Swimming
Championship recap Day 2: Double gold for Mainville, T-Birds extend their lead

U SPORTS Staff
For the second straight year, the UBC Thunderbirds have won both the men’s and women’s national banners as the 2018 U SPORTS Swimming Championships wrapped up on Saturday night at the University of Toronto’s Varsity Pool.
UBC’s men claimed their third banner in the past four years with 1151.5 points, ahead of the Calgary Dinos (939.5) and host Toronto Varsity Blues (887). The T-Birds women accumulated 1362.5 points to earn their sixth national title in the past seven years, while the Blues (997) and Montreal Carabins (767) finished second and third, respectively.
It marks the 14th time in program history and the fourth time in the last seven years that both squads have garnered national banners in the same year.
Congratulations to the @ubctbirds - 2018 @USPORTSca Men's and Women's Swimming CHAMPIONS! #ChampSZN pic.twitter.com/6GU9M5x9sH
— U SPORTS Swimming (@USportsSwimming) February 25, 2018
“The athletes put in all of the hard work and they make us look really good as coaches,” said UBC head coach Steve Price, who earned U SPORTS Coach of the Year honours on the women’s side, and shared the honour with McGill’s Peter Carpenter for the men’s award.
Honestly, this award is really for the whole coaching staff, the centre coaching staff and my assistant coach - it’s a whole team effort.
Price
2016 Olympians Kylie Masse (Toronto) and Yuri Kisil (UBC) were named the U SPORTS Female and Male Swimmers of the Year for the second consecutive season.
Masse, the 2017 world champion and world record holder in the 100m backstroke, completed the backstroke sweep for the third straight season, winning the 200-metre event in a new U SPORTS record time of 2:02.17 on Day 3. She also teamed up with Rachael Parsons, Hannah Genich and Sarah Polley to set a new Canadian club record in the 4x100m medley relay in 4:00.69.
“It was incredible,” said Masse when asked about the caliber of this year’s U SPORTS Championships. “I don’t know if this has ever happened before in Canadian university history."
To have this many Olympic athletes competing at one championship is really unique. I think it shows a lot to young athletes that Canadian university swimming is an incredible opportunity and that you can succeed here.
Masse
Kisil claimed the men’s Sprinter’s Cup as the winner of both the 50m and 100m freestyle races for the second straight year and third time in his career. The Calgary native touched the wall in 47.12 to win the 100-metre gold medal on Saturday night.
“I’m totally stoked with my performances,” said Kisil. “It is such an honour to be recognized for swimming well against such a great field of men, and a lot of my friends too, so it’s been awesome.”
UBC’s Emily Overholt and Calgary’s Frederik Kamminga earned U SPORTS Rookie of the Year honours. A 2016 Olympian, Overholt added to her already-impressive medal haul, claiming the bronze medal in the 200 IM, while Kamminga garnered the men’s 200m breaststroke silver medal on Day 2.
Josh Gold of U of T and Olivia Feschuk of Mount Allison rounded out the major decorations as the U SPORTS Student-Athlete Community Service Award winners.
Day 3 also saw Montreal Carabins standout Sandrine Mainville earn her fourth career women’s Sprinter’s Cup recognition. The 2016 Olympian bettered her own U SPORTS 100m freestyle record in 52.46 seconds to garner her second grand slam recognition of the meet.
RECORD ALERT! GRAND SLAM! @sandy_mainville wins her fourth career @USPORTSca 100 freestyle gold medal in a new record time of 52.46!
— U SPORTS Swimming (@USportsSwimming) February 25, 2018
Women's 100 Freestyle / 100m libre féminin
?S Mainville (MTL @Carabins)
?@ArianeMainville (MTL)
?Charis Huddle (@WesternMustangs) #ChampSZN pic.twitter.com/2Mis4gSbWX
Similarly, UBC’s Erika Seltenreich-Hodgson earned the Super Grand Slam, winning her fifth career 200m IM gold medal in 2:09.41.
Fellow Team Canada member Markus Thormeyer rounded out the record-breaking performances on Day 3, breaking his own U SPORTS 200m backstroke mark in 1:52.90. Thormeyer, Kisil, Jonathan Brown and Josiah Binnema also took home gold in the men’s 4x100m medley relay in 3:32.40.
Manitoba’s Kelsey Wog completed the breaststroke sweep, winning the 50-metre event in 30.71 seconds, while UBC’s Warren Meyer successfully defended his men’s title in 27.58 seconds.
A trio of Calgary Dinos rounded out the podium finishes as Robert Hill won the men’s 200m IM in 1:56.97, sophomore standout Peter Brothers swam his way to a gold medal from the afternoon 1500m freestyle heats in a time of 14:55.16 and Danica Ludlow earned her second straight women’s 800m freestyle U SPORTS title in 8:27.48.
Men
Swimmer of the Year: Yuri Kisil, UBC
Rookie of the Year: Frederik Kamminga, Calgary
Sprinter’s Cup (single winner of both 50 and 100m freestyle): Yuri Kisil, UBC
Co-Coaches of the Year: Steve Price, UBC / Peter Carpenter, McGill
Student-Athlete Community Service Award: Josh Gold, Toronto
Women
Swimmer of the Year: Kylie Masse, Toronto
Rookie of the Year: Emily Overholt, UBC
Sprinter’s Cup (single winner of both 50 and 100m freestyle): Sandrine Mainville, Montreal
Coach of the Year: Steve Price, UBC
Student-Athlete Community Service Award: Olivia Feschuk, Mount Alison
Women
Men (Nelson C. Hart trophy)
Women 800m Free
Men 50m Breast
W 50m Breast
M 200m Back
W 200m Back
M 100m Free
W 100m Free
M 200m IM
W 200m IM
M 1500m Free
W 4 x 100m Medley
1. Toronto, 4:00.69 (Canadian Club Record)
(Kylie Masse, Rachael Parsons, Hannah Genich, Sarah Polley)
2. Montreal, 4:02.96
(Camille Bergeron-Miron, Marie-Lou Lapointe, Sophie Marois, Sandrine Mainville)
3. UBC, 4:03.03
(Ingrid Wilm, Hillary Metcalfe, Hoi Lam Tam, Quincy Brozo)
M 4 x 100m Medley
1. UBC, 3:32.40
(Markus Thormeyer, Jonathan Brown, Josiah Binnema, Yuri Kisil)
2. Toronto, 3:35.11
(Kyle Haas, Eli Wall, Osvald Nitski, Mitch Ferraro)
3. Calgary, 3:35.90
(Robert Hill, Frederik Kamminga, Christian Ng, Parry Chirakorn)
Swimming
U SPORTS Staff