battle in the team standings, Indiana needed every bit of what Sarkany just provided. He got out to the lead early and never relented. Though he was out faster than the field, Sarkany never really fell off the pace.

His performance marks a new career best and Indiana program record. He’s also now the #3 performer all time in the event. It was a marvelously swum race, as all of Sarkany’s 50 splits from the 3rd 50 all the way through the 31st 50 fell between 26.07 and 26.49.

Texas’ Rex Maurer capped off a phenomenal meet with a new career best of 14:25.22, which was good for 2nd. Maurer already won the 500 free and 400 IM, and now he adds a runner-up finish to that tally. The Longhorns weren’t as lucky with David Johnston, who came in as the top seed, but wound up 7th with a 14:30.48.

Cal’s Lucas Henveaux set a new career best with a 14:27.62 for 3rd, earning Cal some much-needed points.

 

Men’s 200 Backstroke

  • NCAA Record: 1:35.37 – Destin Lasco, Cal (2024)
  • Championship Record: 1:35.37 – Destin Lasco, Cal (2024)
  • American Record: 1:35.37 – Destin Lasco, Cal (2024)
  • U.S. Open Record: 1:35.37 – Destin Lasco, Cal (2024)
  • 2024 Champion: Destin Lasco, Cal – 1:35.37
  • 2024 Time to Final: 1:38.36/1:39.92

Top 8:

  1. Hubert Kos (Texas) – 1:34.21 (NCAA Record)
  2. Destin Lasco (California) – 1:36.41
  3. Gabriel Jett (California) – 1:36.76
  4. Mewen Tomac (California) – 1:36.90
  5. Jonny Marshall (Florida) – 1:37.00
  6. Owen McDonald (Indiana) – 1:37.59
  7. Ruard Van Renen (Georgia) – 1:38.11
  8. Will Modglin (Texas) – 1:39.53

Hubert Kos won his 3rd individual title of the meet in the most exciting race yet. When Texas needed it most, Kos stepped up, shattering the NCAA Record in the 200 back. He swam a stunning 1:34.21, taking more than a second off the record that Destin lasco set at last year’s meet. Kos was out fast, splitting 46.22 on the opening 100, and he never let up. In the end, it wasn’t close.

Destin Lasco was denied his bid for another NCAA title in this event, but he did manage a 2nd place finish, securing 17 points for Cal. Speaking of, that was a great event for the Golden Bears, as they also saw Gabriel Jett take 3rd in 1:36.76, and Mewen Tomac was 4th in 1:36.90.

 

Men’s 100 Freestyle

  • NCAA Record: 39.83 – Jordan Crooks, Tennessee (2025)
  • Championship Record: 39.83 – Jordan Crooks, Tennessee (2025)
  • American Record: 39.90 – Caeleb Dressel, Florida (2018)
  • U.S. Open Record: 39.83 – Jordan Crooks, Tennessee (2025)
  • 2024 Champion: Josh Liendo, Florida – 40.20
  • 2024 Time to Final: 41.29/41.71

Top 8:

  1. Josh Liendo (Florida) – 39.99
  2. Jordan Crooks (Tennessee) – 40.06
  3. Gui Caribe (Tennessee) – 40.15
  4. Jack Alexy (California) – 40.36
  5. Chris Guiliano (Texas) – 40.53
  6. Jonny Kulow (Arizona State) – 40.84
  7. Jere Hribar (LSU) – 41.20
  8. Matt King (Indiana) – 41.28

In a bit of an upset, Florida’s Josh Liendo pulled off his 3rd consecutive NCAA title in the 100 free, ripping a 39.99 to become the 3rd swimmer in history to go under 40 seconds. Liendo knew if he was going to deal with Jordan Crooks‘ speed, he was going to have to go out faster than ever, and he did. He was the first swimmer into the first turn, splitting 8.88 on the opening 25. He was 18.94 at the 50, then managed to come home in 21.15. In truth, it was the final 25 where Liendo won the race over Crooks. He split 10.48 on the final length of the pool, while Crooks was 10.82.

Crooks was off his time from prelims, swimming a 40.06, but he still walks away from this swim as the fastest man in history in the event. Tennessee pulled off a big 2-3 finish here, as Gui Caribe clocked a career best of 40.15 to take 3rd.

Men’s 200 Breaststroke

  • NCAA Record: 1:46.35 – Leon Marchand, Arizona State (2024)
  • Championship Record: 1:46.35 – Leon Marchand, Arizona State (2024)
  • American Record: 1:47.91 – Will Licon, Texas (2017)
  • U.S. Open Record: 1:46.35 – Leon Marchand, Arizona State (2024)
  • 2024 Champion: Leon Marchand, Arizona State – 1:46.35
  • 2024 Time to Final: 1:51.65/1:52.71

Top 8:

  1. Jassen Yep (Indiana) – 1:48.30
  2. Matt Fallon (Penn) – 1:48.87
  3. Carles Coll Marti (Virginia Tech) – 1:48.89
  4. Denis Petrashov (Louisville) – 1:49.37
  5. Caspar Corbeau (Indiana) – 1:50.04
  6. Yamato Okadome (California) – 1:50.23
  7. Jake Eccleston (Louisville) – 1:50.27
  8. Jack Kelly (Brown) – 1:50.77

Indiana’s Jassen Yep won his first NCAA title of his career, ripping a huge new personal best of 1:48.30. On top of the career best, the performance marks a new program record for Indiana, and makes Yep the 3rd-fastest performer in history in the event. As pointed out in the post race interview, Yep started as a walk-on at IU 5 years ago, which certainly adds some weight to the significance of this win. The Hoosiers also earned a 5th place finish out of Caspar Corbeau with a 1:50.04.

Matt Fallon earned runner-up status in this event again, swimming a 1:48.87. The time was just off his career best of 1:48.48, which he swam for 2nd last year, but he managed to run down Carles Coll Marti on the final 50 to get his hands on the wall 2nd.

Virginia Tech had their highest finish of the meet so far, seeing Carles Coll Marti take 3rd with a 1:48.89. Coll Marti’s performance marks a new program record for Virginia Tech.

 

Men’s 200 Butterfly

  • NCAA Record: 1:37.17 – Luca Urlando, Georgia (2025)
  • Championship Record: 1:37.35 – Jack Conger, Texas (2017)
  • American Record: 1:37.17 – Luca Urlando, Georgia (2025)
  • U.S. Open Record: 1:37.17 – Luca Urlando, Georgia (2025)
  • 2024 Champion: Ilya Kharun, Arizona State – 1:38.26
  • 2024 Time to Final: 1:40.40/1:41.38

Top 8:

  1. Luca Urlando (Georgia) – 1:36.43 (NCAA Record)
  2. Dare Rose (California) – 1:38.04
  3. Ilya Kharun (Arizona State) – 1:38.74
  4. Andrei Minakov (Stanford) – 1:39.18
  5. Martin Espernberger (Tennessee) – 1:39.49
  6. Krzysztof Chmielewski (USC) – 1:39.66
  7. Jake Magahey (Georgia) – 1:39.67
  8. Colin Geer (Michigan) – 1:39.83

That was…quite a race to behold. Luca Urlando, who set the NCAA Record in this event last month with a 1:37.17, left nothing on the table with this swim. He went for it in a big way, clocking a 45.21 on the opening 100, which is really hard to comprehend. He held up plenty well enough on the back half of the race, becoming the first man under 1:37 in the event, and winning the race by 1.61 seconds.

Interestingly, Urlando swam his race very similarly, from a strategy standpoint, to how Emma Sticklen did at last week’s Women’s NCAAs. Sticklen was also out incredibly fast, was slowing on the final 50, but won and broke the NCAA Record.

Cal picked up a big 2nd place finish with a 1:38.04 from Dare Rose. With those points, Cal is now just 20 points behind Texas in the team standings.

Last year’s winner, Ilya Kharun, managed a 3rd place finish with a 1:38.74.

Men’s 400 Freestyle Relay

  • NCAA Record: 2:42.41 — Tennessee (Caribe, Blackman, Taylor, Crooks) (2025)
  • Championship Record: 2:43.40 — Arizona State (Marchand, Dolan, Sammon, Kulow) (2024)
  • American Record: 2:44.31 — NC State (Held, Ress, Molacek, Stewart) (2018)
  • U.S. Open Record: 2:42.41 — Tennessee (Caribe, Blackman, Taylor, Crooks) (2025)
  • 2024 Champion: Arizona State (Marchand, Dolan, Sammon, Kulow) — 2:43.40

Top 8:

  1. Tennessee (Caribe, Taylor, Blackman, Crooks) – 2:42.30 (NCAA Record)
  2. Arizona State (Kharun, Sammon, Palmer, Kulow) – 2:43.22
  3. Florida (Liendo, Smith, Painter, Buff) – 2:44.02
  4. California (Alexy, Seeliger, Jensen, Lasco) – 2:44.59
  5. Indiana (McDonald, King, Smiley, Miroslaw) – 2:45.08
  6. NC State (McCarty, Fox, Miller, Hoover) – 2:45.09
  7. Texas (Guiliano, Kos, Maurer, Hobson) – 2:45.12
  8. Virginia Tech (Ramadan, Whitfield, Coll Marti, Molla Yanes) – 2:46.21

Fittingly, Tennessee closed this meet out in record-fashion, clocking a 2:42.30 to win the 400 free relay. With the performance, Gui CaribeLamar Taylor, Nikoli Blackman, and Jordan Crooks cracked the NCAA record, championship record, and US Open record. Caribe was 40.57 on the lead-off, then Taylor clocked a 41.02, Blackman was 41.35, and Crooks anchored in the fastest split in history: 39.36.

Arizona State made it a solid race at the end, seeing Ilya Kharun (41.24), Patrick Sammon (40.55), Tommy Palmer (41.50), and Jonny Kulow (39.93) combine for a 2:43.22.

Florida looked like they were going to contend for a while there, as Josh Liendo got them out to the lead with a 40.42. Julian Smith then provided a 40.96 on the 2nd leg, which had Florida in the lead at the halfway point. They weren’t quite able to hold on through the back half, as freshman Alexander Painter was 41.18 and sophomore Scotty Buff was 41.46. The upside for the Gators is that Smith is the only leg that won’t return next year.

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Lpman
1 day ago

Did Luca say “LFG” at the end of race?

M L
1 day ago

Sarkany taking 14 strokes per 25; Millard, 9.

M L
Reply to  M L
1 day ago

Millard looks to have mastered the Sun Yang stroke. Butter.