Word: chui
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...backstroke events, dominating both the 100- and 200-meter swims. The Crimson swept the events and then some, capturing the first four places each time.Sophomore Jordan Diekema placed first in both the 100- and 200- backstroke, with times of 50.67 and 1:52.01, respectively. Freshman Ian Mirisola, sophomore Derick Chui and freshman Rob Newell claimed the next three spots in the 100-meter event, with Mirisola and Chui swapping places in the 200-meter swim.Junior Alex Meyer was another decisive force for Harvard, finishing first in both the 1650-meter freestyle and 500-meter freestyle. After staying neck-and-neck...
...posting a time of 1:54.30. Harvard also finished second and third in both the 200-yard medley and the 400-yard freestyle relays. Diekema, Davidson, Jones, and co-captain David Guernsey took second in the 200-yard medley relay with a combined time of 1:32.02, while Chui, Melillo, Tan, and sophomore Will Heyburn were 1.48 seconds behind with a time of 1:33.50.“The medley relay we were a little disappointed with—we were hoping to get a win in that,” Diekema said. “We swam pretty well...
Freshman Derick Chui captured two backstroke victories in the 100 and 200-meter events, while senior Sam Wollner followed suit with wins in the 200 and 400-meter freestyle. Sophomore Mason Brunnick touched the wall just over a second behind Wollner for a second-place finish in the 400. Junior Eric Lynch took first in the 1500-meter freestyle, with teammates Alex Meyer and Blake Lewkowitz taking second and third, respectively. Twin brothers Bill and Dan Jones finished 1-2 in the 100-meter butterfly and 2-3 in the 200-meter butterfly...
...Derick Chui, another rookie, finished fourth in the 200 backstroke, while Jordan Diekema won the B final...
...Crimson wore black caps for the meet, a move it usually reserves for crucial or championship meets. The move, Wollner said, provided a “symbolic token” to inspire the team. Judging from the results, the move paid dividends. Rathgeber and freshman Derick Chui each won three events, while Wollner and junior Eric Lynch each grabbed two more. Wollner, a Manhattan native, won the 200 and 400 freestyles by only tenths of a second in front of a hometown crowd. “The loss at Columbia [two years ago] was really embarrassing for me especially?...