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Two down, three to go: McIntosh wants to equal Phelps, but she'll have to beat another GOAT first

Two down, three to go: McIntosh wants to equal Phelps, but she'll have to beat another GOAT first

Now, fresh off winning three individual gold medals in Paris, she has declared her bold ambition to take out five individual world titles this week.
She's nearly halfway there, with the 200m butterfly, 800m freestyle and 400m individual medley still to come.
'My goal was to get my hand on the wall first, so to get that done is good,' McIntosh said. 'I'm not super happy with the time, but honestly, at a world championships, my goal is just to go as fast as I can against my competitors.
'Still happy with the gold and hoping to keep up my streak next time.'
Since the world championships began in 1973, only one swimmer – Phelps – has claimed five individual golds in a single meet.
Katie Ledecky won four in Kazan in 2015, while Phelps' quintuple of individual wins in Melbourne 2007 was the prelude to his eight-gold masterclass at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
McIntosh's most difficult assignment will be the 800m freestyle against Ledecky, widely regarded as the greatest female swimmer of all-time, on Saturday. The Canadian is the only swimmer to beat Ledecky across the distance in 15 years and it will be a mouthwatering duel.
For swimmers at this level, the challenge isn't the racing; it's the recovery.
On Sunday, McIntosh had just 22 minutes between her 400m freestyle final and the 200m IM semi-final. Throw in warm-ups and warm-downs and media commitments and refuelling, it's as arduous as it sounds.
McIntosh's performances at Canada's trials were electric. She broke three world records in the same meet, taking Titmus' 400m freestyle mark, plus all-time bests in the 200m and 400m individual medleys.
No woman had achieved that many world records at a single meet since the Netherlands' Inge de Bruijn at Sydney 2000.
Meanwhile, Australia's Alex Perkins picked up her first longcourse medal after finishing third in the women's 100m butterfly.
World record holder Gretchen Walsh overcame illness to win in 54.73, ahead of Belgium's Roos Vanotterdijk (55.84) and Perkins (56.33).
'I couldn't be happier,' Perkins said. 'I tried not to expect anything going into that final.
'I think [my improvements] have probably just come from the confidence in racing and having that self belief and backing myself a little bit more.'
Australia still leads the medal tally after two days, with two golds, one silver and a bronze. They will look to extend that advantage on Tuesday when Kaylee McKeown lines up for the 100m backstroke - the event she has won at the past two Olympics.
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McKeown is keeping expectations in check, despite having beaten American Regan Smith multiple times in the past. Smith qualified 0.23 seconds faster for the final, but both swimmers looked to have something in reserve.
'I'm just here for a good time,' McKeown said. 'I don't really care if I come first or if I come last. I just want to find the love for the sport again.
'I didn't actually want to do the 100. I wanted to come in and do 200 and relays.'
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Olympic dreams, TV deals and a screen of one's own: Inside Netball's ultimate power play
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Swimming with her eyes shut, Meg Harris has put a golden exclamation mark on Australia's world titles with victory in the women's 50m freestyle. Harris' gold medal on Sunday's last night of the titles in Singapore came amid silver medals to compatriot Jenna Forrester (women's 400m medley) and Australia's women's 4x100m medley relayers. Australia, with eight gold, six silver and six bronze, finished second on the medal tally behind the United States (nine, 11, nine). The 23-year-old Harris, who is partially deaf, was stunned at her success - not least, because she swims the entire lap with her eyes closed. "It's normal for me," Harris said of her shut-eye habit. "I do it a lot in the 50m and in the 100m, I always do it on the second lap. "So I'm not quite sure what it is, I do it in training as well, but I guess it's just like trying to focus on my stroke … not 100 per cent, that's just what happens." 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Harris' gold medal on Sunday's last night of the titles in Singapore came amid silver medals to compatriot Jenna Forrester (women's 400m medley) and Australia's women's 4x100m medley relayers. Australia, with eight gold, six silver and six bronze, finished second on the medal tally behind the United States (nine, 11, nine). The 23-year-old Harris, who is partially deaf, was stunned at her success - not least, because she swims the entire lap with her eyes closed. "It's normal for me," Harris said of her shut-eye habit. "I do it a lot in the 50m and in the 100m, I always do it on the second lap. "So I'm not quite sure what it is, I do it in training as well, but I guess it's just like trying to focus on my stroke … not 100 per cent, that's just what happens." Harris clocked 24.02 seconds to claim her first individual title in a career also featuring nine relay golds at Olympics and world championships. "Stoked ... 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Kaylee McKeown collected two golds, repeating her 100-200m backstroke double from last year's Olympics, plus a silver while Cam McEvoy became Australia's oldest gold medallist at a world titles, winning the men's 50m freestyle aged 31. Another veteran, 27-year-old Kyle Chalmers, won gold as part of the men's 4x100m freestyle relay, and bronze in the individual 100m. Meanwhile, in the diving world titles in Singapore, Australia's Cassiel Rousseau won the men's 10m platform for the second time. The 24-year-old produced consistent excellence in Sunday night's final - he led after the first dive, was second after the next two, then held the gold medal position for the final three dives. Rousseau described his gold, which follows his victory in the event at the 2023 world championships, as "unexpected". "It definitely feels amazing," he said. Swimming with her eyes shut, Meg Harris has put a golden exclamation mark on Australia's world titles with victory in the women's 50m freestyle. Harris' gold medal on Sunday's last night of the titles in Singapore came amid silver medals to compatriot Jenna Forrester (women's 400m medley) and Australia's women's 4x100m medley relayers. Australia, with eight gold, six silver and six bronze, finished second on the medal tally behind the United States (nine, 11, nine). The 23-year-old Harris, who is partially deaf, was stunned at her success - not least, because she swims the entire lap with her eyes closed. "It's normal for me," Harris said of her shut-eye habit. "I do it a lot in the 50m and in the 100m, I always do it on the second lap. "So I'm not quite sure what it is, I do it in training as well, but I guess it's just like trying to focus on my stroke … not 100 per cent, that's just what happens." Harris clocked 24.02 seconds to claim her first individual title in a career also featuring nine relay golds at Olympics and world championships. "Stoked ... I have achieved what the dream that I've been dreaming of this whole time," said Harris, who won silver in the event at last year's Paris Olympics. In the women's 400m medley final, Australia's Forrester finished second behind Canadian megastar Summer McIntosh, who won four gold medals in Singapore. Sam Short's illness-troubled titles finished with fourth place in the men's 1500m, Isaac Cooper was seventh in the men's 50m backstroke and Brendon Smith came last in the men's 400m medley. And the Dolphins' women's 4x100m medley team of Kaylee McKeown, Ella Ramsay, Alex Perkins and Mollie O'Callaghan took silver in the last race of the championships, won by the US in a world record time of three minutes 49.34 seconds. O'Callaghan was Australia's most successful swimmer of the meet with three gold medals and two silvers. Kaylee McKeown collected two golds, repeating her 100-200m backstroke double from last year's Olympics, plus a silver while Cam McEvoy became Australia's oldest gold medallist at a world titles, winning the men's 50m freestyle aged 31. Another veteran, 27-year-old Kyle Chalmers, won gold as part of the men's 4x100m freestyle relay, and bronze in the individual 100m. Meanwhile, in the diving world titles in Singapore, Australia's Cassiel Rousseau won the men's 10m platform for the second time. The 24-year-old produced consistent excellence in Sunday night's final - he led after the first dive, was second after the next two, then held the gold medal position for the final three dives. Rousseau described his gold, which follows his victory in the event at the 2023 world championships, as "unexpected". "It definitely feels amazing," he said.

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