The 3-meter diving at the NCAA Division I Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships quickly turned into a head-to-head battle between North Carolina’s Aranza Vazquez Montano and Texas’ duo.
Dive after dive, they were within a couple points from each other as each tried to make a move.
In the end it was Vazquez who swept both springboards for the second year in a row, this time winning 3-meter with a score of 364.75.
“It is hard to believe (I won both boards twice),” she said. “You just have to do everything you have like it is your last competition. It has been a long, hard year, but we practice for this. I wanted to win. It doesn’t matter if I am out of fuel, if I can win, I will win.”
Vazquez, an Olympian for Mexico, started with a 66.00 on her 405B to take the early lead and was at 119.20 after two dives, just a couple of points behind Texas’ Bridget O’Neil (125.40).
Her third dive got a mix of 7s and 8s and scored 64 to push her to 182.2.
But O’Neil was at 184.20 until she had a round of 4.5’s in the fourth round and dropped to fourth place.
Her teammate Hailey Hernandez then surged into second with 232.95 points, trailing Vazquez (240.70).
In the fifth round, Vazquez threw down a 5335D and nailed the twister, scoring a 56.55 to lead at 297.25, still just two points ahead of Hernandez (295.95) with one round to go.
Hernandez’s last dive was a 513D and gave her 46.20, but the degree of difficulty was 2.1 and put her in second place behind Indiana’s Anne Fowler.
Vazquez’s final dive was a 3.0 degree of difficulty and scored 67.50 points to give her the winning total of 364.75, and another repeat title.
“I know that that dive is one of my best dives and that is why it is last on my list,” Vazquez said. “I know that no matter how I am feeling, I can hit that. I knew we were close and I knew I could hit it. It just had to trust that feeling and go for it.”
Vazquez will now shift her springboard focus to the Olympics.
“This competition is a high level. Handling that pressure and adrenaline really helps pushing toward Paris,” she said. “That is one of the advantages I have of being in the U.S. in this system. There are so many high-level competitions.”
Fowler finished second in 342.45, just fractions of a point ahead of Herandez (342.15).
Event 13 Women 3 mtr Diving ========================================================================= NCAA: N 437.75 3/20/2009 Christina Loukas, Indiana Meet: M 437.75 3/20/2009 Christina Loukas, Indiana Pool: P 413.75 2/20/2014 Laura Ryan, Georgia Name Year School Prelims Finals Points ========================================================================= === Championship Final === 1 Vazquez Montano, Aran SR UNC 334.35 364.75 20 2 Fowler, Anne SR Indiana 305.95 342.45 17 3 Hernandez, Hailey JR Texas 332.95 342.15 16 4 McAfee, Sophia JR Purdue 325.50 329.40 15 5 O'Neil, Bridget SR Texas 339.85 319.90 14 6 Lavenant, Montserrat SR LSU 322.20 305.40 13 7 Milligan, Kiarra SO Michigan 307.00 288.65 12 8 Kaye, Elizabeth JR Virginia 313.50 267.30 11 === Consolation Final === 9 Oakley, Joslyn SO TAMU 305.55 317.30 9 10 Hallaselka, Lauren FR UCLA 300.50 315.30 7 11 Brady, Caroline JR Notre Dame 296.35 312.50 6 12 Waxman, Holley JR Utah 293.15 301.15 5 13 Wright, Daryn SO Purdue 299.60 286.75 4 14 Lai, Shiyun FR Kansas 291.75 281.95 3 15 Vear, Samantha SR FSU 297.95 265.25 2 16 Trueb, Savana SR UCLA 297.30 247.80 1