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Agata Naskret breaks the 100 -back division -ii

2025 NCAA Division II Swimming & Diving Championship

Agata naskret We gave ourselves a preview of how the individual backstroke events of the women could look over in the next two days when they broke the 100 -bridge record of Division II, which was led by Colorado Mesa's profit 400 Medley relay.

At the beginning of this season, Naskret, a junior, set a goal to break the Division II record in the event, which was 52.52. She crowned this box during the CMU invitation of the intermediate season, in which she swam 51.96 and for the first time brought the brand under 52 seconds. The meeting was upholidated, and while she was swimming 51.96, the time on the psychiative leaf shows like 51.86.

Tonight she chopped a few tenths out of the record and solved a 51.53 during her leg leg. She turned 24.95 and got off well under her record pace (25.39). In November she separated in 26.57 in the back half and was hundredth of this separation tonight and came across her second 50 yards in Indianapolis 26.58.

TOP 5 Performer All-Time, NCAA Division II History

  1. Agata Naskret, Colorado Mesa – 51.53 (2025 D2 championships)
  2. Polina Lapshina, Queens – 52.07 (2019 D2 championships)
  3. (Tie) Laura Pareja, Drury – 52.42 (2021 NCAA D2 championships)/Celina Marquez, Nova Southeasters – 52.42 (2021 Spartan Invitational)
  4. Cassie Wright, Nova Southeastern – 52.48 (2022 NCAA D2 championships)
  5. Katya Rudenko, Drury – 52.65 (2014 Mizzou Invitational)

Naskret is now 0.54 seconds than the next fastest swimmer in the history of Division II. Her record-breaking swimming brought the Mavericks in full control over the 400 Medley relay and they held half an increase in Drury Panthers to defend their national season title over last season.

Naskret is the defending champion of NCAA Division II at both backstroke events. She will receive another shot in reducing her Division II record during the 100 back of the individual women and on the last day of the meeting to drive the 200 -bridge back. She swam a height of 1: 55.17 in the last few months in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championships, which in the history of the division rank fourth of all time. Set for the height, its best converts to 1: 53.97, good under the Division II record.

400 Medley Relay for women – time -controlled finals

  • NCAA DII recording: 3: 35.70 – Queens (NC) (Lapshina, Prayson, Dacruz, Dobson) (2019)
  • Meet record: 3: 35.70 – Queens (NC) (Lapshina, Prayson, Dacruz, Dobson) (2019)

Final:

  1. Colorado Mesa (Naskret, Leese, Borchardt, Qunell), 3: 37.54
  2. Drury (Lee, Laegreid, Wijk, Morales), 3: 37.97
  3. Findlay (Melnyk, Susi, Mears-Bentley, Jones), 3: 38.64
  4. Nova Southeasters, 3: 39.54
  5. Wingate, 3: 39.80
  6. Catawba, 3: 41.61
  7. Tampa, 3: 41.89
  8. Indy, 3: 42.43

Agata naskret Set the Mavericks for the success from the first stage of the 400 Medley season. Nasket led in heat in Colorado Mesa in Division II in 100-back and swam 51.53 to take over three tenths from the brand, which she put in her part-time invitation.

Colorado Mesa has not followed again when Antonia Leese (1: 01.62), Kiara Borchardt (54.88) and Ada Qunell (49.51) followed the Mätzchen from Naskret and defended her title from last season 3: 37.54.

They held the strong half of the Drury from Wijk and ab Maria Morales for victory. Wijk pulled the panthers with a 53.26 butterfly split near the Mavericks, although Morales (49.60) Qunell was unable to completely delete the gap. The Panthers were second in 3: 37.97, about four tenths behind Colorado Mesa.