Tag: swimming

  • Axemen are champions, by snapping 21-year hold of title by Tigers

    Axemen are champions, by snapping 21-year hold of title by Tigers

    WOLFVILLE, N.S. – At the end of the third and final day of the 2020 Subway AUS Swimming Championships, presented by Keep It Social, the Dalhousie women’s team won their 19th straight AUS championship title while the Acadia Axemen earned their first championship title in 38 years, snapping a winning streak by the men’s Tigers which lasted 21 seasons. 

    Dalhousie’s Reagan Crowell led a podium sweep of the women’s 800m freestyle event to start the night. She posted a U SPORTS qualifying time of 8:50.06. Teammates Imani Theodore and Amelia Lane were second and third respectively. 

    Noah Horwood earned UNB their first gold of the session, touching in with a U SPORTS qualifying time of 28.74 in the men’s 50m breaststroke. Acadia’s Andre Walcott was second, followed by Dalhousie’s Evan Feick in third. 

    Abbey Corish won gold in the women’s 50m breaststroke, to earn Dalhousie their second gold of the evening. She was followed by Memorial’s Polina Konstantinova and Acadia’s Cali Bruce in second and third respectively. 

    Acadia’s Dean Sangster won the 200m backstroke in a U SPORTS qualifying time of 2:00.82. Dalhousie’s Christian Payne was second, followed by fellow Axemen Benjamin Henger in third. 

    UNB’s Leah Smal was first to the wall in the women’s 200m breaststroke. She clocked in with a U SPORTS qualifying time of 2:14.29. Dalhousie’s Claire Yurkovich and Sarah Bond were second and third, respectively. 

    Less than a tenth of a second separated the top three swimmers in the men’s 100m freestyle final. Acadia’s Brett Liem won the event with fellow Axeman Reilly Baker taking second place. Dalhousie’s Tyler Immel-Herron was right on their heals with a third-place finish. 

    Dalhousie’s Isabel Sarty set a new AUS record in the women’s 100m freestyle which she had broken during the heats earlier in the day. She posted a time of 55.19, bettering the time of 55.26 she set at the Kemp-Fry Invitational in November. Fellow Tiger Martine Nyhof was second, followed by Mary Beth Brown of Acadia in third. 

    Acadia’s Gordon Shortt won the 200m IM. Dalhousie’s Evan Feick was second, followed by Axemen swimmer Grier Kershaw in third. 

    Axewoman Cali Bruce out-touched Dalhousie’s Madeline Shivgulam to win the women’s 200m IM. Fellow Acadia swimmer Madison Morrison was third. 

    Dalhousie’s Quinn West won the final single event of the evening, earning a gold medal in the men’s 1500m freestyle event. Memorial’s Thomas Chafe was second, followed by Acadia’s Joshua Nowlan. 

    The Dalhousie team of Martine Nyhof, Abbey Corish, Lise Cinq-Mars and Isabel Sarty set a new AUS record to win the women’s 4x100m medley relay. They posted a time of 4:11.46 to beat the time of 4:11.64 previously set by Dalhousie at the 2016 AUS championships. Acadia was second in the event, followed by UNB in third. 

    Not to be outdone, the Acadia team of Dean SangsterAndre WalcottShane Kenny and Brett Liem set a new AUS recorded in the men’s 4x100m medley relay. They touched in with a time of 3:43.01, topping the time previously set by the Dalhousie Tigers at the 2016 AUS championships. Dalhousie was second, followed by Memorial. 

    Acadia’s Madison Murray and Dean Sangster were named the female and male rookies of the championship meet. 

    Dalhousie’s Isabel Sarty was the female swimmer of the meet, while Acadia’s Brett Liem earned the men’s title. 

    At the end of the third and final day of competition, the team standings are as follows:  

    Women’s  
    Dalhousie - 1043.50 
    Acadia - 677 
    University of New Brunswick - 482 
    Memorial – 479 
    Mount Allison - 261.50 

     Men’s  
    Acadia - 1034 
    Dalhousie - 734 
    Memorial - 439 
    University of New Brunswick - 372 
    Mount Allison - 150 

    Everyone who posted a U SPORTS qualifying time during the AUS season will be headed to the U SPORTS championships, hosted by the University of Victoria, February 20-22, 2020. 

    Eric Cederberg is the Director of Communications for Acadia Athletics.

  • Swimming Lessons

     

    I do not know how to put
    the happy back in my head
    how to stop the aching
    of my bones
    how to fill the hole
    between my lungs.
    I am a ship
    capsized by a sea
    of loneliness
    and as it takes my breath
    I feel my motivation
    for survival leaving me.
    How will I make it shore?
    I do not think I want to.

    The sun is shining,
    the sky clear and blue
    but I succumb to the waves
    I am too weak to move.
    Perhaps apathy
    is all that is familiar to me,
    for I do not tremble.
    I cannot shake in fear
    as I fear not drowning.
    I am instead inviting Sadness
    to stay,
    to hold me in a way
    I have not learned to hold
    myself, stability,
    familiarity in self-destruction.
    These waves are angry,
    relentless
    and they ebb and flow
    being pulled by my own,
    damned
    stubborn heart

    Why else would I give in so easily?

    I have tried countless times
    to defeat my worst enemy
    I have tried to conquer
    this tenacious part of me
    and I cannot win, Darling,
    precedents show I should sink
    instead of swim.

  • Axewomen and Axemen finish Jack Scholz meet in 2nd place

    WOLFVILLE, N.S. – The Acadia swim team wrapped up their second meet of the season with a second place combined finish at the ninth annual Jack Scholz meet hosted at Acadia University.

    Despite a great performance by the women’s and men’s team throughout the two day meet, Acadia finished second to the Dalhousie Tigers.

    The Axemen and Axewomen collected 37 top three finishes to show their developing strength both individually and as a team.

    Some of the key wins were senior swimmer Adam Deutsch, who picked up double victories in the 100m and 200m breaststrokes.

    Single wins came from Jessica Pelletier in the 50m backstroke, Ali MacEachern in the 50m freestyle, Patrick Henger in the 100m butterfly, Hannah Doiron in the 100m breaststroke, Brett Liem in the 50m freestyle and  Ben Henger in the 100m butterfly.

    The men’s relay teams put Dalhousie on notice as they came ever so close in both the 4x50m medley relay and 4x50m freestyle relay, losing by inches.

    “From the get go, the team was ready to show just how hard they have been working. The results started to pay off quickly. The biggest improvement came with 8 victories with close finishes in both men’s relays which could have gone either way,” said head coach Gary MacDonald after the two day event.

    “The team has two more weeks of tough training and then a full rest and shave to get ready for our first championship format meet which will take place at Dalhousie. It should be a very exciting competition,” added MacDonald.

    The Swim team will wrap up the first half of the swim season on the weekend of November 17-19 at Dalhousie in their third competition of the season. The AUS Championships will be hosted by UNB at their UNB Saint John campus on February 9-11, 2018.

    Acadia Medal Winners:

    Jessica Pelletier               2nd 100m backstroke, 3rd 200m backstroke, 1st 50m backstroke

    Walter Guiscardo            3rd 100m backstroke

    Alison MacEachern         2nd 50m butterfly, 2nd 200m butterfly, 3rd 100m butterfly, 1st 50m freestyle

    Kelsea Vessey                  3rs 50m butterfly, 2nd 400m freestyle, 3rd 100m freestyle, 2nd 100m butterfly

    Patrick Henger                 1st 50m butterfly, 3rd 100m butterfly, 3rd 100m butterfly

    Isaiah Grambo                 3rd 50m butterfly

    Hannah Doiron                3rd 200m breaststroke, 3rd 50m breaststroke, 1st 100m breaststroke

    Brett Liem                         3rd 200m breaststroke, 2nd 100m freestyle, 2nd 100m breaststroke,
    1st 50m freestyle

    Adam Deutsch                 1st 200m breaststroke,  1st 100m breaststroke, 2nd 200m individual medley,
    3rd 50m backstroke

    Guy Harrison-Murray     3rd 400m freestyle, 3rd 100m freestyle, 2nd 200m freestyle

    Brendan Vibert                2nd 50m breaststroke

    Ben Henger                      3rd 200m individual medley, 1st 100 butterfly,3rd 200m backstroke

    Joshua Nowlan                3rd 1500m freestyle

    Kristin MacKinnon          3rd 50m freestyle

    Collin Reynolds                3rd 400m individual medley

     

     

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