
McIntosh wins second gold at world swimming championships in Singapore
The 18-year-old Toronto native touched the wall in two minutes 6.69 seconds – nearly two seconds ahead of American Alex Walsh, who claimed silver in 2:08.58.
Fellow Canadian Mary-Sophie Harvey, of Laval, Que., won bronze in 2:09.15.
The winning time trailed McIntosh's world record of 2:05.70. And she was not content.
'Going in tonight, my goal was to get my hand on the wall first,' McIntosh said. 'So to get that done is good. I'm not super happy with my 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.'
Cathal Kelly: Summer McIntosh's star set to soar with Olympics still three years away
For Harvey, it was her first-ever individual long-course worlds medal. The 25-year-old finished fourth in three events at the Paris Olympics, but finally broke through at her fourth long-course worlds.
'It's my first individual [medal] so I'm pretty happy about it and I think it set the tone nicely for the rest of the week,' Harvey said.
'It was pretty special to share the podium with one of my teammates,' Harvey said of McIntosh. 'She's pushing the boundaries for swimming in general, and to stand alongside her is just something I will cherish for a long time.'
McIntosh said Harvey's breakthrough bronze was the highlight of her night.
'That was so incredible,' she said. 'She's worked so hard for this and to see her get the result I think she's over the moon about it. She deserves it, and to share that moment for Team Canada was amazing.'
Yu Zidi, a Chinese 12-year-old phenom, finished fourth in 2:09.21, just missing a medal as she astounded the swim world with her times. She is also due to compete in the 400 IM and 200 butterfly, probably her strongest events.
McIntosh is targeting five individual golds over the eight-day meet.
Monday's win adds to the 400 freestyle gold she earned on the opening day of competition.
She is also chasing individual titles in the 400 individual medley, 800 freestyle and the 200 butterfly over the next six days in Singapore.
Famed Olympian Michael Phelps is the only swimmer to have won five individual gold medals at a world championships.
Canada now has four medals at the world aquatics championships, including a silver in the women's 20-metre high diving by Montreal's Simone Leathead, which was the country's first medal of the competition.
Also Monday, Kylie Masse of LaSalle, Ont., advanced to Tuesday's 100 backstroke final with a semi-final time of 58.66 seconds, the third-fastest of the round. Taylor Ruck of Kelowna, B.C., also moved on with a time of 59.18.
Gretchen Walsh broke through on Monday with the first gold in Singapore for the United States, taking the 100 butterfly in 54.73.
The silver medalist a year ago in Paris, Walsh was just off her world-record time of 54.60 set earlier this year. Roos Vanotterdijk of Belgium took silver in 55.84 and Alexandria Perkins of Australia claimed bronze in 56.33.
Walsh acknowledged in a post-race interview at poolside that the American team had been hit with a bout of what team officials called 'acute gastroenteritis.'
It was picked up at a training camp in Thailand before arrival in Singapore. U.S. officials have confirmed the outbreak but have given few details and did not name the swimmer nor say how many were affected.
'With the illness that's been going on – I faced it back the last couple days – my body has just been fragile, and I think that I've needed to give myself grace,' Walsh said. 'Luckily, I had the morning to recover and rest, and I used that, and that helped me enormously going into tonight, so I tried to make the most of it.
'It was not easy, and I'm just really proud of myself,' Walsh added, thrilled to be under 55 seconds. 'It took a lot of guts. I just wanted to go out there and do it for my team, just represent the flag well. It came out of somewhere, but I'm really, really happy.'
Canada's backstroke big-gamer Kylie Masse focused on worlds, not 2028 L.A. Olympics
Walsh's older sister Alex was almost even with McIntosh after 150 metres, swimming a strong breaststroke leg to make it a race.
'I was really excited on the breaststroke leg,' she said. 'I could see her and I knew I was kind of gaining on her because breaststroke is my best stroke. I was really excited and, obviously coming home on the freestyle, that's definitely where my biggest weakness (is).'
Two other finals wrapped up Monday's schedule.
Qin Haiyang, the world champion in 2023, defeated Paris Olympic winner Nicolo Martinenghi of Italy in the 100 breaststroke. Qin clocked 58.23 to give China its first gold in Singapore with the Italian swimmer finishing in 58.58. Denis Petrashov of Kyrgyzstan took bronze in 58.88.
'I've been injured and it's not been easy to get back to my best,' Haiyang said. 'I'm at best at 70 per cent. I'm probably lucky. This definitely helps with my confidence.'
In the men's 50 butterfly, Maxime Grousset of France edged Noe Ponti of Switzerland. Grousset clocked 22.48 with Ponti finishing in 22.51. Thomas Ceccon of Italy took bronze in 22.67.
In the four semi-finals, Paris Olympics bronze medalist Luke Hobson of the United States led 200 free qualifying (1:44.80), with Paris champion David Popovici of Romania in fourth (1:45.02).
Hubert Kos of Hungary headed a very fast men's 100 backstroke in 52.21. American Regan Smith led the women's 100 backstroke (58.21) ahead of two-time Australian Olympic champion Kaylee McKeown (58.44).
Kate Douglass of the United States swam a personal best in the 100 breaststroke (1:05.49) and will be the top seed in Tuesday's final.
With files from The Associated Press
Hashtags

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


CTV News
14 minutes ago
- CTV News
Canada's Victoria Mboko stuns No. 1 seed Coco Gauff to reach NBO quarterfinals
Victoria Mboko of Canada waves to the crowd following her win over Coco Gauff of the United States during round of 16 tennis action at the National Bank Open in Montreal, Saturday, Aug. 2, 2025. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi) Even Victoria Mboko couldn't believe what she achieved. It was billed as the tournament's marquee match. A rising Canadian star — and last remaining singles hope from the host country — facing her stiffest test yet against the No. 1 seed. And she blew past her in just 62 minutes. Mboko's stellar run at the National Bank Open hit a new level Saturday with a dominant 6-1, 6-4 victory over Coco Gauff of the United States, lifting the 18-year-old from Toronto into the quarterfinals before a raucous, sellout crowd at IGA Stadium. 'I don't even know what to say,' said Mboko, smiling in disbelief. 'I was shocked about it all. Everything came so fast. There were so many people. I feel like tonight I'll let it soak in a little bit more, but I'm still on the high a little bit.' The whole year has been a high. Mboko's ranking rocketed to 85th in the world this week after she began the year outside the top 300. That number is projected to jump into the 50s with her performance in Montreal, and her rise appears unlikely to end there. After major crowd support for Eugenie Bouchard early in the tournament, the buzz in Montreal shifted around Mboko as the teenage sensation took centre court. Mboko met the moment, flashing the powerful groundstrokes and blistering serve that few opponents have had answers for on the pro circuit this season. 'Your support was incredible,' Mboko told the crowd in French after a chorus of 'Olé, Olé, Olé!' chants echoed around the venue. 'I'm really happy to win today.' 'When I was up 5-4, the crowd started cheering even louder, and everything got super noisy,' she later added. 'I used that as more fuel for myself and to pump myself up a little bit more. I just used the crowd to my advantage as much as I could.' Gauff, meanwhile, made unforced error after unforced error, firing some shots long and many more into the net. Mboko, who will play Jéssica Bouzas Maneiro of Spain, saved all four breakpoint opportunities while converting four of her five chances. She also won nearly 60 per cent of the points, her 11 unforced errors half of Gauff's 22 on a dismal night for the American star. The youngster is only the second teenager — and first Canadian — to defeat Gauff, as well as the first player this season to not drop a single service game against her. 'I knew she would come in with a lot of confidence,' Gauff said. 'I knew that it would be tough. I don't know, I just felt like I could do better today, but I also knew that if I took my foot off the gas a little bit, that she would take advantage of those moments, and she did. 'She's playing high-level tennis. I think that's what showed today. I think she was the better player.' The first set took a swift 25 minutes. The 21-year-old Gauff double-faulted on the third point of the match, leading to an early break for the Canadian. In the seventh game, Gauff doubled-faulted and sent two shots into the net in succession to lose the set. When the two players previously met at the Italian Open in May, Mboko also took the opening set but Gauff convincingly won the next two to snag the victory. This time around, Mboko kept her foot on the gas. 'I was actually really thinking about it a lot during the match,' she said. 'I had flashbacks to when I played her in Rome a little bit. I just remember when she came out playing even better and stepped it up a bit better. 'Wanted to step my game up a little bit more and make sure I matched whatever she was producing, and I wanted to stay right there with her.' Gauff, this year's French Open champion, scraped by with three-set wins in Rounds 2 and 3. She struggled with her serve, striking a whopping 37 double faults in the two matches combined — adding six more on Saturday. Tied 3-3, she earned three breakpoint chances with the match tied 3-3, but committed an error each time as Mboko hung on to win the game. Then with Mboko leading 5-4, Gauff doubled-faulted twice more to set up two match points for the Canadian, who quickly took advantage. It's the latest chapter in a breakthrough season for Mboko, who also played in her first two Grand Slam main draws, reaching the French Open third round and Wimbledon second round. Her impressive record in all competitions this season improved to 50-9, including 24-8 against players ranked above her. In only her seventh WTA main draw, she advanced to the quarterfinals of a 1000-level tournament for the first time, knocking off higher-ranked opponents at each step. Mboko opened with a win over 79th-ranked Kimberly Birrell, then upset 23rd seed and former Grand Slam champion Sofia Kenin before snapping Marie Bouzkova's seven-match winning streak with a relentless comeback and taking down Gauff, dropping one set the whole way. 'I do see someone who is going to have a really bright future,' Gauff said. 'She's very athletic. She's a great ball striker, and she seems pretty positive out there on the court, doesn't get really too negative. 'Hopefully we have many more battles, and I look forward to playing her again in the future.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 2, 2025.


CBC
15 minutes ago
- CBC
USA sets world record in women's 4x100m medley relay at the World Aquatics Championships
The American team of Regan Smith, Kate Douglass, Gretchen Walsh and Torri Huske finished with a time of 3:49.34 to set a new world record in the women's 4x100m medley relay discipline to close out the 2025 World Aquatics Championships in Singapore.


Toronto Star
44 minutes ago
- Toronto Star
Canada's McIntosh grabs fourth gold to cap dominant world swimming championships
Summer McIntosh of Canada celebrates after winning a gold medal in the women's 400-meter individual medley final at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore, Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) AR flag wire: true flag sponsored: false article_type: : sWebsitePrimaryPublication : publications/toronto_star bHasMigratedAvatar : false :