UF S&D: No. 3 Florida Men Set for NCAA Championships

17 individual men and five relays will compete in Minneapolis this week

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – The SEC Champion and No. 3 Florida men’s swimming and diving team are set for the 2023 Men’s NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships, hosted at the University of Minnesota’s Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center from March 22-25.

All meet information, including schedules, tickets, heat sheets/results, streaming links, parking and fan policies, can be found on the 2023 NCAA Swimming & Diving Championships Central page<https://gophersports.com/sports/2022/9/29/2023-ncaa-championships>.

Amro Al-Wir, Eric Brown, Adam Chaney, Joaquin Gonzalez Pinero, Dillon Hillis, Mason Laur, Joshua Liendo, Oskar Lindholm, Giovanni Linscheer, Macguire McDuff, Alfonso Mestre, Jake Mitchell, Aleksas Savickas, Julian Smith, and Tyler Watson advanced to this week’s national championships based on their season-best times in 11 different events. Alberto Mestre is the first alternate, while Eric Friese will participate as a relay-only swimmer.

Florida’s 15 swimmers selected are the tied for the third-most in the country. Chaney owns the fastest 100 back time in the country at 44.17, while Savickas is the top 100 breast swimmer this season at 50.73.

Leonardo Garcia and Skip Donald joined the group after qualifying in the NCAA Diving Zones earlier this month. Garcia, who took bronze in the platform at the SEC Championships, and Donald will both compete in all three events.

The Gators qualified five relay teams as well with the 200 free relay, 400 free relay, 800 free relay, 200 medley relay and 400 medley relay. Florida has the top times this season in the 200 free relay and 400 medley relay, and will be the top seed in those events.

Chaney, Hillis, Lindholm, Mestre and Watson all were All-Americans at last year’s national championships. Chaney won two national titles in the 200 medley relay and 200 free relay, while Hillis was a member of the 200 medley relay national championship team.

Name

Event

Time

Amro Al-Wir

200 Breast

1:52.33

Eric Brown

500 Free

4:12.95

1650 Free

14:44.06

Adam Chaney

50 Free

18.71

100 Free

42.26

100 Back

44.17

Skip Donald

1-meter

3-meter

Platform

Leonardo Garcia

1-meter

3-meter

Platform

Joaquin Gonzalez Pinero

200 IM

1:43.09

200 Fly

1:41.37

Dillon Hillis

100 Breast

50.90

200 Breast

1:51.14

Mason Laur

400 IM

3:40.18

Joshua Liendo

50 Free

18.35

100 Free

41.22

100 Fly

44.11

Oskar Lindholm

1650 Free

14:52.71

Giovanni Linscheer

400 IM

3:40.90

500 Free

4:12.69

Macguire McDuff

50 Free

18.95

100 Free

41.59

200 Free

1:32.34

Alfonso Mestre

500 Free

4:10.15

1650 Free

14:52.88

Jake Mitchell

200 Free

1:32.69

500 Free

4:09.85

1650 Free

14:46.91

Aleksas Savickas

100 Breast

50.73

200 Breast

1:50.08

Julian Smith

100 Free

41.98

200 Free

1:42.64

100 Breast

51.52

Tyler Watson

500 Free

4:13.92

1650 Free

14:38.50

SEC Championship Recap
Florida won it’s 11-straight SEC title last month, and the 44th in program history. That title marked the second-most by any SEC team across all sports, and the Gators are only the third team in history of the SEC swimming and diving championships to reach 11 consecutive titles (Florida – 13 from 1955-1968; Auburn – 16 from 1996-2012).

Savickas set the SEC, Meet, Pool, and School record in College Station during the conference championships. The freshman won one gold and two silvers during the week.

Florida’s 400 medley relay team swam a sub 3:00, clocking in at 2:59.48 behind Chaney, Hillis, Liendo, and McDuff, while the 200 free relay of McDuff, Liendo, Chaney, and Alberto Mestre’s time of 1:14.19 flirted with the all-time record that the Gators set during last year’s NCAA Championships (1:14.11).
Liendo continues to make waves across the country during his first year of NCAA swimming. The Canadian Olympian set the second-fastest times in the 50 free (18.35), 100 free (41.22) and 100 fly (44.11).
In the platform, Garcia secured a podium spot after scoring 418.65 to give Florida a bronze diving medal.

Click here for the Full Recap<https://floridagators.com/news/2023/2/18/mens-swimming-diving-sec-sweep-florida-wins-mens-and-womens-sec-swimming-and-diving-championships.aspx>

Championship Coverage
A total of 270 participants (235 swimmers and 35 divers) will compete in the championships. Swimmers qualified for the championships by meeting the established minimum time for the events in which they entered.

All meet information, including schedules, tickets, heat sheets/results, streaming links, parking and fan policies, can be found on the 2023 NCAA Swimming & Diving Championships Central page<https://gophersports.com/sports/2022/9/29/2023-ncaa-championships>.

ESPN+ will provide live digital coverage for preliminary and finals sessions Wednesday through Saturday, and fans can follow along with live stats here <https://swimmeetresults.tech/NCAA-Division-I-Men-2023/> or on the MeetMobile app.

Tape-delayed coverage of the women’s championships will be on ESPNU at 12:30 p.m. Eastern time, Tuesday, April 4.

Schedule of Events (Times in Eastern)
Wednesday – Finals at 7 p.m.
200 Medley Relay
800 Free Relay
Thursday – Prelims at 11 a.m. | Finals at 7 p.m.
500 Free
200 IM
50 Free
1-Meter Diving
200 Free Relay
Friday – Prelims at 11 a.m. | Finals at 7 p.m.
400 IM
100 Fly
200 Free
100 Breast
100 Back
3-Meter Diving
400 Medley Relay
Saturday – Prelims at 11 a.m. | Finals at 7 p.m.
1650 Free
200 Back
100 Free
200 Breast
200 Fly
Platform Diving
400 Free Relay

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