Swimming: Canadian teen Summer McIntosh takes aim at Katie Ledecky's throne
AFP
Canadian teen sensation Summer McIntosh is coming for American legend Katie Ledecky's crown as the swimming portion of the World Aquatics Championships kicks off in Singapore on Sunday, marking a tantalising new chapter of their rivalry.
Ledecky has kept a tight grip on the 800 metres freestyle, winning four Olympic golds and hoping to become the first swimmer to win seven world titles in a single event when she takes on the distance in Singapore.
In May, she shattered her own world record, bettering the mark she set nine years previous.
"I've always approached each race with a mindset that something like that could happen," Ledecky told the outlet SwimSwam after the race.
"Even as that didn't happen for many, many years, I still maintain that approach."
Only the 18-year-old McIntosh appears capable of standing in her path at worlds. She came within two seconds of the 28-year-old American's mark last month, signalling the chance that fans could soon see a changing of the guard.
She famously ended Ledecky's 13-year unbeaten streak in the event in 2024, when she bested the American by nearly six seconds at a sectionals meeting in Orlando, Florida.
"Anytime I get to race Katie, it's a learning experience and it's always a good race," she told reporters this month. "We bring the best out of each other."
McIntosh completed one of the greatest weeks in swimming history with a hat-trick of world records in June, becoming the first to break three different individual long-course records in one meet since American Michael Phelps in 2008.
She broke the world marks in the 200m and 400m individual medleys, as well as the 400m freestyle, another event where she will face off against Ledecky in Singapore.
The 400m is one of the first events on the programme and also features New Zealander Erika Fairweather - a gold medallist last year in Doha when she clocked a national record time, although her main rivals weren't competing.
Dunedin swimmer Erika Fairweather
Photo:
Simon Watts BW Media
McIntosh and Ledecky finished second and third on the podium, respectively, in the 400m at the Paris Olympic Games, behind Australian Ariarne Titmus, who is not competing at worlds.
McIntosh's goal in Singapore is to become the first since Phelps in 2007 to win five solo golds at a single World Aquatics Championships, with the 200m butterfly, 200m medley and 400m freestyle also on her agenda.
She hopes to compete in five individual events at the Los Angeles 2028 Games, as well.
"I'm trying to see this new challenge and see if I can do five events individually and how well I can do in them and how I can manage it... doing that run through now, three years out, is definitely something that will give me lots of confidence," she said.
Leon Marchand will be swimming a reduced programme but the home hero of last year's Paris Olympics still intends to make a splash at the world championships.
Leon Marchand from France wins the final of the men's 400m individual medley at the Paris Olympics.
Photo:
photosport
A year on from those Games, Europe's standout swimmer has dropped two of his four Olympic gold medal events to focus on the 200 and 400 metres individual medley (IM) with some possible relay action.
With the next Los Angeles Games still three years away, the 23-year-old can take the luxury of racing the 200m without restraint.
Having no races immediately before or after on the same day, the Frenchman can push to the limit and that could mean fireworks.
As the swimmer's France-based coach Nicolas Castel observed this week, Marchand wanted to "see what he was capable of".
The world already has a good idea of that: Last November Marchand broke the 200 IM short-course world record at a meet in Singapore and he can become a three-times world champion in the 200 and 400 IM after golds in both in 2022 and 2023.
The 200 IM long course world record of 1:54.00 was set by American Ryan Lochte at the 2011 championships in Shanghai and Marchand clocked 1:54.06 in Paris.
The Frenchman has held the 400 IM world record of 4:02.50 since the 2023 Fukuoka worlds in Japan and can become the first man to hold both at the same time since U.S. great Michael Phelps.
Olympic champions David Popovici (200m freestyle) of Romania, Ireland's Daniel Wiffen (800m freestyle), Germany's Lukas Maertens (400m freestyle) and Italian Thomas Ceccon (100m backstroke) will also be chasing more gold.
Wiffen, reigning world champion in the 800 and 1500 freestyle, has said he wants Zhang Lin's 800m world record of 7:32.12 that was set in the era of now-banned super-suits in Rome in 2009 and is considered by many to be out of reach now.
- Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
2 days ago
- RNZ News
Lewis Clareburt fifth, achieves personal best in 200m IM at world champs
Lewis Clareburt has swum his fastest time in the 200m IM. Photo: photosport New Zealand's Lewis Clareburt has swum his fastest 200m individual medley ever in finishing fifth at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore. French sensation Leon Marchand won the gold medal though he failed to improve on a new world record in the heats just a night earlier . It was always going to be tough for Clareburt swimming against the Olympic champion Marchand, but he built his race well in lane seven, before storming home over the final 50 metres, to touch the wall in one minute 56.07 seconds, his fastest time and a fresh New Zealand record. Marchand won in 1:53.68s, the second fastest time ever. Shaine Casas from the United States was second and Hungary's Hubert Cos took bronze. Marchand finished 0.62sec ahead of Casas and said the record may have taken a bit out of him but he was hardly complaining, Reuters reported. "I felt so excited yesterday that I couldn't sleep," he said. "So I think I lost a lot of energy yesterday night, but it was my goal to break the record, so I was really happy with it." Clareburt will swim in his specialist event, the 400m individual medley, on Sunday. Meanwhile, Summer McIntosh came within a whisker of breaking a long-standing world record in the 200m butterfly. The record of 2:01.81 set by China's Liu Zige in 2009 is the last surviving mark from the supersuit era in women's swimming - and McIntosh all but took it down. She stormed to her third individual gold medal of the meet in 2:01.99, the second-fastest swim of all time and a yawning three seconds better than American silver medallist Regan Smith. Summer McIntosh has won her third gold medal at the world champs in Singapore. Photo: FRANCOIS-XAVIER MARIT / AFP Having made the last turn under world record pace the Canadian 18-year-old flagged slightly coming home and shouted an expletive when she spied the clock. "I know that I messed up the last 15 metres of my race," she said. "Overall, happy with the time and a PB, but I didn't reach my goal tonight." China's 12-year-old marvel Yu Zidi finished just off the podium again having also placed fourth in the 200 IM. McIntosh might console herself in the knowledge that her bid for five individual titles remains intact, with the 400 IM and a hugely anticipated showdown with American great Katie Ledecky in the 800 freestyle still to come. Only Michael Phelps has won five individual golds at a world championships. Romania's David Popovici also flirted with a record on day five, the 20-year-old claiming a thrilling 100 metres freestyle gold to go with his 200m crown on day three. Popovici clocked 46.51 in the 100 to give Pan Zhanle's world record (46.40) a big scare. American runner-up Jack Alexy also broke the 47-second barrier (46.92), while Paris Games silver medallist Kyle Chalmers took the bronze for Australia. At 20, 200 Olympic champion Popovici has already completed the 100-200 sweep twice at world championships, having done the double at Budapest three years ago. The relaxed Romanian said he had reached a higher plane; no longer worried about winning or losing. "I just feel very relieved that this huge pressure of being afraid of winning or losing is off me," he said. "I don't mean it in an arrogant way, I mean it in a self-maturing way." In the finale of Thursday's programme, Australia's women clinched a second relay gold as Mollie O'Callaghan held off Ledecky in a thrilling final leg to guide her 4x200 freestyle relay team over the finish line. Australia also won the men's and women's 4x100 freestyle golds on Sunday. O'Callaghan, whose 11th gold tied her with Ian Thorpe as the most successful Australian at the world championships, will now look to add the 100 freestyle title to her 200 crown on Friday. - RNZ Sport/Reuters

NZ Herald
3 days ago
- NZ Herald
Erika Fairweather finishes sixth in 200m freestyle final at World Aquatics Championship
Erika Fairweather has placed sixth in a fast final of the women's 200m freestyle at the World Aquatics Championships. Competing in Singapore, Fairweather was strong through the first 50m to touch the wall in third. Swimming in lane three, the Kiwi stuck just behind the leaders for the majority

RNZ News
3 days ago
- RNZ News
Marvellous Marchand sparkles on return to global stage with 200m medley world record
France's swimmer Leon Marchand Photo: FRANCOIS-XAVIER MARIT / AFP Four-time Olympic gold medallist Leon Marchand returned to the global stage with a bang on Wednesday by shattering the 200 metres individual medley world record to light up day four of the world championships in Singapore. The "French Phelps" blasted through the World Aquatics Championships Arena in one minute, 52.69 seconds in his semi-final, shaving more than 1.3 seconds off Ryan Lochte's long-standing 1:54.00 from the 2011 event in Shanghai. "I actually can't really believe it right now," said Marchand, who also owns the 400 IM world record of 4:02.50. "I knew I was going to get close to my PB (personal best) because I felt really good today, and the preparation has been pretty good, so I was really excited to race. "It's unbelievable for me. What's crazy is that i's a whole second (ahead of Lochte). "A 1:52 on the 200, that's insane. I'm so happy, it's just incredible." France's swimmer Leon Marchand celebrates Photo: MANAN VATSYAYANA / AFP Exhausted after the Paris Games where he won four individual golds, Marchand skipped the short course world championships in Hungary last December and suffered injuries before returning to the pool for the TYR Pro Series in Florida in May. He is swimming a reduced programme in Singapore, focusing on the 200 and 400 IM alone for individual events, as he works through what he calls a "transition year". If this is his transition year his rivals might wonder what he has in store for them in a normal season. New Zealand's Lewis Clareburt qualified sixth fastest for the 200 IM final which is on Thursday night. -Reuters