2009 Conference Championships / Big 12 Swimming

Links to more 2009 NCAA conf meets 2009 Big 12 Swimming & Diving Championships at the Mizzou Aquatics Center RESULTS Psych Sheet Last Years Results Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Wed Feb. 25 Prelims 4:30 PM 1M Diving - M Finals 6:00 PM 200 Medley Relay 1M Diving - M *800 Free Relay Thu Feb. 26 Prelims 10:00 AM 500 Freestyle 200 Indiv. Medley 50 Freestyle (15 minute break) 400 Medley Relay 1:00 PM 1M Diving - W Finals 6:00 PM 500 Freestyle 200 Indiv. Medley 50 Freestyle 1M Diving - W 400 Medley Relay Fri Feb. 27 Prelims 10:00 AM 200 Freestyle Relay 400 Iniv. Medley 100 Butterfly 200 Freestyle 100 Breaststroke 100 Backstroke 10:30 AM 3M Diving - M 1:30 PM 3M Diving - W 5:00 PM 3M Diving - M Finals 6:00 PM 200 Freestyle Relay 400 Iniv. Medley 100 Butterfly 200 Freestyle 100 Breaststroke 100 Backstroke 3M Diving - W Sat Feb. 28 Prelims 10:00 AM 200 Backstroke 100 Freestyle 200 Breaststroke 200 Butterfly (15 minute break) 400 Freestyle Relay 12:30 PM Platform Diving - W 3:00 PM Platform Diving - M 5:00 PM Platform Diving - W Finals 6:00 PM 200 Backstroke 100 Freestyle **1650 Freestyle 200 Breaststroke 200 Butterfly Platform Diving - M 400 Freestyle Relay
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    . I remember when breaking the 4 minute barrier was a pretty big deal, now we have 23 guys doing it in the morning. I believe it was Gary Hall swimming in the NCAA meet in 1973 who first went under 4:00 in the 400IM. Later in the meet he anchored Indiana's 800 relay, chasing down USC's Frank Heckle. Hall touched him out as both teams shattered the NCAA record. Mark Spitz was so excited he jumped into the pool!!! BEEEP!!!! DQ Indiana!!! There were still teams that hadn't finished the race. Oops.
  • . I remember when breaking the 4 minute barrier was a pretty big deal, now we have 23 guys doing it in the morning. I believe it was Gary Hall swimming in the NCAA meet in 1973 who first went under 4:00 in the 400IM. Later in the meet he anchored Indiana's 800 relay, chasing down USC's Frank Heckle. Hall touched him out as both teams shattered the NCAA record. Mark Spitz was so excited he jumped into the pool!!! BEEEP!!!! DQ Indiana!!! There were still teams that hadn't finished the race. Oops. These statements are only partially true. In 1973, Steve Furniss of USC won the 400 IM and he broke the American Record of 3:58.09 by Gary Hall with a time of 3:55.16 and Gary Hall did not even swim the event. He swam the 100 Fly, 200 Fly which he won, and the 200 IM in which he got second to Steve Furniss. I remember this well because I was at the meet and saw the performances at the University of Tennessee. Mark Spitz was not at this meet because he graduated in 1972 and retired from swimming after the 1972 Olympics. At the 1972 NCAA Championships at West Point, Gary Hall won but went faster with the 3:58.09 at the AAU Nationals in Dallas a couple of weeks later. At the 1972 NCAA Championships it was the first time that 3 swimmers went under the 4 minute barrier in the Championship final. Gary Hall was first with a 3:58.71 and second was Steve Furniss at 3:58.82 and third was Rick Colella at 3:59.61. The first time the 4 minute barrier was broken in the 400 IM was in 1969 when Gary Hall was a High School senior and he swam a 3:59.70 to shatter the US Open Record of Hans Fassnacht of 4:07.70 set at the 1969 NCAA Championships. These efforts helped him win the Swimmer of the Year Award in 1969. The next year, the NCAA Championships were in Utah at altitude and Hall managed to swim a 4:07.31 to break the NCAA Record. The next year in 1971, he swam a 3:58.25 to break his record that he set back in High School. The 800 Free Relay you are referring to was in 1971 and not 1972 or 1973. In 1972 USC won with Jim McConica going the anchor leg against Gary Hall and USC won 6:38.63 to Indiana second place time of 6:40.13 and in 1973 the roles were reversed with Indiana winning with a time of 6:36.39 to USC second place time of 6:39.44 and Gary Hall swam against Jim McConica again but I am not sure of the splits for both swimmers. The 800 Free Relay disqualification you are referring to was at the 1971 NCAA Championships at Iowa State. It was not Mark Spitz but John Kinsella that jumped in the pool to congratulate Hall before the other competitors finished the race. Both teams broke the American Record by 9 seconds but Indiana was disqualified and it didn't not count. If it would have counted, Gary Hall would have had the fastest split at that time for a 200 Free in an 800 Relay.
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I didn't know that Pablo Morales was coaching at Nebraska?! How cool is that!
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    The Big Ten Network's coverage of the women's championship was horrible!
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Frank Thompson I was at that meet where the DQ occurred and remember it clearly, but obviously my memory sucks!
  • I watched some of the Sunday ECAC sessions. There was a video/audio stream, Java scoreboard, and online heat sheets. Whoever was running the meet (Osterber?) did a good job! :agree: That was me at ECACs. We also had a real-time diving scoreboard with dive-by-dive and judge-by-judge reporting of each diving event for our diving fans. People were starting to point out that we're at the point that you sometimes get more and better information at home than you do at the pool. -Rick
  • ... Mike McLean, the former Stanford swimmer who was erased from the all-time list in the Stanford media guide ... The way you phrased that makes me think there's a story to be told.
  • According to the Stanford Athletics' website, Michael's parents names are Michael and Diane. UVa's Athletics' website lists Matt's parents as Duncan and Anne. Although the Stanford grad does have a younger brother named Matt who should be the same age. Plus, one is from Virginia and the other is from Connecticut (the middle C is silent)! Parents are Michael and Diane McLean ... Has one sister, Megan (19) who swims at Bowdoin College, and one brother, Matt (15) who swims at Simsbury High School
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Does anyone know: Is Matt McLean the younger brother of Mike McLean, the former Stanford swimmer who was erased from the all-time list in the Stanford media gude a few years back?
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    The way you phrased that makes me think there's a story to be told. Skip Kenney served a suspension over the following incident: www.sfgate.com/.../article.cgi