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McIntosh just misses breaking oldest women's record by blink of an eye
McIntosh just misses breaking oldest women's record by blink of an eye

Hamilton Spectator

time11-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Hamilton Spectator

McIntosh just misses breaking oldest women's record by blink of an eye

VICTORIA - Summer McIntosh came within a blink of an eye of breaking swimming's oldest women's world record at the Bell Canadian Swimming Trials on Tuesday night. With a sold-out crowd's cheers ringing in her ears, the 18-year-old from Toronto swam the 200-metre butterfly in 2:02.26 — just .45 off the record of 2:01.81 set by China's Liu Zige in 2009. She also shaved .76 off her own Canadian record and notched the second fastest time in history in the event. Meanwhile, four new swimmers earned selection to Team Canada for this summer's World Aquatics Championships. McIntosh was pleased with her swim but also believes the record remains within her grasp. 'I think this world record is the hardest one to get,' said McIntosh, who has set two world records and four Canadian records in four days. 'I'm just so happy with the 2:02 low tonight. I didn't know if that was possible for me.' McIntosh was on world record pace when she made the final turn for home. 'I was kind of upset with myself with the finish,' she said. 'My last stroke was just a little bit wonky. I can definitely find the other little deficiencies through the race. 'The fact I'm knocking on the door on that world record is really encouraging. That's the one world record I never thought I would even come close to. To be pretty close to it is pretty wild.' McIntosh won the 200-m individual medley on Monday in 2:05.70, lowering the time of 2:06.12 set by Hungary's Katinka Hosszu that stood for nearly 10 years. She opened the trials winning the 400-m freestyle in 3:54.18 Saturday, breaking the old mark of 3:55.38 held by Australia's Ariarne Titmus. She broke her own Canadian record in the 800-m freestyle Sunday. Her time of 8:05.07 shaved almost five seconds off her own Canadian record and was the third fastest time ever, 0.95 of a second off the world record American legend Katie Ledecky set in May. Ilya Kharun of Montreal picked up his second victory of the trials, winning the men's 200-m butterfly in 1:53.41. Kharun earned a bronze medal in the 200 fly at the Paris 2024 Olympics, setting a Canadian record time. It was the first medal ever for a Canadian in the event. Kharun said the race remains a learning curve for him. 'I'm really glad how it's progressing,' said Kharun, who swam a personal best time to win the 100 fly on Sunday. 'I think it should be a lot better once we get some more work in.' It was an emotional moment for Toronto's Ruslan Gaziev who won the men's 100-m freestyle in 48.37 seconds. That was under Swimming Canada's secondary standard of 48.82. Gaziev is returning to swimming after serving an 18-month suspension due to an anti-doping rule violation regarding keeping his whereabouts information fully up-to-date. 'I'm just happy I won,' said the 25-year-old. 'I'm honestly proud of myself and how I've handled the struggles I've had. I feel like I've really built up my resilience.' Antoine Sauve of Montreal's CAMO club was second in the men's 100 in 48.42. Toronto's Josh Liendo was third in 48.62 followed by Filip Senc-Samardzic of Toronto in 49.13. Liendo had already earned selection in two events (100 fly and 50 free) while Sauve and Senc-Samardzic added their names to the list. Three-time Olympian Penny Oleksiak of Toronto won her second event of the trials, taking the women's 100 free in 54.03, well under the AQUA A standard of 54.25. She swam a personal best to win the 50 free on Monday. 'I think I had a lot more in that race,' said Oleksiak, the owner of seven Olympic medals. 'I'm excited to get back into training and just getting faster for the summer.' The top four finishers in the men's and women's 100 freestyle events will be selected to join Team Canada at this summer's World Aquatics Championships. Finishing second in the women's 100 free was Kelowna's Taylor Ruck in 54.41, followed by Brooklyn Douthwright of Riverview, N.B., in 54.74 and Ingrid Wilm of the High Performance Centre—Vancouver in 55.15. Ruck (100-m) and Wilm (50-m) had already earned selection in backstroke events, while Douthwright earned her spot for the first time. STRONG NIGHT FOR PARA SWIMMERS Para swimmers enjoyed another strong night with Alyssa Smyth, Nicholas Bennett and Sebastian Massabie all setting Canadian records. Katie Cosgriffe won the multi-class women's 100-m butterfly in 1:07.61, a time the S10 swimmer from the Oakville Aquatic Club believes she can improve on. 'There's lots of technical ways that I can be a lot faster,' she said. 'I have to work on my speed in general.' Alyssa Smyth of the Orangeville Otters Swim Club was second in the race in an S13 Canadian record time of 1:06.42. A mix-up resulted in Smyth arriving at the pool late. She didn't have time for a warm-up before her race. 'There was a lot of adrenalin,' said Smyth. 'I thought to make the best of the situation I would just try the best I could. It went pretty well.' Fernando Lu of Langley's Olympian Swimming won two races. The S10 swimmer started the evening taking the multi-class 100-m butterfly in 58.20 seconds then the 50-m freestyle in 24.44. 'It went well for me tonight,' said Lu who reached two finals at the Paris 2024 Paralympics. 'I feel more energized than ever. I'm really happy with the way I've recovered from the past races.' Massabie of the Pacific Sea Wolves broke the S5 Canadian record twice in the 50 freestyle. He swam 36.22 seconds in the morning preliminaries then 35.42 in the final. He broke the Canadian record in the S5 50-m butterfly twice on Monday. Nicholas Bennett, an S14 swimmer with the Red Deer Catalina Swim Club, swam 57.50 to lower his own Canadian record in the 100-m butterfly. The six-day trials, which run through Thursday, have attracted more than 700 swimmers to Saanich Commonwealth Place in Victoria. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 10, 2025. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

McIntosh just misses breaking oldest women's record by blink of an eye
McIntosh just misses breaking oldest women's record by blink of an eye

Winnipeg Free Press

time11-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Winnipeg Free Press

McIntosh just misses breaking oldest women's record by blink of an eye

VICTORIA – Summer McIntosh came within a blink of an eye of breaking swimming's oldest women's world record at the Bell Canadian Swimming Trials on Tuesday night. With a sold-out crowd's cheers ringing in her ears, the 18-year-old from Toronto swam the 200-metre butterfly in 2:02.26 — just .45 off the record of 2:01.81 set by China's Liu Zige in 2009. She also shaved .76 off her own Canadian record and notched the second fastest time in history in the event. Meanwhile, four new swimmers earned selection to Team Canada for this summer's World Aquatics Championships. McIntosh was pleased with her swim but also believes the record remains within her grasp. 'I think this world record is the hardest one to get,' said McIntosh, who has set two world records and four Canadian records in four days. 'I'm just so happy with the 2:02 low tonight. I didn't know if that was possible for me.' McIntosh was on world record pace when she made the final turn for home. 'I was kind of upset with myself with the finish,' she said. 'My last stroke was just a little bit wonky. I can definitely find the other little deficiencies through the race. 'The fact I'm knocking on the door on that world record is really encouraging. That's the one world record I never thought I would even come close to. To be pretty close to it is pretty wild.' McIntosh won the 200-m individual medley on Monday in 2:05.70, lowering the time of 2:06.12 set by Hungary's Katinka Hosszu that stood for nearly 10 years. She opened the trials winning the 400-m freestyle in 3:54.18 Saturday, breaking the old mark of 3:55.38 held by Australia's Ariarne Titmus. She broke her own Canadian record in the 800-m freestyle Sunday. Her time of 8:05.07 shaved almost five seconds off her own Canadian record and was the third fastest time ever, 0.95 of a second off the world record American legend Katie Ledecky set in May. Ilya Kharun of Montreal picked up his second victory of the trials, winning the men's 200-m butterfly in 1:53.41. Kharun earned a bronze medal in the 200 fly at the Paris 2024 Olympics, setting a Canadian record time. It was the first medal ever for a Canadian in the event. Kharun said the race remains a learning curve for him. 'I'm really glad how it's progressing,' said Kharun, who swam a personal best time to win the 100 fly on Sunday. 'I think it should be a lot better once we get some more work in.' It was an emotional moment for Toronto's Ruslan Gaziev who won the men's 100-m freestyle in 48.37 seconds. That was under Swimming Canada's secondary standard of 48.82. Gaziev is returning to swimming after serving an 18-month suspension due to an anti-doping rule violation regarding keeping his whereabouts information fully up-to-date. 'I'm just happy I won,' said the 25-year-old. 'I'm honestly proud of myself and how I've handled the struggles I've had. I feel like I've really built up my resilience.' Antoine Sauve of Montreal's CAMO club was second in the men's 100 in 48.42. Toronto's Josh Liendo was third in 48.62 followed by Filip Senc-Samardzic of Toronto in 49.13. Liendo had already earned selection in two events (100 fly and 50 free) while Sauve and Senc-Samardzic added their names to the list. Three-time Olympian Penny Oleksiak of Toronto won her second event of the trials, taking the women's 100 free in 54.03, well under the AQUA A standard of 54.25. She swam a personal best to win the 50 free on Monday. 'I think I had a lot more in that race,' said Oleksiak, the owner of seven Olympic medals. 'I'm excited to get back into training and just getting faster for the summer.' The top four finishers in the men's and women's 100 freestyle events will be selected to join Team Canada at this summer's World Aquatics Championships. Finishing second in the women's 100 free was Kelowna's Taylor Ruck in 54.41, followed by Brooklyn Douthwright of Riverview, N.B., in 54.74 and Ingrid Wilm of the High Performance Centre—Vancouver in 55.15. Ruck (100-m) and Wilm (50-m) had already earned selection in backstroke events, while Douthwright earned her spot for the first time. STRONG NIGHT FOR PARA SWIMMERS Para swimmers enjoyed another strong night with Alyssa Smyth, Nicholas Bennett and Sebastian Massabie all setting Canadian records. Katie Cosgriffe won the multi-class women's 100-m butterfly in 1:07.61, a time the S10 swimmer from the Oakville Aquatic Club believes she can improve on. 'There's lots of technical ways that I can be a lot faster,' she said. 'I have to work on my speed in general.' Alyssa Smyth of the Orangeville Otters Swim Club was second in the race in an S13 Canadian record time of 1:06.42. A mix-up resulted in Smyth arriving at the pool late. She didn't have time for a warm-up before her race. 'There was a lot of adrenalin,' said Smyth. 'I thought to make the best of the situation I would just try the best I could. It went pretty well.' Fernando Lu of Langley's Olympian Swimming won two races. The S10 swimmer started the evening taking the multi-class 100-m butterfly in 58.20 seconds then the 50-m freestyle in 24.44. 'It went well for me tonight,' said Lu who reached two finals at the Paris 2024 Paralympics. 'I feel more energized than ever. I'm really happy with the way I've recovered from the past races.' Massabie of the Pacific Sea Wolves broke the S5 Canadian record twice in the 50 freestyle. He swam 36.22 seconds in the morning preliminaries then 35.42 in the final. He broke the Canadian record in the S5 50-m butterfly twice on Monday. Nicholas Bennett, an S14 swimmer with the Red Deer Catalina Swim Club, swam 57.50 to lower his own Canadian record in the 100-m butterfly. The six-day trials, which run through Thursday, have attracted more than 700 swimmers to Saanich Commonwealth Place in Victoria. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 10, 2025.

BAPE & Helinox Reunite for CAMO Outdoor Furniture & Special-Edition Shark Hoodie
BAPE & Helinox Reunite for CAMO Outdoor Furniture & Special-Edition Shark Hoodie

Hypebeast

time09-06-2025

  • Business
  • Hypebeast

BAPE & Helinox Reunite for CAMO Outdoor Furniture & Special-Edition Shark Hoodie

BAPEhas partnered withHelinoxfor the outdoor gear manufacturer's 15th anniversary, unveiling a special collection comprised of camouflage-covered, packable furniture and a Helinox blue Shark Hoodie. Known for its lightweight yet strong and flexible aluminum alloy products, Helinox's chairs and tables are functionally designed for foldability and portability. BAPE leaves the engineering to Helinox's experts, bringing its recognizable CAMO print to the suspended materials in twochairmodels, a bench, and a side table. Unlike the partners'first collaboration in 2023, which centered on a plain brown camouflage, BAPE's original green 'CAMO' spotlights the beloved ape's head motif. Helinox's flagship Chair One features a comfortable suspended seat structure, a breathable backrest with mesh panels, and sturdy legs with a strong grip. Additionally, the Chair One Mini offers a more compact version of the original, suitable for children. Elsewhere, the two-seater bench continues the suspended engineering in a camping-cot-inspired form, and the Table One serves as an on-the-go surface complete with two cup-holders. Each piece comes with a matching storage bag, complete with dual logos. Finally, Helinox puts its own spin on BAPE's motif, casting the 'Shark Full Zip Hoodie' in the brand's distinct blue hue. The 15th anniversary BAPE x Helinox collection will be available on Saturday, June 14 at select BAPE stores, theBAPE webstore, and theHelinox web store.

14th Annual Aircraft Records Conference: Essential Insights on Technical Audits & Maintenance Programs (Dublin, Ireland - September 2, 2025)
14th Annual Aircraft Records Conference: Essential Insights on Technical Audits & Maintenance Programs (Dublin, Ireland - September 2, 2025)

Yahoo

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

14th Annual Aircraft Records Conference: Essential Insights on Technical Audits & Maintenance Programs (Dublin, Ireland - September 2, 2025)

Join the 14th Annual Aircraft Records Conference in Dublin. Dive into legal, maintenance, and digital advancements in aircraft records. Network with industry leaders and gain expertise in audits, software solutions, and more. Don't miss this opportunity to shape the future of aviation records management! Dublin, June 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "14th Annual Aircraft Records" conference has been added to offering. Join in Dublin for an opportunity to network with industry leaders, gain invaluable knowledge, and stay at the forefront of aircraft records management. Save the date and be part of shaping the future of this essential aspect of aviation! Conference Highlights: Legal Aspects: Dive into the legalities surrounding aircraft records. Maintenance Programs: Gain insights into aircraft maintenance from a records perspective. Records Scanning & Digital Future: Explore advancements in aircraft records scanning technology and the shift to electronic records. Technical Audits: Learn the essentials of conducting comprehensive aircraft technical and maintenance records audits. Software Solutions: Discover cutting-edge maintenance and engineering software tailored for the aviation industry. Surviving Audits & Value of Records: Master the art of navigating aircraft records audits and understand the critical importance of maintaining meticulous records. Inspection Insights & Repossession Protocols: Get expert advice on handling pre-purchase, mid-lease, end-of-lease, and redelivery records, as well as best practices during aircraft repossession. Lease Agreements & Management Perspectives: Delve into the intricacies of aircraft records in lease agreements and gain a holistic view of records management. CAMO & Education: Explore Continuing Airworthiness Management Organization (CAMO) protocols and enhance your skills with specialized training for records personnel. Speakers Dr. Jan Michael Bosak, Head of Legal, CCB Leasing (International) Corporation DAC Dave Bryce, CEO, Cleardata UK Matthew Gee, Head of Flight Operations , Six West Jan Willem Storm van's Gravesande, Managing Partner, Aviation Independent Consulting For more information about this conference visit About is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends. CONTACT: CONTACT: Laura Wood,Senior Press Manager press@ For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470 For U.S./ CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

The Highground raises funds with its 15th annual Honor Ride
The Highground raises funds with its 15th annual Honor Ride

Yahoo

time03-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

The Highground raises funds with its 15th annual Honor Ride

NEILLSVILLE — In a day that many spent in leisure, The Highground was one of several organizations that put the focus back on Veterans this past Memorial Day. 'The Highground's actually been around since the early '80s and it started out as a memorial park,' explained Liz Hamilton, who said her role was mainly in marketing and social media for The Highground but that she wore many hats including as an event photographer. 'It was started by a Vietnam veteran, and it was just started as a way to honor and remember the sacrifices that our Veterans made through all wars — so we started with World War I, then a World War II tribute and we have a Korean War tribute [as well as] a national Native American tribute is on site and Gold Star tribute.' Other memorials are on site, including the Dove Effigy mound, a 'living memorial' to pay homage to those who were prisoners of war or went missing in action. The mound contains soil from all counties in Wisconsin as well as hundreds of other locations throughout the country. With the expansions it has received throughout the years, Hamilton said that The Highground is now the second largest Veterans park in the United States, behind the memorial parks in Washington, D.C. The scale certainly impresses, but The Highground goes beyond memorials in providing programs and support for Veterans in the area. These efforts come in the form of education, such as with their Vets & Guitars program. They also come in the form of various retreats and other programs that help Veterans deal with what has been labeled as 'unseen wounds,' including post-traumatic stress disorder. Hamilton noted that Veterans also deal with a disproportionately high rate of homelessness as she described efforts by The Highground to assist those who have found themselves unhoused. 'We work with a company out of [The Twin Cities] and we also work with some local communities like the Wisconsin Veterans' Home in Chippewa Falls,' explained Hamilton, 'And we do what we call a winter clothing drive that actually goes through March or April. We take those donations wherever we hear that there's a need for that.' Other assistance comes in the form of its Community and Military Outreach, or CAMO program that offers a variety of workshops to the community and specifically to Veterans. 'We kicked it off this year …[CAMO] had a financial workshop where people could come and get financial advice; we did a mental health expo too. We have a couple of other things that are planned for this year,' she said. A significant amount of what is provided, however, requires financial support; this has led to numerous fundraising initiatives in the form of rides throughout the year. These include the Memorial Day Honor Ride that took place last Monday, the fifteenth year the event has taken place. The event started in 2010 as The Highground Fun Run with bikers taking a trip from Hudson to The Highground, and has from that point. The event now makes thousands of dollars to assist The Highground with its programming, with hundreds of riders participating. There are now several independently-organized routes led by experienced ride leaders, with each path taking riders on scenic routes throughout the area. Riders at the end take a ride throughout Neillsville together, in honor of those who fought for their country but never made it home. It is one of many rides to help raise funds for The Highground that happen throughout the year, with the rides going back decades in some cases. 'We also have The Heroes' Ride [in August], which is our bicycle tour; that is actually the longest and largest fundraiser at The Highground. It was started by a bunch of wonderful volunteers and it's in its 41st year; it's a multi-route ride like the Honor Ride,' said Hamilton. 'Then we have the Ride to Remember, which is specifically honoring the MIAs and the KIAs (missing in action/killed in action); that one is in its 25th year.' Hamilton said that she couldn't help but find the emotional significance of the rides powerful. As the photographer for many of the events, she has seen the solidarity of the Veteran community as they come together for a common cause. 'To be involved in those, it's inspiring and a little emotional because of the fact that there are so many Veterans out there that are willing to help each other. Most of these rides are led by volunteers, so our route leaders — they start early and they volunteer their time on the side and they do this solely to give back to the Veteran community and The Highground,' she said. 'It's a pretty amazing place and a pretty amazing thing to be involved in.'

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