In the movie Gone in 60 Seconds, starring the ubiquitous Nicolas Cage, there’s a scene where his character talks about Eleanor, the car that he keeps trying to steal but can’t, and for him that’s a 1967 Mustang code named ‘Eleanor’. And at the end of the day, with the whole plot on the line, he gets it, he gets his unicorn, his Eleanor.

Well, with just a few weeks until he ages up, Michael Andrew has gotten his Eleanor. He swam a 19.85 in the 50 yard free on Saturday night at the Jenks Sectional in Oklahoma, breaking the National Age Group Record that seems to, ironically, have been the hardest for him to get at the 13-14 level (among his wheelhouse events, at least).

That broke the 20.02 that Arizonan Ryan Hoffer swam in 2013 and makes Andrew the youngest swimmer ever under 20 seconds in the event. Hoffer now holds the National Age Group Record for 15-16’s already at a 19.54, but Andrew’s not far off of that time either.

Andrew now has 8 out of 14 yards-course National Age Group Record offered for 13-14’s. This break means officially that the list of ones he holds is longer than the ones he doesn’t:

Michael Andrew Records:

50 free – 19.85

100 free – 44.16

100 back – 48.10

100 breast – 54.04 (pending ratification)

100 fly – 47.47

200 fly – 1:46.29

200 IM – 1:47.44

400 IM – 3:52.08

Non Michael Andrew Records:

200 free – Maxime Rooney – 1:38.42

500 free – Alex Katz – 4:26.73

1000 free – Matthew Hirschberger – 9:02.37

1650 free – Arthur Frayler – 15:14.17

200 back – Benjamin Ho – 1:45.73

200 breast – Reece Whitley – 2:00.14

Now that the 50 is gone, perhaps we’ll see him change his focus for these last two weeks and take a shot at some of the records that he’s not traditionally associated with, like the 1000 or 1650 free. Either way, this has been another absurd year of swimming for Michael Andrew, and a level of age group dominance that we haven’t seen in a decade.