Men's Swimming

Centennial Captures Five All-America Awards on Day Two

Results

GREENSBORO, N.C. -- Two individuals and three relays earned All-America awards to lead Centennial Conference performances on day two of the NCAA Swimming Championships. 

Swarthmore's Quinn Weygandt secured a second straight top-five finish at the national championships to lead all day two performers, taking fourth place with a conference-record time of 4:20.51. The time reset Weygandt's own CC record of 4:21.64 that she set earlier this season in December and matched during Thursday's preliminary heat. The All-America honor was the third of Weygandt's career in the 400 IM and ups her career total to five. 

Swarthmore's Cami Wilson captured the first All-America accolade on the men's side of the 2025 championships, finishing eighth in the 100 butterly with a time of 47.81 seconds. Wilson broke his own conference record during the preliminaries at 47.46. He is the first male swimmer in CC history to earn first-team distinction in the 100 butterfly, achieving the highest finish in conference history. Wilson also became the men's first CC All-American since Swarthmore's Andrew Karpenko, who placed eighth in the 200 breaststroke in 2023.

A trio of 200 freestyle relays earned second team All-America honors - the Swarthmore men and women and the Gettysburg women. The Swarthmore women's 200 freestyle relay of Genine Collins, Ainsley Jane Tambling, Sophie Rotival and Elle Anthony touched in a conference-record time of 1:32.83 to take 10th place. Collins earned her third All-American honor of the season and the eighth of her career, Anthony secured her eighth, Rotival her seventh, and Tambling her third.  The same group earned first-team status with a bronze finish in 2024. Swarthmore's 200 freestyle relay team is the first in conference history to earn back-to-back All-American honors with the same four members in any relay event. 

The Gettysburg women's 200 freestyle relay quartet of Ava Collin, Mia Yancey, Delaney Reck and Valerie Lawton placed 14th at 1:33.94. The time was the second best in Gettysburg program history. 

On the men's side, the Swarthmore 200 freestyle relay squad of Wilson, Danny Castle, Levi Tipton and Cole Griscavage placed 13th at 1:20.99, a new Garnet program record. It marked the first All-America award in the event in program history.