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HS Junior Kaitlynn Wheeler Verbally Commits to Kentucky

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

High school junior Kaitlynn Wheeler has announced via social media her intention to swim at the University of Kentucky beginning in the fall of 2019. She is the second verbal commit for the Wildcats; Florida’s Caitlin Brooks has also given her verbal pledge to the class of 2023.

“I am so excited to announce my verbal commitment to University of Kentucky to continue my athletic and academic career in 2019! Thank you to everyone who supported me throughout the years! I can’t wait to be a part of the Wildcat family!</body> </html>


USA Swimming Investigated Hutchison/Kukors In 2010, Statement Confirms

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

A statement from USA Swimming this morning confirms that the federation received a tip and conducted an investigation into an allegedly inappropriate relationship between coach Sean Hutchison and National Team swimmer Ariana Kukors in 2010.

USA Swimming says it became aware of a rumored relationship between the two based on information from a third party. The federation says it conducted an investigation with a private investigator that included interviews with Hutchison, Kukors and Kukors’ sister Emily. All three “unequivocably” denied the existence of a sexual or romantic relationship at the time, according to USA Swimming.

With the alleged victim (Kukors) denying the complaint, USA Swimming says it had “no basis to conclude that a Code of Conduct violation occurred, and the case was closed.”

Kukors’ attorney Bob Allard confirmed that early investigation. He says the investigation interviewed Kukors, who, “because she was in the midst of an abusive relationship, denied that she was in a relationship with [Hutchison].”

Kukors went public yesterday with allegations that Hutchison began “grooming” her at the age of 13 and sexually abusing her at the age of 16, all while he was her coach. USA Swimming’s full statement on the matter is below:

Ariana Kukors’ recent public statement marked the first time USA Swimming learned of the allegations that Sean Hutchison sexually abused Ariana when she was a minor. Our hearts go out to Ariana and the difficulty she has gone through to reach this point of disclosure. We fully support her in her case for answers and justice and applaud her courage in sharing her story in an effort to empower victims and protect athletes.
“In 2010, USA Swimming became aware of a rumored relationship between Hutchison and then 21-year-old Ariana via a third-party. Based on the information, USA Swimming retained an independent private investigator and conducted a full investigation into the rumor and the possible Code of Conduct violation.
“During the USA Swimming investigation, both Ariana and Hutchison, as well as Ariana’s sister, Emily, unequivocally denied the existence of a romantic or sexual relationship.
“With the denials from both parties, the investigation provided no basis to conclude that a Code of Conduct violation occurred, and the case was closed. Hutchison left coaching shortly thereafter but remains a member of USA Swimming as the owner of a member club based in Seattle.
“In January 2018, USA Swimming was notified of a Center for Safe Sport case regarding Hutchison and we have proactively sent over the 2010 case file to aid their investigation and support in any possible way.
“Over the last several years, Ariana has worked with USA Swimming as on-camera talent in its digital productions and has truly become a member of the family. We stand by her, and all other victims, in their quest to break their silence and confront their horrific experiences.”

Read the full story on SwimSwam: USA Swimming Investigated Hutchison/Kukors In 2010, Statement Confirms

Hungary’s Adel Juhasz Decommits from VT, Sends Verbal to Florida State

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

Kiskunhalas, Hungary’s Adel Juhasz has decommitted from Virginia Tech and sent a verbal commitment to Florida State University for the fall of 2018. Juhasz will join fellow future members of the class of 2022:

“I chose this school, because I have heard a lot of great things about them. The professionalism of the swim team, their enthusiastic, progressive and committed communication, the elaborated vision and strategy of the future plans have left me no doubt about my decision. I feel very honoured to be part of the FSU family. Go Noles!”

Juhasz is a distance freestyle specialist who also sports a mean 200 fly. She is a member of the Hungarian National Team and has represented her country internationally since the summer of 2013 when she was 15 and placed 10th at European Junior Championships in the 100 fly and 6th on the mixed 4×100 medley relay. The following summer she was crowned European Junior Champion in the 200 fly. She placed 7th in the 100 fly and 5th on the 4×100 medley. In 2015 Juhasz competed at World Junior Championships, where she placed 5th in the 1500. In December she swam at European Short Course Championships and placed 8th in the 800 free.

In 2016 she competed at European Championships in London in the 800 free, 1500 free, and 4×100 medley. She also swam in the 5km open water relay at European Junior Open Water Championships and in the 10km race at Marathon Swimming World Cup in Balatonfüred. This past August she placed 10th in the 10km race at European Junior Open Water Championships.

Top LCM times (converted to SCY)

  • 200 free – 2:03.62 (1:48.48)
  • 400 free – 4:12.82 (4:43.27)
  • 800 free – 8:33.50 (9:35.35)
  • 1500 free – 16:22.69 (16:03.42)
  • 200 fly – 2:10.93 (1:55.43)

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to Recruits@swimswam.com.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Hungary’s Adel Juhasz Decommits from VT, Sends Verbal to Florida State

Gabriele Detti, Ilaria Bianchi to Join Detti at Miglio D’Oro

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

TROFEO IL MIGLIO D’ORO

Start lists for the 2018 Trofeo Il MIglio D’Oro meet have been released, and the headlining return of Gabriele Detti from a shoulder injury that cost him the European Championships won’t be the only swims of interest at the meet. International-caliber swimmers Marco Orsi and Ilaria Bianchi will also participate in the meet.

Orsi, the Italian “Bomber,” was the 100 IM European Champion in short course meters in December. That was his 7th European title overall which goes with 4 World Championship medals (including a 50 free individual silver in 2014 in short course). Bianchi is a 3-time Italian Olympian (2008, 2012, 2016) who was the 2006 World Junior Champion, 2012 European Short Course Champion, and 2012 World Short Course Champion in the 100 fly.

Orsi holds 4 Italian records individually (50 free LCM, 50/100 free & 100 IM SCM), plus 4 more as part of relays. Bianchi holds 3 Italian records individually (including the 100 fly in long course) as well as an additional relay record.

While awaiting the final start lists, these are the confirmed entries so far:

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Gabriele Detti, Ilaria Bianchi to Join Detti at Miglio D’Oro

Sjöström, Christiansen Among Participants at Bergen Swim Festival

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

Coming this spring, the 2018 Bergen Swim Festival will feature top swimmers from various countries. Running from April 13th to 15th, and held at the Alexander Dale Oen Arena in Bergen, Norway, some preliminary information has been released by the meet organizers.

The big name expected at the meet is Swedish sprinter Sarah Sjöström. The 24-year-old holds long course world records in the 50m free, 100m free, 50m fly, and 100m fly. She also holds the short course world records in the 100m fly and 200m free. Sjöström is coming off of a 2017 summer campaign where she set new WRs in the 50 and 100m freestyle races, in addition to earning gold medals in the 50 free, 50 fly, and 100 fly at the 2017 World Championships in Budapest.

Hungarian Gergely Gyurta, a distance specialist, is also expected to compete at the meet, along with several Norwegian stars. Of the hometown names, featured are Henrik ChristiansenSusann Bjørnsen, and Tomoe Zenimoto Hvas. Christiansen, also a distance swimmer, will contest Gyurta in the distance races. Bjørnsen and Hvas both own several Norwegian national records, and Hvas is committed to swim in the United States for the University of North Carolina.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Sjöström, Christiansen Among Participants at Bergen Swim Festival

Max Edwards Announces Commitment to Virginia for 2019-20

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

Winston-Salem, North Carolina’s Max Edwards has given a verbal commitment to the University of Virginia’s class of 2023, where he will join fellow early commit Jack Walker on the Cavaliers’ roster.

“I chose UVA because it has a history of excellence in both academics and athletics. I know I can achieve my goals with support from great coaches and teammates. I can’t wait to get to Charlottesville and be a part of the UVA swimming family. Go HOOS!!”

Edwards is a junior at Ronald Reagan High School in Pfafftown, NC. He placed fourth in the 100 fly (49.56) and fourth in the 100 back (51.12) as a sophomore at the North Carolina 4A State Championships last February. He then went on to have a stellar meet at the Dolfin ISCA Junior Championship Cup a month later, going best times in the 50 free, 50/200 back, 50/100/200 fly, and 100 IM. He won the 16-and-under 100 fly, was 3rd in the 50 fly, 5th in the 100 back, 7th in the 50 back and 200 back, and 11th in the 50 free.

At Winter Junior Nationals East this past December, where he was a C finalist in the 50 free and 100 fly, Edwards improved his PBs in the 50 free and 200 fly. Tim Hillen, Edwards’ coach at Enfinity Aquatic Club, told SwimSwam, “Max’s progression in the past 3 years is nothing short of remarkable.  There is no reason he won’t continuing this pace under Coach DeSorbo and the UVA Staff.  Excited for Max and his commitment to both Academic and Athletic excellence at UVA.”

Top SCY times:

  • 50 free – 20.59
  • 100 back – 48.93
  • 200 back – 1:49.60
  • 100 fly – 48.21

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to Recruits@swimswam.com.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Max Edwards Announces Commitment to Virginia for 2019-20

NCHSAA 1A/2A, 3A, and 4A Champ Psych Sheets Released

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

swimming photo Mike Lewis

The psych sheets for the three North Carolina high school championship meets have been released. Below, find links and brief previews for what to expect at the 1A/2A, 3A, and 4A meets this weekend.

1A/2A

PSYCH SHEETS

Last year, Pine Lake Prep soared to the victory on the girls’ side, winning with 332 points. Allyson Accordino led the way for them last year, winning the 50 free and taking 2nd in the 100 free. Community School’s Emme Nelson, the defending champion in the 200 IM and 100 breast, is the top seed in both of those events for this year’s meet. Also looking to defend her title is Lyndsey Reeve of Croatan in the 200 free and Salisbury’s Kathryn Morrison in the 100 back.

The Washington boys won the men’s meet last year, but the star of the meet will likely be Ross Dant. The junior from Newton-Conover is the top seed in the 500 free by almost eleven seconds (4:35.99), and is seeded 2nd in the 100 back. Dant, who recently committed to the NC State Wolfpack, has a best time of 4:18.89, making him an exciting name to follow.

3A

PSYCH SHEETS

The Marvin Ridge boys and girls won the respective state titles at the 3A champs last season. This year, on the girls’ side, three SwimMAC standouts will be racing. Olwyn Bartis and Julia Menkhaus both compete for Charlotte Catholic, and are favorites to win two state titles, each. Note that Charlotte Catholic competed at the 4A meet last year. Bartis is the top seed in the 100 free and 200 free, while Menkhaus, a UVA verbal commit, is favored in the 100 fly and 100 back. Additionally, Maddy Flickinger of Weddington is the top seed in the 200 IM.

Western Alamance’s Noah Henderson looks likely to take the 100 back and 100 fly, as he’s the top seed in both races. Another favorite to pull off two individual wins is South Iredell’s Colson Zucker, who is the top seed in the 200 IM and 100 breast (both by over two seconds). Henderson is verbally committed to NC State, and Zucker to Duke.

4A

PSYCH SHEETS

Last year, William Amos Hough won the girls’ meet, and South Mecklenburg the boys’. There are a couple races that pit top swimmers on the women’s side which should be great to watch. In the 200 and 500 free, Apex’s Ana Pozder and Sanderson’s Kenna Haney will go head-to-head, along with Hough’s Heidi Lowe. Haney won last year in 1:47.29, ahead of UNC verbal commit Lowe (1:48.57) and Pozder (1:49.22). In the 500, Mizzou verbal commit Pozder is the top seed and Haney the 2nd seed, and Pozder is looking to defend her title after going 4:48.48 to win by two seconds over Haney last year. Brooke Zettel (Apex Friendship) and Tennessee verbal commit Sinclair Larson (South Mecklenburg) will do battle in the 200 IM, while Larson is favored in the 100 back. Leesville Road’s Grace Countie is looking to defend her 50 and 100 free titles from last year. Countie is verbally committed to UNC.

UVA verbal commit Jack Walker of Myers Park is the big name on the boys’s side after throwing down a 1:33.73 in the 200 free at the 2016 Junior Championships – East. He’s lurking at the 5th seed (1:43.16) on the psych sheets, but won the race last year in 1:39.61. Meanwhile, Athens Drive’s Zach Brown is seeking to repeat as 200 IM and 100 fly champion. He’s currently seeded 2nd in the 200 IM (1:53.16) behind Providence’s Teddy Perelli (1:52.45), and 2nd in the 100 fly (49.52) behind Reagan’s Max Edwards (49.44). Brown is verbally committed to NC State, and Edwards to UVA.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: NCHSAA 1A/2A, 3A, and 4A Champ Psych Sheets Released

Photos: 2018 YAIAA swimming championships


Sean Hutchison Denies Kukors’ Abuse Allegations In Statement

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Swim coach Sean Hutchison has categorically denied the allegations that he groomed and sexually abused Olympian Ariana KukorsHutchison released a statement to the Associated Press through his attorney today.

Kukors came forward this week claiming that Hutchison began grooming her when she was 13 and began sexually abusing her as a teen. We contacted Hutchison for comment at the time, but didn’t receive a response. Hutchison’s attorney, Brad Meryhew, released a statement from Hutchison to the Associated Press today in which Hutchison denies ever abusing Kukors or doing anything that wasn’t consensual. He says the two were in a “committed relationship” after the 2012 Olympics and that the two lived together in Seattle.

USA Swimming has confirmed it investigated an allegedly inappropriate relationship between the two in 2010, but says Hutchison, Kukors’ and Kukors’ sister denied that a relationship existed. Kukors now says she lied at the time out of fear while still in the allegedly abusive relationship.

Hutchison’s full statement is below:

“At no time did I ever abuse Ariana Kukors or do anything with her that was not consensual. I absolutely deny having any sexual or romantic relationship with her before she was old enough to legally make those decisions for herself. Prior to that time, I did nothing to ‘groom’ her.

“After the 2012 Olympics we were in a committed relationship and Ariana lived at my residence in Seattle for more than a year. Her younger sister also lived with us for several months and her mother was a regular visitor to our home. I deeply regret that she would make these wild allegations all these years later.”

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Sean Hutchison Denies Kukors’ Abuse Allegations In Statement

Britain’s Wilby & Burnell Take On Colorado Springs OTC

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

In less than 55 days we’ll see some of the world’s most talented aquatic athletes descend upon Gold Coast, Australia for the 2018 Commonwealth Games. Among them are 2 British swimmers, James Wilby and Jack Burnell, both of whom recently spent some time training at altitude at the Colorado Springs Olympic Training Center.

Watch their quick video to take in the sights and sounds as both men speak to how altitude training factors into their overall competition preparation, as well as what they think of the famed facilities’ perks.

Wilby is heading to his 2nd Commonwealth Games after earning gold as a member of England’s 4x100m medley relay. Burnell is also looking forward to making his mark in the open water swimming events to follow-up a 4th place finish at last year’s World Championships.

Team Leader Tim Jones said,“These camps are an integral part of getting the most out of our swimmers and physiologically preparing them for the rigours of senior international competition.

“Each of our athletes has been given individual challenges for the camp – some may come away seeing immediate benefits from training at altitude, whereas others will be able to use it as part of their longer-term progression.”

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Britain’s Wilby & Burnell Take On Colorado Springs OTC

Ariana Kukors Opens Up With Details About Hutchison Abuse Allegations

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Olympic swimmer Ariana Kukors came forward this week with allegations that longtime coach Sean Hutchison had sexually abused her, and followed up with a post on her website telling her side of the story Friday morning.

Kukors recounts Hutchison’s early interactions with his swimmers, which Kukors alleges were part of a grooming program. She was 13 at the time, and says Hutchison started pushing their coach-swimmer relationship in increasingly inappropriate directions starting when she was 15. She says the relationship turned sexual at 16, and that Hutchison would engage in sex acts with her and watch her shower.

She also says Hutchison convinced her to go to school at the University of Washington so he could remain her coach and continue to have sexual relations with her. From there, Kukors portrays the relationship as becoming more and more emotionally abusive and manipulative. She includes several e-mails she received from Hutchison, including one she received when she was at training camp with the U.S. Olympic Team just before the 2012 London Olympics.

Kukors says Hutchison required her to send daily naked pictures during those Olympics, that he arranged for her to fly home before the closing ceremonies and that he portrayed her participation in the Olympics as selfish because it caused her to be away from him. She says the relationship ended in the summer of 2013, as she slowly began to realize she had been conditioned to accept his abuse without question.

We have reached out to Hutchison for comment on Kukors’ allegations, but he has not yet responded.

Update: Hutchison’s attorney has released a statement to the Associated Press from Hutchison denying the allegations. His full statement is below:

“At no time did I ever abuse Ariana Kukors or do anything with her that was not consensual. I absolutely deny having any sexual or romantic relationship with her before she was old enough to legally make those decisions for herself. Prior to that time, I did nothing to ‘groom’ her.

“After the 2012 Olympics we were in a committed relationship and Ariana lived at my residence in Seattle for more than a year. Her younger sister also lived with us for several months and her mother was a regular visitor to our home. I deeply regret that she would make these wild allegations all these years later.”

You can read Kukors’ full story on her website here, or republished in full below:

Any swimmer will tell you about the black line on the bottom of every pool . . . the line that we follow day after day.  We develop a relationship with that line; it holds our hopes and our dreams, but it also holds our fears.  If only that black line could talk, it would tell you of my nightmare.

To those in the swimming community, if you’ve heard the rumors about me, you may have been wondering if and when I’d find the courage to speak my truth.

This is the truth.

I recently came across a quote by Thich Naht Hahn that said, “People have a hard time letting go of their suffering. Out of a fear of the unknown, they prefer suffering that is familiar.” This quote is ironic, because I can still picture Hahn’s books lying on his bedside table.

I grew up in a family of 5 just outside of Seattle. I was the middle sister of 3 girls, the Kukors Sisters, as we were often referred to. When I was little we used to take our family boat out in the Puget Sound and many of my first memories are of water. The water has always felt natural to me. My older sister, Emily, joined a swim team when she was nine. I was five and eager to follow in her footsteps. That was when my swimming career began, and all three of us girls, my Mom’s mermaids, fell in love with the sport. In 2008, the three of us competed at the US Olympic Swim Trials, a moment in time I will never forget. I trained with my sisters, dreamed with them, won and lost with them. Before each race, we would always tell each other the same message: “I’m sending you my strength”.

I poured everything into my training. I had talent at a young age and progressed quickly with the help of extraordinary age group coaches; coaches who supported, developed, and challenged me in all the right ways. When I was 13, just on the cusp of making the USA National Team, I was handed off to a new coach, Sean Hutchison.

Sean was an up and coming coach with a great reputation and we were excited to have him at King Aquatic Club. He was personable, well-liked, charismatic, and an incredibly convincing leader. We hung onto every word he said.

The grooming started immediately. Each of us had to shake his hand after every practice. A simple handshake, but it was a first step; contact.

Sean made sure we craved his attention and always had a strong hold over his female swimmers; we would do anything for him and he knew it. Before long, we were waking up early to pick up coffee and a scone for him before morning practice. He made everyone feel special. He’d ask about our lives, how we were feeling, what we were up to that night. He’d stay on the pool deck and talk to us after practice.

I got a cellphone when I was 15 and we began texting. He made me feel special; the chosen one in some ways, both in and out of the water. And I was swimming better than ever.

Sean made his move in the Mt. Rainier Pool parking lot, a hole in the wall complex just outside of Seattle. I was standing by his car talking after practice wearing baggy gray sweatpants with TROJANS, my high school mascot, written down the side in green. I was 15.

He asked me if I was wearing underwear.

I said no.

I’ll never forget the look on his face, it was almost mischievous as he was trying to gauge my response.

From that point on, everything was different.

I’d like to tell you it only happened a few times, but that was just the beginning of an extensive, abusive, and incredibly manipulative relationship that spanned the better part of the next decade of my life.

We talked all the time. Post-race hugs that lasted just a little too long, coffee meetings outside of practice, and constant texting were the ways he made sure I relied on him for everything. He began by having me sit on his lap when we were alone, then progressed to kissing me in elevators, and touching me over my clothes. He once put a paper ring on my ring finger that read, “My beautiful Ari,” and told me he wanted to spend his life with me. He was 34. I was 16.

That was the year the relationship turned sexual. I’d never been physical with anyone before but I now found myself alone with him, engaging in sexual acts and trying to hide my embarrassment when he sat in the women’s locker room and watched me shower. But he said he loved me, and I thought he held the keys to my future – not just to my swimming career, but to my whole life.

In the summer of 2006, I had just turned 17 and qualified for my first travel trip with Team USA to the Pan Pacific Games in Victoria, Canada. I won a silver medal in the 400-meter individual medley but the increasingly sexual nature of our relationship was beginning to overshadow anything that I accomplished in the pool.

I began my senior year of high school as one of the top recruits in the country, which meant I had my pick of schools from which to choose. I took recruiting trips to USC, University of Arizona, and University of Georgia, but Sean was not amused. He told me if I went off to college, I should kiss my dreams of becoming an Olympian goodbye. But he had a solution; I could go to the University of Washington down the street, and continue to train with him. I just had to sign my letter of intent.

Throughout my senior year, our sexual activity continued to become more and more frequent.  Every meet we went to – meets that shaped not only my swimming career, but the trauma that I now carry with me everywhere I go – was marred with acts that still haunt me to this day.

We did “everything but”.

He was saving that until I was 18.

Shortly after my 18th birthday, we had traveled out-of-state for one of the summer’s swim meets. Sean snuck me into his room to finally give me my “gift”; I’ll spare you the details, but the memory of that night will always haunt me. The parent chaperone knocked on Sean’s door, telling him I wasn’t in my room. Sean sent him on a wild goose chase, while smuggling me into the stairwell as I pretended to be on the phone with my Mom.

A liar. That’s what I had become.

I signed with the University of Washington and tried my best to find a normal life as a student-athlete. I made great friends and teammates, won a handful of Pac-10 Championships, even beating my big sis at NCAA’s. . . but I was waking up and living a lie every single day.

Swimming was, and always will be, the beacon of light that calls me home. Unfortunately, because of the success I was having in the pool, it only made my attachment to Sean stronger and he convinced me that I could only swim fast for him.

And so I stayed.

It was Summer 2009, and I had just broken the World Record to win my first World Championship. I quickly found out that success often had a dark side, and for me it meant an increasingly louder flurry of whispers about my relationship with Sean.

When the opportunity to move to a training program in California came about, I jumped on it. I needed a fresh start and Sean was telling me we were in love and could be more of a “couple” there, even though he would still be coaching me. We couldn’t tell anyone in the swimming community, but we could stay at each other’s apartments like a “real couple”. This was an enticing thought as I craved some kind of normalcy in the lie I was living.

I think back on those times now, tearfully asking why no one helped me . . . why no one stepped in to save me from this monster. It’s still hard to comprehend, but Sean had perfected the art of grooming; I wasn’t even aware I needed saving. And as long as I swam fast, it seemed easy enough for the organizations that have masterfully buried these tragedies for years, to once again brush off the rumors.

Days turned into weeks, weeks into months, and months turned into years. Before I knew it, I was a grown adult – or so my age would tell you. People continued to whisper; they suspected what was going on behind closed doors. A star swimmer craving attention and love? Of course I’d turn to the man who had groomed me from the age of 13. In addition, he had a longtime girlfriend. He told me she was his alibi, in case someone suspected us. I now know he told her something entirely different.

Looking back, I don’t even recognize the young girl Sean so meticulously controlled and manipulated. I was lying to everyone around me… My parents. My sisters. My teammates. My friends. I began to distance myself from all of them, in fear that they would find out my secret. When asked about the rumors, I didn’t even bat an eye when I replied that they simply weren’t true. Even now, when my sisters ask me why I hadn’t confided in them, it’s hard to explain. He told me that we were in love, and while our relationship had to remain a secret, he promised that one day it would be out in the open and we could live as a true couple.

The truth was not an option, or so I believed. So I carried my web of lies with me, like a coat of armor.

I decided to go forward with the decision to move and train in California with Sean and for 15 months it seemed like I was living a relatively normal life. I enrolled in a local university to complete my college education, I found a great apartment, and could frequently be found studying on the beach or trying new restaurants with the handful of friends I had made. Sean and I stayed at each other’s apartment several times a week and would drive out of town, often down to San Clemente, to get brunch on the weekends.

My world came crashing down in late December of 2010, thanks to an article in the Washington Post. I had just finished Christmas with my family in Seattle and I was secretly flying out to meet Sean in Georgia. While I was boarding my plane, the article hit the press. I didn’t know what to do, but he told me to come anyway. It was an emotionally charged day that Sean later recounted in an email sent to me on May 22, 2015.

I remember the day (identity redacted) called me to ask me ‘what was going on?’  I was in the car, just having left lunch with (identities redacted).  The Washington Post was calling.  You were on your way to join me in Savannah, and we were going to Florida.  Such a violent day, emotionally, and even physically – the guy on your plane who stabbed the person next to him, in the neck of all places.  You landed.  We were unsure of what to do and found a hotel in Hilton Head.  The Westin.  We drove over there. We had a Tahoe.  We much preferred the Buick SUV we found a year or so later, our ‘family’ car.  We checked in. I had a couple more phone calls.  You sat patiently, supportively, lovingly.  We ate and had a couple drinks or more in that dream of a bar in the restaurant between the pool and the beach.  Such upheaval, but a beautiful night.  I love that night. 

That night, as scared as I was, and I was terrified, for what I later understood to be for all the wrong reasons, as upset as I was, as uncertain as I was, I knew one thing more than anything.  There was not another person I would stand next to together through that difficulty.  There was not another person I would willingly go through that for, just for the opportunity to be with her forever.  No one.  And, that I would be OK as long as you were with me.  I knew how lucky I was.  How you were willing to stand next to me.  How strong you were, even though you were scared too.  How much I appreciated you. How you looked at me wishing you could help more without realizing you were doing everything I needed. How lucky we were.  You made me believe in soul mates.

I was 21 years old at the time the article hit the news, and Sean had been my swim coach for 8 years.

In January of 2011, USA Swimming investigated the claims made against Sean and myself. The extent of my part in the investigation was me spending a few minutes on the phone with a private investigator. 19 questions I counted. I was scared. I lied. I had never felt more alone in all my life.

Several weeks later, USA Swimming aggressively closed the book on the investigation, putting out a public statement saying they had found no wrongdoing, and calling rumors about Sean “malicious lies.”

Well that shut me up real quick. But I think they knew. I think everyone knew. No one flew out to meet me. No one seemed to care what happened to me in all this.

But my world was beginning to turn upside down and I was convinced I was being followed to the point where I was sleeping with my dining room table pushed in front of my door. I also had to endure Sean’s verbal abuse, which began escalating from the moment he left the team and set off to start a new company, Ikkos.

I returned to the pool because it was all I knew and I still had a year left of my college education. He told me I was selfish for choosing to swim, and that I should choose him. He said he was tired of waiting for me, and was constantly belittling and controlling me.

On June 28th, 2012, I achieved my career-long dream of making the Olympic Team. In 2008, I missed the Beijing Team by 0.08 of a second – 3rd place… so you’d think I would be elated, and in some ways I was. I had worked my butt off, and with the support of so many, I was able to reach the pinnacle of my sport. But I was petrified of the way Sean would react, as his jealousy and control over me had reached a new level of unbearable. Below is an excerpt from an email Sean sent to me on July 7th, 2012, while I was at the Olympic Training Camp:

Hi,
i’m hurting right now.  i will be fine.  Some dumbass stuff I didn’t want to say on the way to the airport that seems trite and you will just probably throw out, which is up to you.
you’re an olympic model on nbc.  i saw a couple days ago.  your pictures are beautiful.  please be aware that because of that you will get more attention from photographers.  please be mindful of what you’re wearing and suits and adjusting suits.  someone will be watching.  i know.  i’m sorry to say it.  
people get bored on this trip.  i know you aren’t dumb.  but please don’t be naive.  get mad at me if you want.  but if any guy sits with you somewhere more than once in the same or concurrent days, he is thinking something, no matter how nice he is.
i am here.  it’s painful being here.  remember that when you talk to me.  you need to tell me what’s going on, yes.  but, please be aware that i’m at a disadvantage every time we talk.  if i’m quiet, assume the best.  
Please don’t be stubborn.  This is not easy.  Don’t judge me.  If you do, we will have problems.

That was my Olympic Dream.

Checking in with him constantly, sending him naked pictures every single day as he required of me, and trying not to have too much fun, for fear of him yelling at me. After 8 days, the swimming portion of the Olympics concluded and Sean made sure I was on the first flight home the following day, less than halfway through the Games. There would be no closing ceremony for me and certainly no further bonding with my Olympic teammates. In Sean’s eyes, I had been selfish enough, and it was time to come home.

When I returned home from London, it wasn’t an option of whether or not I would continue swimming; my career was over. I packed up my house and joined him in Seattle where he locked me away on the 21st floor. He wouldn’t let my name be on the lease even though oftentimes I was the one maxing out credit cards to pay rent. He had the one and only key and I was allowed to come and go only as he pleased. All of this because he was still paranoid about the rumors.

This was September of 2012.

At this point, my whole family (except my Dad) knew about Sean. It was difficult for them to wrap their minds around our relationship, as they too had been hearing the rumors for years. Time and time again, I had vehemently denied the rumors, telling them that they simply were not true. But now I convinced them that I loved him, that it started when I was an adult, and they all just needed to accept it. Try as they might, it shook our tight knit family to its core.

In May of 2013, my younger sister, Mattie, had graduated from college and was looking for a job in the city. I convinced Sean to let her move in with us and for the next few months I was able to see through her eyes just how messed up my life and my relationship really were.

Sean was yelling at me every day, stressed about the progress of Ikkos, and continually blaming everything on me. I was suffering and felt like a hostage in my own home while trying to get my own corporate career off the ground in Seattle. I was reaching my breaking point . . . but when I brought up the idea of a taking a break or ending the relationship, he said that we had a great love story, one of sacrifice, and that we belonged together.

I believed him.

Until the end of summer in 2013.

He was traveling, and I needed a break; I was emotionally drained. I packed up all my things and moved out. When he returned from his travels, I told him I was leaving him. After a lot of screaming and crying, he begged me to take him back, and said he would change. I refused. He allowed me to take a “break” from him, all the while contacting me about how much he was changing and growing for my sake.

Around this time, I met a guy while getting drinks with a girlfriend at a bar in Bellevue, WA. He was attractive, successful, and showed me that I was worthy of affection. I

IOC to Pursue African Cities as Host of 2022 Youth Olympic Games

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By Reid Carlson on SwimSwam

In a press release titled “It’s time for Africa” the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has declared its intentions to pursue Africa cities as hosts of the 2022 Youth Olympic Games (YOG).

Earlier this week the IOC revealed an updated set of standards and processes for selecting future Olympic hosts known as the “New Norm.” The New Norm will primarily attempt to ensure that all future Olympic host cities are better off economically and culturally after hosting the Games–or at the very least, that hosts are not left financially crippled when the Games leave town.

The IOC hopes to elect an African host for the 2022 YOG at its upcoming session in Buenos Aires in October. The IOC’s session will also coincide with the 2018 Youth Summer Olympics which are taking place in Buenos Aires October 6th – 18th.

IOC President Thomas Bach said the organization will “proactively approach a number of African [National Olympic Committees] to evaluate the feasibility of such a project.”

Unlike the 2004 Athens Olympics and the 2016 Rio Summer Games, among others, the IOC and African NOCs will rely on existing infrastructure and temporary venues to stage the YOG events. Furthermore, “enhanced flexibility and adaptation to the local context, with the event to be used as a catalyst for wider youth and sport engagement programmes” is being emphasized.

Similar to the invitation to bid that the IOC will strive to implement for selecting the host of the 2026 Winter Olympics and future iterations of the Games thereafter, the IOC wants to make hosting the Youth Olympics affordable to small and medium-sized cities and replace the current candidature and bidding process with a “competitive dialogue approach.”

The IOC believes a successful 2022 YOG could be a “catalyst” for future sports development in Africa. In September 2017 the IOC, with the help of the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), launched the Olympic Refuge Foundation as a way of creating “safe, basic and accessible sports facilities in areas where there are refugees, a displaced migrant population and internally displaced people.” Projects are currently underway in Rwanda and Ethiopia, and in 2016 eight African athletes competed in the Rio Olympics as members of the first-ever Refugee Olympic Team.

Though it is apparent the IOC wants to help African countries produce more home-grown Olympians and Olympic medalists, Africa’s most successful swimmers have traditionally flocked to American universities to further their careers in the pool. Zimbabwe’s Kirsty Coventry, who has won a total of seven Olympic medals, two of which are gold, trained at Auburn University. Oussama Mellouli is another African-born Olympic gold medalist who trained abroad after leaving Tunisia at age 15. Mellouli first went to France to attend high school, and in 2003 moved to the University of Southern California where he trained for three Olympic Games. Mellouli is the first African man to ever win an individual Olympic medal in swimming and was honored as Tunisia’s flag bearer during the opening ceremonies of the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio.

African record holder and world champs bronze medalist Farida Osman, who represents Egypt, also currently trains in the US at Cal Berkley. Osman placed 12th in the 100m butterfly in Rio, and at last summer’s world championships in Budapest she placed 3rd in the 50 fly, winning Egypt’s first-ever medal world championship medal in swimming, resetting the African record in the event three times.

South Africa, on the other hand, has produced several home-grown Olympic medalists. At the 2012 Olympic Games in London, Cameron van der Burgh became the first-ever African swimmer to win an Olympic medal by training exclusively with his club in South Africa. Days later countryman Chad le Clos stole the spotlight by edging out Michael Phelps and winning gold in the 200m butterfly. Later in the meet le Clos got by on the podium in a tie for silver in the 100m butterfly. Both le Clos and Van Der Burgh have remained highly successful since 2012, and have been joined by others such as Calvyn Justus, who is going to be a medal threat in the 100 freestyle and 100 backstroke at this year’s Commonwealth Games. South Africa has also demonstrated that it is dedicated to producing more home-grown world-class swimmers by adding two 15-year-olds to its Commonwealth Games roster.

Prior to 2012, South Africa had been successful in Olympic swimming, producing multiple Olympic finalists, and in Athens 2004 a gold medal by way of the 400m freestyle relay team of Roland Schoeman, Lyndon Ferns, Darian Townsend, and Ryk Neethling, which also toppled the world record. Each one of the swimmers on that relay, however, had trained at the University of Arizona and still resided in Tuscon.

Given the success of South African swimmers over the past couple decades, perhaps the IOC should look to the nation and its NOC as a case study in how to foster both enthusiasm and success in youth sports in Africa generally. The recent appointment of Kirsty Coventry as the IOC Athletes’ Commission Chairperson should also help the effort to encourage elite sports in Africa.

The Youth Olympics, like the standard Games, follow a quadrennial cycle of summer and winter games, which means the 2020 YOG will be a Winter Games, hosted in Lausanne, Switzerland, home of the IOC headquarters.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: IOC to Pursue African Cities as Host of 2022 Youth Olympic Games

Joan Casanovas Blasts 1:35.05 200 Free on Day 2 of GLVC Championship

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By Spencer Penland on SwimSwam

2018 GLVC Championships

Team Scores After Day 1

Women

  1. Drury– 454
  2. Indianapolis – 351
  3. Truman State – 311
  4. McKendree – 161
  5. William Jewel – 143
  6. Bellarmine – 136
  7. UMSL – 111
  8. Lewis – 109
  9. Maryville – 55

Men

  1. Indianapolis – 378
  2. Drury – 307
  3. Missouri S&T – 300
  4. Truman State – 215
  5. McKendree – 202
  6. William Jewel – 187
  7. Lewis – 101
  8. UMSL – 98
  9. Bellarmine – 60
  10. Maryville – 32

After day 2 of the Great Lakes Valley Conference Championship the Indianapolis men have overtaken Drury by 71 points. Meanwhile, Drury has extended it’s lead over Indianapolis in the women’s meet. In addition to the 4 GLVC records that were broken on day 1, 4 more came down today, all of which came in men’s events.

WOMEN’S 200 FREE RELAY

  • GLVC record – 1:32.23
  1. Drury – 1:33.49
  2. Truman State – 1:33.78
  3. Indianapolis – 1:34.90

The Drury team of Vera Johansson (23.30), Chrysoula Karamanou (24.00), Katya Rudenko (22.91), and Mackenzie Wieberg (23.28) combined to win in a very tight race with Truman State. Drury and Truman State were tied at the 100 mark, but Drury won the race with a 22.91 from Rudenko on the 3rd leg compared to the 23.30 on Truman State’s 3rd leg (Libby Opfer). Drury was over a second off their season best time of 1:32.09, which leads the NCAA in the D2 rankings. Truan State’s time is now ranked 8th in the national rankings.

MEN’S 200 FREE RELAY

  • GLVC record – 1:20.58
  1. McKendree – 1:20.96
  2. Drury – 1:21.46
  3. Missouri S&T – 1:21.65

McKendree touched the wall exactly half a second ahead of Drury with a team including 2 freshmen. Those 2 freshmen, Matija Pucarevic and Xander Skinner had the fastest splits on the relay at 20.37 (lead-off) and 19.51 respectively. The other splits were 20.38 (Luca Simonetti) and 20.70 (Throstur Bjarnason). Mckendree’s time is now tied for 9th in the D2 national rankings with Drury.

WOMEN’S 400 IM

  • GLVC record – 4:22.75
  1. Karlie Rimat (McKendree) – 4:25.23
  2. Kortney Betz (Truman State) – 4:28.98
  3. Sophia Nelson (Drury) – 4:30.30

Karlie Rimat took the lead in the 1st 100 and never gave it up, to the wall 3.75 seconds ahead of runner-up Kortney Betz. Rimat, a freshman, split a 58.35 on the fly 100, 1:07.54 on back, 1:17.06 on breast, and 1:02.28 on free. Her time is 8th in the D2 national rankings.

MEN’S 400 IM

  • GLVC record – 3:48.56
  1. Will Shanel (Truman State) – 3:53.16
  2. Young Tae Seo (Drury) – 3:54.64
  3. Hector Gomez (Indianapolis) – 3:55.66

Truman State senior Will Shanel chased down Young Tae Seo and Hector Gomez on the free leg of the 400 IM. Shanel split a quick 53.13 on the free 100, compared to 55.73 from Tae Seo and 56.01 from Gomez. That was Shanel’s 2nd fastest time of the season, with his 3:51.24 from Novemeber being the 2nd fastest in the Division 2 rankings.

WOMEN’S 100 FLY

  • GLVC record – 53.73
  1. Vera Johansson (Drury) – 53.95
  2. Zuzanna Chwadeczko (Drury) – 54.46
  3. Abby Lunzmann (Drury) – 55.18

Vera Johansson was on top of a Drury sweep of the top 3. Johansson went a season best of 53.95 to boost herself from 4th to 3rd in the national rankings. Johansson went out half a second faster than Chwadeczko, 25.13 to 25.58, then they came back the same at 28.8. Chwadeczko is now 7th nationally.

MEN’S 100 FLY

  • GLVC record – 48.04
  1. Pavel Semochkin (Drury) – 47.35
  2. Matija Pucarevic (McKendree) – 47.46
  3. Eirik Nielsen (Missouri S&T) – 48.11

In a very tight finish, Pavel Semochkin out-touched Matija Pucarevic by just .11 seconds. Semochkin blasted a 21.79 on the first 50, compared to Pucarevic’s 22.24, but came home in 25.56 to Pucarevic’s 25.22. Both Semochkin and Pucarevic shattered the GLVC record of 48.04. Semochkin’s season best of 4673 is the 3rd fastest time in the D2 rankings, while Pucarevic’s time from this meet comes in 4th, and 3rd place finisher Eirik Nielsen’s time of 48.11 comes in 9th.

WOMEN’S 200 FREE

  • GLVC record – 1:48.72
  1. Erica Dahlgren (Drury) – 1:49.31
  2. Malvina Shoukri (Indianapolis) – 1:50.86
  3. Merideth Geyer (McKendree) – 1:51.02

Erica Dahlgren followed up her huge 1000 performance on day 1 with a win and season best in the 200 free. Dahlgren was the only swimmer in the field to break 1:50. Dahlgren pushed the middle 100 hard, posting splits of 27.52 and 27.74 to go a 55.26 in the middle of the race. Her time now comes in 8th in the national rankings.

MEN’S 200 FREE

  • GLVC record – 1:35.42
  1. Joan Casanovas (Drury) – 1:35.05 (‘A’ cut)
  2. Guilherme Zavaneli (Indianapolis) – 1:35.25 (‘A’ cut)
  3. Xander Skinner (McKendree) – 1:36.64

Joan Casanovas followed up his win in the 1000 on day 1 by chasing down Gulherme Zavaneli on the final 50 of the 200 free. Casanovas split 24.34 on the final 50 compared to Zavaneli’s 24.98, and touched the wall .20 seconds ahead at 1:35.05. Both Casanovas and Zavaneli came in under the NCAA D2 ‘A’ cut, giving Casanovas his 2nd of the meet. McKendree freshmen Xander Skinner came in close behind at 1:36.64, a season best that gets him 6th in the national rankings. Casanovas and Zavaneli came in 2nd and 3rd in the national rankings respectively.

WOMEN’S 400 MEDLEY RELAY

  • GLVC record – 3:37.99
  1. Drury – 3:43.08
  2. Indianapolis – 3:46.30
  3. Truman State – 3:46.73

Drury was way off their season best of 3:38.13, posting a 3:43.08 to win by 3 seconds over Indianapolis. Their splits were Katya Rudenko (54.01), Madeline Nelson (1:04.30), Vera Johansson (53.49), and Caytee Wright (51.28). When they went their season best, Bailee Nunn split a 59.93 on the breastroke leg, and Zuzanna Chwadeczko split 50.36 on the anchor leg. The Drury season best also ranks 1st in the Division 2 rankings.

MEN’S 400 MEDLEY RELAY

  • GLVC record – 3:14.33
  1. Indianapolis – 3:14.25
  2. Missouri S&T – 3:16.56
  3. McKendree – 3:18.16

The Indianapolis team of Rodrigo Codo Berti (48.35), Jan Zuchowicz (54.28), Ante Lucev (47.79), and Guilherme Zavaneli (43.83) combined to post a season best of 3:14.25, just under the GLVC record of 3:14.33. Indianapolis is now ranked 2nd nationally, while Drury (which got DQ’d in the final), is 3rd in the national rankings with their season best. Missouri S&T is now 9th in the rankings with their time of 3:16.56.

WOMEN’S 3 METER DIVING

  • GLVC record – 474.85
  1. Cassandra Kury (Indianapolis) – 409.35
  2. Chloe Jones (Indianapolis) – 351.35
  3. Caitlyn Canadi (McKendree) – 324.60

Cassandra Kury won the women’s 3 meter by nearly 60 points, with her teammate Chloe Jones coming in 2nd. While Kury was pretty far off the GLVC record, her score puts her 17th in the national rankings.

MEN’S 1 METER DIVING

  • GLVC record – 493.15
  1. Josh Zylstra (Indianapolis) – 509.10
  2. Payton Staman (Indianapolis) – 483.50
  3. Casey Crawford (Indianapolis) – 316.45

Josh Zylstra was broke the first GLVC record of the day, posting a 509.10 in the 1 meter to crush the record by 16 points. That is the 8th best score in the Division 2 national rankings this season. Indianapolis took all 3 of the top spots, with Payton Staman, who held the record Zylstra broke, coming in 2nd with a 483.50.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Joan Casanovas Blasts 1:35.05 200 Free on Day 2 of GLVC Championship

Jamaica Names Just 1 Swimmer to 2018 Commonwealth Games Team

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

Jamaica will only be sending 1 swimmer, and 2 aquatic athletes in total, to the 2018 Commonwealth Games on Gold Coast, Australila. Alia Atkinson will represent the country in swimming, while Yona Knight Windsom will be the country’s lone diving representative.

This will be Atkinson’s 4th-straight Commonwealth Games, having competed at every edition since 2006. It’s also a return to major global competition after she sat out last year’s World Championships (in spite of competing all season long).

Her only Commonwealth Games medals came at the 2014 event in Glasgow, Scotland where she took silver in the 50 breaststroke and bronze in the 100. She became just the 3rd Jamaican in history to medal at the Commonwealth Games. Janelle Atkinson (no relation) earned 2 bronze medals at the 2002 Commonwealth Games, and William McCarty earned a silver at the 1934 British Empire Games in the 200 yard breaststroke 3 decades before Jamaica earned independence from the UK.

Atkinson’s career resume includes 2 short course World Championships in the 100 breaststroke and 2 long course World Championship medals – silver in the 50 breaststroke and bronze in the 100.

After sitting out the 2017 World Championships, Atkinson still raced at all 8 stops of the 2017 FINA World Cup Series, where she finished 5th overall with 210 points. She won 13 events at the series, including sweeping the 50 and 100 breaststroke offerings, which jumps her in to 4th place in series history for event wins by a woman (6th place overall).

Jamaica’s Olympic committee allocated 7 spots to swimming at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, though Knight-Wisdom was the only diver in Glasgow as well. Atkinson was the only swimmer to make a final (she did so in all 3 breaststroke distances). Their next-best finish was an 11th-place from Zara Bailey in the women’s 400 IM, followed by a 12th-place finish from Timothy Wynter in the 200 breaststroke.

Among the swimmers left off the roster were Michael Gunning and Justin Plaschka, who were the country’s two representatives at the World Championships last year. Gunning was a high of 36th in the 200 fly and Plaschka was a high of 41st in the 50 fly.

Knight-Wisdom finished 5th in the men’s 1-meter and 11th in the men’s 3-meter in Glasgow in 2014.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Jamaica Names Just 1 Swimmer to 2018 Commonwealth Games Team

Harpeth Hall Girls Break Overall Nat’l HS Record in 200 Medley Relay

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

2018 TISCA HS CHAMPIONSHIPS

The Harpeth Hall girls broke the national overall high school record tonight at the TISCA HS Championships in the 200 medley relay. With Alex Walsh and Gretchen Walsh bookending the relay, along with Ella Nelson and Alex Massey, the girls took down both the national independent high school record (private schools) that was previously held by Sacred Heart Academy in Kentucky, along with the overall national record, which was held by an incredible quartet of girls from Carmel High School in Indiana.

Harpeth Hall went 1:38.77, faster than the 1:39.25 done by Carmel in February of 2015 as well as the 1:40.61 done by Sacred Heart in February of 2016.

SPLIT COMPARISON

Prev. Ind. RecordPrev. Overall Record
New Overall Record
SACRED HEARTCARMELHARPETH HALL
Back legTonner DeBeer (25.76)Sammie Burchill (25.39)
Alex Walsh (24.37)
Breast legKennedy Lohman (27.97)Alex Clarke (29.00)
Ella Nelson (28.27)
Fly legAsia Seidt (24.07)Veronica Burchill (23.31)
Alex Massey (24.49)
Free legBrooke Bauer (22.81)Amy Bilquist (21.55)
Final time1:40.611:39.251:38.77

Alex Walsh‘s 24.37 lead-off backstroke leg was the clear standout leg for Harpeth Hall, over a second ahead of both Sacred Heart’s and Carmel’s lead-offs.

Harpeth Hall is now the fastest private school in history in this event, and of course, the fastest high school team ever. The public school record will still belong to Carmel’s 2015 relay, however.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Harpeth Hall Girls Break Overall Nat’l HS Record in 200 Medley Relay


Trey Freeman Drops 1:33.0 200 Free, Sets New Nat’l High School Record

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

2018 TISCA HS CHAMPIONSHIPS

Baylor School’s Trey Freeman successfully defended his state title tonight in the 200 free, unleashing a 1:33.06 to set a new national high school record.

SPLITS

FREEMAN 2018

  • 21.58 – 45.22 (23.64) – 1:09.17 (23.95) – 1:33.06 (23.89)

SHOULTS 2016

  • 22.00 – 45.65 (23.65) – 1:09.46 (23.81) – 1:33.26 (23.80)

Freeman was incredibly consistent, going out in 21.5 and holding 23’s the rest of the way. His 45.22 going out was met with a 47.84 back end, which just gets him under Grant Shoults‘ 200 free national high school record of 1:33.26. Shoults swam that time in May of 2016, when he went 4:12.87 to also set the 500 free national overall record.

His time also makes him the 2nd-fastest 17-18 year old in U.S. history. Maxime Rooney‘s 1:32.18 leads the way, and Freeman’s 1:33.06 puts him just ahead of Tom Kremer’s 1:33.07 from 2013.

Freeman is also ahead of the national public high school record. That time is a 1:33.30, set one year ago by Carmel’s Drew Kibler. Since Freeman attends a private school, however, the national public high school record still belongs to Kibler, who will get a crack at the overall record later this month at the Indiana high school state championships.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Trey Freeman Drops 1:33.0 200 Free, Sets New Nat’l High School Record

National Records Fall on Night 1 of TISCA Championships

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

2018 TISCA HS CHAMPIONSHIPS

Two national records fell on the first night of the TISCA Championships in Tennessee, with the Harpeth Hall girls cracking the national 200 medley relay record and Baylor School’s Trey Freemantaking down the 200 free national record.

Alex Walsh was 24.37 leading off Harpeth Hall’s 200 medley relay, followed by Ella Nelson‘s 28.27, Alex Massey‘s 24.49, and Gretchen Walsh‘s 21.64 to go 1:38.77 and break Carmel’s overall record and beat Sacred Heart’s independent record. Alex Walsh was back the very next event to win the 200 free (1:45.93), and then Nelson held off Brentwood Academy’s Allie Raab in the 200 IM, 1:58.31 and 1:58.56.

Freeman went 1:33.06 to win the 200 free, the only finisher under 1:40. He took down Grant Shoults’ 1:33.26 national high school record, and now he’s the 2nd-fastest 17-18 American in history in the event behind Maxime Rooney’s 1:32.18. Freeman’s Baylor teammate, Luis Weekes, won the 200 IM (1:50.22), and split a 25.41 breaststroke as Baylor also won the opening 200 medley relay.

Gretchen Walsh was back in the 50 free, taking the title in 22.26 over her Harpeth Hall teammate Ophelia Pilkinton (22.85). Caleb Harrington from Bearden won two titles tonight, going 20.37 to win the 50 free and then 48.36 to dominate the 100 fly, the only finisher under 50 seconds in that race.

In the final girls’ race of the night, Riley Gaines of Station Camp went 54.16 in the 100 fly to touch out Harpeth Hall’s Alex Massey (54.28).

Read the full story on SwimSwam: National Records Fall on Night 1 of TISCA Championships

State College owns Day 1 of Mid-Penn boys swimming championships

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Cumberland Valley's Logan Skiles won the gold in the 100 butterfly.

Emily Weiss Breaks Indiana HS Breaststroke Record in Prelims

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

2018 Indiana High School Girls’ Swimming State Championship Meet

  • February 9th-10th, 2018
  • Indiana University Natatorium, IUPUI, Indianapolis, Indiana
  • 25 yard, invite format, prelims/finals
  • Live Results

Yorktown High School junior Emily Weiss has broken her own Indiana high school State Record in the 100 yard breaststroke in prelims on Friday on the IUPUI campus. Weiss swam a 59.25 which left her 3-seconds better than anybody else in the field and broke her old state record of 59.68.

This is the 2nd-best time of her career, trailing only her 58.77 from Winter Juniors – East in December. Last year, she broke the state record held by another Indiana native: Lilly King. King now also holds the fastest-ever times in the 100 long course meters and short course yards breaststroke. Weiss will be following in King’s footsteps to Indiana University, though not until the fall of 2019 – the season after King exhausts her eligibility.

Weiss also split a 27.29 on Yorktown’s 12th-place-qualifying 200 medley relay and qualified 1st in the 200 IM with a 2:0034. In that 200 IM, Carmel’s Trude Rothrock (2:00.52) and Bloomington Hills’ Mackenzie Looze (2:00.59) are both within three-tenths of a second of a second of her in that race.

Weiss was the only record-breaker in prelims, though Carmel junior Kelly Pash was close in both of her individual events. She qualified 1st in the 200 free in 1:45.65 (the record is 1:45.09 by Claire Adams), and then qualified 1st in the 100 free in 48.87 (the record is Amy Bilquist’s 48.36).

Pash also anchored Carmel’s top-seeded 400 free relay with a 48.85 (3:25.04 as a relay). Carmel didn’t use her on the 200 free or medley relays in prelims, but are expected to sub her in for Saturday’s finals session.

Other top qualifiers:

  • Franklin High qualified 1st in the 200 medley in 1:43.69, with Hamilton Southeastern just behind in 1:43.88.
  • Bloomington Hills’ Julia Wolf holds the top seed in the 50 free with a 23.01. The top 8 are all 23.57-or-better in a tightly-packed final. For the 2nd-straight season, all 16 finalists were under 24 seconds.
  • Carmel senior and Tennessee commiTrude Rothrock qualified 1st in the 100 fly in 53.62. That puts her two-tenths ahead of 2nd qualifier Carla Gildersleeve (53.86) from Franklin. Rothrock is chasing her 2nd-straight state title in the event. Rothrock also split 24.32 on Carmel’s 200 medley relay – the fastest in the field by more than half-a-second.
  • Kay Foley entered the meet as the 4th seed, but emerged from prelims 7-and-a-half seconds faster than anybody else in the 500 free with a prelims 4:48.02. That’s her lifetime best by more than 8 seconds.
  • Northridge qualified 1st in the 200 free relay in 1:33.86, including a 23.12 leadoff from Elsa Freitz. Carmel sits 2nd, about 8-tenths back.
  • Tessa Wrightson qualified 1st in the 100 back in 54.00.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Emily Weiss Breaks Indiana HS Breaststroke Record in Prelims

2018 Metros Psych Sheet and Schedule (updated times & final score predictions)

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By Reach for the Wall staff. Below is key information regarding the 2018 Washington Metropolitan Interscholastic Swimming and Diving Championships (Metros),
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