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2025 Ivy League men's championship day 1 final

2025 Ivy League Men Swimming & Diving Championships

  • Data: Wednesday, February 26th – Saturday, March 1st
  • Location: Katherine Moran Coleman Aquatics Center, Providence, RI
  • Defending champion: Harvard Men (7x)
  • Live results
  • Live video: ESPN+
  • Central championship

Day 1 of the 2025 men's championships 2025 will exist in time -controlled finals from the 200 Medley and 800 Free Relays as well as a team diving event.

The Diving team, which is still in its exhibition phase, is the version of a Diving Medley relay. The idea is to achieve this event like a season so that every participating team collects double points. Each team consists of 3 divers, each with two dives. In the Ivy League, the platform diving is not an event achieved, so that the divers perform a total of three 1-meter dives and three 3-meter dives.

200 -yard -Medley relay of men -time -controlled final

  • Ivy Meet: 1: 23.79, Harvard (Tan, McNamara, Yakubovich, O'Hara), 2023
  • Pool recording: 1: 23.79, Harvard (Tan, McNamara, Yakubovich, O'Hara), 2023
  • NCAA A: 1: 23.62
  • NCAA B: 1: 23.90

Podium:

  1. Yale – 1: 24.00
  2. Harvard – 1: 24.20
  3. Cornell – 1: 24.67
  4. Columbia – 1: 24.75
  5. Brown – 1: 24.92
  6. Princeton – 1: 24.96
  7. Penn – 1: 26.22
  8. Dartmouth – 1: 28.09

After a three -year run by Harvard, the Ivy League saw a new quartet on the podium on Wednesday when Yale's Lucius Brown (21.42), Alexander Hazlett (23.05), Nick Finch (20.52) and Nankov refuse (23.05) combined to achieve the purple, 1: 24.00 to 1: 24.20. It was a program record for the Bulldogs and their first conference title in the event.

Harvards Anthony Rincon (21.27), Joshua Chen (23.84), Sonny Wang (20.11) and Marre Gattnar (18.98) second, only 0.47 in front of Cornell (Pietro UbertalliPresent Sebastian WolffPresent Joseph GurskiAnd Josh Toothman).

When Columbia (1: 24.75), Brown (1: 24.92) and Princeton (1: 24.96) came to the wall.

Men's team diving (only jumping board) -exhibition

Podium without score:

  1. Harvard Team Diving – 355.15
  2. Princeton Team Diving – 339.80
  3. Dartmouth Team Diving – 318.75
  4. Brown Team Diving – 316.10
  5. Yale Team Diving – 310.15
  6. Columbia Team Diving – 274.80

Harvard won the team diving exhibition with an average score of 59.19 per dive of 15.35 points more than Princeton, which had won the event last year.

800 Yard Freestyle Relay for Men – time -controlled finals

  • Ivy Meet: 6: 15.38, Harvard (Novak, Reiman, Rawls, Farris), 2019
  • Pool recording: 6: 16.77, Princeton (Lim, Khosla, Schott, Walther), 2023
  • NCAA A: 6: 15.80
  • NCAA B: 6: 18.42

Podium:

  1. Princeton – 6: 13.75
  2. Yale – 6: 13.98
  3. Cornell – 6: 17.54
  4. Harvard – 6: 18.05
  5. Brown – 6: 21.17
  6. Penn – 6: 23.62
  7. Dartmouth – 6: 25.17
  8. Columbia – 6: 26.54

Princeton and Yale both came to the wall for more than a second below the record time of 6: 15.38, which was set by Harvard in 2019, but Princeton received the touch by 0.23, in order to etch their name in the record books. Sophomore Arthur Balva (1: 34.77), junior Mitchell Schott (1: 31.81), in the second year Noah Six (1: 34.85) and newcomer Patrick Dinu (1: 32.32) combined for 6: 13.75 to secure the victory of the Tiger.

Princeton started leg 2 in the 5th place, behind Cornell (Cornell (Pietro Ubertalli1: 33.01), brown (Marton Nagy1: 33.56), Yale (Jake Wang1: 33.82) and Columbia (Adam Wu1: 34.57) on 200.

Schott provided by a very large edge the fastest second leg, which Princeton broke in first place on the 400. Noah Millard. The Bulldogs carried out the fact at 700.

Cornell (Ubertalli, Jacques GrovePresent Jack BanksAnd Dominic Edwards) Eked a third place and came to the wall for half a second ahead of Harvard (Littlejohn, Harris Durham, Shane Washart and David Greeley).

Team values ​​after day 1 points

  1. Yale – 120
  2. Princeton – 112
  3. (Tie) Harvard / Cornell – 108
  4. – –
  5. Brown – 100
  6. Columbia – 96
  7. Penn – 94
  8. Dartmouth – 90