2020 MIAA Swimming & Diving Championship - Day One

2020 MIAA Swimming & Diving Championship - Day One

Day One Results  |  Championship Central Page

Women's Recap

In an 800 Free Relay that was a three-way tie at the 600-yard mark, Hope pulled away in the final leg to win the first event at the 2020 MIAA Swimming & Diving Championship, hosted by Calvin at the Venema Aquatic Center.

Hope's quartet of Emma Schaefer, Sydney Randall, Emily Kurt, and Tarah Lang touched in 7:41.25 to edge Calvin by one second and Albion by three seconds. Lang's last leg was timed at 1:54.77, the fastest anchor leg of the relay and fourth-fastest overall.

EVENT WINNERS - DAY 1

800 Free Relay - Hope - 7:41.25

STANDINGS - DAY 1

1. Hope - 58
T2. Calvin - 46
T2. Albion - 46
4. Kalamazoo - 40
5. Olivet - 34
6. Alma - 28

Men's Recap

Hope set the MIAA record for the 800 Free Relay Wednesday in the first day of action at the 2020 MIAA Swimming & Diving Championship, hosted by Calvin at the Venema Aquatic Center.

The Hope relay of Bailey Smith, Dan Clyde, Gabe Boonstra, and Daniel Keith touched in 6:42.17, improving the record set last year by 0.8 seconds. The time was also an NCAA B Cut.

Calvin finished second in 6:43.28, also an NCAA B Cut, with the relay team of Julian Iturbe, Jacob Heeres, Ryan Gelderloos, and Tim Randall. Iturbe's leadoff split of 1:38.37 was 0.04 shy of the MIAA record, but did achive an NCAA B Cut for the 200 Free distance.

Olivet's Eric Wood set a program record in the 200 free with a leadoff leg time of 1:42.57.

EVENT WINNERS - DAY 1

800 Free Relay - Hope - 6:42.17 (MIAA Record, NCAA B Cut)

STANDINGS - DAY 1

1. Hope - 52
2. Albion - 50
3. Calvin - 48
4. Olivet - 38
5. Alma - 28
6. Kalamazoo - 10

Special Olympics Unified Relay

Photo Gallery

For the third consecutive year, the MIAA partnered with Special Olympics Michigan to provide a Unified Sport Event to kick-off the 2020 MIAA Swimming and Diving Championship. 

A 125-yard relay started Day One at Venema Aquatic Center, featuring two MIAA student-athletes and three Special Olympics Athletes competing in seven lanes. Energy and excitement filled the air, with a bounty of smiles, high fives, and hugs happening on the pool deck.