Serene teen wins Canada's first medal
Toronto Star|July 28, 2024
Like a diamond-blade saw in the water and a switchblade knife on deck.
ROSIE DIMANNO
Serene teen wins Canada's first medal

Summer McIntosh, silver fish of the pool and silver on the podium --was an astonishing quick-change artist on Saturday night, with barely enough time to finger the medal tangled in her sodden hair before marching back out there with her Canadian gal-pals for the relay.

"Definitely tried to appreciate the moment as much as I could because Olympic medals don't come around too often. But at the same time I had to mentally prepare myself for going into the relay because I only had around 30 minutes. Kind of appreciate it, but then flip the switch and get right back into race mode."

More like 45 minutes, actually, between touching the wall in the gruelling 400-metre individual freestyle-an outstretched arm behind Australia's defending Olympic champion Ariarne Titmus - and slapping her arms to get the blood circulating before diving back into the pool to swim the third leg in the women's 4x100-metre freestyle relay.

A double-triple, too, for Maggie Mac Neil, who had the 100-metre butterfly heat in the morning, semifinal in the evening, and then the relay, which is a lot of swimming to be going on with.

"We were really hyped going in, watching Maggie's 100-fly, and then being in the ready-room watching Summer on the podium, like, a minute before she walked over to us," marvelled Penny Oleksiak, breakout teenage swim star of the Rio Games. "They were walking us out and Summer popped up in the ready room. So that was pretty cool."

In delivering to Canada its first medal of these Games, Toronto teen McIntosh was typically composed, a tall cool glass of water.

Once she got out of the water.

"It's definitely pretty surreal. Going into tonight, I really just wanted to put my best foot forward and race as hard as I could. Overall I'm happy with the result. An Olympics is always pretty nerve-wracking".

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