
Five Canadian medal contenders to watch at the world swimming championships in Singapore
Here are five Canadian medal contenders to watch at the worlds:
The 18-year-old set three world records and five Canadian records while qualifying in five events at the Canadian swim trials. The Toronto native became the first swimmer to break three different individual long-course world records in one meet since American Michael Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Despite that, McIntosh believes she can be even faster at the world championships. She's coming off a four-medal showing (three gold, one silver) at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, where she became the first Canadian athlete to win three gold medals at a single Olympic Games.
Liendo, 22, won silver in the men's 100-metre butterfly in his Olympic debut in Paris last year. Now, the Toronto native looks to add to his world championship medal haul, which stands at four. He earned three medals at the 2022 worlds (one silver, two bronze) and another silver in 2023 in the 100 butterfly.
The 20-year-old Montreal native was on the very same podium as Liendo, taking bronze in the 100 butterfly in Paris. But he also earned bronze in the 200 butterfly in his Olympic debut. At swim trials in Victoria, Kharun also got the better of Liendo in the 100 by 0.9 seconds. Kharun has seven short-course world championship medals (one gold, four silver, two bronze) but will be in search of his first world championship medal in Singapore.
The Lasalle, Ont., product has been a staple on Canada's successful women's program over the years, both individually and in relay events. Masse, 29, has amassed five Olympic medals (two silver, three bronze) and nine world championship medals (three gold, one silver, five bronze) over her career. Masse, who specializes in the backstroke, said she's put 'a little more focus' into the 50-metre event after winning at nationals.
Knox is slated to defend his world title after cruising to victory in the 200 individual medley at Canadian swim trials in one minute 57.25 seconds. The 24-year-old from Okotoks, Alta., outdid his time at the Paris Games by one-hundredth of a second at the trials, while leaving room to show even more at worlds with his 2024 world-title winning time being 1:56.64 and his national record of 1:56.07.
Hashtags

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


CBC
14 minutes ago
- CBC
Zak Madell talks to Anastasia Bucsis about his wheelchair rugby success and road to retirement
In 2011, at the age of 17, Zak Madell made his debut on the Canadian national team. Madell then went on to compete in the 2012 Paralympic Games, helping the team to secure a silver medal. The four-time Paralympian has been a valuable asset to Wheelchair Rugby for 13 years, raising the profile of the sport in Canada and worldwide.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Montreal Roses score early, hold on to beat Calgary Wild
Social Sharing Latifah Abdu scored in the game's first minute and teammate Tanya Boychuk scored four minutes later and the Montreal Roses then coasted to a 2-0 Northern Super League victory on Saturday night at Stade Boreale in Laval, Que. The Roses improved to seven wins, three losses and three draws, and are one point behind the front-running AFC Toronto. The Wild, fifth in the six-team women's pro soccer circuit, slipped to four wins, seven losses and two draws. WATCH l Abdu, Boychuk lead Roses past Wild: Roses shut down Wild with goals from Abdu and Boychuk 14 hours ago Montreal defeated Calgary Wild 2-0 Saturday in NSL action as Roses draw closer in the standings to first place AFC Toronto. The Roses controlled possession for 58 per cent of the match and outshot the visitors 15-6, including 6-3 on target. Montreal goalkeeper Anna Karpenko recorded the clean sheet, stopping three shots. "To concede two in the first five minutes has a big impact on the result," said Wild head coach Lydia Bedford. "On the whole, coming off the pitch, I'm pretty proud of what the players put out for the remainder of the game. Overall, we were pretty resilient." The match also marked the NSL debuts for the Wild's newest additions, Jorian Baucom and Kathryn Harvey, who each started and played the first 45 minutes. The Wild received four of the five yellow cards handed out in the contest and had two corners, compared to the host's seven. Up next


Toronto Star
an hour ago
- Toronto Star
Summer McIntosh captures first gold at worlds as her grinding quest for swimming history begins
SINGAPORE—This wasn't easy, or at least, it's not supposed to be easy. Swimming is hard, elite swimming is hard, swimming the year after an Olympic high is hard, taking down swimming gods is hard, swimming a 400-metre final and then a 200 medley semifinal 27 minutes later is hard. It really, really is. But on the first day of the swimming world championships, Summer McIntosh made it all look like the most natural thing in the world. She won gold in the 400 freestyle in 3:56.26, almost two seconds ahead of China's Li Bingjie and American legend Katie Ledecky, who was out-touched for silver and relegated to bronze. Then Summer swam her 200 IM semifinal more than one second faster than anyone else in the field, cruising. Opinion articles are based on the author's interpretations and judgments of facts, data and events. More details