William & Mary Women, George Washington Earn Wins In Split Dual

WILLIAM & MARY VS GEORGE WASHINGTON

  • December 20, 2025
  • Washington, D.C.
  • SCY (25 yards)
  • Results

Courtesy: Tribe Athletics

WASHINGTON, D.C. — William & Mary swimming split its dual meet at Washington on Saturday at the Charles E. Smith Center. The women secured a dominant 165-97 victory while the men fell 157-105 in the final meet of 2025.

The Tribe women’s 200 medley relay team continued its winning ways, posting a time of 1:39.68 to place first. Julie Addison led the way, followed by Lindsay JuhlinLauren Klinefelter, and Caroline Burgeson.

William & Mary had victories from Addison in the 100 back (54.51) and Juhlin in the 100 breast (1:01.87). The Tribe also swept the 50 free with winning times from Burgeson (23.05) and Aiden Bond (20.33).

In the 100 free, Burgeson placed first with a time of 50.65, while Bond recorded the fastest time for the men at 44.67.

The Tribe had a pair of event winners in the 200 free relay. The men’s team of Connor Vargas, Bond, Alex Valliere, and David Yune posted a top-16 performance with their time of 1:20.09. The women’s team composed of Sarah Dunham, Juhlin, Ellie Hunt, and Burgeson needed just 1:33.39 to claim the victory.

Other first-place finishes included Klinefelter in the 100 fly (54.45), Thomas Duncan in the 200 back (1:48.36), and Heilen in the 200 breast (2:15.40).

Kiersten Dagg impressed in the 1000 free, finishing in 10:15.64 for the 15th-fastest time in school history. It marked the first career top-16 performance for the senior.

On the men’s side, freshman Tyler Barritt improved upon his 1000 free time, clocking in at 9:23.65 as he remains fifth all-time.

UP NEXT
The Green & Gold will be back in action on Friday, Jan. 9 for the Tribe Quad Meet. The action gets underway at 4 p.m. from the Hampton Aquaplex.

Courtesy: GW Sports

WASHINGTON – GW swimming & diving closed its 2025 slate this weekend as diving split three of six events at West Virginia, and swimming split a dual meet vs. William & Mary, as the men’ won 157.00-105.00, but the women fell 165.00-97.00. 

On the men’s side, Daniel Choi and Matija Radjenovic led the way with a pair of event wins each. Choi showed his distance skills with wins in the 1,000-yard free (9:20.77) and the 500-yard free (4:30.17), while Radjenovic captured wins in both the 200-yard free (1:37.74) and the 200-yard IM (1:49.33). 

The men’s team got the job done on Saturday with help from up-and-down the team, as a total of seven Revolutionaries captured event wins. Alessandro Borsato took first in the 100-yard breast (54.80), Andres Brooks won the 100-yard fly (1:47.56), Daniel Nagy claimed the 100-yard fly (47.64), Ganesh Sivaramakrishnan was victorious in the 100-yard backstroke (48.03), and Ben Sosnowski topped the 200-yard breaststroke (2:01.09).

GW’s men also claimed victory in the 200-yard medley relay, as Sivaramakrishnan, Borsato, Nagy and AJ Wood combined for the win (1:27.47).

On the women’s side, Topolewski had another afternoon to remember, winning each of her three individual events: the 1,000-yard free (9:57.53), 500-yard free (4:50.75) and the 200-yard fly (2:01.16). Colleen MacWilliams also had a standout afternoon with two race wins and one second-place finish, with wins in the 200-yard free (1:50.84) and 200-yard IM (2:04.96) and a second-place finish in the 200-yard backstroke (1:59.99).

Over in Morgantown on Friday, the GW’s divers won three of six events vs. West Virginia. The men captured two event victories, as Michael Wood captured the 3-meter dive (330.90) and Holden Wheeler won the platform dive (266.70), while Olivia Paquette captured a women’s diving win, also in the 3-meter (301.80). 

UP NEXT
GW breaks until early 2026 when it returns to action with three dual meets in January, beginning with a dual at Towson on Friday, Jan. 16. 

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