Word: diekema
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...good job of stepping up and especially of just winning races.”Harvard showed its strength in the 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...
...this weakness, the Harvard men managed to return to Cambridge with significant results, both on the team and individual levels. Jones finished fifth in the 200-yard butterfly, touching the wall in 1:46.47 and earning himself an NCAA “B” qualifying time. Sophomore Jordan Diekema also performed well individually, claiming first in the 200-yard backstroke with a time of 1:45.97. The sophomore also swam a solid 49.31 in the 100-yard backstroke for a third-place finish. “[Diekema’s] strong work ethic in practice showed...
...deserves the No. 1 position in the Ancient Eight. The Crimson won 13 out of 16 events and doubled Columbia’s points with a final score of 200-100. “We were coming up from a tough meet against Cornell,” sophomore Jordan Diekema said. “I think that overall we were able to carry on with the strong momentum, but we were a bit more tired than we had thought.” Harvard edged out Cornell last Saturday in a nail-biter, in which the Crimson eventually was able...
...Lewkowitz would repeat its 1-2-3 performance in the 500-yard freestyle, as Lynch led the way once again in 4:33.91. Meyer followed with 4:36.85 while Lewkowitz finished at 4:40.17. Equaling Lynch’s two individual wins in swimming events was sophomore Jordan Diekema, who took the 100-yard and 200-yard backstroke races, narrowly beating out Cornell’s Phil Baity in both events. Diekema defeated the Big Red swimmer in the 100-yard back with a time of 50.25—a margin of victory of .27?...
...Philip Moriarty Award for the most outstanding swimmer at last year’s meet did not translate into a team victory. Still, Rathgeber enjoyed the best of both worlds in 2008, sharing the award while contributing phenomenally to the team’s success. Along with freshman Jordan Diekema, junior Bill Jones, and senior Pat Quinn, Rathgeber set a pool, meet, and EISL record in the 400-medley relay, taking first place in a scorching 3:13:34. The same group would make an NCAA “B” cut en route to claiming the 200-medley...