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For Summer McIntosh, a record swim and fourth gold to cap superb world championships

For Summer McIntosh, a record swim and fourth gold to cap superb world championships

New York Times2 days ago
Summer McIntosh, the 18-year-old Canadian swimming star, rolled to victory Sunday in the women's 400-meter individual medley, setting a world-championship record and winning her fourth individual gold medal of the event.
McIntosh entered the meet in Singapore hoping to equal Michael Phelps' record of five individual golds, set in 2007. She came up just a few seconds short, fading down the stretch of an incredible women's 800-meter freestyle race on Saturday and taking bronze there.
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Otherwise, she was flawless in winning the 200-meter butterfly, 400-meter freestyle, and the 200- and 400-meter IMs. The four golds still put in her in elite company. Aside from Phelps, only Americans Caeleb Dressel (2019), Katie Ledecky (2015) and Ryan Lochte (2011) have ever won that many individual medals at a world championships.
Australia's Jenna Forrester and Japan's Mio Narita tied for silver behind McIntosh, both finishing in 4:33.26, more than seven seconds behind.
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Comparables for Oilers prospect Ike Howard offer encouragement for the future
Comparables for Oilers prospect Ike Howard offer encouragement for the future

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Comparables for Oilers prospect Ike Howard offer encouragement for the future

The newest impact prospect on the Edmonton Oilers depth chart is winger Ike Howard. Acquired from the Tampa Bay Lightning for prospect centre Sam O'Reilly, fans of the team have been projecting the youngster's boxcar numbers in the NHL for 2025-26. It's a difficult projection. Unlike fellow rookie Matt Savoie, who has a full season of pro hockey behind him (plus a few games with the Oilers a year ago), Howard has no professional track record. Advertisement One of the ways we can predict future production is by using players who delivered similar results in the same league at the same age in previous seasons. Since Howard's primary skill is as a goal scorer, it's best to look at players his age (20 a year ago) who played in the same league (Big Ten) and posted similar shot volume, shooting percentages and overall totals. I'm using a 10-year window. There is no clear comparable for Howard, owing to the fact that most impact college scorers turn pro before their age-20 seasons. The Lightning were eager to sign him, but the two sides couldn't come to an agreement. His resume (impact player at World Juniors, Hobey Baker winner) is impressive, and his numbers in the Big Ten during his 20-year-old season are top drawer. Thus, the problem in finding a perfect comparable. There are three. Howard and Jimmy Snuggerud have a lot in common based on math. Both men were drafted in the first round in 2022 and have similar scoring and volume numbers. Both played in the Big Ten in the same season. Snuggerud scored 20-plus goals in three consecutive seasons, while Howard only had one. However, Howard's points per game were superior in both of his Big Ten years. Both men will hit the ice as NHL rookies next year. Snuggerud did play for the St. Louis Blues during the regular season (1-3-4 in seven games) and the playoffs (2-2-4 in seven games); an encouraging early indication about a possible future for Howard. Matt Coronato is well-known to Oilers fans, as he has established himself as one of the best young Calgary Flames players over the last 18 months. Coronato scored sparingly at age 21 in the NHL (3-6-9 in 34 games) before blossoming as a scorer (24-23-47 in 77 games) at age 22. In his age-21 season, Coronato was over a point per game in the AHL. If Howard takes the same route to the NHL and has similar success, the organization should consider the trade a success. Advertisement Adam Gaudette played his 20-year-old college season for Northeastern (Hockey East) in 2016-17, which is a hockey lifetime ago. However, he's an interesting comparable for two reasons: the comps are close, and we have over 300 NHL games of progress to digest as it pertains to a possible future for Howard. Gaudette has taken the long way to NHL success, but found it last year with the Ottawa Senators. 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A player like Ryan Nugent-Hopkins or Adam Henrique may serve as his centre and mentor the young winger through the early weeks of his NHL career. When projecting Howard, it's impossible to ignore the possibility that one of Connor McDavid or Leon Draisaitl emerges as the centre on his line. If that happens, comparables take a powder, and we're in uncharted territory. Getting 'the push' has been a decade-long experience for wingers who arrive in Edmonton. Trades are made, fringe wingers arrive, and not long after, Pat Maroon is signing a contract for more money than anyone thought possible. The list of wingers helped along the way by both McDavid and Draisaitl is long and impressive. Maroon, Zack Kassian, Jesse Puljujarvi, Kailer Yamamoto, Ty Rattie, Alex Chiasson, James Neal, Evander Kane, Warren Foegele and many others have benefited over the years. After the Puljujarvi and Yamamoto experience, the organization faded rookies and players with a lack of experience as skill wingers. 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Howard's comparables are quality. He could exceed all of them, but there is no guarantee of immediate success. If he delivers a strong rookie season, chances are it will be in a complementary role with an impact centre leading the way.

TNT Sports to show England's 2025-26 Ashes series in Australia
TNT Sports to show England's 2025-26 Ashes series in Australia

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

TNT Sports to show England's 2025-26 Ashes series in Australia

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Blue Jays' Ernie Clement shows lifelong hitting ability in historic night for Toronto
Blue Jays' Ernie Clement shows lifelong hitting ability in historic night for Toronto

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Blue Jays' Ernie Clement shows lifelong hitting ability in historic night for Toronto

Blue Jays' Ernie Clement shows lifelong hitting ability in historic night for Toronto originally appeared on The Sporting News Ernie Clement has always been a hitter. He received a plastic golf club from his grandparents on his first birthday, and his swing worked from the start. At 2, Clement swung an adult-sized wooden bat against pitches from his mother and somehow made contact. At 4, he rolled up socks and tossed them up in the air for himself to whack, over and over again. So to those who watched Clement grow up, what happened Monday night was no surprise. And even in Toronto, where Blue Jays fans have watched Clement grow into a tremendous big league ballplayer, it felt like something well within the realm of possibility. But the reality of this stat line is still remarkable: 5-for-5, with three singles, a double and a triple. The first five-hit game of Clement's career. It's only the fifth such statistical game ever by an American League shortstop, joining Jeremy Pena (2023), Rick Burleson (1980), Mario Guerrero (1977) and Bert Campaneris (1968), per StatsCentre. MORE: Cubs' Matthew Boyd has mastered the balk pickoff move For Clement, it's the crowning jewel of what has been his breakout MLB season. He was a star in the Rochester, N.Y. area at Brighton High School, the rare northeast standout to earn a spot at the University of Virginia, and then he started there as a freshman on a national title team. Eventually, Cleveland picked him in the fourth round of the draft, but in early stints there and then in Oakland, he didn't stick. The Blue Jays gave Clement a late-season chance in 2023, and he hit .380 in a small sample size. In 2024, he was steady if not a star, batting .263 with a career-high 12 homers and 12 steals. And now this season, Clement spent much of the year above .300. He's at .289 right now, already a career-high 22 doubles. He has played stellar defense all around the Toronto infield and is an absolute masher against left-handed pitching. The player Clement has grown into is one it always seemed like he had a chance to be. This is a guy who once said, "I just wanted to hit. I never thought about walking until I got to college." His American Legion coach, Tom Sapienza, once added: "He hit as if he had come down from a higher league. That's how he hit." MORE: Yankees are paying 3 players a combined $43.8 million to not play for them On Monday night, that was exactly the case. Clement was unstoppable at the dish. His only hiccup on the night came on his triple, when his slide into third was anything but graceful. But in the box score, a triple is a triple, clumsy slide or not. Besides, this night wasn't about Clement's slides. It was about his swing, his hand-eye coordination, the ability he has been honing basically since his two feet allowed him to stand up and attempt to make contact with a round object. Clement is a hitter, for his whole life, and never has that shone more brightly than it did in his brilliant 5-for-5 performance. MORE MLB NEWS: White Sox batters have turned into 1927 Yankees Steven Kwan shows kindness on the most stressful day of his MLB career Marlins' Jakob Marsee starts his MLB career in a way no one ever has Rockies' Warming Bernabel is red hot Oneil Cruz makes one of the best throws in MLB history Red Sox phenom Roman Anthony makes MLB history not done since Elmer Valo in 1940

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