Indiana and Louisville tied for 2nd at 1:27.15, with all of their splits essentially within 0.1s of each other. In the first event, the 200 medley relay, Texas trotted out the same lineup we’ve seen all season ( Chris Staka, Charlie Scheinfeld, Alvin Jiang, and Daniel Krueger) and won in 1:26.60, just a bit off from the quartet’s nation-leading time of 1:26.20 from last weekend. Louisville 2nd in 1:30.83, followed by Indiana in 1:30.89. The whole Texas squad was between 22.43 and 22.84, including leadoff, and finished in 1:30.54. The meet closed with a close race in the 200 free relay. Peplowski and Oglesby picked up doubles in the 200 breast 2:11.24) and the 100 fly (53.70), respectively, before Pash wrapped up the day with her third win, a 4:13.12 in the 400 IM. ![]() Pfeifer’s time appears to be the 3rd-fastest so far this season. Pfeifer completed the distance free sweep with a 4:44.83, a time over six seconds ahead of Indiana’s Cassy Jernberg (4:51.01). The rest of the individual events were all won by swimmers who’d won earlier in the session. The Longhorns then made it two in a row as Claire Adams won the 200 back by over a second with a 1:58.96. Texas got going again after the break, as Pash beat Indiana’s Cora Dupre 49.14 to 49.31 for her second win of the session. That was immediately followed by another incredibly close race in the 50 free, where another Cardinal, Lainey Visscher, won the 50 free for the 2nd day in a row, topping Texas’s Bridget Semenuk 23.06 to 23.07. Louisville’s Grace Oglesby then narrowly edged Texas’s Lauren Case for the win in the 200 fly, winning 1:59.44 to 1:59.45. Noelle Peplowski won the 100 breast in 1:00.66, while Emily Weiss took 2nd in 1:01.05, as the two teammates swapped spots from yesterday’s LCM race. Next, Indiana interrupted the Longhorns’ streak with a 1-2 finish of their own. Finally, Texas swept the top two spots in the 100 back, with Julia Cook winning in 53.75 and Claire Adams right behind her the whole way, touching in 53.75. Next, Kelly Pash won the 200 free in 1:46.68, her second time under 1:47 this season. Evie Pfeifer won the 1000 free in 9:46.75 that should move her into the top five in the nation. From the results, Texas appears to have touched first, but was DQ’d, presumably for an early takeoff by Kelly Pash on the fly leg (-0.05rt).įrom there, Texas rattled off three straight wins. Louisville matched yesterday’s win total in the very first event, the 200 medley relay, which the Cardinals won in 1:40.15, thanks largely to Mariia Astashkina’s 27.56 split on the breastroke leg. Counsilman Billingsley Aquatic Center, Bloomington, IN.
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