Kyle Chalmers hopes Enhanced Games leads to improvement in prize money for clean swimmers
– Kyle Chalmers won't criticise fellow swimmers for taking part in the Enhanced Games, but the Australian hopes the proposed multi-sport event prompts World Aquatics to increase prize money for clean athletes.
The Enhanced Games will allow athletes to use pharmacological or technological assistance, including substances banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency.
Retired Australian world champion swimmer James Magnussen, 34, in February 2024 agreed to take performance-enhancing drugs to make an attempt at beating Cesar Cielo's 15-year-old 50-metre freestyle world record.
The Enhanced Games concept has been met with widespread criticism, with World Aquatics introducing a new bylaw that will prevent any athlete or official who supports or endorses doping from competing or holding any positions after a Greek swimmer supported by the Enhanced Games 'broke' the world record.
'James is one of my really great mates, so I'm definitely not going to knock him for going across there,' Chalmers was quoted as saying by the Australian Associated Press on June 8, ahead of Australian trials in Adelaide.
'That is something that is hard in our sport, there's not a huge amount of money or prize money on offer and we kind of do it for the love of it. So I am not going to be a person that slams swimmers for wanting to go across and make some money and give themselves a better opportunity in life or set their families up...'
The Enhanced Games will hold their inaugural competition in Las Vegas in May 2026 with swimming, athletics and weightlifting on the agenda. Participants could earn prize money totalling up to US$500,000 (S$642,580) per event plus bonuses for surpassing a world record mark.
'Swimmers have been underpaid for a very long time at the big competitions,' the 26-year-old said.
'I'm very lucky to have a lot of personal sponsors so I do OK for myself, which is nice. But I know that there's a lot of swimmers out there that really struggle... So I really hope that there is a shift, that we are able to get a little bit more prize money for what we do, but I guess we'll see.'
Over at the Canadian Swimming Trials, Summer McIntosh stormed to victory in the women's 800m freestyle on June 8, firing another warning shot to Katie Ledecky after narrowly missing out on breaking the American's world record.
A day after obliterating the 400m freestyle world record, McIntosh touched in 8min 5.07sec in the 800m, putting her just outside US great Ledecky's world best of 8:04.12 set only in May.
'Going into tonight, I really wanted to see how close I could get to that world record,' the three-time Olympic gold medallist said after her win at the trials in Victoria, British Columbia.
'But, overall, pretty happy with my race and my splits. I was a little bit in no man's land. So I'm happy excited for just moving forward and seeing how I can be pushed when I get some close-quarter racing.'
McIntosh won gold in the 200m butterfly, 200m medley and 400m medley at the Paris Olympics and has indicated she'll chase five titles at the world championships in Singapore in July.
On Saturday, she shattered the 400m free world record with a time of 3:54.18, slicing more than a second of the record set in 2023 by Australian Ariarne Titmus, who is taking the 2025 season off.
The blistering form of McIntosh and Ledecky sets the stage for a titantic duel at the world championships and the Canadian admitted she was relishing the prospect.
'Any time I get to race Katie, it's an honour. I always have to bring my best to be able to challenge her,' McIntosh said on June 8.
'So I'm really excited for our match-ups at the worlds. This is my starting point now and I just try to keep pushing forward.' REUTERS, AFP
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Independent Singapore
5 hours ago
- Independent Singapore
Canadian Summer McIntosh claimed the new world record once again in the 400-m freestyle swimming
BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA: Canadian teenager Summer McIntosh recently broke the 400-m freestyle world record with her impressive performance, finishing with a final time of 3:54.18 at the Canadian Swimming Trials. The young swimmer had beaten the previous world record by over a second, which was set by her longtime rival in the sport, Ariarne Titmus. Titmus had defeated McIntosh and won gold at the same event during the 2024 Paris Olympics. With her win, she proudly expressed to the reporters: 'Touching the wall, you can kind of see my outburst of emotions because I was really not expecting that time, but overall I'm super, super happy.' McIntosh added: 'I think just seeing the time after two years of really pushing my hardest every day and training in this event and not seeing the results…So just kind of all that energy and anger and blood, sweat, and tears built up, and then finally having an amazing swim in it is just really, really satisfying.' See also Singapore's Max Maeder nominated for World Sailor of the Year Breaking records at a young age The young Canadian previously held the world record in the event, which she set back in March 2023, with a final time of 3:56.08. The result was nearly two seconds slower than the time she achieved in her latest milestone. Now, she may have started off slow, but indeed finished stronger, speeding up in the second half to beat her previous time. At a young age, McIntosh is clearly used to achieving great results in swimming. She breaks records and wins competitions that make her name well-known in the sport. She made history by becoming the first Canadian to win three gold medals at a single Olympic Games, at the 2024 Paris Olympics. In a social media post, McIntosh shared her achievement with her fans with a caption: 'Not a bad way to kick off Trials. 🇨🇦… World Record 400m Freestyle – 3:54.18.' Netizens expressed their support in the comments: 'Ahhhhh you are amazing!! Congrats Summer 🔥😍,' 'Absolutely amazing! What a start! Congratulations on yet another world record, Summer! Wow! 🇨🇦👋,' 'There was some fire behind that swim—worlds are going to be fun. Well done Summer 🔥,' 'Congratulations Summer! Absolutely fabulous 👏👏,' and 'Making Canada proud 👏🙌.' In another social media post, she also shared her achievement of clinching a new Canadian record in the 800-m category. She said in her caption: 'Thanks for cheering me all the way through that 800m Free Victoria! 👏🏻❤️… New Canadian Record 🇨🇦 8:05:06.' More netizens commented and showed their support: 'Congratulations, what an accomplishment! You have been a huge inspiration to our kids who have both started competitive swim this past year! 🍁🔥🎖️' and 'Summer McIntosh has become a true source of national pride—not only for her remarkable achievements in the pool, but for the down-to-earth way she carries her growing fame.'

Straits Times
5 hours ago
- Straits Times
Kyle Chalmers hopes Enhanced Games leads to improvement in prize money for clean swimmers
– Kyle Chalmers won't criticise fellow swimmers for taking part in the Enhanced Games, but the Australian hopes the proposed multi-sport event prompts World Aquatics to increase prize money for clean athletes. The Enhanced Games will allow athletes to use pharmacological or technological assistance, including substances banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency. Retired Australian world champion swimmer James Magnussen, 34, in February 2024 agreed to take performance-enhancing drugs to make an attempt at beating Cesar Cielo's 15-year-old 50-metre freestyle world record. The Enhanced Games concept has been met with widespread criticism, with World Aquatics introducing a new bylaw that will prevent any athlete or official who supports or endorses doping from competing or holding any positions after a Greek swimmer supported by the Enhanced Games 'broke' the world record. 'James is one of my really great mates, so I'm definitely not going to knock him for going across there,' Chalmers was quoted as saying by the Australian Associated Press on June 8, ahead of Australian trials in Adelaide. 'That is something that is hard in our sport, there's not a huge amount of money or prize money on offer and we kind of do it for the love of it. So I am not going to be a person that slams swimmers for wanting to go across and make some money and give themselves a better opportunity in life or set their families up...' The Enhanced Games will hold their inaugural competition in Las Vegas in May 2026 with swimming, athletics and weightlifting on the agenda. Participants could earn prize money totalling up to US$500,000 (S$642,580) per event plus bonuses for surpassing a world record mark. 'Swimmers have been underpaid for a very long time at the big competitions,' the 26-year-old said. 'I'm very lucky to have a lot of personal sponsors so I do OK for myself, which is nice. But I know that there's a lot of swimmers out there that really struggle... So I really hope that there is a shift, that we are able to get a little bit more prize money for what we do, but I guess we'll see.' Over at the Canadian Swimming Trials, Summer McIntosh stormed to victory in the women's 800m freestyle on June 8, firing another warning shot to Katie Ledecky after narrowly missing out on breaking the American's world record. A day after obliterating the 400m freestyle world record, McIntosh touched in 8min 5.07sec in the 800m, putting her just outside US great Ledecky's world best of 8:04.12 set only in May. 'Going into tonight, I really wanted to see how close I could get to that world record,' the three-time Olympic gold medallist said after her win at the trials in Victoria, British Columbia. 'But, overall, pretty happy with my race and my splits. I was a little bit in no man's land. So I'm happy excited for just moving forward and seeing how I can be pushed when I get some close-quarter racing.' McIntosh won gold in the 200m butterfly, 200m medley and 400m medley at the Paris Olympics and has indicated she'll chase five titles at the world championships in Singapore in July. On Saturday, she shattered the 400m free world record with a time of 3:54.18, slicing more than a second of the record set in 2023 by Australian Ariarne Titmus, who is taking the 2025 season off. The blistering form of McIntosh and Ledecky sets the stage for a titantic duel at the world championships and the Canadian admitted she was relishing the prospect. 'Any time I get to race Katie, it's an honour. I always have to bring my best to be able to challenge her,' McIntosh said on June 8. 'So I'm really excited for our match-ups at the worlds. This is my starting point now and I just try to keep pushing forward.' REUTERS, AFP Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.

Straits Times
20 hours ago
- Straits Times
Strong field as women's event returns to Queen's after 52-year gap
LONDON - Top tier women's tennis returns to Queen's Club for the first time in more than half a century on Monday with the start of the WTA 500 event at the prestigious London establishment. While the men's event has become one of the key dates in the grasscourt season and the build-up to Wimbledon, a women's tournament was last held in 1973. In effect, Olga Morozova can claim to have been the reigning champion for 52 years, but not for much longer. A high-quality field have assembled in south west London including Olympic champion Zheng Quinwen, reigning Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova, current Australian champion Madison Keys and former Wimbledon winner Elena Rybakina. There will also be strong home interest with Emma Raducanu, Sonay Kartal and Katie Boulter all in the draw. "I've actually always said to myself, I wish there was a women's event here," Boulter said in the build-up. "I wish I got the chance to play on this court, because you can feel the history and you can feel how incredible it is." One thing is for sure, it will feel a world away from when Morozova won the title with a wooden racket, spent the week staying in a cheap bed and breakfast in Earl's Court and took a public bus to the courts for her matches. She earned 1,000 pounds for her work that week, although coming from the former Soviet Union meant she could not keep it. The inaugural version of the revamped event will boast total prize money of $1.415 million, the highest for a WTA 500 event of its draw size on the Tour, with the singles champion receiving a cool $164,000. Organisers say, they plan to have equal prize-money with the men's event, which takes place the following week, by 2029. The ATP event has a total prize fund of $2.87 million. The WTA 250 event in Eastbourne will take place from June 23-28, in the week before Wimbledon. "We are making significant increases this year to the women's prize money at Queen's and Eastbourne and want to achieve equal prize money as soon as possible," Lawn Tennis Association chief executive Scott Lloyd said in a statement. "The LTA is committed to growing women's tennis, both at professional and grass-roots level and this move is an important part of that commitment." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.