2017 NCAA DI Men's Swimming & Diving ChampionshipsMar 26, 2017 by Maclin Simpson
NCAA Day Four Finals: Texas Caps Three-Peat With Record-Breaking 400 F.R.
NCAA Day Four Finals: Texas Caps Three-Peat With Record-Breaking 400 F.R.
Live updates from Saturday's finals at the 2017 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming & Diving Championships featuring Clark Smith in the 1650 freestyle, Ryan Murphy in the 200 backstroke, Caeleb Dressel in the 100 freestyle, Will Licon in the 200 breaststroke.

Well, that's a wrap folks. ​The Texas Longhorns capped an incredible week in Indianapolis at the 2017 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships in record-breaking fashion -- destroying the NCAA, meet, and U.S. Open records in the 400 freestyle relay with a blistering time of 2:45.39. Texas won four out of the six swimming events contested Saturday -- 1650 freestyle, 200 breaststroke, 200 butterfly, and 400 freestyle relay -- each of them a new NCAA and U.S. Open record.
After four thrilling days of competition, Texas claimed its third consecutive team championship with 542 points. California secured second with 349 points; Florida grabbed third with 294.5 points. NC State finished fourth with 272.5 points, and Stanford rounded out the top five with 242 points.
NCAA Record:14:24.08 (Martin Grodzki - Georgia, 2012) 14:22.41 (Clark Smith - Texas, 2017)
Meet Record:14:24.08 (Martin Grodzki - Georgia, 2012) 14:22.41 (Clark Smith - Texas, 2017)
American Record:14:23.52 (Connor Jaeger, 2014) 14:22.41 (Clark Smith - Texas, 2017)
U.S. Open Record:14:23.52 (Connor Jaeger, 2014) 14:22.41 (Clark Smith - Texas, 2017)
If that race does not get you fired up, then you likely don't have a pulse.​ The top four guys just swam the four fastest times in history. ​PJ Ransford ​of Michigan set the pace early out of lane one going 8:43.37 to the feet at the 1000, but the rest of the field caught him with about 500 yards to go. At that point it was a game of cat and mouse between ​Clark Smith​ of Texas, ​Jordan Wilimovsky ​of Northwestern, ​Akaram Mahmoud​ of South Carolina, and ​Felix Auboeck​ of Michigan. They all paced off of one another until the last 50, where they shifted into another gear and went into an all-out sprint. In the end, Smith took the win with a time of 14:22.41 -- setting new NCAA, meet, American, and U.S. Open records. Auboeck touched for second in 14:22.88. Mahmoud grabbed the bronze in 14:22.99, and Wilimovsky snagged fourth in 14:23.45. Unbelievable.​
​
1.) Clark Smith (Texas): 14:22.41 (NCAA, American, & U.S. Open Record)
2.) Felix Auboeck (Michigan): 14:22.88
3.) Akaram Mahmoud (South Carolina): 14:22.99
4.) Jordan Wilimovsky (Northwestern): 14:23.45
5.) Matt Hutchins (Wisconsin): 14:31.19
6.) PJ Ransford (Michigan): 14:32.35
7.) Anton Ipsen (NC State): 14:34.85
8.) Grant Shoults (Stanford): 14:35.82
NCAA Record: 1:35.73 (Ryan Murphy - California, 2016)
Meet Record: 1:35.73 (Ryan Murphy - California, 2016)
American Record: 1:35.73 (Ryan Murphy - California, 2016)
U.S. Open Record: 1:35.73 (Ryan Murphy - California, 2016)
Ryan Murphy took the win in 1:36.75 and officially solidified himself as one of the all-time backstroke greats. Double Olympic gold medal and 100m backstroke world record in Rio? Check. NCAA four-peat in the 100 backstroke? Check. NCAA four-peat in the 200 backstroke? Check. ​John Shebat​ of Texas set the pace early and fought like hell. Shebat led at the 100 46.82 to 47.24 and maintained his lead at the 150 over Murphy 1:11.62 to 1:12.01. But in the end, Murphy's closing speed was too much for the Longhorns sophomore as he out-split Shebat 24.74 to 25.62 over the final 50 yards. Regardless, Shebat pushed Murphy to his limit in this race and took a hard-earned silver medal in 1:37.24. ​Patrick Mulcare ​of USC made a strong push as well to pull up to the leaders and finish third in 1:37.80.​
​
1.) Ryan Murphy (California): 1:36.75
2.) John Shebat (Texas): 1:37.24
3.) Patrick Mulcare (USC): 1:37.80
4.) Connor Oslin (Alabama): 1:39.23
5.) Grigory Tarasevich (Louisville): 1:39.73
6.) Carter Griffin (Mizzou): 1:40.20
7.) Anton Loncar (Denver): 1:40.64
8.) Jonathan Roberts (Texas): 1:41.35
NCAA Record:40.46 (Caeleb Dressel - Florida, 2016) 40.00 (Caeleb Dressel - Florida, 2017)
Meet Record:40.46 (Caeleb Dressel - Florida, 2016) 40.00 (Caeleb Dressel - Florida, 2017)
American Record:40.46 (Caeleb Dressel - Florida, 2016) 40.00 (Caeleb Dressel - Florida, 2017)
U.S. Open Record:40.46 (Caeleb Dressel - Florida, 2016) 40.00 (Caeleb Dressel - Florida, 2017)
​​CAELEB DRESSEL!?​ What on earth just happened? Dressel just unloaded a 40.00 100 freestyle. Think about that for a second. Let it sink in. Now, appreciate it and look forward to the day he unloads a 39. Dressel rocketed out at the 50, popping a 19.01 to the feet and came home in an unbelievably fast 20.99. This guy is on another planet -- there is no doubt about it. ​Michael Chadwick​ of Missouri had a phenomenal swim to drop a 40.95, and ​Ryan Held ​of NC State grabbed the bronze with a 41.21. What a race.​
1.) Caeleb Dressel (Florida): 40.00 (NCAA, American, & U.S. Open Record)
2.) Michael Chadwick (Mizzou): 40.95
3.) Ryan Held (NC State): 41.21
4.) Dylan Carter (USC): 41.76
5.) Santo Condorelli (USC): 41.77
5.) Brett Ringgold (Texas): 41.77
7.) Sam Perry (Stanford): 41.80
8.) Blake Pieroni (Indiana): 41.85
NCAA Record:1:48.12 (Will Licon - Texas, 2016) 1:47.91 (Will Licon, 2017)
Meet Record:1:48.12 (Will Licon - Texas, 2016) 1:47.91 (Will Licon, 2017)
American Record:1:48.12 (Will Licon - Texas, 2016) 1:47.91 (Will Licon, 2017)
U.S. Open Record:1:48.12 (Will Licon - Texas, 2016) 1:47.91 (Will Licon, 2017)
​​Will Licon​ had a body length lead at the 75 -- nobody was going to touch the Longhorns senior in this race. Out in 51.42 at the 100, Licon blazed home untouched to take the win in 1:47.91. Yes, I know what you are asking yourself -- he did, in fact, swim this race breaststroke. Will Licon is ​​that​ good. Grabbing the silver was ​Anton McKee​ of Alabama in 1:51.22, and picking up the bronze was ​Mauro Luna Castillo ​of Texas A&M in 1:52.09. ​
​
1.) Will Licon (Texas): 1:47.91 (NCAA, American, & U.S. Open Record)
2.) Anton McKee (Alabama): 1:51.22
3.) Mauro Castillo Luna (Texas A&M): 1:52.09
4.) Brandon Fiala (Virginia Tech): 1:52.71
5.) Carlos Claverie (Louisville): 1:52.81
6.) Nils Wich-Glasen (South Carolina): 1:52.87
7.) Marat Amaltdinov (Purdue): 1:53.04
8.) Trent Jackson (Notre Dame): 1:55.24
NCAA Record:1:37.97 (Joseph Schooling - Texas, 2016) 1:37.35 (Jack Conger, 2017)
Meet Record:1:37.97 (Joseph Schooling - Texas, 2016) 1:37.35 (Jack Conger, 2017)
American Record:1:38.06 (Jack Conger - Texas, 2016) 1:37.35 (Jack Conger, 2017)
U.S. Open Record:1:37.97 (Joseph Schooling - Texas, 2016) 1:37.35 (Jack Conger, 2017)
​JACK CONGER! ​The Texas senior just unloaded a 1:37.35 - the fastest time in history. What is in the water tonight in Indianapolis? It sounds cliche, but it was evident Conger wanted this race. ​Badly. ​He torched through the first 100 yards in 45.78, way under record pace, and swam a gutsy back 100 to take the win in NCAA, American, and U.S. Open record-breaking fashion. Touching in second was ​Zheng Quah ​of Cal in 1:38.83, and getting his hand on the wall for the bronze was ​Gunnar Bentz​ of Georgia in 1:40.07.​
​
1.) Jack Conger (Texas): 1:37.35 (NCAA, American, & US Open Record)
2.) Zheng Quah (Cal): 1:38.83
3.) Gunnar Bentz (Georgia): 1:40.07
4.) Pace Clark (Georgia): 1:40.41
5.) Andreas Vazaios (NC State): 1:40.80
6.) Andrew Seliskar (Cal): 1:40.91
7.) Justin Wright (Arizona): 1:40.94
*Chase Kalisz (Georgia): disqualified*
NCAA Record:2:46.03 (Auburn, 2009) 2:45.39 (Texas, 2017)
Meet Record:2:46.56 (Auburn, 2007) 2:45.39 (Texas, 2017)
American Record: 2:47.02 (Texas, 2009)
U.S. Open Record:2:46.03 (Auburn, 2009) 2:45.39 (Texas, 2017)
​The Texas Longhorns capped an NCAA team title by destroying the NCAA, meet, and U.S. Open records in the 400 freestyle relay with a blistering time of 2:45.39. ​​Brett Ringgold​ got the Longhorns off to a strong start by posting a 42.06. His teammates ​Jack Conger ​(41.30), ​Townley Haas​ (41.01), and ​Joseph Schooling​ (41.02) brought it home swiftly to clinch the championship for Texas. Thanks to a blazing 40.48 leadoff from ​Caeleb Dressel​, Florida actually had the lead going into the anchor leg; however, Schooling out-split ​Mark Szaranek​ 19.20 to 20.11 over the first 50 yards to give the Longhorns the lead. It appears Schooling benefited from having a bit of extra rest tonight and was fueled by the success of his teammates. Florida ended up touching in second with a 2:46.21, and Southern Cal grabbed the bronze with a 2:47.33.
1.) Texas: 2:45.39 (NCAA, Meet, & US Open Record)
2.) Florida: 2:46.21
3.) Southern Cal: 2:47.33
4.) California: 2:48.49
5.) Stanford: 2:48.80
6.) Arizona State: 2:49.00
7.) NC State: 2:49.09
8.) Indiana: 2:49.53
1.) Texas - 542 points
2.) California - 349 points
3.) Florida - 294.5 points
4.) NC State - 272.5 points
5.) Stanford - 242 points
6.) Southern Cal - 237 points
7.) Indiana - 229.5 points
8.) Georgia - 183 points
9.) Missouri - 179.5 points
10.) Alabama - 153.5 points
After four thrilling days of competition, Texas claimed its third consecutive team championship with 542 points. California secured second with 349 points; Florida grabbed third with 294.5 points. NC State finished fourth with 272.5 points, and Stanford rounded out the top five with 242 points.
1650 FREESTYLE
NCAA Record:
Meet Record:
American Record:
U.S. Open Record:
If that race does not get you fired up, then you likely don't have a pulse.​ The top four guys just swam the four fastest times in history. ​PJ Ransford ​of Michigan set the pace early out of lane one going 8:43.37 to the feet at the 1000, but the rest of the field caught him with about 500 yards to go. At that point it was a game of cat and mouse between ​Clark Smith​ of Texas, ​Jordan Wilimovsky ​of Northwestern, ​Akaram Mahmoud​ of South Carolina, and ​Felix Auboeck​ of Michigan. They all paced off of one another until the last 50, where they shifted into another gear and went into an all-out sprint. In the end, Smith took the win with a time of 14:22.41 -- setting new NCAA, meet, American, and U.S. Open records. Auboeck touched for second in 14:22.88. Mahmoud grabbed the bronze in 14:22.99, and Wilimovsky snagged fourth in 14:23.45. Unbelievable.​
​
1.) Clark Smith (Texas): 14:22.41 (NCAA, American, & U.S. Open Record)
2.) Felix Auboeck (Michigan): 14:22.88
3.) Akaram Mahmoud (South Carolina): 14:22.99
4.) Jordan Wilimovsky (Northwestern): 14:23.45
5.) Matt Hutchins (Wisconsin): 14:31.19
6.) PJ Ransford (Michigan): 14:32.35
7.) Anton Ipsen (NC State): 14:34.85
8.) Grant Shoults (Stanford): 14:35.82
200 BACKSTROKE
NCAA Record: 1:35.73 (Ryan Murphy - California, 2016)
Meet Record: 1:35.73 (Ryan Murphy - California, 2016)
American Record: 1:35.73 (Ryan Murphy - California, 2016)
U.S. Open Record: 1:35.73 (Ryan Murphy - California, 2016)
Ryan Murphy took the win in 1:36.75 and officially solidified himself as one of the all-time backstroke greats. Double Olympic gold medal and 100m backstroke world record in Rio? Check. NCAA four-peat in the 100 backstroke? Check. NCAA four-peat in the 200 backstroke? Check. ​John Shebat​ of Texas set the pace early and fought like hell. Shebat led at the 100 46.82 to 47.24 and maintained his lead at the 150 over Murphy 1:11.62 to 1:12.01. But in the end, Murphy's closing speed was too much for the Longhorns sophomore as he out-split Shebat 24.74 to 25.62 over the final 50 yards. Regardless, Shebat pushed Murphy to his limit in this race and took a hard-earned silver medal in 1:37.24. ​Patrick Mulcare ​of USC made a strong push as well to pull up to the leaders and finish third in 1:37.80.​
​
1.) Ryan Murphy (California): 1:36.75
2.) John Shebat (Texas): 1:37.24
3.) Patrick Mulcare (USC): 1:37.80
4.) Connor Oslin (Alabama): 1:39.23
5.) Grigory Tarasevich (Louisville): 1:39.73
6.) Carter Griffin (Mizzou): 1:40.20
7.) Anton Loncar (Denver): 1:40.64
8.) Jonathan Roberts (Texas): 1:41.35
100 FREESTYLE
NCAA Record:
Meet Record:
American Record:
U.S. Open Record:
​​CAELEB DRESSEL!?​ What on earth just happened? Dressel just unloaded a 40.00 100 freestyle. Think about that for a second. Let it sink in. Now, appreciate it and look forward to the day he unloads a 39. Dressel rocketed out at the 50, popping a 19.01 to the feet and came home in an unbelievably fast 20.99. This guy is on another planet -- there is no doubt about it. ​Michael Chadwick​ of Missouri had a phenomenal swim to drop a 40.95, and ​Ryan Held ​of NC State grabbed the bronze with a 41.21. What a race.​
1.) Caeleb Dressel (Florida): 40.00 (NCAA, American, & U.S. Open Record)
2.) Michael Chadwick (Mizzou): 40.95
3.) Ryan Held (NC State): 41.21
4.) Dylan Carter (USC): 41.76
5.) Santo Condorelli (USC): 41.77
5.) Brett Ringgold (Texas): 41.77
7.) Sam Perry (Stanford): 41.80
8.) Blake Pieroni (Indiana): 41.85
200 BREASTSTROKE
NCAA Record:
Meet Record:
American Record:
U.S. Open Record:
​​Will Licon​ had a body length lead at the 75 -- nobody was going to touch the Longhorns senior in this race. Out in 51.42 at the 100, Licon blazed home untouched to take the win in 1:47.91. Yes, I know what you are asking yourself -- he did, in fact, swim this race breaststroke. Will Licon is ​​that​ good. Grabbing the silver was ​Anton McKee​ of Alabama in 1:51.22, and picking up the bronze was ​Mauro Luna Castillo ​of Texas A&M in 1:52.09. ​
​
1.) Will Licon (Texas): 1:47.91 (NCAA, American, & U.S. Open Record)
2.) Anton McKee (Alabama): 1:51.22
3.) Mauro Castillo Luna (Texas A&M): 1:52.09
4.) Brandon Fiala (Virginia Tech): 1:52.71
5.) Carlos Claverie (Louisville): 1:52.81
6.) Nils Wich-Glasen (South Carolina): 1:52.87
7.) Marat Amaltdinov (Purdue): 1:53.04
8.) Trent Jackson (Notre Dame): 1:55.24
200 BUTTERFLY
NCAA Record:
Meet Record:
American Record:
U.S. Open Record:
​JACK CONGER! ​The Texas senior just unloaded a 1:37.35 - the fastest time in history. What is in the water tonight in Indianapolis? It sounds cliche, but it was evident Conger wanted this race. ​Badly. ​He torched through the first 100 yards in 45.78, way under record pace, and swam a gutsy back 100 to take the win in NCAA, American, and U.S. Open record-breaking fashion. Touching in second was ​Zheng Quah ​of Cal in 1:38.83, and getting his hand on the wall for the bronze was ​Gunnar Bentz​ of Georgia in 1:40.07.​
​
1.) Jack Conger (Texas): 1:37.35 (NCAA, American, & US Open Record)
2.) Zheng Quah (Cal): 1:38.83
3.) Gunnar Bentz (Georgia): 1:40.07
4.) Pace Clark (Georgia): 1:40.41
5.) Andreas Vazaios (NC State): 1:40.80
6.) Andrew Seliskar (Cal): 1:40.91
7.) Justin Wright (Arizona): 1:40.94
*Chase Kalisz (Georgia): disqualified*
400 FREESTYLE RELAY
NCAA Record:
Meet Record:
American Record: 2:47.02 (Texas, 2009)
U.S. Open Record:
​The Texas Longhorns capped an NCAA team title by destroying the NCAA, meet, and U.S. Open records in the 400 freestyle relay with a blistering time of 2:45.39. ​​Brett Ringgold​ got the Longhorns off to a strong start by posting a 42.06. His teammates ​Jack Conger ​(41.30), ​Townley Haas​ (41.01), and ​Joseph Schooling​ (41.02) brought it home swiftly to clinch the championship for Texas. Thanks to a blazing 40.48 leadoff from ​Caeleb Dressel​, Florida actually had the lead going into the anchor leg; however, Schooling out-split ​Mark Szaranek​ 19.20 to 20.11 over the first 50 yards to give the Longhorns the lead. It appears Schooling benefited from having a bit of extra rest tonight and was fueled by the success of his teammates. Florida ended up touching in second with a 2:46.21, and Southern Cal grabbed the bronze with a 2:47.33.
1.) Texas: 2:45.39 (NCAA, Meet, & US Open Record)
2.) Florida: 2:46.21
3.) Southern Cal: 2:47.33
4.) California: 2:48.49
5.) Stanford: 2:48.80
6.) Arizona State: 2:49.00
7.) NC State: 2:49.09
8.) Indiana: 2:49.53
FINAL TEAM SCORES
1.) Texas - 542 points
2.) California - 349 points
3.) Florida - 294.5 points
4.) NC State - 272.5 points
5.) Stanford - 242 points
6.) Southern Cal - 237 points
7.) Indiana - 229.5 points
8.) Georgia - 183 points
9.) Missouri - 179.5 points
10.) Alabama - 153.5 points