Friday, September 11, 2009

A shot at redemption

If there is one D2 swimmer looking for redemption this season, it might be Milton's Jennah Haney.

She entered last year's state meet as the two-time defending champion in the 100 breaststroke, with a chance of becoming one of the few swimmers in state history to win a single event all four years in high school. But she finished runner-up to Plymouth freshman Kate Criter in one of the fastest races in state history -- five swimmers, including one in the first heat, broke the existing state record. Haney dropped 2.16 seconds from her sectional time at state, only to come up nearly half-a-second short of Criter. As she emerged from the pool after the race and looked up at her time on the scoreboard, Haney had one of those "What do I have to do?" looks on her face.

Probably no swimmer in the state greeted the news banning high-tech swimsuits like the blue70s with greater eagerness than Haney. For if any single event generated buzz and angst about the high-tech suits, it was the D2 girls breaststroke final last year at state. Records in 100-yard races usually fall in increments, not multiple seconds (Criter topped the old record, which had stood since 1996, by 2.23 seconds.), and not by multiple swimmers. Suits like the blue70s, because of their buoyancy, were viewed as especially beneficial to breaststrokers. See this article on how one elite U.S. breaststroker is changing her stroke to accomodate less-buoyant suits:

http://reachforthewall.com/2009/09/11/kukors-plans-to-change-with-the-slower-times/

And it's worth watching last year's D2 breaststroke final (see http://wiaa.tv/events/6276 starting at about the 98-minute mark), and note in particular how high Criter sits in the water; the top half of her head rarely if ever breaks the surface. Did Criter get "more" out of wearing a high-tech suit than any other swimmer in the race? Hard to tell; Criter had a very solid freshman campaign, is a very good technician with a rapid turnover, and won the race over the two other top finishes -- Haney included -- who also wore full-body high-tech suits. But it should be a fascinating race to watch this year -- all five of the swimmers who broke the state record in the race last year return.

As for Haney, she's already established some solid times early in the season, with a 1:07.27 100 breaststroke against McFarland this past week at her home pool. Haney will also face a big decision on her second event -- she's never finished lower than 3rd place at state in an individual event, but in her first two years she swam the 200 IM. Last year she switched over to the 200 free, but she finished well behind two other swimmers -- Brookfield Academy's Kelsey Hojan-Clark and Shorewood's Elli Sellinger -- who return this year. Maybe Milton's dual-meet win over McFarland showed a hint of what's to come -- Haney won the 200 IM in a very fast 2:08.29 (a time good enough to finish 2nd last year at state).

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Early returns

After a couple of weeks of girls swimming, here are a few notable times and results:

-- Madison Memorial's depth of talent is impressive. The Spartans wandered north for the UW-Eau Claire relays and emerged with a first-place win with 386 points, 82 points in front of neighborhood rival Madison West. In an all-relay meet, Memorial took six of the 12 relays, with four 2nd-place finishes. Memorial has also topped tough Big Eight rivals West (109-61) and Verona (112-58, a very good win considering two-time state champ Jackie Powell took the night off). Memorial has a young but versatile squad this year, with key contributions from several sophomores; how its young group of swimmers develop over the course of the season will be a big factor in how the Spartans match up against the D1 field in November.

-- In a very tight contest, Madison Edgewood beat out Oregon and Milton to win the Badger Conference South relays meet. Edgewood scored 132 points to 126 for Oregon and 124 for Milton, with McFarland in 4th place with 104 points. The meet was decided in the last event -- the 400 free relay -- with Edgewood and Oregon battling it out in an extremely close race. It came down to the anchor legs for each team, and appropriately featured two senior sprinters -- Edgewood's Kelsey Richards and Oregon's Rachel Walsh -- who have been two of the conference's better sprinters for the past four years. Richards held off her rival from Oregon as Edgewood won with a time of 3:45.56, just .15 seconds ahead of Oregon. DeForest won the Badger Conference North relays meet with 106 points, with Waunakee (90), Baraboo (84) and Sauk Prairie (82) trailing.

-- Sturgeon Bay/Southern Door has been impressive in some early meets, posting times that are competitive with those swum by the team late in the season last year. Notably, the Clippers star freshman Savanna Townsend set a team record in the 50 free with a time of 24.68 at the Shawaon Sprints meet, a time that would've placed 4th last year at the D2 state meet. Her 54.32 100 free time at the same meet would've placed 9th at state. The team's medley relay of Townsend, older sister Sierra Townsend, Michaela Rabas and McKenzie Trelka also set a team record time of 1:51.48 that topped the team's 11th-place finish at state last year by nearly a second. The Townsends and Trelka also teamed with Erin Hogan to swim a 1:40.89 200 free relay, which would've placed 7th last year at state. ""It was pretty scary," Clippers coach Mike McHugh told the Door County Advocate. "I think the times are remarkable for this early in the season." The Clippers don't regularly face the caliber of teams that Madison and Milwaukee-area D2 teams do, but they continue to make a case for a strong showing this November at the state meet.

-- Madison East junior Aja Van Hout, the state's best swimmer, often finds herself swimming against her own time standards, given that few swimmers in the state can keep up with her. But she's just as good when faced with a hill to climb. Against Middleton recently, Van Hout anchored East's 200 and 400 free relays to victories, overcoming large deficits in doing so. In the 200 free relay, she swam a 22.92 anchor leg after entering the water nearly three seconds behind. In the 400 free relay, she swam a 50.79 anchor leg after entering the water nearly four seconds behind. In each case, she ran down veteran state meet swimmers for Middleton. Oh, and her winning individual times: 1:52.34 in the 200 free and 4:56.22 in the 500 free -- a time only a small handful of swimmers in the history of the state have topped.

-- Keep an eye on Brookfield East sophomore Sara Brzozowski. Against Menomonee Falls/Sussex Hamilton this past week, she won the 200 freestyle in 1:55.91 and the 500 freestyle in 5:06.00 -- both impressive times for this early in the season. Brzozowski qualified for state last year in the 500, finishing 19th with a time of 5:17.16. It's not unusual to see young swimmers make big strides in distance events from year to year. And the 500 free may be the single most loaded event this year in D1 -- 15 of the top 16 placers from last year's meet return, including the top 8. With four returning swimmers having already broken 5 minutes in their careers (Van Hout, Middleton's Katie Delaney, and Muskego's Brittany Walsh and Jessica Wolf), the 500 free has the potential to be one of the best events to watch at the state meet this year.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Big early win for Shorewood

Give Shorewood and Whitefish Bay a lot of credit. The two Div. 2 powers in girls swimming aren't in the same conference, but they have a tradition of swimming against each other in an early-season dual meet. The two teams are expected to be among the top five or so squads this year competing for the D2 state title.

This week, they met again, and Shorewood eked out an 87-83 win, clinching the victory with a win in the meet-ending 400 free relay. Shorewood stars Claire Chamberlain and Elli Sellinger led the way, with four individual wins between them and helping Shorewood to wins in the 400 free and 200 medley relays. Ellen Stello provided the depth Shorewood has been looking for, with wins in the 100 fly and 500 free. WBay kept it close with its superior depth, and the team picked up wins from Maggie Smith in 50 free and Lauren Van Loon in the 200 free, along with its 200 free relay.

These two teams will be interesting to watch as the season progresses, and they are a study in contrasts. Shorewood has the kind of top-tier talent that goes a long way at the state meet, but WBay has the kind of depth that can qualify lots of individuals, and all three relays, for state. They both should be fun to watch. And kudos to those involved at each school for maintaining this compelling non-conference rivalry.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

By the way -- no season switch

Lost in all the hullabaloo over swimsuits comes this announcement from the WIAA: girls and boys swim seasons will stay where they are -- girls in the fall, boys in the winter. A year ago, the WIAA appeared poised to switch the seasons, following a lawsuit over the placement of a number of girls and boys seasons in Michigan.

But WIAA assistant director Tom Shafranski, in his video presentation (available on WIAATV.com) on the upcoming swim seasons, said the WIAA's Board of Control has decided to keep the current swim seasons in place. One factor cited by Shafranski: the lack of support for the idea among high school swim coaches. WISCA, the state association for swim coaches, played a key role in surveying its membership on the idea of switching seasons, and few reported that they favored the move.

Making it to state

I always like stories such as these:

http://www.htrnews.com/article/20090830/MAN020507/908300438/1378/MAN02/Lincoln-looks-to-end-state-drought

It's been seven years since Manitowoc Lincoln -- one of the larger high schools in Wisconsin -- has sent a swimmer to the D1 state meet. Sometimes lost in all the speculation about who will win state, and what records may be broken, is that for some teams, simply qualifying for the state meet and competing against the best in Wisconsin is a notable goal and accomplishment.

It's clearly the focus these days for the Manitowoc girls team. Here's an excerpt from the above article:

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Seven years.

It's a fact not lost on Ships' head coach Vance Higdon nor his crew of swimmers, and it's a drought that all involved hope to bring to an end this season.

"We do talk about. If I don't, the girls do. They are so motivated," Higdon said. "We have girls with a lot of desire that go about attacking their times. They really want to lower their times."

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Last Feburary, I noted that Jefferson's boys program ended a 10-year drought when it qualified for the D2 state meet in two individual events and the 200 free relay. There are few more exciting venues for Wisconsin high school athletes to compete in than the UW Natatorium, packed literally to the rafters, during a state high school swim meet. Here's hoping the Manitowoc swimmers can reach their goal this fall.

Good to see her back

Two years ago, Wisconsin Rapids' freshman Becca Weiland burst on to the Wisconsin swimming scene with two 3rd-place finishes at the Div. 1 state meet in the 50 and 100 frees. She seemed destined to some day win a state title in at least one of the sprints.

But last year proved to be a disappointment, as Weiland's sophomore season was derailed by a shoulder injury that prevented her from competing at the sectional qualifying meet.

Weiland is now back, and joins a team that in her absence established a presence at the state meet -- its 200 medley relay finished 19th with three underclassmen, including Becca's youngster sister Racheal. Weiland will certainly be aiming for a return trip to state in two individual events, and also joining her state-meet veteran teammates on potentially two relays with the hopes of another visit to the D1 meet.

blue70s: Here today, gone tomorrow

Here's the upshot of the long-running high-tech swimsuit debate: Watch what you wear at this year's sectional swim meets.

By now, most in the high school swim community are aware of the ban announced on full-body, high-tech suits. The suits were credited (or blamed, depending on your take on these things) for a season (both boys and girls) in which fast times were the norm, and record times were not surprising (e.g., at last year's Div. 2 state meet, five swimmers broke the state record in the 100 breaststroke, and it was lowered by an astounding 2.23 seconds). For many swimmers, the suit of choice was the full-body blue70s; it wasn't unusual to see entire heats at the state meet (or entire teams, in the case of DeForest's girls team at the Baraboo sectional) wearing the suits.

Here's the press release from the National Federation of State High School Associations announcing the ban on high-tech suits:

http://www.nfhs.org/web/2009/08/hightech_swimsuits_banned_in_hi.aspx

The WIAA has said it will follow the ban recommendations. This is the annual WIAA sports meeting presentation that details the WIAA's interpretation of the ban (the section devoted to suits starts at about 22 minutes and runs for about five minutes):

http://wiaa.tv/events/6683

In short, it sounds like the blue70s are out, while TYRs and Speedos (though it's unclear about the LZRs) are in. Here is some additional information posted by the WIAA recently about the ban:

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SWIMSUIT TECHNOLOGY
Question: Should officials inspect swimmers if they view a potential violation of the new swimming suit rule?
Interpretation: No, all questions regarding the legality of a swimming suit are directed to the coach of the swimmer involved. If no violation is observed by the official, then there is no violation. If a potential violation is observed by an official, the coach of the swimmer is contacted. The coach handles the inspection
and reports to the official whether or not there is a violation.

Question: Will a list of legal or illegal swimming suits be available?
Interpretation: The NFHS is currently informing us that they will not be providing a list of suits at this time. Through their discussions with the NCAA, USA-S, Speedo, and TYR, the requirements of made of textile, permeable and no aid in buoyancy should be easy to just observe. The manufacturers are not making anything that won’t be in compliance. Should a list become available, it will be provided to school administrators, WISCA leadership and WIAA officials.

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Coaches, swimmers and parents may want to pay particular attention to the WIAA sports presentation clip as it pertains to the role of officials and coaches at meets, and the procedure that will be used for identifying, and potentially DQing, swimmers wearing non-conforming suits. The WIAA says it will equate decisions about suits on the pool deck the same way it rules on jewelry. But given that most jewelry takes seconds to take off, and most high-tech suits take several minutes to put on, it's likely that a swimmer risks a DQ (because meet officials won't hold up the meet for a suit change) if they step up to the blocks for a race wearing a banned suit.