Platte County senior Palmer Keith swims in a race last season. MEREDITH GUTSHALL/PC Preps Extra

Keith, Gutshall set to finalize careers as 2 of best in program history

Platte County’s standout senior duo scored all of team’s state points last fall, while 5 other returns made their postseason debut on developing roster.

Platte County didn’t have any seniors on last year’s roster, allowing for optimism to see additional results from a pair of senior stars and the development of strong contributors.

Deacon Gutshall and Palmer Keith enter the final season of their already accomplished careers with a chance to put the finishing touches on an undeniable legacy. Already two of the best in program history, the senior pair bring Class 1 all-state credentials and a desire to help the Pirates back to the Class 1 MSHSAA Swimming and Diving Championships podium in at least one relay.

Last fall, Platte County did not have a top-16 relay at state for the first time since 2016. Yet, Gutshall and Keith accounted for 51 team points to help the Pirates place 16th, while seniors Cobie Parkin, Zach Linville and Dylan Smith plus juniors Jack Hokanson and Landon Steffel making state debuts — beneficial experience for a team in transition.

The focus remains on development and personal improvement.

“The swimmers are more concerned with swimming fast than they are about places and titles,” Platte County second-year coach Britt Johnson said. “Those will come with good quality swims and time drops.”

Guthsall and Keith have continually raised the standards for Platte County while rewriting the program’s record book. Already the two most decorated individual swimmers ever for the Pirates, they enter their senior seasons having each matched the previous best individual all-state finish in program history (fifth), while Gutshall set a new standard after placing third in the 500-yard freestyle in last year’s Class 1 meet.

Platte County saw three new school records set at state, while coming up just short of sending two relays to the consolation final.

Continuing rapid progression into the state’s elite for distance freestyle, Gutshall garnered the second and third all-state medals of his career. He set school records in both the 200 and 500 freestyle in the state preliminaries and held seed in both finals races. The third-place finish in the 500 freestyle came in 4 minutes, 43.02 seconds, a day after he set the school record at 4:41.53. He entered with a career-best of 4:45.96 from earlier this season, meaning he knocked another 4 1/2 seconds off the mark that has consistently gone lower over the past two seasons.

Prior to 2022, only Nathanial Savage had gone under 5 minutes in the event for Platte County.

Gutshall also made the championship final of the 200 freestyle for the first time in his career. He set a school record in the preliminaries (1:44.50) and then swam slightly faster in the final (1:44.39) to hold fifth place, which at the time matched Keith and 2018 graduate Caden DeLay for the best finish in program history.

Keith quickly followed with another fifth-place medal for Platte County in the 200 individual medley. He improved his school record in the event during preliminaries (1:55.82) and qualified fourth out of preliminaries before dropping one spot in the finals in 1:56.10. Both of those times were better than his career-best of 1:56.73 going into state.

In addition to the all-state finish, Keith also qualified for the consolation final of the 100 breaststroke and placed 10th. He went 1:00.22 in the preliminaries and 1:00.39 in his final race of the weekend after setting the school record just under two weeks earlier in the Suburban Conference White Division Championships at 59.83, finally breaking DeLay’s mark and becoming the second in program history to break the 1-minute mark in the event.

Keith goes into his senior year holding the school record in the 200 IM, 100 breaststroke and 100 butterfly.

With swimmers limited to a maximum of four events — a maximum of two individual — at state, Gutshall and Keith also teamed with Parkin and Hokanson on both Platte County’s 200 freestyle and 400 freestyle relay teams. The quartet came in 17th in preliminaries for the shorter of the two races at 1:34.82 — just off the season best of 1:34.33. The Pirates were a little more than half a second off the tie for 15th between Westminster Christian and Kearney for the final two spots in the consolation final.

In the 400 freestyle relay, Platte County came in 19th (3:29.30) and were again just off the season-best time for the same group but well back of the top 16 cutoff.

Because of the limit on individual races, Hokanson also earned an opportunity to compete in both the 100 butterfly and 500 freestyle races. The top 32 make the state preliminaries in each event, and as others made choices, he moved up the ranks and into the field.

Hokanson came in 25th in the 100 butterfly (56.36, just off his career-best) and 32nd in the 500 freestyle (career-best 5:15.40 after entering with a qualifying mark of 5:21.42).

Coburn ended up swimming on all three of Platte County’s state-qualifying relays, teaming with Linville, Smith and Steffel in the 200 medley preliminaries. The Pirates were 31st in 1:56.73.

In addition to the returning qualifiers, Platte County also expects more contributions from juniors Finn Smith and Alex Emmerich, while freshman Beau Jonkman helps deepen a lineup looking to build on last year’s runnerup finish in conference. The Pirates’ team accomplishments will hinge on how far the top seniors take them while finishing their stories.

Gutshall qualified for state as a freshman, sneaking into the 500 freestyle field and then narrowly missing a spot in the consolation final. The experience helped shift much of his individual focus to distance freestyle and away from backstroke as a sophomore — a move that continues to pay off.

Motivated by not having a race on the second day of state as a freshman, Gutshall came back and ended up sixth in the Class 1 500 freestyle as a sophomore and ninth in the 200 freestyle after winning the consolation final.

All-state in each of his first three seasons, Keith has placed seventh, fifth and fifth in the 200 IM in three tries; 10th and ninth in the 100 breaststroke the past two seasons; and 16th in the 100 butterfly as a freshman. He has a chance to be a finalist in all eight individual state races in his career with similar showings this season.

While Platte County didn’t have a relay finalist in 2023, Gutshall and Keith were on the 10th-place 400-meter freestyle team and the 14th-place 200 freestyle team in 2022. Keith also swam on honorable mention all-state 200 and 400 freestyle relay teams as a freshman. Gutshall swam on the 2021 200 medley relay team that did not place in the top 16 in preliminaries.

Platte County has scored at least one team point at state for eight straight seasons, including all seven since the state split into two classifications. The Pirates were 13th in 2022 with a program-record 63 state points, matching the overall finish of the 2017 team (61 points).

Platte County ended up just seven points out of 13th last fall but maintained a consistency from recent seasons. The Pirates were tied for 35th with just two points in 2020 then went to 17th in 2021 with 37 points to last year’s record finish. The program’s other top run came starting in 2017 then followed by finishing 16th in 2018 (53 points) and 2019 (40 points).

In the final year before the split, Platte County scored one point while competing against every program in the state.

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