U.S. Saves Its Best for Last
- Share via
U.S. swimmers waited until the last individual events of the day Friday to put a stop to Japanese dominance at the Swim Meet of Champions in Mission Viejo.
After sending an early message at the four-day event with record-setting performances in the men’s and women’s 800 on Thursday, the 21-member Japanese Olympic team went to work quickly on the second day of the meet, sweeping the first three places in the women’s 200-meter backstroke and 200-meter butterfly, while taking titles in the men’s 100-meter freestyle and 200-meter butterfly.
But Americans, who won’t hold their Olympic trials until August, rallied under their club banners in the 400-meter event, with El Toro High senior Kaitlin Sandeno and former Laguna Hills standout Chad Carvin out-distancing their respective fields.
Sandeno, a disappointing third in the 800, won the 400 in a time of 4:13.14. Sachiko Yamada, the 800-meter champion from Japan, was second in 4:14.06.
Carvin won the men’s 400 in 3:52.37. Japan’s Masato Hirano, the 800-meter champion, finished second in 3:55:20.
This meet is supposed to serve as a coming-out party for the Japanese Olympic team, and until the 400 everything was going according to plan.
“I’m sad. That’s all I can say,” Yamada said. “I’m very disappointed.”
USC’s Lenny Krayzelburg, the world record-holder in the 200-meter backstroke, held off Newport Harbor High junior Aaron Peirsol for first in the event with a meet-record 1:58.95.
Former Irvine High swimmer Jason Lezak had the most dramatic comeback. A poor showing in the preliminaries of the men’s 100-meters left him in the No. 8 lane.
But Lezak responded to win in a meet-record 50.46.
“I was tight and cold in the morning, but I got lucky and just gone in the final,” Lezak said. “But the important thing is, I got in.”
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.