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DINOS WIN ONE, LOSE ONE AT CONFERENCE MEET
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. –
The University of Calgary Dinos captured their fourth consecutive
Canada West men’s swimming title Sunday, while the Dinos
women were denied in their quest for a third straight conference
title as the 2010 Canada West Swimming Championships wrapped up
Sunday afternoon in Lethbridge.
After taking the lead in the team standings
late Saturday, the Calgary men exploded to turn a 73-point
advantage into a 244-point win on the final day of racing.
Meanwhile, the Dinos women stayed neck-and-neck with UBC but just
didn’t have the numbers the T-Birds had down the stretch,
falling by just 15 points in one of the closest team races in
recent memory – one that saw the lead go back and forth
through the final races of the afternoon before a UBC podium sweep
of the 200-metre breaststroke.
The men’s team title was the University
of Calgary’s 19th in history and the fifth in the
past seven seasons.
“We swam really well and, though we
missed a few swims in there, we were pretty dominant,” said
Calgary head coach Mike Blondal. “We have some work to do
still, but we’ll be in good shape when we get to CIS.
It’s a different ball game there and with some new coaches at
new programs things will be
different.”
“Everybody, I think, stepped up and did
what we needed to do,” said team captain Jason Block, who won
a gold medal in the 200-metre breaststroke Sunday. “The team
atmosphere on the deck was great, everyone really came together,
and that was great to see. At the same time, we won this meet last
year and still had a very tough battle at the national meet, so we
need to keep a level head and go into CIS ready to race and put up
our best fight.”
Rookie Bogdan Knezevic was Calgary’s
other individual gold medalist on Day 3 after leading a pack of
Dinos to the podium in the 200-metre individual medley. Colin
Miazga and Block grabbed silver and bronze, respectively, while
David Dimitrov finished fourth, Dillon Babb sixth, and Kyle
Sorrenti eighth.
Block won his third medal of the day swimming
the breaststroke leg of the 4 x 100-metre medley relay, joining Dan
Langlois, Andre Kudaba, and Ryan Gow atop the
podium.
A focus heading into the CIS Championships
for the Calgary men will be the relays, after the Dinos were
disqualified in Friday night’s 4 x 200-metre relay. A botched
exchange was also a key factor in Calgary’s close loss to UBC
at the CIS championships last year.
“We lost it on a relay takeover last
year and we got a good scare on it here this weekend, so we
can’t make that mistake,” said Blondal.
“That’s 40 points. They all know how to do it properly,
we just need to take care of it.”
The Dinos head to the CIS event looking to
regain the national title they last won in
2008.
Calgary’s women -
meanwhile, had just 14 swimmers at the meet against
UBC’s 18, and two key members of the team – Canadian
record holder Katy Murdoch and Jy Lawrence – remained in
Calgary due to illness. Both are expected to be back with the team
in time for the 2010 CIS Swimming Championships Feb. 18-20 in
Toronto.
“I think we’re a stronger team at
a stronger meet like CIS than we are here with less depth, so
we’ll be ready to go in Toronto. Here we came in four girls
shy of the maximum, and that’s 16 swims that should all score
points. That’s our fault as coaches, and we need to find ways
to make sure we cover for that.”
Erica Morningstar, the 2009 CIS rookie of the
year, accounted for two of the four Canada West records broken on
the weekend with both coming on Sunday. In the 100-metre freestyle,
she lowered her own record set in 2009 by 17 hundredths, stopping
the clock in 54.51 seconds. Seanna Mitchell, Breanna Hendriks, and
Erin Wamsteeker finished in spots two, three, and four behind
Morningstar.
Just four races later, she was back in the
pool for the 100-metre backstroke and promptly became the first
woman in Canada West championship history to break the minute mark,
winning with a time of 59.87 to break Erin Gammel’s mark of
1:00.07 set in 2007.
The Dinos nearly had another podium sweep in
the 400-metre freestyle when Kevyn Peterson and Hendriks finished
one-two while Julianne Brown was just out-touched at the wall to
finish fourth.
Brown, acting as team captain in
Murdoch’s absence, applauded the team’s effort over the
weekend.“I think our team cohesion was really good, and we
saw some girls put in some really good swims,” she said.
“It was a lot harder than we thought it was going to be and
it was really close at the end.”
The Dinos women will look to defend their
first-ever CIS swimming championship Feb. 18-20 in
Toronto.
FINAL TEAM STANDINGS – MEN
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CALGARY – 764.5 pts
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UBC – 520.5
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Alberta – 452
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Victoria – 427.5
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Manitoba – 157.5
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Lethbridge – 149
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Regina – 28
FINAL TEAM STANDINGS – WOMEN
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UBC – 773 pts.
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CALGARY – 758
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Alberta – 418
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Victoria – 274
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Lethbridge – 181
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Manitoba – 121
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Regina – 43
MAJOR AWARD WINNERS
Male Swimmer of the Meet – Nicholas
Sinclair, Victoria
Female Swimmer of the Meet – Martha
McCabe, UBC
Male Rookie of the Year – Nicholas
Sinclair, Victoria
Female Rookie of the Year – Shelby
Snodgrass, UBC
Coach of the Year (Men) – Mike
Blondal, Calgary
Coach of the Year (Women) – Chad
Webb, UBC
CANADA WEST ALL-STARS – WOMEN
Breanna Hendriks, Calgary
Erica Morningstar, Calgary
Jessika Craig, Calgary
Kevyn Peterson, Calgary
Julianne Brown, Calgary
Seanna Mitchell, Calgary
Allison Long, Calgary
Martha McCabe, UBC
Erin Miller, UBC
Hanna Pierse, UBC
CANADA WEST ALL-STARS – MEN
Nicolas Sinclair,
Victoria
Craig Dagnall, Victoria
Ryan Gow, Calgary
Jason Block, Calgary
David Woodman, Calgary
James Goodway, Calgary
Colin Miazga, Calgary
Bogdan Knezevic, Calgary
Andre Kudaba, Calgary
Dan Langlois, Calgary
Joshua Au, Alberta
Robert Mackinnon,
Alberta
Scott Stewart, Alberta
Brian Yakiwchuk, Alberta
Tommy Gossland, UBC
Riley Pickerl, Manitoba
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