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Summer McIntosh: The 17-Year-Old Canadian Who's Rewriting Olympic History, One Gold Medal at a Time

2 August, 2024 - 12:05AM
Summer McIntosh: The 17-Year-Old Canadian Who's Rewriting Olympic History, One Gold Medal at a Time
Credit: globalnews.ca

Summer McIntosh began rewriting Canadian history at the Olympic Games with her second gold medal.

The 17-year-old swimmer from Toronto won women's 200-metre butterfly gold, which was also her mother Jill Horstead's race in the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, on Thursday.

McIntosh's second gold was her third medal in Paris after her victory in the 400-metre individual medley and a silver in the 400-metre freestyle.

"It's been a pretty amazing Games for me, but I'm not done yet," the teenager stated.

McIntosh joined George Hodgson in 1912 and Alex Baumann in 1984 among Canadian swimmers who won two gold medals at an Olympic Games.

She's the first Canadian woman to claim double gold in individual events at an Olympic Games.

Her time of two minutes 3.03 seconds was an Olympic record in an event that resonates with her because it was also her mother's.

"It's pretty cool tonight winning the 200 fly because that, by far, was her main event," the daughter said. "To share that moment with her is pretty cool. I know she is so proud of me along with the rest of my family."

Regan Smith of the United States took silver in 2:03.84 and China's Zhang Yufei was the bronze medallist in 2:05.09.

"I'm really happy with the time even though I definitely think I had 2:02 in me," McIntosh said. "I haven't been able to watch it yet. I think my finish was a little bit weird, but yeah, I can never be upset with that best time, especially by that margin."

McIntosh missed another podium chance later Thursday evening when she anchored the women's 4x200 freestyle relay to a fourth-place finish alongside Mary-Sophie Harvey of Trois-Rivieres, Que., Ella Jansen of Burlington, Ont. and Ottawa's Julie Brousseau.

"We're pretty disappointed with that result," McIntosh said. "But I think we're all extremely proud of each other because two of them, that was their first Olympic final and they're just a little bit older than me.

"We're all so young and along with Mary being so experienced, but also still in her early twenties, it was a cool moment to share with all of them."

The Australian squad set an Olympic record of seven minutes 38.08 seconds en route for the gold medal. The U.S. took silver, making Katie Ledecky the most decorated female Olympic swimmer of all time.

China earned bronze, finishing 3.71 before the Canadians.

Ledecky now has 13 Olympic medals, one more than compatriots Jenny Thompson, Dara Torres and Natalie Coughlin and Australia's Emma McKeon.

As she said, McIntosh isn't done chasing more history in Paris. She competes in the 200-metre individual medley preliminary rounds on Friday. The final is Saturday.

McIntosh is also a candidate to race the women's medley relay Sunday.

Zhang was strong off the blocks to take an early lead in the 200 fly, which the Chinese relinquished to McIntosh before the 150-metre mark and began to fade.

"At the 125 [metre] mark, I feel I hadn't started trying in the race yet. I was really controlling it as much as possible," McIntosh said.

Smith tried to close on the final 50, but the Canadian held her ground out front and touched the wall first.

"She's out aggressively but not overly aggressive, great third 50 and probably one of the best turns for her off the last wall and then just doing what she needs to do the last 50," was her coach Brent Arckey's assessment.

Three of McIntosh's teammates qualified for finals via Thursday's semifinals.

Toronto's Josh Liendo and Finlay Knox of Okotoks, Alta., grabbed the eighth and final berths in the men's 50-metre freestyle and 200-metre individual medley respectively.

Before veteran backstroker Kylie Masse of LaSalle, Ont., qualified fifth for the 200 metres, she watched her young teammate step to the top of the Olympic podium again.

"I don't know if people recognize the significance of what she's doing and the number of medals she's achieved," Masse said.

"She's such an incredible athlete and one of a kind. I hope people can recognize that and really get behind her and support her in her achievements already."

Canadian Olympic Committee president and former rower Tricia Smith, who was recently re-elected to the International Olympic Committee, presented McIntosh with the gold medal.

"The first night when they actually put the silver on my neck, I was actually in shock at how heavy it was because no other medal has been that heavy before," McIntosh said. "Definitely pretty surreal and I just try to soak up those moments as much as possible."

With files from Reuters

Summer McIntosh's Dominance

It is turning into a Summer sizzler over here, well on its way to becoming the greatest single display ever performed by a Canadian Olympian.

And what a show Summer McIntosh — part athletic brilliance, and part entertainment — is putting on as the rising star of these Games not only wins, but does so in dominating fashion.

The Toronto teenager is a two-time gold-medallist after a brilliantly executed and never-in-doubt effort in the 200-metre butterfly on Thursday night to drape another heavy piece of shiny hardware around her neck.

And in the process, she’s fast-forwarding herself near the top of the conversation of who is the greatest Canadian Olympian of all time. It’s stunning, sensational and a thing of beauty — all in one incredibly fine-tuned athlete.

In a commanding six days of competition here, her legacy is already entrenched. She is the first Canadian woman to win two individual golds at a Summer Games, the first female swimmer to capture three. All at the age of 17 and all with the asterisk of there’s more to come.

On Thursday, McIntosh was as entertaining as she was in full command of her assignment. Not only was her time of 2:03.03 an Olympic record, it was the second fastest ever raced in the event.

You think she was ready for the moment? The latest show of firepower knocked a second off her personal best at a La Defense Arena pool that has been slow by international standards.

Yes, these are the Games of Summer now as the showman in McIntosh came out in what was her most impressive win yet and a glittering golden complement to the one she claimed in the 400-metre IM earlier in the week.

“She’s such an incredible athlete and one of a kind,” said McIntosh’s veteran Canadian teammate, Kylie Masse. “It’s incredible to see her on top of the podium. It’s so wonderful to see her so true to who she is and visibly enjoying what she’s doing and being here at the Olympic Games.”

Summer essentially toyed with the competition in this one, letting reigning Olympic champ Yufei Zhang hold a slim lead at the 100-metre mark. And then she toyed with the controversial Chinese swimmer and the rest of the field on the way to a breakout victory. The opening silver was nice, the gold to follow made her a champion. Now she’s a legend.

Family Ties

There was an added special to element to the latest victory for the McIntosh family: The gold came in the same race that her mother Jill competed in at the 1984 Games in Los Angeles. It will no doubt be a subject of conversation at the family cottage when the McIntoshes get back to Ontario.

“It was pretty cool winning the 200 fly because that was her main event,” Summer said. “So sharing that moment with her is pretty cool. I know she is so proud of me along with the rest of the family.

“I’ve always loved the 200 fly growing up. It’s such a fun and enjoyable race.”

It’s also one that she executed to perfection which is in line with the biggest statement McIntosh has been making here. That killer instinct matched with brilliance in execution makes her the one to beat every time she steps on the blocks. And the competition is well aware of it.

“This one was such a well-executed race,” her coach Brent Arckey said afterwards. “She went out aggressively but not overly aggressive, (had) a great third 50 and probably one of the best turns for her off the last wall and then just doing what she needs to do over the last 50.”

The Next Steps

Like the rest of the swimming world, Arckey is clearly in awe of his prized student and her composure. There is so much to celebrate, but so much yet to accomplish starting with Friday’s preliminary’s for the 200 IM where a third gold looms as a strong possibility.

“We’re trying to get to the end of this thing and then we’ll be able to take a deep breath,” Arckey said. “You get to celebrate in the moment. It’s something we’ve rehearsed. I think there will be a bigger celebration at the end. The last phase is celebrating.”

And what a celebration that will be.

McIntosh is getting the hang of this now and we’re starting to see the joy emerge in the moments outside of her locked-in focus. She’s got the podium wave down pat. She’s got the walk around the stadium with a Canadian flag draped on her shoulders cemented as part of her routine. And she sings the anthem in both official languages.

Oh, and then there are the medals.

“The first night when they put the silver medal on my neck, I was actually shocked how heavy it was because no other medal has been that heavy before,” McInosh said. “I just try to soak up those moments as much as possible.” The latest masterpiece, ripped in front of another sellout crowd, gave Canada it’s seventh medal of the Games, three of them from McIntosh and four from the surging swim team.

Leaving from Lane 4, the Canadian was second after 50 metres to Zhang but narrowed that gap at the halfway mark and shot to the front through the third lap of the 50-metre pool. What followed was pure athletic brilliance. With the sellout crowd urging her on, she increased her margin as she reached the wall.

More to Come

And McIntosh is not done yet in her quest to blow away anything previously done by a Canadian at a Winter or Summer Games.

Though in the 4×200 freestyle relay, she swam a blistering third leg on Thursday and had to settle for fourth, she’s got the IM on the weekend and likely more relay action.

When the water settled and the celebration Arckey references begins, the McIntosh legacy could already be something special. A third gold would surpass the two that speed skaters Marc Gagnon (Salt Lake City, 2002) and Gaetan Boucher (Sarajevo, 1984) won as the most by any Canadian in a single Olympics. And there’s still a chance at leaving France with five total medals which would match long track speed skater Cindy Klassen’s performance (one gold, two silver, two bronze) at the 2006 Turin Games.

Many veteran observers are starting to compare McIntosh to American superstar Katie Ledecky, whose win in the 1,500 freestyle on Wednesday was her eighth career Olympic gold. McIntosh has a ways to go to validate those comparisons, but is off to a flying start.

“It’s pretty surreal,” McIntosh said, as teenagers like to say. “I’m trying not to reflect on it too much. I’ve got the 200 IM tomorrow and it’s time to focus on that.”

Summer McIntosh: The 17-Year-Old Canadian Who's Rewriting Olympic History, One Gold Medal at a Time
Credit: swimswam.com
Summer McIntosh: The 17-Year-Old Canadian Who's Rewriting Olympic History, One Gold Medal at a Time
Credit: tinifycdn.com
Tags:
Summer McIntosh Summer McIntosh Olympic swimming Canada Paris Olympics 2024 Olympics
Samantha Wilson
Samantha Wilson

Sports Analyst

Analyzing sports events and strategies for success.

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