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RECAP DAY 3 (of 3) CIS swimming championships: Hometown Dinos get double repeat
Photo credit David Moll
CALGARY (CIS) – For the second straight year, the
University of Calgary Dinos are CIS in both men’s and
women’s swimming – this time in their own pool.
Official website (live results & video webcast of finals): http://english.cis-sic.ca/championships/swim
While Calgary’s women led wire-to-wire to win their third
straight national title by 130 points, the Dinos men went back and
forth with their old rivals, the UBC Thunderbirds. After trailing
UBC by 9.5 points heading into Saturday, the Dinos had a solid
preliminary session and qualified enough swimmers for
‘A’ finals to outpace the T-Birds. After punctuating
their win with a victory in the 4x100-metre medley relay, the
day’s final event, the Dinos had a 50.5-point edge atop the
leaderboard.
It is Calgary’s third CIS women’s swimming championship
– all three of them coming in consecutive seasons –
while the Dinos men win their 15th national banner overall,
repeating for the first time since 1996 and 1997.
“Our guys swam really well, and it was really special to
finish off with that relay,” said Calgary coach Mike Blondal,
who was named the CIS Coach of the Year in both men’s and
women’s swimming by his peers. “It was an exciting one
for the girls as well. We’ll take this one and enjoy it
tonight…but another year starts tomorrow and we’re
back in the pool training Monday.”
UBC finished second in both team races. The Toronto Varsity Blues
grabbed third spot in the women’s standings but were edged
out for the bronze medal position in the men’s team standings
by the Laval Rouge et Or.
Calgary’s Erica Morningstar and Ryan Cochrane of the Victoria
Vikes were named the CIS Swimmers of the Year. Cochrane, a 2008
Beijing Olympic bronze medallist in the 1500m free, also took home
rookie-of-the-year honours for his outstanding performance at the
event, while UBC’s Savannah King was named CIS female rookie
of the year.
Morningstar posted a FINA score of 886 in her 200-metre individual
medley Saturday, stopping the clock in 2:09.70. Combined with her
100-metre breaststroke victory Thursday, her combined FINA score
was a whopping 1743. Morningstar did taste defeat for the first
time in her CIS championship career, however, settling for silver
in the 50-metre breaststroke behind teammate Allison Long. Between
individual and relay events, Morningstar has 20 gold medals and one
silver in 21 events at the CIS meet.
“It's awesome,” Morningstar said after winning a third
straight CIS title. “We knew we had a really strong team
coming in here. It was just a matter of putting everything
together, and I think we did an awesome job of that. The guys, as
well. They don't have a full team and they managed to pull it off.
It was great for them too.”
Cochrane set the standard on the night with his marquee event, the
1500-metre freestyle, finishing in a time of 15:03.27, more than 27
seconds ahead of second-place David Dimitrov of Calgary. Combined
with his 400 free victory Friday night, Cochrane finished with an
aggregate FINA score of 1644.
Competing in his first CIS championship, Cochrane was impressed
with the experience.
“It's a completely different environment, you've got an
awesome level of support here between all teammates,” said
the 22-year-old Victoria native. “The camaraderie here
between all of us was good. And it's great for the sport to have
the place packed with a loud crowd. It was a really good
environment to swim in, especially when you're standing on the box
for relays.”
“I'm pleased with my performances here. And I'm pretty tired,
too,” Cochrane said with a laugh, noting the higher altitude
presents challenges with fatigue. “It's a tough three days.
When I'm tired when I go back to training next week, it will be a
good reminder to me of why it (the training) is so
important.”
The other key individual performance Saturday came from
Calgary’s Jason Block, who took nearly two tenths off the
two-year-old CIS record in the 50-metre breaststroke with a 27.36
clocking. For the second straight year, Block swept the three
breaststroke distances, captaining his Dinos to a team title.
“It was a great team atmosphere all throughout the meet, and
with 13 guys against 18 for other teams the odds were stacked
against us the whole way through, but we came up big,” said
the third-year Calgary native. “It was special to do it at
home, and all the support from the crowd sure makes you swim
faster.”
UBC freshman Savannah King scored double gold in the distance
freestyle events to take the CIS top rookie honours with a combined
score of 1643.
Dominique Massey-Martel of the Laval Rouge et Or captured the
Sprinter’s Cup Saturday night thanks to his gold medal
performance of 48.91 in the 100 free to follow up a 50-metre
freestyle title from Friday night.
Other women’s champions Saturday included Victoria’s
Hilary Caldwell in the 200 backstroke and Seanna Mitchell of
Calgary in the 100 freestyle. Ottawa’s Matt Hawes won the 200
back and Steven Bielby of McGill took gold in the 200 IM to round
out the men’s individual champions.
INDIVIDUAL
HONOURS
Women
Swimmer of the year: Erica Morningstar, Calgary
Rookie of the year: Savannah King, UBC
Sprinter’s Cup (single winner of both 50 and 100 free): Not
awarded
Coach of the year: Mike Blondal, Calgary
Men
Swimmer of the year: Ryan Cochrane, Victoria
Rookie of the year: Ryan Cochrane, Victoria
Sprinter’s Cup (single winner of both 50 and 100 free):
Dominique Massey-Martel, Laval
Coach of the year: Mike Blondal, Calgary
NOTE: All gold medallists at the CIS championships (including
relays) are first-team all-Canadians for the 2010-11 season, while
all silver medallists (who were not gold medallists) are
second-team all-Canadians).
FINAL TEAM
STANDINGS
Women
1. Calgary, 778.5
2. UBC, 648.5
3. Toronto, 341
4. Victoria, 227.5
5. Montreal, 224
6. Alberta, 179
7. Western Ontario, 172
8. Laval, 157
9. Guelph, 145
10. Dalhousie, 112
11. McMaster, 87
12. Ottawa, 69
13. Wilfrid Laurier, 61
14. McGill, 39
15. UQTR, 36
16. Lethbridge, 35
17. UNB, 25
18. Laurentian, 19
18. Manitoba, 19
20. Brock, 14.5
21. Regina, 7
Men (Nelson C.
Hart trophy)
1. Calgary, 543:5
2. UBC, 493
3. Laval, 397
4. Toronto, 363
5. Victoria, 244.5
6. Dalhousie, 205
7. Alberta, 202
8. Western Ontario, 165
9. Montreal, 160
10. Ottawa, 154
11. McGill, 139
12. Guelph, 130
13. McMaster, 63
14. Sherbrooke, 52
15. Manitoba, 44
16. Waterloo, 28
17. Lethbridge, 15
18. Acadia, 6
19. York, 4
DAY 3 INDIVIDUAL MEDALLISTS (Saturday)
Women 800m Free
1. Savannah King, UBC, 8:35.86
2. Stephanie Horner, Victoria, 8:44.72
3. Pamela Ruksys, Toronto, 8:54.84
Men 50m Breast
1. Jason Block, Calgary, 27.36 (CIS championship record)
2. Jake Armstrong, Western, 27.83
3. Bryn Jones, Western, 28.11
W 50m Breast
1. Allison Long, Calgary, 30.91
2. Erica Morningstar, Calgary, 30.97
3. Kayla Voytechek, Alberta, 31.53
M 200m Back
1. Matt Hawes, Ottawa, 1:56.48
2. Adam Best, Ottawa, 1:57.75
3. Nicholas Sinclair, Victoria, 1:59. 47
W 200m Back
1. Hilary Caldwell, Victoria, 2:08.22
2. Jessika Craig, Calgary, 2:10.53
3. Vanessa Taillefer, Laval, 2:12.41
M 100m Free
1. Dominique Massie-Martel, Laval, 48.91
2. Tommy Gossland, Laval, 49.91
3. Connor Maxey, Calgary, 50.11
W 100m Free
1. Seanna Mitchell, Calgary, 54.72
2. Marie-Pier Ratelle, Laval , 55.28
3. Chantique Payne, Guelph, 55.47
M 200m IM
1. Steven Bielby, McGill, 2:00.24
2. Bogdan Knezevic, Calgary, 2:01.87
3. Zach Summerhays, Toronto, 2:02.49
W 200m IM
1. Erica Morningstar, Calgary, 2:09.70
2. Hanna Pierse, UBC, 2:15.07
3. Stephanie Horner, Victoria, 2:16.13
M 1500m Free
1. Ryan Cochrane, Victoria, 15:03.27
2. David Dimitrov, Calgary, 15:30.33
3. Zack Chetrat, Toronto, 15:39.09
W 4 x 100m Medley Relay
1. Calgary 4:04.82
(Erica Morningstar, Allison Long, Jessica Johnson, Seanna
Mitchell)
2. UBC, 4:09.80
(Rachelle Salli, Martha McCabe, Shaneese Nowlan, Heather
MacLean)
3. Montréal, 4:12.78
(Karah Stanworth-Belleville, Sarah-Lee Hevey, Emilie Belleau,
Marie-Pierre Berube)
M 4 x 100m Medley Relay
1. Calgary, 3:37.66
(Gleb Suvorov, Jason Block, David Dimitrov, Colin Miazga)
2. Laval, 3:39.68
(Jonathan Blouin, Kevin Deret, Maxime Jacomelli, Dominique
Massie-Martel)
3. UBC, 3:40.48
(Kelly Aspinall, Sam Acton, Rory Biskupski, Tommy
Gossland)
DAY 2
INDIVIDUAL MEDALLISTS (Friday)
Women 100m Back
1. Erica Morningstar, Calgary, 59.34
2. Hilary Caldwell, Victoria, 1:00.70
3. Andrea Jurenovskis, Toronto, 1:00.88
Men 100m Back
1. Kelly Aspinall, UBC, 53.89
2. Matt Hawes, Ottawa, 53.98
3. Gleb Suvorov, Calgary, 54.08
W 50m Fly
1. Paige Schultz, Toronto, 27.43
2. Chantique Payne, Guelph, 27.55
3. Caroline Lapierre-Lemire, UQTR, 27.61
M 50m Fly
1. Mike Smerek, Toronto, 24.05
2. Mark Maizonnasse, Sherbrooke, 24.33
3. Joshua Au, Alberta, 24.61
W 400m Free
1. Savannah King, UBC, 4:11.47
2. Julianne Brown, Calgary, 4:14.88
3. Kevyn Peterson, Calgary, 4:16.12
M 400m Free
1. Ryan Cochrane, Victoria, 3:48.13
2. David Dimitrov, Calgary, 3:51.12
3. Frank Despond, Toronto, 3:52.81
W 200m Breast
1. Martha McCabe, UBC 2:23.15
2. Hanna Pierse, UBC, 2:26.84
3. Fiona Doyle, Calgary, 2:28.70
M 200m Breast
1. Jason Block, Calgary, 2:12.11
2. Bryn Jones, Western, 2:12.46
3. Frédéric Le Blanc, Montreal, 2:12.59
W 50m Free
1. Marie-Pier Ratelle, Laval, 25.05 (CIS championship record)
2. Seanna Mitchell, Calgary, 25.27
2. Chantique Payne, Guelph, 25.50
M 50m Free
1. Dominique Massie-Martel, Laval, 22.68
2. Tommy Gossland, UBC, 22.73
3. James Goodway, Calgary, 22.78
W 200m Fly
1. Stephanie Horner, Victoria, 2:12.69
2. Vanessa Treasure, Toronto, 2:14.72
3. Jessica Johnson, Calgary, 2:15.02
M 200m Fly
1. Zack Chetrat, Toronto, 1:57.45
2. David Dimitrov, Calgary, 1:59.69
3. Curtis Samuel, Toronto, 2:00.53
W 4 x 200m Free Relay
1. Calgary, 8:05.63
(Erica Morningstar, Julianne Brown, Talia Benson, Kevyn
Peterson)
2. UBC, 8:11.44
(Brittney Harley, Heather MacLean, Savannah King, Fionnuala
Pierse)
3. Victoria, 8:16.49
(Stephanie Horner, Siobhan Newell, Hilary Caldwell, Kim Bryan)
M 4 x 200m Free Relay
1. Calgary, 7:17.97
(Connor Maxey, Brad Hankewich, Colin Miazga, David Dimitrov)
2. Laval, 7:19.62
(Dominique Massie-Martel, Vincent Fontaine, Jonathan Blouin, Adam
Szoo)
3. Toronto, 7:21.30
(Zack Chetrat, Taylor Bond, Frank Despond, Curtis Samuel)
DAY 1 INDIVIDUAL
MEDALLISTS (Thursday)
Women 200m Free
1. Kevyn Peterson, Calgary, 1:59.08
2. Heather McLean, UBC, 1:59.89
3. Savannah King, UBC, 2:00.26
Men 200m Free
1. Ryan Cochrane, Victoria, 1:47.81
1. Colin Miazga, Calgary, 1:47.81
3. Adam Szoo, Laval, 1:47.83
W 50m Back
1. Hilary Caldwell, Victoria, 28.25
2. Bethany Flemington, Calgary, 28.67
3. Jy Lawrence, Calgary, 28.93
M 50m Back
1. David Sharpe, Dalhousie. 24.99
2. Kelly Aspinall, UBC, 25.21
3. Gleb Suvorov, Calgary, 25.48
W 100m Breast
1. Erica Morningstar, Calgary, 1:05.99
2. Allison Long, Calgary, 1:07.73
3. Martha McCabe, UBC, 1:07.83
M 100m Breast
1. Jason Block, Calgary, 1:00.11
2. Bogdan Knezevic, Calgary, 1:01.05
3. Bryn Jones, Western Ontario, 1:01.13
W 100m Fly
1. Seanna Mitchell, Calgary, 1:00.98
2. Jessica Johnson, Calgary, 1:01.18
3. Chantique Payne, Guelph, 1:01.32
M 100m Fly
1. Zack Chetrat, Toronto, 53.30
2. Mike Smerek, Toronto, 53.71
3. Joshua Au, Alberta, 53.85
W 400m IM
1. Stephanie Horner, Victoria, 4:41.40
2. Hanna Pierse, UBC, 4:43.66
3. Hayley Pipher, UBC, 4:44.12
M 400m IM
1. Steven Bielby, McGill, 4:13.60
2. David Dimitrov, Calgary, 4:17.33
3. Ryan Cochrane, Victoria, 4:19.24
W 4 x 100m Free Relay
1.Calgary 3:41.03
(Erica Morningstar, Bethany Flemington, Fiona Doyle, Seanna
Mitchell)
2. Laval 3:46.04
(Marie-Pier Ratelle, Charlotte Dandurand, Sarah Routhier, Vanessa
Taileffer)
3. UBC 3:46.39
(Kimberly Bowman, Colleen Nesbitt, Heather MacLean, Fionnuala
Pierse)
M 4 x 100m Free Relay
1. UBC 3:17.83
(Tommy Gossland, Rory Biskupski, Kelly Aspinall, Duncan Furrer)
2. Calgary 3:17.93
(Colin Miazga, Brad Hankewich, Connor Maxey, James Goodway)
3. Laval 3:19.14
(Dominique Massie-Martel, Maxime Jacomelli, Jonathan Blouin, Adam
Szoo)
-CIS-















