Ă山ǿĽé freshman Bielby golden at swim Nationals
VANCOUVER – Steven Bielby of Pointe Claire, Que., smashed
Ă山ǿĽé, Quebec university and Quebec club records en route to
capturing gold in the 400-metre individual medley at the CIS swim
championships in Vancouver, Thursday.
The 5-foot-7 electrical engineering freshman was clocked in four
minutes, 11.42 seconds, to become the first Redmen CIS gold
medalist since 2007, when Ryan Tomicic of Aylmer, Que., won the 50
freestyle sprint. Bielby destroyed the seven-year-old Ă山ǿĽé record
of 4:19.56, set by Sylvain Lemieux in 2001 and beat the QSSF
conference mark set last year by Laval’s Bruno Langlois (4:19.11).
The CIS record is 4:02.72 was established in 2003 by Olympian Brian
Johns of UBC.
"We thought his best chance for gold would be in the 1500m on
Saturday because he was third in that event at the Olympic trials
last year," said Francois Laurin, in his 24th season as head coach
at Ă山ǿĽé. "But he swam a Ă山ǿĽé record and personal best in the
morning prelims (4:18.18) and we realized that he had a chance to
win this event. He took the lead during the first 50 (metres) and
never lost it.
"His goal was to qualify for the world university games next summer
and he had to win to qualify. He had never won an event at any
national competition, comes in as a freshman, was very focused and
took control. Now he's a winner."
In what turned out to be the fastest night in CIS swimming history,
half the races won were in Canadian record time as six national
marks were set during the first evening of competition. A quartet
of Olympians starred and established four individual national marks
in the first six races and playing major roles on a pair of
record-setting relay teams.
Championship website (live results & live video webcast):
In the women’s team standings, the Calgary Dinos, looking for their
first-ever CIS title, lead the race with 252 points. The host
Thunderbirds, who have won the last 11 banners, a record in any CIS
sports, are second with 196 points.
The Thunderbird men, who last year saw their record sequence of 10
straight titles come to an end, lead the competition with 274
points compared to 217 for the reigning national champion Dinos.
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The University of Toronto Varsity Blues are third in both team
races.
Calgary rookie and 2008 Olympian Erica Morningstar started off the
meet with a national record in the women’s 200-metre freestyle
(1:56.11) and was a key member of the Dinos 4 x 100 freestyle relay
that set the fifth Canadian mark of the night two hours later with
a time of 3:38.74. Â
The first-year student from Regina led a 1-2-3-4 sweep for the
Dinos in the 200 individual freestyle en route to erasing Sophie
Simard’s national record of 1:56.14 and CIS championship mark of
1:57.10. Breanna Hendriks and Katy Murdoch earned second and third
in the 200 and teamed with Morningstar and Seanna Mitchell for gold
in the 4 x 100 free. Â
“I’m dying right now,” an exhausted Morningstar said immediately
following the race. “I’m really happy with the time. I was actually
hoping to go a little faster. But all in all I’m happy I held it
together.”
UBC’s Scott Dickens, a 2004 Olympian, also notched a pair of
Canadian records on Thursday. His gold-medal time of 59.34 in
the men’s 100 breaststroke tied Morgan Knabe’s 2002 national mark
and bettered his own CIS championship record by more than half a
second. Calgary’s Mike Brown, who took fourth place in the 200
breast at the Beijing Games, claimed silver in the event.
“I’m pretty happy with the time but my goal was to go 58. I know I
have that time in me I just need to work out the kinks in the
race,” a satisfied Dickens said after his first gold of the
night. “Being part of the T-Birds and getting to race at this
meet is one of the best things about swimming. It’s all about the
team and doing the most you can for your school.”
The fifth-year star led out the Thunderbirds 4 x 100 freestyle
relay with a swift 49.18 setting the stage for UBC’s national
record of 3:15.42, erasing the old mark of 3:15.61 held by
Olympians Mike Mintenko, Brian Johns, Mark Johnston, and Brent
Hayden. The time was also more than two seconds ahead of the old
CIS championship record of 3:17.53 held by UBC since 2003.
U of T’s Colin Russell, a 2008 Olympian and former star at Indiana
University, was victorious in the men’s 200 freestyle (1:43.31)
taking down Rick Say’s 2003 Canadian record of 1:43.68 in his first
ever CIS race. His time also bested Brian John’s old CIS
championship standard of 1:44.47.
The record bull run also witnessed a stunning performance by UBC
star and 2008 Olympian Annamay Pierse who led a 1-2-3 T-Bird sweep
of the women’s 100 metre breaststroke. The fifth-year from
Edmonton shattered her Canadian and CIS championship records with a
world-class time of 1:05.16. It was the third time Pierse has
set a Canadian mark in the event since November 2008.
“I have been totally motivated by all the fast swimming going on
here tonight,” said Pierse after her jaw-dropping swim. “All of the
records going down tonight is awesome for the sport and our
country. I came to this meet pumped up and ready to go and it was
great to swim so fast. I’m getting closer to where I want to
be.”
Not to be lost in all the fan fare tonight was T-Bird Callum Ng who
was the biggest individual winner on the night, taking gold in the
50 backstroke (23.49) and 100 butterfly (52.74) and swimming on
UBC’s record setting relay. It was Ng’s fifth consecutive triumph
in the 50 back at the CIS championships and ends his CIS career
undefeated in the event.
Calgary’s Hanna Kubas bested three-time CIS champion Jennifer
Carroll in the women’s 50 backstroke with a championships record of
27.48. Kubas won bronze two years ago, silver in 2008, and finally
broke through with gold this evening. Carroll finishes her CIS
career in the 50 back with three golds, one silver and a bronze to
her credit
Also earning individual gold medals Thursday were Laval’s Pamela
Filiatrault-Veilleux in the women’s 100 butterfly (59.83), and
UBC’s Hanna Pierse who defended her 400 individual medley title
(4:41.58).
The three-day CIS meet resumes Friday morning with preliminaries
starting at 10 a.m. Pacific Time and finals at 6 p.m.
Pacific.
DAY 1 TEAM STANDINGS
Women
1. Calgary, 252 points
2. UBC, 196
3. Toronto, 131
4. Laval, 80
5. Western Ontario, 78
6. Alberta, 68
7. Victoria, 54
8. Dalhousie, 51
9. Guelph, 44
10. Manitoba, 35
11. McMaster, 17
12. UQTR, 16
13. Brock, 14
14. Wilfrid Laurier, 13
15. Ă山ǿĽé, 9
16. Ottawa, 8
17. Regina, 7
18. Montreal, 6
Men
1. UBC, 272 points
2. Calgary, 217
3. Toronto, 132
4. Laval, 116
5. Victoria, 52
6. Montreal, 49
7. Dalhousie, 46
8. Alberta, 37
9. Guelph, 35
10. Waterloo, 33
11. Ă山ǿĽé, 28
12. Western Ontario, 19
13. McMaster, 18
14. Ottawa, 14
15. Manitoba, 9
16. Memorial, 4
17. Laurentian, 2
DAY 1 RESULTS: INDIVIDUAL MEDALLISTS (Thursday)
Women’s 200-meter Free
1. Erica Morningstar, Calgary, 1:56.11 (Canadian record / CIS
championship record) Â
2. Breanna Hendriks, Calgary, 1:56.95
3. Katy Murdoch, Calgary, 1:58.63
Men’s 200m Free
1. Colin Russell, Toronto, 1:43.31 (Canadian record / CIS
championship record) Â
2. Rory Biskupski, UBC, 1:46.77
3. Colin Miazga, Calgary, 1:47.07
W 50m Back
1. Hanna Kubas, Calgary, 27.48 (CIS championship record)
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2. Katy Murdoch, Calgary, 28.10
3. Jennifer Carroll, UQTR, 28.14
M 50m Back
1. Callum Ng, UBC, 24.49
2. Dan Langlois, Calgary, 24.92
3. Kelly Aspinall, Calgary, 25.02
W 100m Breast
1. Annamay Pierse, UBC, 1:05.16 (Canadian record / CIS championship
record) Â
2. Haylee Johnson, UBC, 1:07.34 Â
3. Martha McCabe, UBC, 1:08.12
M 100m Breast
1. Scott Dickens, UBC, 59.34 (Ties Canadian record / New CIS
championship record)Â Â Â Â
2. Mike Brown, Calgary, 59.74
3. Kevin Deret, Laval, 1:00.86Â Â Â
W 100m Fly
1. Pamela Filiatrault-Veilleux, Laval, 59.83
2. MacKenzie Downing, Victoria, 1:00.42
3. Sasha Theron, Toronto, 1:00.79
M 100m Fly
1. Callum Ng, UBC, 52.74Â Â Â
2. Rory Biskupski, UBC, 53.51
3. Zack Chetrat, Toronto, 54.19Â Â Â Â
Â
W 400m IM
1. Hanna Pierse, UBC, 4:41.58Â Â
2. Tara Ivanitz, UBC, 4:46.55Â Â
3. Jessica Johnson, Calgary, 4:47.29Â Â
M 400m IM
1. Steven Bielby, Ă山ǿĽé, 4:11.42 Â
2. Jordan Hartney, UBC, 4:15.81Â Â
3. Matt Hawes, UBC, 4:19.05
W 4 x 100m Free Relay
1. Calgary, 3:38.74 (Canadian record / CIS championship
record)Â Â Â Â Â Â
(Erica Morningstar, Katy Murdoch, Seanna Mitchell, Breanna
Hendriks)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
Â
2. Toronto, 3:45.85Â Â
(Sasha Theron, Andrea Jurenovskis, Heather Maitland, Kristin
McLlroy)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
Â
3. Western Ontario, 3:46.78Â Â Â Â
(Alyssa Molenaar, Hayley Nell, Lenore Chesworth, Brittany
Cooper)
M 4 x 100m Free Relay
1. UBC, 3:15.42 (Canadian record / CIS championship
record)Â Â Â Â Â Â
(Scott Dickens, Rory Biskupski, Callum Ng, Tommy
Gossland)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
Â
2. Calgary, 3:16.79Â Â Â
(Kelly Aspinall, Colin Miazga, Ryan Gow, David
Woodman)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
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3. Toronto, 3:18.02Â Â Â Â
(Zack Chetrat, Colin Russell, Curtis Samuel, Cam Cummings)
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For more information please contact:
Earl Zukerman
Communications Officer
Ă山ǿĽé Dept. of Athletics & Recreation
514-398-7012
earl.zukerman [at] mcgill.ca
Michel BĂ©langer
CIS Communications Manager
Cell: (613) 447-6334
belanger [at] universitysport.ca
Ben Schach
UBC Sports Information Director
Cell: (604) 809-1485
varsity [at] interchange.ubc.ca