tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80175017004851512592008-07-16T17:57:56.181-07:00The Psyche SheetBrett Hooverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04150904853990646176noreply@blogger.comBlogger115125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-50255365342538118822007-02-27T20:34:00.000-08:002007-03-01T12:13:00.608-08:00UpdatesAll of the records and history have been updated.<br /><br />And we are declaring this blog to be a success. We have had more than 44,000 visitors this month, coming from 40 foreign countries and nearly every state. If you have comment or suggestion for the future, please click on the comments below.<br><br /><br>Brett Hooverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04150904853990646176noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-72171895322926055752007-02-27T09:16:00.000-08:002007-02-27T09:18:24.511-08:00All-Ivy: WomenThe Princeton Tigers took the Frank Keefe Trophy at the Ivy League Women's Swimming and diving Championship in Princeton on Feb. 15-17, 2007. The top Ivy League performers in each individual event and the top Ivy League team in each relay event earn selection to the All-Ivy League swimming & diving first-team. The second Ivy finishers earn second team honors. The following earned their All-Ivy status at the 2007 Ivy League Women's Swimming and Diving Championship:<br /><br /><font size=+1><font color=278df3><b>FIRST TEAM</b></font color></font size><br /><font color=fcce43><b>50y free</b></font color> — Meg Gill, Yale / Sr., Chester, Va.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y free</b></font color> — Justina DiFazio, Princeton / Soph., Burlington, Ont.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y free</b></font color> — Justina DiFazio, Princeton / Soph., Burlington, Ont.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>500y free</b></font color> — Alicia Aemisegger, Princeton / Fr., Oreland, Pa.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>1000y free</b></font color> — Alicia Aemisegger, Princeton / Fr., Oreland, Pa.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>1650y free</b></font color> — Alexandra Clarke, Harvard / Fr., Phoenix, Ariz.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y fly</b></font color> — Bridget O'Connor, Harvard / Jr., Scarsdale, N.Y.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y fly</b></font color> — Noelle Bassi, Harvard / Sr., Franklin Lakes, N.J.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y breast</b></font color> — Kelly Hannigan, Princeton / Sr., Greenwich, Conn.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y breast</b></font color> — Alicia Aemisegger, Princeton / Fr., Oreland, Pa.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y back</b></font color> — Moira McCloskey, Yale / Sr., Ventnor, N.J.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y back</b></font color> — Lindsay Hart, Harvard / Jr., Walnut Creek, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y IM</b></font color> — Courtney Kilkuts, Princeton / Fr., Corona, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y IM</b></font color> — Kelly Hannigan, Princeton / Sr., Greenwich, Conn.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>One-meter diving</b></font color> — Katie Giarra, Princeton / Soph., Herndon, Va.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>Three-meter diving</b></font color> — Katie Giarra, Princeton / Soph., Herndon, Va.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y free relay</b></font color> — Yale, Andrea Clifford (Fr., Chattanooga, Tenn.), Moira McCloskey (Sr., Ventnor, N.J.), Alexis Mann (Soph., Ontario, Calif.), Meg Gill (Sr., Chester, Va.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y free relay</b></font color> — Yale, Jane Kim (Fr., Buena Park, Calif.), Alexis Mann (Soph., Ontario, Calif.), Moira McCloskey (Sr., Ventnor, N.J.), Meg Gill (Sr., Chester, Va.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>800y free relay</b></font color> — Princeton, Justina DiFazio (Soph., Burlington, Ont.), Lisa Hamming (Jr., Lake Forest, Ill.), Kelly Hannigan (Sr., Greenwich, Conn.), Alicia Aemisegger (Fr., Oreland, Pa.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y medley relay</b></font color> — Harvard, Lindsay Hart (Jr., Walnut Creek, Calif.), Jackie Pangilinan (Jr., Clifton, N.J.), Bridget O'Connor (Jr., Scarsdale, N.Y.), Amanda Slaight (Jr., Boca Raton, Fla.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y medley relay</b></font color> — Harvard, Lindsay Hart (Jr., Walnut Creek, Calif.), Jackie Pangilinan (Jr., Clifton, N.J.), Bridget O'Connor (Jr., Scarsdale, N.Y.), Amanda Slaight (Jr., Boca Raton, Fla.)<br /><br /><font size=+1><font color=278df3><b>SECOND TEAM</b></font color></font size><br /><font color=fcce43><b>50y free</b></font color> — Justina DiFazio, Princeton / Soph., Burlington, Ont.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y free</b></font color> — Meg Gill, Yale / Sr., Chester, Va.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y free</b></font color> — Jane Kim, Yale / Fr., Buena Park, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>500y free</b></font color> — Alexandra Clarke, Harvard / Fr., Phoenix, Ariz.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>1000y free</b></font color> — Alexandra Clarke, Harvard / Fr., Phoenix, Ariz.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>1650y free</b></font color> — Ellen Gray, Princeton / Jr., Larchmont, N.Y.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y fly</b></font color> — Meg Gill, Yale / Sr., Chester, Va.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y fly</b></font color> — Monika Friedman, Princeton / Soph., Stanford, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y breast</b></font color> — Jackie Pangilinan, Harvard / Jr., Clifton, N.J.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y breast</b></font color> — Susan Kim, Yale / Fr., Rockville, Md.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y back</b></font color> — Lindsay Hart, Harvard / Jr., Walnut Creek, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y back</b></font color> — Moira McCloskey, Yale / Sr., Ventnor, N.J.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y IM</b></font color> — Lindsay Hart, Harvard / Jr., Walnut Creek, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y IM</b></font color> — Nicole Bassi, Harvard / Sr., Franklin Lakes, N.J.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>One-meter diving</b></font color> — Samantha Papadakis, Harvard / Jr., Deerfield, Ill.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>Three-meter diving</b></font color> — Michelle DeMond, Princeton / Sr., Potomac, Md.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y free relay</b></font color> — Princeton, Sobenna George (Sr., St. Augustine's, Trinidad), Justina DiFazio (Soph., Burlington, Ont.), Kristin Arey (Sr., Charlotte, N.C.), Lisa Hamming (Jr., Lake Forest, Ill.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y free relay</b></font color> — Princeton, Lisa Hamming (Jr., Lake Forest, Ill.), Kristin Arey (Sr., Charlotte, N.C.), Sobenna George (Sr., St. Augustine's, Trinidad)), Alicia Aemisegger (Fr., Oreland, Pa.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>800y free relay</b></font color> — Harvard, Alexandra Clarke (Fr., Phoenix, Ariz.), Lindsay Hart (Jr., Walnut Creek, Calif.), Meaghan Colling (Jr., Monson, Mass.),Laurin Weisenthal (Sr., Huntington Beach, Calif.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y medley relay</b></font color> — Yale, Moira McCloskey (Sr., Ventnor, N.J.), Caroline Dowd (Jr., Weston, Mass.), Andrea Clifford (Fr., Chattanooga, Tenn.), Meg Gill (Sr., Chester, Va.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y medley relay</b></font color> — Yale, Moira McCloskey (Sr., Ventnor, N.J.), Susan Kim (Fr.., Rockville, Md.), Meg Gill (Sr., Chester, Va.), Jane Kim (Fr., Buena Park, Calif.)<br><br>Brett Hooverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04150904853990646176noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-85768542848484730902007-02-27T06:48:00.000-08:002007-02-27T08:01:32.493-08:00All-Ivy: MenThe Princeton Tigers claimed the EISL Men's Swimming and Diving Championship in home waters at the DeNunzio Pool on Feb. 22-24, 2007. The top Ivy League performers in each individual event and the top Ivy League team in each relay event earn selection to the All-Ivy League swimming & diving first-team. The second Ivy finishers earn second team honors. The following earned their All-Ivy status at the 2007 EISL Men's Swimming and Diving Championship:<br /><br /><font size=+1><font color=278df3><b>FIRST TEAM</b></font color></font size><br /><font color=fcce43><b>50y free</b></font color> — Alex Righi, Yale / Soph., Phoenix, Ariz.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y free</b></font color> — Alex Righi, Yale / Soph., Phoenix, Ariz.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y free</b></font color> — Michael Smit, Cornell / Sr., Mount Sinai, N.Y.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>500y free</b></font color> — Michael Smit, Cornell / Sr., Mount Sinai, N.Y. AND Wes Newman, Cornell / Soph., Chateauguay, Que.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>1000y free</b></font color> — Samuel Wollner, Harvard / Jr., New York, N.Y.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>1650y free</b></font color> — Samuel Wollner, Harvard / Jr., New York, N.Y.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y fly</b></font color> — Doug Lennox, Princeton / Soph., Lake Forest, Ill.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y fly</b></font color> — Michael Smit, Cornell / Sr., Mount Sinai, N.Y.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y breast</b></font color> — David McKechnie, Cornell / Sr., Collingwood, Ont.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y breast</b></font color> — David McKechnie, Cornell / Sr., Collingwood, Ont.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y back</b></font color> — Alex Righi, Yale / Soph., Phoenix, Ariz.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y back</b></font color> — Geoff Rathgeber, Harvard / Jr., Kensington, Conn.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y IM</b></font color> — Geoff Rathgeber, Harvard / Jr., Kensington, Conn.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y IM</b></font color> — Geoff Rathgeber, Harvard / Jr., Kensington, Conn.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>One-meter diving</b></font color> — Luke Sanders, Harvard / Jr., Maryville, Ill.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>Three-meter diving</b></font color> — Jeff Leichtenstein, Yale / Jr., Barrington, Ill.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y free relay</b></font color> — Cornell, Michael Smit (Sr., Mount Sinai, N.Y.), David McKechnie (Sr., Collingwood, Ont.), Brad Gorter (Jr., Mechanicsburg, Pa.), Wesley Newman (Soph., Chateauguay, Que.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y free relay</b></font color> — Harvard, Pat Quinn (Jr., Lighthouse Point, Fla.), David Guernsey (Soph., Essex, Conn.), Bill Jones (Soph., Fremont, Mich.), Geoff Rathgeber (Jr., Kensington, Conn.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>800y free relay</b></font color> — Cornell, Wesley Newman (Soph., Chateauguay, Que.), David McKechnie (Sr., Collingwood, Ont.), Brad Gorter (Jr., Mechanicsburg, Pa.), Michael Smit (Sr., Mount Sinai, N.Y.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y medley relay</b></font color> — Cornell, Phil Baity (Soph., Greenwich, Conn.), David McKechie (Sr., Collingwood, Ont.), Jackson Wang (Soph., Delta, B.C.), Brad Gorter (Jr., Mechanicsburg, Pa.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y medley relay</b></font color> — Cornell, Phil Baity (Soph., Greenwich, Conn.), David McKechie (Sr., Collingwood, Ont.), Michael Smit (Sr., Mount Sinai, N.Y.), Wesley Newman (Soph., Chateauguay, Que.)<br /><br /><font size=+1><font color=278df3><b>SECOND TEAM</b></font color></font size><br /><font color=fcce43><b>50y free</b></font color> — Pat Quinn, Harvard / Jr., Lighthouse Point, Fla.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y free</b></font color> — Tobin White, Columbia / Sr., Mount Hermon, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y free</b></font color> — Wes Newman, Cornell / Soph., Chateauguay, Que.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>500y free</b></font color> — No second team<br /><font color=fcce43><b>1000y free</b></font color> — Robert Griest, Princeton / Soph., Atlanta, Ga.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>1650y free</b></font color> — Eric Lynch, Harvard / Soph., San Jose, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y fly</b></font color> — Dan Jones, Harvard / Soph., Fremont, Mich.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y fly</b></font color> — Meir Hasbani, Princeton / Sr., Willamette, Ill.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y breast</b></font color> — Zachary Glassman, Columbia / Soph., Westmount, Ont.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y breast</b></font color> — Michael Nelson, Columbia / Sr., Walnut Creek, Calif.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>100y back</b></font color> — Phil Baity, Cornell / Soph., Greenwich, Conn.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y back</b></font color> — Phil Baity, Cornell / Soph., Greenwich, Conn.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y IM</b></font color> — Will Schaffer, Princeton / Soph., Wheaton, Ill.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y IM</b></font color> — Meir Hasbani, Princeton / Sr., Willamette, Ill.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>One-meter diving</b></font color> — Mike Papageorge, Princeton / Fr., Fairfax Station, Va.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>Three-meter diving</b></font color> — Mike Papageorge, Princeton / Fr., Fairfax Station, Va.<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y free relay</b></font color> — Harvard, Geoff Rathgeber (Jr., Kensington, Conn.), David Guernsey (Soph., Essex, Conn.), Bill Jones (Soph., Fremont, Mich.), Pat Quinn (Jr., Lighthouse Point, Fla.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y free relay</b></font color> — Cornell, Wesley Newman (Soph., Chateauguay, Que.), Kevin Carey (Soph., Long Beach, N.Y.), Brad Gorter (Jr., Mechanicsburg, Pa.), Michael Smit (Sr., Mount Sinai, N.Y.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>800y free relay</b></font color> — Columbia, Kevin Wakefield (Soph., Malverne, N.Y.), Hyun Lee (Soph., Seoul, South Korea), John Dragelin (Soph., Vienna, Va.), Tobin White (Sr., Mount Hermon, Calif.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>200y medley relay</b></font color> — Yale, Alex Righi (Soph., Phoenix, Ariz.), Matt Sweitzer (Soph., New Canaan, Conn.), Chris Pool (Soph., Montgomery, Md.), Andrew Foss (Sr., Fairfax Station, Va.)<br /><font color=fcce43><b>400y medley relay</b></font color> — Harvard, Jason Degnan-Rojeski (Sr., East Lansing, Mich.), Geoff Rathgeber (Jr., Kensington, Conn.), Dan Jones (Soph., Fremont, Mich.), Pat Quinn (Jr., Lighthouse Point, Fla.)<br><br>Brett Hooverhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04150904853990646176noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-86172828728193502392007-02-24T20:48:00.000-08:002007-03-01T08:45:01.965-08:00Princeton Takes the DoubleA week ago, it was the Women's program celebrating an Ivy League championship and we watched as Coach Susan Teeter joined her team in a celebratory dip to commemorate the occasion.<br /><a href="http://bp2.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/ReDxX0ONXgI/AAAAAAAAAC0/veL9qp5uW5g/s1600-h/princetontrophy.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp2.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/ReDxX0ONXgI/AAAAAAAAAC0/veL9qp5uW5g/s320/princetontrophy.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5035289774857739778" /></a>Tonight, it was C. Rob Orr's turn to do the same with the Princeton Men and the EISL championship as they put together a performance in front of the home crowd that saw a winning margin eventually rise to 184.5.<br /><br />The final standings also created quite a stir as Yale rose to 3rd place in the overall by a grand total of 5 points over Columbia.<br /><br />1. Princeton - 1405<br />2. Harvard - 1220 1/2<br />3. Yale - 1036<br />4. Columbia - 1031<br />5. Cornell - 963 1/2<br />6. Navy - 801 1/2<br />7. Brown - 624<br />8. Penn - 580 1/2<br />9. Dartmouth - 316<br /><br />As for the individual awards ...<br /><a href="http://bp1.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/ReDyTkONXiI/AAAAAAAAADM/UNPeQNenw-I/s1600-h/awards.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp1.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/ReDyTkONXiI/AAAAAAAAADM/UNPeQNenw-I/s320/awards.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5035290801354923554" /></a>High-Point Scorers of the Meet (Moriarty Trophy) -<br /><a href="http://www.gocrimson.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=41034&SPID=3654&DB_OEM_ID=9000&ATCLID=649078&Q_SEASON=2006">Geoff Rathgeber - Harvard</a href><br /><a href="http://yalebulldogs.cstv.com/sports/m-swim/mtt/righi_alex00.html">Alex Righi - Yale</a href><br />HIgh-Point Diver of the Meet (Michael Trophy) -<br /><a href="http://yalebulldogs.cstv.com/sports/m-swim/mtt/lichtenstein_jeffrey00.html">Jeff Lichtenstein - Yale</a href><br />High-Point Career Swimmer (Ulen Trophy) -<br /><a href="http://cornellbigred.cstv.com/sports/m-swim/mtt/smit_mike00.html">Mike Smit - Cornell</a href><br><br /><br>Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-19793072950879069182007-02-24T20:07:00.000-08:002007-02-24T18:23:28.613-08:00Lichtenstein Takes Home the 3mJeff Lichtenstein ('08, Yale) ruined my bold prediction. I had predicted a major upset tonight and I was leaning toward the 3m diving competition as the mode to deliver the bold prediction. I thought that an unknown quantity, most notably freshman Mike Papageorge ('10, Princeton), would come out of nowhere to win the whole thing.<br /><br />That is until I saw Jeff Lichtenstein dive in the finals. <br /><br />Although Papageorge proved to the EISL competition that he belonged in the finals as a freshman, it was Lichtenstein that masterfully crafted a program chock full of difficulty and precision. His routine placed him comfortably in first place going into the last dive. However, Papageorge made it very interesting by hitting his final dive to high scores. His statement dive meant that Lichtenstein would need to not only choose a high degree of difficulty on his final dive, but also hit it.<br /><br />And Lichtenstein did just that.<br /><br />He selected a dive with a high degree of difficulty registering 3.5 and just narrowly missed nailing it with a slight rotation issue as he entered the water. However, he had certainly done enough to outscore Papageorge and win the competition, by a margin of 359.00 to 347.45.<br /><br />Excellent spectacle, gentlemen.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-84375119457737360642007-02-24T19:51:00.000-08:002007-02-24T19:52:18.097-08:00EISL Video Highlights from the Final Night!Congratulations to Princeton on its victory. Take an 8-minute stroll through the land of EISL swimming by clicking below.<object width="425" height="350"> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/X2S_y873bAA"> </param> <embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/X2S_y873bAA" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350"> </embed> </object>Chuck Yrigoyenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00516703530117761299noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-77104745705744291722007-02-24T19:37:00.000-08:002007-02-24T16:49:25.916-08:00Smit Keeps the Pace; Wins 200 FlyMike Smit ('09, Cornell) also did his best to be put in the mix for the Swimmer of the Meet by staving off a furious challenge from the rest of the competition and winning in the oft undesirable Lane 2. Smit found himself in Lane 2 after qualifying in 3rd position during the preliminaries.<br /><br />But in the final, his performance left absolutely no doubt that he was the swimmer to beat in the race. His 1:46.44 outdueled Meir Hasbani ('07, Princeton), the leading qualifier in the preliminaries, and his 1:47.04.<br /><br />So add Mr. Smit as the 4th deserving candidate for the Swimmer of the Meet.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-41608533758338474732007-02-24T19:15:00.000-08:002007-02-24T16:24:28.994-08:00McKechnie Delivers in 200 BreastReady for a 3rd name to the Swimmer of the Meet consideration?<br /><br />Dave McKechnie ('07, Cornell).<br /><br />McKechnie smoked the rest of the field to also remain undefeated in the overall competition as he led wire-to-wire in the 200 Breaststroke. His 2:00.18 held off a challenge from two Columbia swimmers and provided much needed points for the overall team competition that now looks much closer than Princeton (the leaders at that beginning of the day) would prefer.<br /><br />Congratulations, Dave on a superb swim.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-71286072893462711102007-02-24T18:57:00.000-08:002007-02-24T16:14:48.733-08:00All Hail, Righi! 43.19 in the 100 Free<a href="http://bp0.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/ReDUCUONXfI/AAAAAAAAACo/geOhVDHlIV0/s1600-h/righihenry.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp0.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/ReDUCUONXfI/AAAAAAAAACo/geOhVDHlIV0/s320/righihenry.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5035257519653346802" /></a>Alex Righi ('09, Yale): You are my new best friend.<br /><br />You don't even know me, but we're officially best buds ... and it's not because you're parents gave you an equally awesome name to mine.<br /><br />Nay.<br /><br />The reason is because you made a smart man out of this fan. I made a bold prediction on a wing and a prayer, and you brought it to fruition. My words are now prophetic. Heck, I may even consider myself smart now. <br /><br />You see, the other Alex did exactly what this Alex said he was going to do at <a href="http://psychesheet.blogspot.com/2007/02/bring-on-nightcap.html">1:33 pm</a href> today: he was going to smash his own Meet and EISL records, and by virtue of his exploits, would destroy the existing Pool Record. Not only that, but he also beat his competition by a full second in the process.<br /><br />Yes, that isn't a typo. A full second. Actually 1.11 seconds to be exact. His swim was flawless and now he owns every record in the discipline.<br /><br />Oh, and while we're at it: go ahead and add Alex Righi to the growing list (2) of Swimmer of the Meet candidates.<br /><br />Fantastic swim, Alex ...<br /><br />... Your friend,<br />NostradamusAlex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-56012267513819921412007-02-24T18:40:00.000-08:002007-02-24T15:48:12.785-08:00Rathgeber Owns Pool Record in 200 BackLadies and gentlemen, introducing the first candidate for Swimmer of the Meet: <br /><br />Geoff Rathgeber ('07, Harvard).<br /><br />Ho-hum, another race ... another record. Just another day at the office. <br /><br />Rathgeber led from the onset and was never troubled by the competition as he cruised to yet another victory at the EISL meet, lowering the pool record held by former Harvard swimmer, David Cromwell ('06), from 1:44.20 to 1:43.54.<br /><br />Kevin Mukri ('07, Navy) was Rathgeber's closest competition, swimming a very respectable 1:45.62.<br /><br />With the win, Harvard has begun to close the gap considerably with Princeton and now is within striking distance for the overall championship.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-34675238307981838932007-02-24T18:31:00.000-08:002007-02-24T15:36:58.714-08:00Wollner Takes the 1650Samuel Wollner ('08, Harvard) outkicked teammate Eric Lynch ('09) in the first event of Saturday night: the 1650.<br /><br />Wollner's heroics follow up on his win last night in a race that mimicked this win almost identically. Once again he waited until the end to make his move, and once again he successfully outkicked his competition in the final 25 yards.<br /><br />His time of 15:15.37 was a Top 10 All-Time mark.<br /><br />Congratulations Sam, way to make our collective hearts stop for a second night in a row!Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-179427904432073722007-02-24T13:33:00.000-08:002007-02-24T17:44:26.303-08:00Bring On the Nightcap!I'm going to make five bold predictions for the nightcap of Day 3 as my normal teaser.<br /><br />1. Alex Righi of Yale will break his own Meet and EISL record in the 100 Freestyle, and will subsequently smash the Pool record for the event.<br /><br />2. There will be a major upset tonight that many will say "nobody can honestly say that they predicted that!" Well guess what, I predicted it. And when it happens, I'll gloat. :)<br /><br />3. A longstanding record will fall tonight.<br /><br />4. There will be a four worthy selections for the Swimmer of the Meet, but only Co-Swimmers of the Meet will be awarded.<br /><br />5. I personally will not get out of the DeNunzio Pool before 10pm. And I have to be up at Harvard (roughly 4 hours and 49 minutes away) for a Fencing tournament tomorrow. Good times.<br /><br />... Stay Tuned!Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-86615706116610641492007-02-23T20:44:00.000-08:002007-02-23T18:10:41.714-08:00Day 2 Leaderboard<a href="http://bp3.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/Rd-ciUONXdI/AAAAAAAAACQ/vU73sZY9HSo/s1600-h/orr1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp3.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/Rd-ciUONXdI/AAAAAAAAACQ/vU73sZY9HSo/s320/orr1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5034915021781294546" /></a>Upon completion of Day 2, the leaderboard looks as follows:<br /><br />Coach C. Rob Orr's Princeton Tigers lead the overall competition going into the final day.<br /><br /><a href="http://bp2.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/Rd-dQEONXeI/AAAAAAAAACc/VjSpq88uNeI/s1600-h/smitnewman.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp2.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/Rd-dQEONXeI/AAAAAAAAACc/VjSpq88uNeI/s320/smitnewman.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5034915807760309730" /></a><br /><br />1. Princeton - 916<br />2. Harvard - 795 1/2<br />3. Cornell - 681 1/2<br />4. Columbia - 675<br />5. Yale - 674<br />6. Navy - 556 1/2<br />7. Brown - 441<br />8. Penn - 414 1/2<br />9. Dartmouth - 198<br /><br />This just goes to show you how vital ALL of the points are as Princeton has stormed to the lead by virtue of 2nd-8th place showings. To put it in perspective, Princeton has only officially won 1 discipline, whereas Yale has taken home 2 event wins, Harvard has 4 event wins, and Cornell leads with a total of 6 event wins.<br /><br />Will it be a Princeton sweep in 2007 in their home pool? Tomorrow will have the answer.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-63578090377014222332007-02-23T20:25:00.000-08:002007-02-23T17:40:16.587-08:00Cornell Holds Off Columbia in the 800 Freestyle RelayIn what was easily the best race of the night, Cornell staved off a fantastic upset bid by Columbia University. Columbia gave everything they had in this race, and prior to the last exchange were actually leading.<br /><br />Only a fantastic anchor leg by Mike Smit ('07) kept Columbia from staging a monumental upset. The team of Kevin Wakefield ('09), Hyun Lee ('09), John Dragelin ('09), and Tobin White ('07) battled the entire way, and by using exceptional speed and textbook turns, nearly stunned the crowd. To put it in perspective, and if you consider seeding times as valid measures of performance, then Columbia seemingly came out of nowhere to place 2nd.<br /><br />But at the end of the day, it was Smit, combined with Wes Newman ('09), Dave McKechnie ('07) and Brad Gorter ('08) keeping Columbia and the rest of the teams at bay, to capture the full allotment of points.<br /><br />We'll see you tomorrow!Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-86465194800173791802007-02-23T20:12:00.000-08:002007-02-24T13:41:08.472-08:00Righi Holds Off Mukri to Take 100 BackAlex Righi ('09, Yale) held off a late challenge from Kevin Mukri ('07) of the Naval Academy to take the maximal points in the event that saw five (5) sub-50 second times registered. First place is certainly not a new experience for Righi, who has already won events this year and has been on the podium in year's past, but it should be noted that Mukri's race was the highest placement by an individual swimmer from the Naval Academy to this point.<br /><br />The final 25 yards of Mukri's swim propelled him from 4th place up to 2nd place and saw his time of 48.61 only bettered by Righi's 48.01. He was closing the gap with Righi during every subsequent stroke.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-69931219933860104482007-02-23T19:53:00.000-08:002007-02-23T17:02:57.590-08:00McKechnie Delivers Again for CornellAll Cornell knows how to do is win. It is as simple as that. And Dave McKechnie ('07) added more proof of this unquestionable truth during a smashing performance in the 100 Breaststroke. McKechnie jumped out in front of the competition and coasted back home with a victory that was just as much awe-inspiring as it was ... for lack of a better word ... easy.<br /><br />McKechnie crushed the competition in a signature race that saw him touch the wall a full 2.16 seconds faster than Zachary Glassman ('09), the second-place finisher from Columbia. His prowess in the pool also broke the meet and EISL records for the event.<br /><br />Excellent swim, Dave, and congrats on the records!Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-87443080005363597612007-02-23T19:45:00.000-08:002007-02-23T16:52:27.321-08:00Smit Owns Pool Record in 200 FreeDeNunzio's Pool is officially Mike Smit's ('07, Cornell) to own. Well at least in the 200 Free it is.<br /><br />Although he was off the pace that he posted in the 2006 meet by .1 second, his 1:35.52 erased a pool record that has been in existence since 1:36.33. The original mark was held by Mike Kiedel of Harvard, who also owns the EISL record.<br /><br />Smit is also making a very compelling case for another Swimmer of the Meet distinction. Not surprisingly, Smit and Geoff Rathgeber of Harvard were co-Swimmers of the Meet last year, and both appear poised to compete for the distinction again this year.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-57105026193113489362007-02-23T19:23:00.000-08:002007-02-23T16:39:08.566-08:00Lennox Flies in the 100If there was ever a race that teams could possibly gain some valuable points on the leaders, Princeton ... this was that race. This was because Princeton only had 1 person represented, whereas challengers Harvard and Cornell sported 3 and 2 racers, respectively.<br /><br />But if I may steal a horse racing reference: you've gotta have a horse in the race if you want to win.<br /><br />And Princeton had a horse. Not to mention a very fast one. <br /><br />Doug Lennox ('09) outlasted the competition in the 100 Butterfly to take home 1st place and 32 vital points in the team competition with a time of 47.94. Although Harvard benefitted the most from the swim, after taking 2nd, 3rd and 6th places, it was Lennox's performance that was the most significant. He did what he needed to do in order to keep Princeton with the most points possible.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-52805817704212881102007-02-23T18:53:00.000-08:002007-02-24T13:42:28.865-08:00Rathgeber Takes Another TitleGeoff Rathgeber ('08, Harvard) seems to only be getting more and more comfortable at the EISL competition. After rewriting the record books in the 200 IM on Thursday night, he went for the encore double on Friday night in the 400 IM. While he did not set any records during this swim, it was plain to see that he was on a different level than the rest of the competition. His final time of 3:47.59 was nearly 4 full seconds faster than his closest competition. <br /><br />Unfortunately, Harvard's prospects for the team championship took yet another blow as a result of the final of the 400 IM. The reason for this was not from another disqualification, but arguably just as devastating: Princeton took 2nd-4th and 6th place in the competition and extended a lead which may prove to be insurmountable by the end of the night.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-75386700881848956192007-02-23T18:29:00.000-08:002007-02-24T13:43:38.523-08:00A Fantastic Finish in the 1000For nearly 990 yards, Robert Griest ('09, Princeton) was comfortably in control of the first Freestyle competition of Friday night's program.<br /><br />Unfortunately, the race was the 1000 yards ... and the 10 yards in which Griest found himself in 2nd place were yards 991 through 1000. That was when Harvard junior, Sam Wollner, overtook him to reach the wall first.<br /><br />Wollner was nestled in second position for most of the swim and waited for the optimal time to make his move, and based on the results, he chose the perfect time. His 9:06.36 bested Griest's effort of 9:06.61 and allowed for Harvard to regain some vital points that were lost as a result of the disqualification in the 200 Medley earlier in the night.<br /><a href="http://bp2.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/Rd-PNEONXcI/AAAAAAAAACE/neFa-tlT2Zw/s1600-h/wollnercorbisero.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp2.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/Rd-PNEONXcI/AAAAAAAAACE/neFa-tlT2Zw/s320/wollnercorbisero.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5034900363057913282" /></a>Sam Wollner (pictured) is joined by Ivy League swimming legend, Tony Corbisiero ('82, Yale), the presenter of the 1000 award.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-66437637736515580672007-02-23T18:09:00.000-08:002007-02-23T15:28:31.067-08:00And We've Got Controversy!Nothing quite like starting off the night with some old fashioned controversy.<br /><br />It appeared that Harvard was deemed the winner in the 200 Medley Relay, however the 1st place points and bragging rights were very short lived.<br /><br />Shorter than any Harvard fan would like, that's for sure.<br /><br />Within seconds after the final swimmer touched the wall to signify the end of the race, the big board at Princeton showed a disqualification of Harvard for an unspecified broken rule.<br /><br />Harvard took a massive blow to their chances of winning the overall competition as a result of the disqualification, which ultimately penalized them 64 points. But the gaff also rewarded Cornell with yet another relay win in a time of 1:29.11.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-48078130250400578672007-02-23T10:46:00.000-08:002007-02-23T07:53:24.386-08:00A Little History to Hold You OverSince we had a bit of time before the 2nd Day Preliminaries began, we thought that it might be fun to show a clip of a great race in our sport.<br /><br />Although it may have nothing to do with the EISL competition, here is a nice little reminder of what many consider to be the greatest race of all time.<br /><br />Without further adieu, the 2000 Sydney Olympics 4x100 Relay. Get your goosebumps ready. The video is housed on <a href="http://www.youtube.com">You Tube</a href>.<object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/dQQt0eTknxY"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/dQQt0eTknxY" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object>Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-23842386370470108512007-02-22T20:01:00.000-08:002007-02-22T17:15:05.559-08:00Cornell Breaks Another; Princeton LeadsThe Cornell 400 Medley Relay added another record for the books. With a blistering opening leg, Cornell cruised to Meet, EISL, and Pool Record Gold. Their time was 3:13.61.<br /><br />As for the First Day scores:<br /><br />Princeton leads the competition with consistently strong showings in all events with a 442.<br /><br />Princeton - 442<br />Harvard - 353 1/2<br />Cornell - 304<br />Navy - 266 1/2<br />Columbia - 266<br />Yale - 260<br />Brown - 197<br />Penn - 147<br />Dartmouth - 120<br /><br />We'll see you tomorrow for Day 2.Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-87097069295617198682007-02-22T19:48:00.000-08:002007-02-22T16:58:04.557-08:00Thanks for the Memories, Rick!Rick Gilbert has given so much to the Ivy League and sport of diving, that it is time for us to repay him with our gratitude.<br /><br />Rick will be retiring after 39 years worth of coaching at Cornell. Thank you for everything that you have done for our conference and student-athletes everywhere.<br /><br />Enjoy your retirement, and come back and see us sometime. We'd be honored to have you back around.<br /><a href="http://bp2.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/Rd47CUONXbI/AAAAAAAAAB4/Tq6DA2PBORE/s1600-h/gilbertceremony.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp2.blogger.com/_QtwuZAD8CVc/Rd47CUONXbI/AAAAAAAAAB4/Tq6DA2PBORE/s320/gilbertceremony.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5034526344420875698" /></a>Joining Rick in the above picture are, from L to R; Andy Noel (Cornell AD), Joe Lucia (Head Coach), Rick Gilbert, Paul Steck and Larry Moore (former Cornell divers)Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8017501700485151259.post-13007276010775829212007-02-22T19:30:00.000-08:002007-02-22T16:44:31.164-08:00Sanders Takes the Crown in the 1mLuke Sanders ('08, Harvard) used a pretty unconventional means to upset the rest of the field in the finals of the 1m Diving competition.<br /><br />He basically played "possum".<br /><br />But as the old adage goes in sports: it's not how your start, it's how you finish. <br /><br />And finish he certainly did. Sanders positioned himself comfortably in the "A" Final with conservative dives and putting together a routine that would place him in 5th place at 277.90. Essentially, he did what he needed to do to ensure he'd be in the final. <br /><br />After that, all bets were off.<br /><br />In the final, Sanders emerged as the guy-to-beat with strong dives combined with a calculated degree of difficulty. This delicate balance allowed <i>LUUUUUUUUUUUUKE!!!</i> to distance himself from his competitors, and run away with the 1m championship. His 305.90 in the final was a full 10 points better than his closest competitor, Mike Papageorge ('10, Princeton).Alex Searlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07430312043884381396noreply@blogger.com