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William & Mary Athletics

The W&M men's swimming team celebrates after winning the 2020 CAA Championship, Feb. 22, 2020

Men's Swimming Jacob Skipper, Associate Media Relations Director

W&M Men's Swimming Wins the CAA Championship for the Sixth Year in Row

The William & Mary men's swimming team won its sixth-consecutive Colonial Athletic Association Championships on Saturday night, doing so in record-setting fashion in a week filled with individual event records.  W&M scored 874.5 points, the fifth-most ever in conference history, to defeat the field of five teams.  UNCW was second with 781 points, while Drexel finished third with 601 points, Towson fourth with 531.5, and Delaware was fifth with 314 points.

Among the records that the Tribe set while winning the conference title was the record for the most event championships won in a single year, with 14 gold medals in 18 swimming events.  That tied the record set by American University in 2001.  W&M swept all five relays for the third-straight year, and won all five of them with conference records.  At the end of the meet, first-year head coach Nate Kellogg and his staff were named the CAA Men's Swimming Coaches of the Year.  This is the first year since 1994 that a coach in his first year at the head of a conference team has led that team to the CAA Championship.

Tribe senior Colin Wright (Williamsburg, Va.) was named the Most Outstanding Swimmer of the Championships, after an exceptional week and an even more incredible career.  Wright won all seven of his events for the second year in a row, becoming the first man in conference history to achieve that feat twice.  He also became the first swimmer in league history, male or female, to win at least five titles all four years of his career.  Wright's seven championships this week gave him 24 for his career, the most ever won by any swimmer in conference history, and his 15 relay championships are also the most ever won by any one swimmer.  His career will most likely continue for another month, as he collected likely NCAA invitation times in both the 50 free and the 100 free, as well as another provisional time in the 200 free.

1,650 Freestyle
Starting the evening off was the 1,650 free, where senior Chris Balbo (Short Hills, N.J.) capped off his career with his second win of the week and third gold medal of his career.  Balbo kept the pace easy over the first third of the race, and then steadily kept ratcheting up the speed and the pressure as the laps increased, pulling away over the final 300 yards to win in 15:32.38.  It was Balbo's first win in the 1,650 free, after making the podium each of his first three years, and the fifth year in a row that a W&M swimmer had won the event.  Freshman Conor Sokolowsky (Williamsburg, Va.) finished ninth overall to add nine more team points, stopping the clock in 16:06.95.

200 Backstroke
W&M piled up more than 50 points in the 200 back.  Senior Lee Bradley (Crestwood, Ky.) was fourth overall in 1:48.25, and his classmate Colin Demers (Virginia Beach, Va.) was right behind him in 1:48.47 for sixth place.  Junior Jake Kealy (Wilton, Conn.) improved his spot from the morning prelims, and finished seventh in 1:50.64.  In the consolation finals, sophomore Jack Galbraith (Vienna, Va.) was 10th overall in 1:50.90, while freshman Noah Fields (Williamsburg, Va.) was 13th in 1:53.57 and his classmate Colby Mills (Fredericksburg, Va.) was 16th in 1:55.46.

100 Freestyle
In the 100 free, Wright picked up his sixth gold of the week and broke the CAA record for the most championships in his career, beating the mark of 22 originally set by JMU's Mark Gabriele '95.  Wright swam the finals in 42.19 seconds, an NCAA provisional qualifier and the second-fastest race in school history to pick up the win.  His classmate Jack Doherty (Middletown, Conn.) was second with a lifetime-best performance of 43.39 seconds, the seventh-fastest race ever and also an NCAA provisional qualifier.  Sophomore Graham Hertweck (Greensboro, N.C.) was eighth in 45.34 seconds, and junior Christopher Pfuhl (Charlotte, N.C.) swam a lifetime-best 44.73 seconds for 10th overall.  Pfuhl now ranks eighth in school history.  Senior Ian Thompson (Alexandria, Va.) rounded out the scorers in 13th overall, stopping the clock in 44.97 seconds.

200 Breaststroke
Senior Ben Skopic (Marriottsville, Md.) wrapped up his week with his third individual championship, and fourth overall, winning the 200 breast for the first time in his career.  He swam a lifetime-best 1:58.79 for the gold, the eighth-fastest race in school history, and now ranks fourth all-time among Tribe athletes.  Sophomore Ryan Bebel (Westfield, N.J.) was fourth in 2:01.60, while Flynn Crisci (Williamsburg, Va.) was seventh in 2:02.15 and Kyle Demers (Virginia Beach, Va.) swam 2:02.25 for eighth overall.  In the consolation finals, Sokolowsky swam 2:05.44 for 13th overall in his second event of the session, and senior Ian Bidwell (Pelham, N.Y.) wrapped up his career with a 15th-place 2:06.31.

200 Butterfly
Both of W&M's finalists in the 200 fly turned in collegiate-best times.  Sophomore Steven Thalblum (Ashburn, Va.) swam 1:48.58 for fourth place overall, and improved to sixth all-time at W&M.  The freshman Fields, swimming his second event of the night, won the consolation finals for ninth overall with a time of 1:50.25.  That lifted him up to 13th in school history among athletes.

400 Free Relay
With the team title already locked up, the Tribe's 400 free relay put the icing on the cake with another win, W&M's sixth in a row in the event.  Wright led things off with another NCAA provisional qualifier, 42.44 seconds, the third-fastest time of the day and in school history, handing off to Pfuhl with a comfortable lead.  He split 44.52, the second-fastest time in the field, and kept the lead for Doherty to work with on the third leg.  Doherty split 43.45, the fastest in the third leg, and Thompson brought things home in 43.66 seconds, again the fastest leg among all anchors.  Overall, W&M swam 2:54.07 to break the conference and school records that the Tribe had set last year.

For most of the team, the season is now complete, but Wright and possibly several others will begin preparing for the NCAA Championships, March 25-28 in Indianapolis, Ind.  Official selections will be announced on Wednesday, March 11, and while Wright is squarely in the selection envelope, W&M also has a couple relays that could go fast enough at a last-chance meet to earn a spot at the national championships.

2020 Colonial Athletic Assocation Men's Swimming & Diving Championships
Final Standings
1. William & Mary 874.5

2. UNCW 781
3. Drexel 601
4. Towson 531.5
5. Delaware 314
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Players Mentioned

Chris Balbo

Chris Balbo

Free/IM
6' 0"
Senior
Ryan Bebel

Ryan Bebel

Breast/IM
6' 3"
Sophomore
Ian Bidwell

Ian Bidwell

Free/IM
6' 4"
Senior
Lee Bradley

Lee Bradley

Free/Back
6' 0"
Senior
Colin Demers

Colin Demers

Back/Fly
6' 5"
Senior
Jack Doherty

Jack Doherty

Free/Fly/Back
6' 0"
Senior
Jack Galbraith

Jack Galbraith

Back/Fly
5' 7"
Sophomore
Graham Hertweck

Graham Hertweck

Free/Fly
6' 2"
Sophomore
Jake Kealy

Jake Kealy

Back/IM
5' 11"
Junior
Christopher Pfuhl

Christopher Pfuhl

Free/Back
5' 11"
Junior

Players Mentioned

Chris Balbo

Chris Balbo

6' 0"
Senior
Free/IM
Ryan Bebel

Ryan Bebel

6' 3"
Sophomore
Breast/IM
Ian Bidwell

Ian Bidwell

6' 4"
Senior
Free/IM
Lee Bradley

Lee Bradley

6' 0"
Senior
Free/Back
Colin Demers

Colin Demers

6' 5"
Senior
Back/Fly
Jack Doherty

Jack Doherty

6' 0"
Senior
Free/Fly/Back
Jack Galbraith

Jack Galbraith

5' 7"
Sophomore
Back/Fly
Graham Hertweck

Graham Hertweck

6' 2"
Sophomore
Free/Fly
Jake Kealy

Jake Kealy

5' 11"
Junior
Back/IM
Christopher Pfuhl

Christopher Pfuhl

5' 11"
Junior
Free/Back