Apr 302014
 


The USA Swimming Grand Prix circuit for 2014 is comprised of six swim meets across the country with the meet in Mesa, Arizona being the forth stop for those competing among the Olympic Athletes who have historically represented countries around the globe. This year’s Mesa meet was different, partly because of the return of Michael Phelps onto the competitive stage, and also for two of our swimmers qualifying for the televised finals broadcast on Universal Sports live, and one of whom qualified to the Championship heat alongside the likes of Olympic Gold Medalist and Olympic and American Record Holder Tyler Clary, North Carolina’s, and USA Swimming National Team members, Tom Luchsinger, and Stanford’s Bobby Bollier.

Nolan 2014 Mesa2 Nolan 2014 Mesa5

Christopher Nolan came home with a 7th place finish in the final heat of the 200 meter butterfly after outperforming names such as Tom Shields during the preliminary heats.  Chris’s time in the fastest seeded heat of 2:04.99 came in second behind Tyler Clary. Chris also earned a second swim in the 400 IM moving from 30th in the D-final after swimming 4:44.89 to 29th. He improved his 200 meter freestyle to a 1:58.82.

Mallory 2014 Mesa2 Mallory 20143

Mallory Korenwinder earned a spot on live TV in the 100 meter breaststroke after swimming a time of 1:13.34 in the preliminary heats. She was one of only two 15-year old swimmers among the top-16. Her time has posted as the top 15-year old nationally to date. Her second final was in the 200 breaststroke where her 2:43.02 was enough for a 28th place finish in the D-final.

Sixteen year old Lauren Davis made it to her first showing among the Olympians with her highest finish at 38th in the 100 breaststroke, and a time of 1:19.68.

Pictures taken by Swimming World Magazine at the Mesa Grand Prix, such as those presented here, can be found on the Swimming World Facebook site at https://www.facebook.com/SwimmingWorld/photos_stream

Lauren 2014 MEsa

 Posted by at 22:53
Apr 142014
 

Fifteen TNT swimmers participated in the Merced long course meet on the second Saturday of April, and eight of them improved 100% of their times, with an additional three improving 50% or more of their times. Our 100% improvements came from Danielle Albright (4 of 4), Janessa Bringe (3 of 3), Layla Flores (4 of 4), Tristan Gaines (3 of 3), Jakob Koorey (3 of 3), Garrison Price (3 of 3), Alex Roberts (4 of 4) and Katherine Sullivan (4 of 4).

Two of our swimmers came home undefeated in their age group. Eight year old Damian Brown won all four of his events, and improved over five seconds in the 50 meter freestyle (39.83), while fourteen year old Jakob Koorey won all four of his events. His greatest improvement was over nine seconds in the 200 breaststroke event (2:49.87). Other event champions included Laruen Davis (200 breaststroke – 2:57.36), Alonso Escobedo (100 fly – 1:10.73 & 200 back – 2:34.45), Skylar Ford (50 free – 31.18 & 50 fly – 33.51), Daniel Haley (50 fly – 42.70), Khloe McCarthy (100 free – 1:04.97, 200 back – 2:39.59 & 400 IM – 5:30.86), Gage Price (200 free – 2:50.27), and Garrison Price (100 back – 1:23.59).

 Posted by at 19:12
Apr 142014
 

2014 SC Far Western Team - Copy

Ten year old Visalia swimmer Kylie Walker came away with the most impressive overall performance for any of the eight TNT swimmers attending the 2014 Far Western meet that took place over the first weekend of April in Morgan Hill. She improved three of her five events with the largest drop of over one second in the 100 fly where her time of 1:04.75 was not only a silver medal finish in the event, but is also currently the 9th fastest time posted by any 10-year old girl in the nation. Needless to say, her Far Western swim was an improvement of her previous team record of 1:05.99 that she swam at Junior Olympics two months earlier. Kylie’s other second place finish was in the 50 fly where her time of 29.11 slid under her preexisting record of 29.31 that she set at Junior Olympics, and her current time also stands as the 9th fastest nationally. Her final time improvement, and new record, also resulted in a championship final. Kylie swam 1:00.50 in the 100 freestyle, once again going under her preexisting record of 1:00.78 from JO’s, and finishing 8th in that event. This time currently ranks 64th nationally. She rounded out her four finals with a 27.60 in the 50 freestyle, a time that was enough for a 5th place finish at the meet.

Two additional individuals set team records, both in the 10-under boys division with one resulting in a championship final that fielded ten swimmers. Peyton Costa improved three of his ten events, the 100 back by a margin of over three seconds. The 1:11.29 earned a spot in the top-10, where he moved from 10th to 9th, and went well under Jonathan Granada’s 1:13.34 that he posted as the previous team record at the Selma meet back in 2009. Peyton’s time stands as the 223rd fastest nationally.

Visalia swimmer Benjamin Wheeler had one of the highest improvement percentages at the meet, improving three of his four events, the largest in the 500 freestyle where he improved by over 16 seconds. His time of 6:06.32 was well under the previous team record set four years ago by Alonso Escobedo at the Arizona meet as a 6:10.63. Benjamin’s time stands as the 260th fastest for any 10-year old in the nation.

Three of our swimmers improved 100% of their times, and the improvement rates were led by Toby Jones who improved six of six events, the largest drop of nearly 19 seconds in the 200 IM being the largest improvement by any TNT swimmer at the meet. Toby’s highest place was 18th in the 100 breaststroke. Danielle Albright qualified at the bottom of the age group, and improved her single event (50 breaststroke), and finished 35th there. Visalia Swimmer Janessa Bringe competed in two events, and improved by nearly five seconds in the 500 free. Her highest finish was 36th in the 200 fly. Visalia team mate Layla Flores improved two of three events. Her highest finish was 29th in the 100 breaststroke, while Selma swimmer Madison Pallares had her highest finish as 50th in the 50 breaststroke event.

 Posted by at 17:53
Apr 142014
 

Twenty-seven TNT swimmers competed in a total of 106 total events at the short course JO Max meet in Tulare on March 23rd, and 44 events resulted in improvements, while 50 of those events were new swims for our members (or 89% of them). Madelyn Brumit, Devon Cardoza, Dylan Hunt, Tanner Kelm, Olivia Machado, Daden Medeiros, Alissa Nalewajko, Ava Olson, and Parker Princewill entered and successfully competed in all new events, setting the foundation for future success, and a starting point for goals to come.

Many of our swimmers competing at the meet, had previous times, and entered new events at a meet tailored for trying new challenges. Congratulations to Caleb Bonds for swimming the 100 free, Dominic Colvin for competing in the 50 breaststroke, Erica Garcia for braving the 200 IM, Mackenzie Garza for taking on the 200 free, Morgan Garza for swimming the 50 back for the first time, Alyssa Logan for swimming under the 3:00 mark in the 200 free, Rylee Lord for swimming the 50 fly the first time, Genoveve Mcilwaine for swimming four new events, including the 100 free, Jorge Noricumbo for including the 200 free and 200 IM to his repertoire, Joseph Oliveira for adding the 50 breast to his efforts, and Mariah Oliveira successfully completed the 100 free.

Some of our more experienced swimmer had preexisting times in all of their events they competed in, and they included Jillian Gaines who improved both the 200 free and 50 breaststroke events, Brother Tristan Gaines who won the 100 back, Seiji Shinkawa who improved over 15 seconds in the 200 free, Shoji Shinkawa who improved three of four events, Aubrie Walker who improved over three seconds in the 200 free, Emmie Walker who improved nearly four seconds in the 100 IM, and Jenna Yeates who improved over ten seconds in the 100 free, and over three seconds in the 50 breaststroke.
The team’s overall improvement percentage was 57%.

 Posted by at 17:38
Apr 142014
 

2014 NCSA Juniors

Three TNT swimmers training out of the Slema program competed at the 2014 Junior Nationals in Orlando, Florida over the March 18-22 week. This meet is one of the largest senior meets in the nation fielding many of the country’s top 18-under athletes. Sixteen year old Jilluan Hatch came home with two new team records. She swam 52.57 in the 100 yard freestyle, sliding under her preexisting team record of 52.68 set last year at the Clovis meet. At the same Clovis meet last year, Jillian also swam 1:53.68 in the 200 freestyle, and while in Orlando this spring, she swam 1:53.35 to reset that record. She improved three of the four events she competed in, including the 100 free, 200 free and 50 free events. She also had the team’s highest finish of 107th in the 50 freestyle.

Emily Goodbar maintained a 60% improvement rate, improving three of her five events that included the 50 breaststroke, 50 butterfly and 50 backstroke events. Her highest finish was the in the 200 butterfly event where her time of 2:07.32 was enough for a 112th place finish in the event. Sierra Jett maintained a 50% improvement rate, improving both the 50 fly and 50 backstroke events. Her highest finish was 119th in the 50 fly, resulting from a time of 26.22. Mia Newkirk a former Hanford resident who trained TNT, now of California Capital, finished her meet with a bang, moving from 143rd to 69th in the 50 backstroke with her time of 26.96.

 Posted by at 17:37
Apr 142014
 

Kyle1 - Copy

The March issue of Splash Magazine, USA Swimming’s national publication, lists the national top-10 age group long course rankings reflective of performances ending this past summer. Kyle Grissom swam 56.22 in the 100 meter butterfly to become the 4th fastest 15-year old boy in the nation, and the second fastest 15-year old in California. The top three times included a 55.32, 55.75, and 56.04. He is one of only six swimmers from Central California Swimming to hold a national ranking for the 2013 long course season.

Kyle top-10(3)

Kyle is a Porterville resident who has qualified and competed in both last summer’s long course Junior Nationals, and this past winter’s short course Junior Nationals. While at Junior Nationals he achieved the 2013 Short Course National time standard. Kyle will bypass the Mesa Grand Prix meet, but is scheduled to compete at the Santa Clara International in efforts to attain the summer National time standard.

 Posted by at 17:31
Mar 272014
 

In preparation for the upcoming summer long course championship meets, five TNT swimmers traveled to compete in La Mirada in late February. In a unique meet schedule where two days of events were compacted into a single day due to difficulties related to pool availability, our five swimmers competed along with a handful of international swimmers representing USC. These swimmers included Nikita Lobintsev and Alexandr Sukhorukov who both represented Russia on the Silver medal 4×200 freestyle relay of the 2008 Olympics, as well as Yana Martynova from Russia who finished 24th in the 2012 Olympics in the 400 IM. Also joining the small meet was German swimmer Jan-Philip Glania who won the backstroke in La Mirada with a 2:02.65, and was the 6th place finisher in the semifinals at the 2012 Olympics. Miler Mateusz Sawrymowicz of Poland, a contemporary of 2000 and 2004 Olympic Gold Midlist Grant Hackett, also competed at the meet in his specialty event of the 1500 freestyle.

Our highest finisher was Mallory Korenwinder who came home with a first place finish in the 100 breaststroke in a time of 1:16.34, and a third place finish in the 200 breaststroke behind Martinova and a So Cal 15-year old in that event. Mallory’s time was 2:49.38. Katelyn Herrera had our next highest finish of 6th in the 800 freestyle with her time of 9:45.96, and place was followed by an 8th place swim by Owen Ansel with a 1:12.46 in the 100 breaststroke event. Chris Hansen competed in an event along with Trojan Jason Block in the 200 breaststroke, Chris finishing 11th in a time of 2:46.92. Matthew Tashima finished 18th in the 50 freestyle in a time of 26.45 where the Trojan Lobintsev took home the win in a time of 22.62.

2014 La Mirada

 Posted by at 17:51
Mar 192014
 

Eighteen TNT swimmers competed at the Juanita Allington Memorial Senior Meet that took place over the past weekend of February, and six of them earned a second swim in one of three final heats. Fifteen year old Mallory Korenwinder maintained the largest number of finals, earning four second swims in the five that she entered, and also came home with the team’s highest place. Mallory swam 2:18.30 in the 200 breaststroke event for a 3rd place finish, and matched that place in the 100 breaststroke with a time of 1:04.04. Her 2:09.36 was enough for a 6th place finish in the championship heat, and finally, she swam 58.48 in the 100 fly to finish 15th in the consolation heat.

Chris Nolan, after returning from his meet in Osaka, Japan, came home with three second swims that included a 5th place finish in the 200 fly after swimming a 1:53.14 in the preliminary heats. He had two tenth place finishes that included the 100 fly resulting from his time of 51.64, and the 100 breaststroke where his time of 1:00.98 was just ahead of teammate Cody Nash of Selma who finished 12th in the consolation heat with his time of 1:01.84.

Our other multi-finalist was Owen Ansel with two bonus finals, his highest place winning the consolation heat with a 17th place finish in the 100 breaststroke resulting from his 1:02.38. His other final came after swimming 2:16.27 in the C-final in the 200 breaststroke, and finishing 19th there. Selma swimmer Noah Haworth came home with a final in the 100 fly after swimming 53.09 in the preliminary heats, while Khloe McCarthy competed in the consolation heat in the 200 IM after swimming 2:13.27 in the preliminary heats.
Congratulations go to Josh Avila, Morgan Coddington, Lauren Davis, Alonso Escobedo, Emily Goodbar, Jillian Hatch, Katelyn Herrera, Sierra Jett, Jakob Koorey, Preston Niayesh, Jeremiah Santillana and Satoshi Shinkawa for qualifying and competing at the senior-level meet.

 Posted by at 17:26
Mar 192014
 

2014scJO2

After winning last year’s short course Junior Olympics, and last summer’s long course Junior Olympics, Tule Nation Tritons came up 373 points short of winning this year’s short course championship meet. Clovis outscored TNT 3,729.5 to 3,357.5 points in the combined women and men’s division, and outscored TNT on the women’s side 2,271.5 to 1,820.5 points. TNT male swimmers outscored all teams at the meet, leading Clovis by 79 points.

Team Points

Our total team points from individual events was led by 10-year old Visalia swimmer Kylie Walker whose 134 points resulted from five first place finishes and two second place finishes. Kylie was one of only two TNT swimmers to win an event, and was also our team’s only High Point recipient, outscoring all 10-under girls at the meet. Her performance resulted in resetting five team records beginning with the 100 fly where she improved her own team record that was set as a 1:07.77 while competing at the All Star meet last month. She improved her time by over a full second to a 1:05.99, and swimming a time that places her among the top 10 swimmers in the nation to date. Kylie proceeded to break her preexisting 100 IM team record that she set at the Tulare meet last October as a 1:10.37 with a 1:10.14 that moves her to the 64th position nationally in that event. Her third team record was in the 50 free, and is a new one for her, set by Skylar Ford at the Selma meet in 2012 as a 27.56. Kylie’s new record of 27.54 stands as the 40th fastest nationally for girls of age 10. Skylar also held the 100 freestyle team record that she set as a 1:00.99 at the Winter Age Group Invitational in 2012, and Kylie’s JO swim of 1:00.78 slid under that time, and becomes the 50th fastest nationally. Kylie rounded out the meet improving her time, and therefore team record, in the 50 fly event from a 29.41 that she swam in San Diego earlier to a 29.31, placing her among the top six nationally.

Our only other event champions included 16-year old Khloe McCarthy who went home with a win on day one, swimming 18:08.54 in the 1650 freestyle event and Preston Niayesh who swam to a first place finish in the 200 breaststroke with a time of 2:22.76 qualifying for the Terrapin Senior meet that takes place in November. Other Championship finalists included Bre Abell, Danielle Albright, Owen Ansel, Damian Brown, Morgan Coddington, Tomas Contreras, Peyton Costa, Alonso Escobedo, Layla Flores, Skylar Ford, Emily Goodbar, Kyle Grissom, Jillian Hatch, Noah Haworth, Katelyn Herrera, Jackson Huckabay, Sierra Jett, Toby Jones, Mallory Korenwinder, Khloe McCarthy, Sofia Mora, Cody Nash, Madison Pallares, Emma Pena, Garrison Price, Alex Roberts, Satoshi Shinkawa, Katherine Sullivan, Kylie Walker, Wyatt Ward, Sydnee Wilson, and Alexa Wong.

Forty-seven of our 65 swimmers scored at the meet:

Scoring Swimmers

Tule Nation Tritons fielded 52 relays, and 46 of those scored, contributing 1,500 points toward the overall team score. Three CCS Records were established by two distinct relays by the 15-16 year old girls at Junior Olympics. The team of Khloe McCarthy, Mallory Korenwinder, Emily Goodbar and Sierra Jett set the Team, 15-16 CCS and Senior CCS relay records with a time of 1:51.21 in the 200 Medley relay. The TNT team of Khloe McCarthy, Morgan Coddington, Sierra Jett and Katelyn Herrera had set the CCS Record in December as a 1:53.98, and the Senior CCS Record was set in 1996 by Clovis as a 1:52.41. Our same team set the CCS 15-16 Record in the 400 Medley Relay with a time of 3:58.87, going under the preexisting record of 4:10.42 that our team of Khloe McCarthy, Morgan Coddington, Sierra Jett and Jillian Hatch had set in December at the Winter Invitational.

2014scJO3

Team relay records were also set in the 13-14 boys 200 Medley Relay with a time of 1:51.88 by Alonso Escobedo, Preston Niayesh, Satoshi Shinkawa and Blake Wong. Justin Warner, Jimmy Koster, Luke Dignan and Justin Bos had set the record as a 1:52.50 at last year’s Junior Olympics. The same team, with Quinton Davis replacing Blake Wong, set the team record in the 400 Medley Relay with their time of 4:02.42, going under the 4:11.21 set last year by Owen Ansel, Noah Haworth, Kyle Grissom and Jeremiah Santillana. Our 10-under boys of Benjamin Wheeler, Toby Jones, Tomas Contreras and Peyton Costa reset the 200 Medley Relay team record with their time of 2:16.48, going well under the 2:21.35 record set by Parker Giles, Dax Korenwinder, Jonas Huckabay and Micah Ruiz at JO’s in 2010. The same team also set the team 200 freestyle relay record with their time of 2:01.17 going under the 2:02.17 record set in 2011 by Dax Korenwinder, JD Koster, Jonus Huckabay and Preston Niayesh. Two 15-18 team freestyle relay records were also reestablished, beginning with the 1:40.50 that resulted from the team of Mallory Korenwinder, Khloe McCarthy, Bre Abell and Sierra Jett in the 200 free relay. This time was under the Winter Invite swim of 1:41.76 by Sierra Jett, Khloe McCarthy, Katelyn Herrra and Jillian Hatch this past December. Mallory, Bre, Sierra and Jillian Hatch swam a 3:36.22 in the 400 free relay which is under the Winter Invite time of 3:44.82 posted by Emily Goodbar, Sierra Jett, Khloe McCarthy and Jillian Hatch.

Fifteen of our 65 swimmers improved all events that they competed in, thereby maintaining a 100% improvement rate. Congratulations to: Alonso Escobedo (9 of 9), Layla Flores (7 of 7), Amanda Garabedian (1 of 1), Mackenzie Garza (1 of 1), Kyle Grissom (6 of 6), Brandon Hatch (1 of 1), Annlyn Haworth (3 of 3), Maya Herrera (7 of 7), London Jones (1 of 1), Mallory Korenwinder (8 of 8), James Lamb (5 of 5), Wyatt Ward (5 of 5), Sydnee Wilson (1 of 1), Alexa Wong (4 of 4) and Bryan Wong (2 of 2).

 Posted by at 17:24
Feb 042014
 

 

2014 San Clemnte

Owen Ansel and Chris Hansen opened up the long course season for TNT as they competed at the 2014 Southern California Swimming January Senior Invitational in mid-January. The meet, hosted by San Clemente Aquatic Team, fielded teams from Southern California, San Diego Imperial, Nevada, and a rather large contingent from Mexico.

Owen Ansel came home with two fourth place finishes, one in the 100 breaststroke where his time of 1:11.62 was an improvement over his lifetime best established last year at Junior Olympics, and the other resulting from his 2:36.99 in the 200 breaststroke event. Owen improved five of his seven events, and he scored top-16 in four of them: 50 free (12th – 26.43), 100 breast (4th – 1:11.62), 200 IM (14th – 2:19.80), and 200 breast (4th – 2:36.99).

Chris Hansen came home with his two highest finishes, also in both breaststroke events, as he finished 10th in both. His 100 breaststroke time was 1:13.78, while his 200 time was 2:40.46. Chris improved his 50 freestyle time to a 27.48.

 Posted by at 00:53