arena Swim of the Week: Luke Hobson Fires Off Early-Season 1:32.5 200 Free

2022-09-24 01:23:49 By : Ms. Dora Zhao

Hobson nearly reset his lifetime best in the 200 free at Texas' Orange & White intrasquad meet on Thursday, clocking 1:32.50. Archive photo via Jack Spitser/Spitser Photography

The 16-year-old won the girls’ 7.5k at Junior Open Water Worlds in Seychelles by more than two minutes, averaging 1:06 per 100 meters.

Still just 17, Ribeiro made history at the World Junior Championships, becoming the first junior-aged swimmer under 23 seconds in the 50 butterfly.

One of the swims that flew under the radar at Euros was Djakovic’s 400 free, where he dropped nearly two seconds for silver in a time of 3:43.93.

Nandor Nemeth, Richard Marton, Balazs Hollo and Kristof Milak combined to win Hungary’s first male European relay title in 68 years on Thursday.

Clareburt stormed over the closing meters to upset three-time defending champion Chad Le Clos in the final of the men’s 200 fly in Birmingham.

September 23rd, 2022 Arena Swim of the Week, Big 12, College, News

Swim of the Week is brought to you by arena, a SwimSwam partner.

Disclaimer: Swim of the Week is not meant to be a conclusive selection of the best overall swim of the week, but rather one Featured Swim to be explored in deeper detail. The Swim of the Week is an opportunity to take a closer look at the context of one of the many fast swims this week, perhaps a swim that slipped through the cracks as others grabbed the headlines, or a race we didn’t get to examine as closely in the flood of weekly meets.

To say that Luke Hobson is riding a wave of momentum would be an understatement.

The University of Texas sophomore dropped a blistering time of 1:32.50 in the 200 freestyle at the Longhorns’ annual Orange & White intrasquad meet on Thursday, an incredible showing given that the calendar still reads September.

Hobson had a successful opening season in Austin last year, most notably in the 500 free, where he reset the U.S. 17-18 National Age Group Record multiple times and ultimately finished third at NCAAs in a time of 4:08.42.

Over the summer, it became clear his 200 free had taken a massive leap forward. After swimming a best time of 1:32.31 in the NCAA prelims and ultimately finishing 16th in the final, Hobson had an impressive run of performances in the long course pool.

First, he placed seventh in the 200 free at the International Team Trials in April, half a second off earning a berth on the U.S. World Championship team. The personal best time he set in the prelims, 1:46.92, would’ve made the team by .01.

Three months later, at U.S. Nationals in late July, Hobson out-dueled a loaded field to win the event in a new PB of 1:46.14, taking out the likes of Kieran Smith, Jake Magahey and Grant House.

Then, at the Duel In The Pool in August, Hobson uncorked another best, dropping a 1:45.59 to book his spot on the U.S. National Team.

He also swam respective times of 1:41.69 and 3:35.67 in the SCM 200 and 400 free while over in Australia, showing off his exceptional form in a short course format leading into the NCAA season.

Then came the Texas Orange/White Classic, where the Nevada native annihilated the meet record of 1:33.97 and nearly downed his best time before the team’s first non-intrasquad meet of the season.

Incredibly, Hobson went 1:40.29 at this event last season. Now, 1:32.50.

Throughout the 2021-22 season, Hobson clocked 1:37.89 in October, got down to 1:33.18 during the mid-season Minnesota Invitational, and ultimately went a lifetime best of 1:32.31 at NCAAs.

What’s not listed in those official times is his NCAA relay split of 1:30.84, which helped propel the Longhorn men to the national title and a new NCAA, U.S. Open and American Record in the 800 free relay.

Given that he’s already 1:32-mid on Sept. 22, matching his relay split on a flat-start seems like the low-end of what Hobson might be able to produce in the NCAA postseason.

It’s early in the season, and a lot can happen, but sub-1:30 seems imminent. It will also be interesting to see how entering the season on such good form coming off the Duel In The Pool will impact his performances over the course of the campaign.

You can watch the race, which also sees teammate Coby Carrozza go 1:33.40, below:

Full results from the intrasquad can be found here.

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Enjoyed the coverage and analysis of this great early season effort.

If I recall correctly, last year Luke also swam the 500 and/or the 1000 at Orange-White – very well – and that may have played a part in his 1:40 200 at the time.

Was there no 200 Medley Relay? Where were Anthony Grimm and Zac Van Want? Anyone know?

Almost as good as Crooks 18.9 at the end of practice! But still a nice effort.

Who is in the running to be the last leg of the 800 free relay for Texas now?

I imagine something like Hobson, Foster, Carrozza, and then Corbeau? 2free is easy to cross train for so who knows who might fire off a 1:32 this year out of the group.

I know all the athletes train free kick bc Eddie doesn’t think fly/breast works the legs enough. So in theory they all have the legs for it, it’s just down to form and speed.

I might be wrong about Corbeau, I thought he had a 2free split from last year but I can’t find it. Kibler was 1:30 so if hobson can drop a second, they need a 1:31 to maintain and a 1:32 would add a second.

Caspar was 1.32 at the Minnesota Invite on the B relay. There is zero chance he swims it. Foster, Hobson, Carrozza and Larson FTW.

Corbeau will swim the other 4 relays, I think. Peter Larson will be on it instead.

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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