
Men's Swimming Sweeps Southeastern Conference Yearly Awards
Thursday, April 10, 2014 | Men's Swimming & Diving
Florida Head Swimming and Diving Coach Gregg Troy and swimmers Marcin Cieslak, Brad deBorde and Mitch D'Arrigo were all recognized by the Southeastern Conference for seasonal awards.
Troy was named the SEC Men's Coach of the Year for the second year in a row after UF brought home its second consecutive and 35th overall Southeastern Conference Championship behind nine SEC titles. Troy was awarded the conference's Coach of the Year award for the sixth time in his career.
At the NCAA Championships, Florida tallied two national titles and finished in third place with 387 points, representing the highest finish for the Orange and Blue in 23 years. Since Troy took over the men's team before the 1999-2000 season, the Gators have scored a top-10 finish at the national meet every year. During the 2013-14 season, Florida men set 12 of a possible 18 school records.
“It is always an honor when you are in that type of situation,” Troy said. “The real tribute is to the staff. We have a fantastic staff- assistant coaches (Anthony Nesty, Martyn Wilby, Steve Jungbluth and Leah Martindale-Stancil), diving coach (Donnie Craine), trainers (Tommy Stich) and strength coach (Matt DeLancey), You put a great staff like that together with some fantastic athletes you get some great results. I'm really happy for everyone involved in the program and thank them for all their help in the special year that we had.”
A senior from Warsaw, Poland, Cieslak becomes Florida's 1 0th SEC Male Swimmer of the Year and the first since the SEC changed seasonal awards to a voting process done at the conclusion of the season. Cieslak, a double major in finance and sport management, was the NCAA Championships High Point of the Meet after winning the 200 individual medley and 100 butterfly NCAA titles and finishing second in the 200 butterfly.
After totaling a maximum seven at the national meet, Cieslak finished his career with 25 All-American honors, which ranks him third all-time in UF history. Cieslak's three career NCAA titles make him only the 10th Gator in history with three career NCAA titles.
At the SEC Championships, Cieslak captured his seventh career individual SEC title in the 100 fly. Cieslak's career SEC titles ranks him fourth in Florida's storied history.
“Marcin's honor is well deserved,” Troy said. “He was the leading point scorer at the NCAA Championships and made all of our relays go. He was consistently fantastic all year. The award could not go to a more worthy guy his senior year.”
D'Arrigo becomes the eighth Gator swimmer under Troy's tutelage to win SEC Male Freshman of the Year. The freshman from Rome, Italy, earned NCAA First-Team All-American (top-eight) status in three individual events and swam on Florida's silver medal 800 freestyle relay. He was also the highest placing freshman at NCAAs in the 200 freestyle and the 1650 freestyle.
At the SEC Championships, D'Arrigo, a linguistics major, captured a trio of silver medals. Ironically, all three of D'Arrigo's second place finishes (200 free, 500 free and 1650 free) were behind Gator upperclassmen. D'Arrigo's 1650 free and 500 free rank second and third, respectively, in Florida history.
“Mitch had an outstanding freshman year,” Troy said. “He showed tremendous improvements in events like the mile, which he never really swam much of before he came here. He showed that he is a world class middle distance freestyler. He raced well at every level- dual meet, conference and NCAAs.”
deBorde was named the Men's Scholar-Athlete of the Year and will graduate UF in December with a degree in Industrial & Systems Engineering. deBorde has been a leader in UF's athletic community and a key member outside of the pool for the swim program, serving as the Student-Athlete Advisory Council President and as one of the 2013-14 team captains. The senior from Longwood, Fla., has been named to the College of Engineering Dean's List from Fall 2010 to Fall 2013.
In the pool, deBorde leaves Florida as the top sprinter to come through the program. deBorde captured SEC titles in the 50 free in 2012 and 2014 and was the bronze medalist in the event at the 2014 NCAA Championships. deBorde leaves Florida as the 10th swimmer in UF history to amass 20 NCAA All-American awards and as the owner of both sprint school records.
“I'm really proud of Brad deBorde,” Troy said. “The guy has come a long way since he has been here. He made a lot of our relays work and swam one of the toughest programs at the NCAA Championships. He got better and better every year he was here.”
At the Southeastern Conference Championships, senior Elizabeth Beisel was named the SEC Commissioner's Trophy Recipient for scoring the most points at the meet after winning both the 200 backstroke and 400 individual medley SEC titles, becoming only the fourth swimmer in SEC history to win multiple events in all four years of competition.
Also at SECs, redshirt senior Sebastien Rousseau was voted the SEC Swimmer of the Meet and named the SEC Commissioner's Trophy Recipient for scoring the most points at the SEC Championships. Rousseau picked up SEC titles in the 200 fly, 200 free and 200 IM.
Additionally, the SEC released its 2014 All-SEC and SEC All-Freshman Teams. Florida men were represented 13 student-athletes and the UF women's team were represented with seven student-athletes.
First-team All-SEC honors went to those student-athletes who finished first in each event at the SEC Championships in February, including relays. Second-team All-SEC honors went to the second and third-place finishers in each event at the SEC Championships, including relays. The top freshman finisher in each event was named to the SEC All-Freshman Team.
2014 SEC Swimming and Diving Awards
Men's Swimmer of the Year: Marcin Cieslak, Florida
Women's Swimmer of the Year: Brittany MacLean, Georgia
Men's Diver of the Year: Mauricio Robles, Tennessee
Women's Diver of the Year: Laura Ryan, Georgia
Men's Freshman Swimmer of the Year: Mitch D'Arrigo, Florida
Women's Freshman Swimmer of the Year: Olivia Smoliga, Georgia
Men's Freshman Diver of the Year: Jordan Gotro, South Carolina
Men's Co-Scholar-Athlete of the Year: T.J. Leon, Auburn
Men's Co-Scholar-Athlete of the Year: Brad deBorde, Florida
Women's Scholar-Athlete of the Year: Shannon Vreeland, Georgia
Men's Swimming Coach of the Year: Gregg Troy, Florida
Women's Swimming Coach of the Year: Steve Bultman, Texas A&M
Co-Men's Diving Coach of the Year: Jeff Shaffer, Auburn
Co-Men's Diving Coach of the Year: Jamie Sweeney, Missouri
Women's Diving Coach of the Year: Dan Laak, Georgia
2014 SEC Swimmers and Divers of the Meet (announced at the SEC Championships)
Men's Swimmer of the Meet: Sebastien Rousseau, Florida
Women's Swimmer of the Meet: Breeja Larson, Texas A&M
Men's Diver of the Meet: Ford McLiney, Texas A&M
Women's Diver of the Meet: Laura Ryan, Georgia
Men's All-SEC First Team
Marcelo Chierighini, Auburn
Marcin Cieslak, Florida
Kyle Darmody, Auburn
Brad deBorde, Florida
James Disney-May, Auburn
Michael Duderstadt, Auburn
Nic Fink, Georgia
Arthur Frayler, Florida
Christian-Paul Homer, Florida
Chase Kalisz, Georgia
Sean Lehane, Tennessee
T.J. Leon, Auburn
Corey Main, Florida
Anton McKee, Alabama
Ford McLiney, Texas A&M
Arthur Mendes, Auburn
Sebastien Rousseau, Florida
John Santieu, Auburn
Eduardo Solaeche-Gomez, Florida
Dan Wallace, Florida
Men's All-SEC Second Team
Jack Blyzinskyj, Florida
David Bonuchi, Missouri
Vlad Caciuc, Alabama
Matthew Curby, Florida
Mitch D'Arrigo, Florida
Taylor Dale, Georgia
Greg Ferrucci, Kentucky
Andrew Gemmell, Georgia
Kristian Gkolomeev, Alabama
Zane Grothe, Auburn
BJ Hornikel, Alabama
Matias Koski, Georgia
Gustav Aberg Ledjstrom, Tennessee
Fraser McKean, Auburn
Connor Oslin, Alabama
Luke Percy, Tennessee
Sam Rairden, Tennessee
Doug Reynolds, Georgia
Mauricio Robles, Tennessee
Connor Signorin, Florida
Tristan Slater, Tennessee
Ty Stewart, Georgia
Michael Trice, Georgia
Brett Walsh, Alabama
Pawel Werner, Alabama
Men's SEC All-Freshman Team
Pace Clark, Georgia
Mitch D'Arrigo, Florida
Taylor Dale, Georgia
Kyle Darmody, Auburn
Michael Duderstadt, Auburn
Brandon Flynn, Kentucky
Jordan Gotro, South Carolina
Cam Jones, Auburn
Anton McKee, Alabama
Connor Oslin, Alabama
Joe Patching, Auburn
Brent Sagert, Alabama
Women's All-SEC First Team
Cammile Adams, Texas A&M
Elizabeth Beisel, Florida
Ann-Perry Blank, Georgia
Kaylin Burchell, Alabama
Jessica Graber, Georgia
Molly Hannis, Tennessee
Lauren Harrington, Georgia
Lili Ibanez-Lopez, Texas A&M
Tori Lamp, Tennessee
Breeja Larson, Texas A&M
Maddie Locus, Georgia
Brittany MacLean, Georgia
Melanie Margalis, Georgia
Amber McDermott, Georgia
Caroline McElhany, Texas A&M
Paige Miller, Texas A&M
Laura Ryan, Georgia
Olivia Smoliga, Georgia
Chantal VanLandeghem, Georgia
Shannon Vreeland, Georgia
Ellese Zalewski, Florida
Women's All-SEC Second Team
Christina Bechtel, Kentucky
Kelli Benjamin, Texas A&M
Sammie Bosma, Texas A&M
Harper Bruens, Tennessee
Erica Dittmer, Texas A&M
Hali Flickinger, Georgia
Lindsey Gendron, Tennessee
Molly Hannis, Tennessee
Sarah Henry, Texas A&M
Natalie Hinds, Florida
Faith Johnson, Tennessee
Faith Johnson, Tennessee
Hilda Luthersdottir, Florida
Lindsey McKnight, Florida
Meredith Oliver, Texas A&M
Lauren Reedy, Missouri
Sinead Russell, Florida
Laura Ryan, Georgia
Lauren Solernou, Tennessee
Cherelle Thompson, Tennessee
Cassie Weil, LSU
Annie Zhu, Georgia
Rachel Zilinskas, Georgia
Women's SEC All-Freshman Team
Bridget Blood, Alabama
Kendal Casey, Kentucky
Madison Hudkins, Texas A&M
Taylor Katz, Florida
Lindsay Keahey, Kentucky
Kara Kopcso, LSU
Sycerika McMahon, Texas A&M
Allyx Purcell, Auburn
Olivia Smoliga, Georgia
Ellie Suek, Missouri
Danielle Valley, Florida
Rachel Zilinskas, Georgia
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