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Summer McIntosh wins 400 individual medley in stunning swim

McIntosh becomes the first Canadian to win two gold medals at a single championship
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Summer McIntosh of Canada looks back after winning the women’s 200m Butterfly final at the 19th FINA World Championships in Budapest, Hungary, Wednesday, June 22, 2022. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

After her success at the World Aquatic Championships in June, Canadian teenager Summer McIntosh triumphed again with a stunning swim at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham on Friday.

The 15-year-old McIntosh, who became the first Canadian to win two gold medals at a single championship in Budapest, easily beat her opposition in the 400-meter individual medley.

On a night when several Commonwealth Games records were set, McIntosh established a new event mark and personal best of 4:29.01 in her dominant win.

Australian Kiah Melverton finished some 7.77 seconds behind McIntosh for the silver medal.

McIntosh is the third fastest performer in the event’s history and is closing the gap on the world record of 4:26.36 set by Hungarian Katinka Hosszu at the 2016 Olympics in Brazil.

“I was excited to re-do my time from (the) worlds and see what I can do to get better,” McIntosh said. “I’ve been working on a lot of stuff in training so I can execute my 400m IM better than I did at (the) worlds, because I had so much room for improvement, and I still do.”

The Canadian’s triumph split Australian hat tricks, with Ariarne Titmus’s decision to sit out the World Championships paying dividends in the 200 freestyle.

Compatriot Mollie O’Callaghan raced at the shoulder of the double Olympic gold medalist throughout but fell short of an upset by less than a second, with Titmus recording a time of 1:53.89. Madison Wilson completed a sweep of medals for Australia when finishing third.

It was a similar case in the men’s 400 freestyle to open the night.

Winner Elijah Winnington started the pool party for Australia, with compatriots Sam Short and Mack Horton also finishing on the podium.

Success in the pool, combined with dominance in London in track cycling events, pushed Australia to the top of the medal count on the opening day.

The Lee Valley velodrome was the scene of several new Commonwealth Games records on the first day of track cycling.

The Australian women and New Zealand men obliterated existing records in the respective 4000-meter team pursuits in finals on Friday afternoon.

WILDE FINISH

After showing sportsmanship during the men’s triathlon, New Zealand’s Hayden Wilde has protested his second-place finish behind England’s Alex Yee.

The silver medalist slowed shortly before the finish when handed a 10-second penalty for an infraction at the end of the cycling leg.

Competitors are not allowed to unstrap their helmets before their bike is racked.

Rather than challenge for the finish line, Wilde slowed so Yee could cross first and celebrate his victory in the first completed event of the Birmingham games.

Yee, who described winning on home soil as “wicked,” believes his competitor and friend has a case in his quest to share the gold medal.

“I said when I caught him, ‘I’m sorry you got the penalty. It is rubbish’,” Yee said.

The protest was heard on Friday but it could take up to 30 days for a result.

Bermuda’s Flora Duffy later defended the gold medal she claimed on Australia’s Gold Coast four years ago, defeating England’s Georgia-Taylor Brown and Scotland’s Beth Potter.

Also, Australian wicketkeeper Alyssa Healy became the first player to claim 100 dismissals in the Twenty20 format of cricket as her country defeated India in the first women’s match held in the Commonwealth Games.

– Courtney Walsh, The Associated Press