Skip to navigation Skip to content Skip to footer

Tigers improve on day 2 of national championships

Photo courtesy of Mathieu Tanguay
Photo courtesy of Mathieu Tanguay

Tigers swimmers had another great day in the pool with seven swimmers qualifying for finals along with with both 4x200m relay teams moving on to the evening sessions.

Reagan Crowell led the way with a sixth-place finish in the women's 400m freestyle with a personal-best time of 4:15.05, just .04 seconds behind the the current Dalhousie record holder Megan Bernier. Adam Bouma was 23rd in the men's 200m breaststroke with a time of 2:17.22, just .30 seconds off a new Dalhousie record. Noah Mascoll-Gomes was .01 seconds shy of setting a new Dalhousie record in the men's 50m freestyle on his way to a 13th place finish.

EVENT FINALISTS

6. Reagan Crowell - 400m freestyle
7. Reagan Crowell, Abbey Nichols, Martine Nyhof & Emilie Schofield - 4x200m freestyle relay
9. Noah Mascoll-Gomes, Liam Ferguson, Christian Payne & Logan Sparkes - 4x200m freestyle relay
13. Veronica Hollick - 50m butterfly
13. Noah Mascoll-Gomes - 50m freestyle
17. Christian Payne - 100m backstroke
22. Martine Nyhof - 100m backstroke
22. Liam Ferguson - 100m backstroke
23. Adam Bouma - 200m breaststroke

The women currently sit in 11th place while the men are in 12th.

FULL RELEASE

QUEBEC CITY (U SPORTS) – The UBC Thunderbirds men's team and the Toronto Varsity Blues women's team have strengthened their lead atop the standings on Day 2 of the 2022 U SPORTS Swimming Championships at Laval University in Quebec City. 

Schedule, standings and results
CBCSports.ca 

After 26 of the 38 events on the meet's event, the Thunderbirds have picked up 853 points, ahead of the University of Calgary (639.50) and the University of Toronto (551). On the women's team standings, the Varsity Blues are leading comfortably (1,035 points), with UBC (749.50) and the Calgary Dinos (505) trailing. 

The last time a team other than UBC won the women's U SPORTS banner was Toronto back in 2016, the last time Laval hosted the national event. 

"We love this pool! We really like to come to Quebec City, there's something in the water that's good for Toronto, said Byron MacDonald, head coach of the Varsity Blues. Tomorrow, basically, we just need to maintain the momentum. When you are on a roll like this, the student-athletes get a more positive feeling and I think we'll see some best times again tomorrow." 

On the men's side, Thunderbirds' head coach Derrick Schoof praised his athletes' performances. "I couldn't be more pleased that both our men and women are really stepping up. The men's 100m backstroke tonight was really fun to watch. To see our guys go 1-2-3 was really special, he said. It's a tough meet, these three days are really tough, so for tomorrow it's a matter of getting some good sleep tonight, warming up well in the morning and getting a lane for the afternoon."

For a second straight day, McGill's Clement Secchi etched his name in the U SPORTS record books. After breaking the 100m butterfly mark on Thursday, the Frenchman took care of the 50m butterfly on Friday, setting a record at 23.23 seconds in the preliminary rounds, before improving it in the final with a time of 23.05. Secchi later came 0.05 second away from setting another record in the 200m butterfly, dominating the event with a time of 1:54.61 to add a fourth gold medal to his weekend's total. Secchi completed the evening with a great effort to anchor McGill's 4x200 freestyle relay from fourth place to a silver medal. It was the Redbirds' swimmer's sixth podium in two days. 

Danielle Hanus won a second and a third gold medal on Friday. The UBC athlete first dominated the 100m backstroke final touching the wall in 56.60 seconds, close to three full seconds ahead of the second-place finisher. She then contributed to the Thunderbirds' gold-medal performance in the 4x200m freestyle relay. 

Rebecca Smith of the University of Calgary also added a third gold medal to her haul, this time winning the 50m butterfly in 26.39 seconds. 

Laval Rouge et Or's Mehdi Ayoubi brought the local crowd to their feet with a strong showing in the 50m freestyle final with a gold-medal-winning time of 21.73 seconds, the host's first gold medal since the beginning of the meet. 

At the end of Day 2, McGill's Clément Secchi leads the individual medal table with four gold and two silver medals. Calgary's Rebecca Smith (three gold medals and two bronze) and Toronto's Aleksa Gold (two gold medals, a silver and a bronze) follow, while a trio of UBC swimmers, including Danielle Hanus (three gold medals and a silver), Emma O'Croinin (two gold and two silver) and Blake Tierney (two gold medals, a silver and a bronze) won four. 

NOTES : The 2022 U SPORTS Swimming Championships will close on Saturday with the preliminary heats starting at 10 a.m. while the finals follow starting at 6 p.m.… The preliminary heats can be followed live each morning on U SPORTS' Facebook page while the finals are on CBC Sports' platforms 

Results and start lists are available here.