Word: kerola
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...Crimson's Tuomo Kerola took advantage of the situation, attacking the water to record a personal season best of 2:09.78 en route to a third-place finish. Princeton captain and defending champion Chuck Hector took second, so the Tigers picked up a point to lead by eight with three events left...
...last five years in a row, also dominated the 100-yd. breastroke and butterfly. In the breast, won by Dartmouth's Tom Whitaker in 58.92, two Princeton men made the finals--John Christensen (second) and Chuck Hector (sixth). The lone Harvard qualifier in that event was Tuomo Kerola, who finished eighth...
...Harvard team of Geoff Seelen, Tuomo Kerola, Malcolm Cooper and Julian Mack placed second in 3:27.44. Crimson Coach Joe Bernal pulled a mild surprise in the medley by not swimming Hackett, who split a blazing 45.0 against Yale last weekend, in the anchor leg. A swimmer may race in all three relays and three individual events in the championships, but apparently Bernal wanted to save his premier swimmer for a later showdown...
...medley relay should go to Harvard, with Pyle, Tuomo Kerola, Cooper and Hackett swimming for the Crimson. Princeton's breaststroker, John Christensen, should have a slight advantage over Kerola in what Pyle calls the "shakiest of our three relays," but backstroker Pyle should be able to edge Princeton's Steve DeCosse. And if it's close going into the last leg, you can count on the awesome Mr. Hackett, whose 45.0 freestyle split at Yale last weekend is tops in the East...
...always the Crimson's arsenal of bionic freshmen supplied the lion's share of the team's points. Backstroker Geoff Seelen stroked 200 yards to yet another impressive victory in a time of 1:58.07. Finnish phenomenon Tuomo Kerola frogkicked to his usual 200-yd. breaststroke triumph in 2:13.57. And of course, all-world Bobby Hackett whipped the field in the 200 freestyle...