Summer McIntosh interviewed by La Presse | Canada’s Best Kept Secret in Sport

Penny Oleksiak. Maggie McNeil. Kylie Masse. Three Canadian swimmers, three world champions, three phenomena. Between them, they have won 14 Olympic medals since 2016.


However, they know very well that another teammate is likely to steal the show from them in less than 500 days at the Paris Games.

Summer McIntosh is only 16 years old, but her list of achievements is already staggering since she revealed herself with a fourth place at the Tokyo Games, when she was 14.

Double individual world champion in Budapest last summer – the youngest since Tracy Caulkins in 1978 – the Torontonian made headlines again at the beginning of the month by inflicting a rare “defeat” on Katie Ledecky in Fort Lauderdale.

The American had won all of her 200m-plus freestyle races in long-course competitions held in the United States since 2014.


PHOTO MICHAEL P. HALL, SUPPLIED BY SWIMMING CANADA

Katie Ledecky et Summer McIntosh

The feat made headlines on sports sites, especially because the young Canadian had brought down a legend like Ledecky, the best freestyle swimmer in history.

Summer McIntosh is poised to rewrite the swimming record, but for now, she’s the best kept secret in Canadian sport. On the phone, the teenager laughs when she hears this statement.

” I don’t know. I try not to focus on that kind of stuff at all,” she dropped from Florida, where she has been training full-time since the start of the season.

“My main goal is just to inspire anyone who climbs and progresses. It’s really close to my heart. If I see young fans on the side of the pool, I try to make sure I talk to them, chat with them because I know what it means to them. I used to be in their place…”

Wide range

In 2016, she accompanied her mother Jill Horstead, a participant in the Los Angeles Games in 1984 in swimming, during the nomination of the Canadian Olympic team. She was able to meet Oleksiak, with whom she took a photo.

Five years later, she was the youngest of all the members of the Canadian delegation in Tokyo. His fourth place in the 400m freestyle, won by Australian Ariarne Titmus ahead of Ledecky, revived the memory of Michael Phelps’ fifth place in the 200m butterfly at the Sydney Games, at the age of 15.

A year later, the American broke the world record for the distance. The man who dreamed of “changing the world of swimming” then achieved the unprecedented with his crazy bet of eight gold medals in Beijing in 2008.

“I don’t really have such goals,” McIntosh replied. Obviously I always dreamed of getting a world record, probably more so when I was younger. Now it’s more like: what can I do every day that makes me swim as fast as possible? If it’s a world record, it’s a world record, and if it isn’t, it isn’t. »

I’m just thinking about setting the benchmark and exploring everything I can do in the water.

Summer McIntosh

His range of events seems endless, probably more than that of Phelps: front crawl, butterfly, backstroke, medley, middle distance, long distance. We should not be surprised to see her integrate the 4 X 100 m free relay.

Does she have a preference? ” Not really. All events are really important to me. Obviously, there are some that I’m better at than, say, a 50-metre breaststroke. I like to keep my racing schedule wide open and see how I progress. As I am a medley girl, I train for all four strokes. I think I have the potential to do each individually as well. »

Ascension

McIntosh’s rise is all the more remarkable as she has evolved under four coaches in a short time.

In 2020, the sudden death of his first coach Kevin Thorburn in Etobicoke drove her to the Toronto High Performance Center run by Ben Titley, Oleksiak’s mentor. To everyone’s surprise, the Briton’s contract was not renewed last year by Swimming Canada. Montreal-born Ryan Mallette took over.

First a few weeks in winter 2021-2022, then full time since the fall, McIntosh has been training with Brent Arckey and the Sarasota Sharks club.

“Several things have changed. I still keep in touch with Ben [qui travaille maintenant en Espagne, où Kylie Masse l’a rejoint]. Things happen and you kind of have to keep moving forward and focus on the goal of being the best swimmer. »


PHOTO MICHAEL P. HALL, SUPPLIED BY SWIMMING CANADA

Summer McIntosh et Kylie Masse

In West Florida, she evolves in a group of about thirty swimmers, including three other Canadians. Arckey will accompany them to the Canadian Trials for the World Championships, where McIntosh will compete in five events starting Tuesday.

“Everyone in the team welcomed me and was a good teammate. Some of my closest friends are on the team. It’s great to be a part of that. »

The only things she misses are her family, her room, and her two cats, Mikey and Riley.

Her father and her mother, who swam for the University of Florida, exchange attendance with their youngest daughter. “Right now they’re both in Japan for my sister,” Summer McIntosh said of her eldest, Brooke, 18.

She is taking part in her first Senior World Figure Skating Championships, where she ranks 10e rank in pairs with his partner Benjamin Mimar after the short program. Canadian vice-champions, the duo won bronze at the Junior Worlds last year.

Inspiration

Brooke is an inspiration for Summer, who also skated: “We grew up together and often in the same sports. We learned from each other as much our love and passion for sports as our competitiveness. I learn so much from her on a daily basis, even today. »

The 5’9” ​​athlete posted the fourth fastest time ever in the 400m individual medley at a meet in North Carolina in December. The Commonwealth Games gold medalist is just over two seconds off the benchmark set by Hungary’s Katinka Hosszú at the 2016 Olympics. She currently holds six world junior records.

“I try not to focus on records, whatever type, just because it can be some kind of benchmark,” she said. For me, the benchmark is only what I can do for myself and that’s just to keep improving. »

Likewise, she assures us that she does not draw any particular motivation from the idea of ​​competing with Ledecky, a 19-time gold medalist at the World Championships.

“I try not to necessarily focus on who I want to beat, because that’s really out of my control. I don’t know what other people are capable of. The only thing I know is what I can do, and that comes from daily training. So I try to focus only on that before the World Championships. »

At next week’s Trials in Toronto, qualification is all but assured for whoever is declared the top seed by a wide margin in each of her five events. Under the circumstances, will she show up at the Toronto Pan American Sports Center swimming pool completely rested?

“Hmm, I don’t know. I follow my trainers’ practices and I don’t even know what being fully rested means, or how to define it… So I’m just going to go out there and do my best. It is up to her rivals to ponder on this.

“She’s just 16, cuddly! »


PHOTO MICHAEL P. HALL, SUPPLIED BY SWIMMING CANADA

Summer McIntosh

Finalist at the last World Championships, Mary-Sophie Harvey achieved her fifth performance in life to win silver in the 200 m individual medley at the Pro Swim Series in Fort Lauderdale on March 4. Summer McIntosh won the gold with a lead of almost… four seconds.

“Summer is definitely in a class of her own,” conceded Harvey, 23. Competition after competition, she demonstrates that she is the best. It’s good for the older ones – and I include myself in the lot. It forces us to move a little! […] It’s really fun to race with her, even if she is two or three seconds ahead! »

With swimming usually only being seen once every four years during the Olympics, Harvey agrees that his compatriot remains a closely guarded secret. “Certainly, but she will no longer be in Paris [en 2024]. »

McIntosh’s potential is limitless, Harvey believes. “She’s still just 16, cuddly! I think she will achieve everything she wants. Her mental toughness is something I admire about her and wish I had. Several people outside might distract her, but she’s really good at keeping her focus no matter the situation. She has both feet on the ground, she knows where she’s going and doesn’t get carried away. It’s all to his credit. »

Simon Drouin, The Press

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