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HONOLULU—The University of Hawai’i women’s swimming team hosts Alaska-Fairbanks in the final home meet of the season on Friday at 5:00 p.m. at the Duke Kahanamoku Aquatics Complex. Meanwhile, the Rainbow Warrior and Rainbow Wahine diving squads hit the road to compete in the Bruin Diving Invitational from Friday, Jan. 9, through Sunday, Jan. 11, at the Spieker Aquatics Center in Los Angeles, Calif.

 




HAWAI’I RAINBOW WAHINE (3-2, 1-1 Big West) vs. ALASKA FAIRBANKS NANOOKS (4-2, 2-0 PCSC)


Date | Time
Friday, Jan. 9 | 5:00 p.m. HT


Location 
Duke Kahanamoku Aquatics Complex – Honolulu, O’ahu


Event Schedule
Heat Sheet


Live Stats
SwimCloud


Social Media
Instagram | X | Facebook

 




HAWAI’I RAINBOW WARRIORS INTRASQUAD SCRIMMAGE


Date | Time
Friday, Jan. 9 | 5:00 p.m. HT


Location 
Duke Kahanamoku Aquatics Complex – Honolulu, O’ahu


Event Schedule
Heat Sheet


Live Stats
SwimCloud


Social Media
Instagram | X | Facebook

 




UCLA DIVING INVITATIONAL


Date | Time
Friday, Jan. 9 – Saturday, Jan. 11 | All Day


Location 
Spieker Aquatics Center – Los Angeles, Calif.


Live Stats
DiveMeets

The Rainbow Wahine enter the weekend riding back-to-back victories with wins over BYU (163-136) and Pacific Lutheran (136-72). Reigning Big West Athlete of the Week, senior Holly Nelson continued her standout season, leading the Rainbow Wahine against the Cougars with a meet-high 27 points with wins in three individual events (50 fly, 50 free and 100 free) plus a silver swimming the anchor leg in the 400 free relay. Aoife Harkin tallied a meet-high 18 points against Pacific Lutheran with three podium finishes, highlighted by victories in the 400 IM and 500 free.

On the boards, the Rainbow Wahine divers dominated against BYU, claiming the top-five spots in both the 1-meter and 3-meter events. Macie Wheeler claimed gold in the 1-meter (289.65) while Lovisa Gustavsson won the 3-meter (306.23). On the men’s side, Juan Esteban Ramirez Tamayo swept both competitions with wins in the 1-meter (338.40) and 3-meter (386.18). Tamayo’s 3-meter mark is the eighth-highest in program history.

 

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