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Ed Maas's avatar

Great article, as usual! Congratulations to Justin Finkel! His closing speed at this meet is reminiscent of Bobby Finke’s extra gear in the Olympics.

Another example of great closing speed at this meet was Connor Vincent, throwing down a blistering 24 second final 50, for a very exciting finish to the mile race. Keep an eye on Mr Vincent as a contender for next year’s Swimmer of the Year.

This article mentions the controversy regarding Derek Maas, and Swim Swam also wrote an article on this.

Yet another outstanding swimmer who had an amazing meet, that hasn’t received much attention, was Kenyon’s Djordje Dragojlovic. Mr Dragojlovic earned 2 individual NCAA titles, an individual NCAA runner up, and was a key contributor to 3 relay NCAA titles, plus another podium finish in a fourth relay.

This site has referenced, in the past, the benefits of making votes for team rankings public. It might be interesting to make votes for Swimmer of the Year public as well.

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SwimCoachDad's avatar

In all honesty, I’m not sure how much of the meet most of the coaches actually see. I notice coaches I know leaving finals after the first event or not come to finals at all if they don’t have a swimmer. I’ve seen plenty of Most Valuable awards at championship meets go to an unexpected recipient. I talk to 20-30 college coaches most years about my swimmers when they are being recruited and I wonder how much some of them really know about the sport. I believe in some ways, these awards are like Prom King and Queen where it becomes more of a popularity contest with a hint of merit. Can we make a case that Justin was Swimmer of the Meet? Yes. But was he the obvious choice? No since there was a swimmer with 3 individual wins. Was Finkel possibly a politically motivated choice or coaches being petty? Definitely. It isn’t like Maas cheated. He played by the rules as they stand. He’s going to a top level med school and had a year of eligibility. Now, does this show the disparity among D3 schools? I think so. There certainly are a lot broader range of school sizes, resources, grad programs etc than in D1. I even heard from one of the coaches that his school offers swimmers a “pipeline” into their med school. How much of a draw would THAT be? I like the way Justin swims but I also appreciate the high level of swimming Derek was at (and I watched all 8 sessions).

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