Caeleb Dressel has a saying: It's a fine line between goal-setting and laughter. With that in mind, the Florida senior set an ambition so outlandish that it would have made plenty of people chuckle.
Dressel wanted to lower his time in the 50-yard freestyle to 17.6 seconds at the NCAA men's swimming and diving championships. That represented a drop of more than half a second from his U.S. and NCAA record of 18.20, and it would make him the first person ever to swim the distance in less than 18 seconds. Thursday night, Dressel hit his mark at the Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center, and it brought him his fourth NCAA championship in the 50 free.
The 21-year old stunned the crowd with a time of 17.63, winning the race by 1.01 seconds over Ryan Held of North Carolina State.
It was the latest milestone by a swimmer who won seven gold medals at last summer's world championships, equaling a record set by Olympic legend Michael Phelps and drawing inevitable comparisons.
Indiana took the lead in the team race on Day 2 of the championships, topping a tightly packed group of five teams with 169 points. But everyone was talking about Dressel, and it's unlikely anyone will laugh at whatever he sets his aim on next.
"I don't think you should sell yourself short," said Dressel, who also helped Florida win the 200 free relay Thursday. "17.6 was what I thought I was capable of doing. Maybe I lied to myself, but it worked.
"I'm super happy with it. I think everyone in the world of swimming expected 17.9, but I don't really care about other people's expectations. I want to set my own."
Dressel has been doing that since he was a teen. He broke the first of several national age-group records when he was 14, toppling some marks that had stood for 20 years.