Records fell, future college swimmers ended their high school careers in style and history was made from a team perspective.
It all added up to another memorable Texas 6A boys and girls Swimming & Diving Championships this past weekend.
Keller High School made history by becoming just the third program in state history to sweep the boys and girls titles.
The girls won its first ever title in program history, while the boys squad won its third straight state title.
Three future Division I college swimmers were the stars of the meet, with each winning two events.
Grace Rabb of Dripping Springs High School, who has signed with Florida, broke a 17-year-old state record by winning the 200 IM in a time of 1:56.40. The old record was 1:56.56 set in 2008 by Mary Beck of Austin Westlake.
Born in the fall of 2006, Rabb was a toddler and just barely walking when Beck's record was set. At the same time, Rabb also beat out defending state champion Avery Collins of Keller by more than four seconds (2:00.65).
Rabb then followed up that performance by winning the 100 backstroke in a school-record time of 53.01, outlasting defending champion Macey deGroot of League City Clear Springs (53.52).
Another standout was San Antonio Ronald Reagan senior Montserrat Spielmann, a Chilean national record-holder who has signed with Michigan. She won the 200 freestyle in a time of 1:47.57 -- just .09 ahead of runner-up Sofia Luper of Houston Cypress Fairbanks -- and then defended her title in the 100 butterfly with a time of 53.02.
The other standout was Georgia signee Marin Clem, who won two titles for Southlake Carroll. Clem won the 50 freestyle (22.63) and repeated as champion in the 100 freestyle (49.23).
Clem also swam the anchor for Carroll's winning team in the 400 freestyle relay, coming in with a split of 49.22 to help Carroll of 3:24.18. Olivia Colombo, Emma Bibza and Sydney Klopfenstein were the other members of the team.
Keller won both the 200 medley relay and the 200 freestyle relay. The team of Avery Collins, Ella McWhorter, Ellen Garritson and Natalie Schneider won the 200 medley relay in a time of 1:41.75, while the team of Schneider, Chloe Corbin, Lucy Backus and Garritson won the 200 freestyle relay in 1:33.49.
Girls' Team Standings - Top 5
Maximus Williamson certainly left a legacy in what was his last high school meet. Headed to swim in college for Virginia, Williamson set a national record in the 200 freestyle finals, setting a new national record by swimming a time of 1:30.46. He broke the record of 1:32.63 he set himself in preliminaries.
Williamson then followed that up by winning the 100 freestyle in a state record time of 41.54, breaking his own previous record of 41.84. He was also a part of two winning relay teams.
Williamson swam a 19.08 leadoff leg for Keller's winning team in the 200 freestyle relay, which finished with a time of 1:20.06. Maxwell Stanislaus, Riccardo Osio and Simon Wright were the other members of the team.
Williamson then swam anchor in the 400 freestyle relay, producing a 41.40 split to help Keller win in a time of 2:56.51.
Stanislaus, Osio and Wright were the other members of the team.