WORLD RECORD RELAY

While McIntosh may one day be held in the same esteem as nine-time Olympic gold medallist Ledecky, Australia’s Kaylee McKeown has already cemented her place as the greatest backstroker in women’s swimming.

The only woman to win back-to-back Olympic 100m and 200m backstroke golds, McKeown completed another double in Singapore with an emphatic win in the 200m.

Once again, it was American Regan Smith looking to take down McKeown, only to be reeled in on the last lap as the Australian dominator clocked 2:03.33 in the third-fastest swim of all time.

It was nearly a second better than Smith (2:04.29), who had taken silver behind McKeown in the 100m and 200m at the Paris Olympics and again in the 100 in Singapore.

Just like in Paris, McKeown’s win came straight after compatriot Cameron McEvoy stormed to his second 50m freestyle title in 21.14 seconds, becoming the oldest Australian world champion at the age of 31.

Fastest off the blocks, McEvoy once again denied Ben Proud (21.26) gold, having beaten the Briton to the Olympic title by a fingertip in Paris exactly a year ago.

Leon Marchand’s 200m IM world record was one of the biggest headlines from the meet, but another Frenchman grabbed the spotlight on Saturday.

Maxime Grousset rocketed to his second 100m butterfly world title in 49.62, beating Switzerland’s Noe Ponti and recording the third-quickest swim of all-time in the event.

Only American world record holder Caeleb Dressel (49.45) has gone faster.

It was Grousset’s second butterfly title in Singapore, having also beaten Ponti for the 50m crown on day two.

Gretchen Walsh kept the United States team’s medal haul ticking upwards with a dominant victory in the 50m butterfly, adding to her 100m title in Singapore.

Touching the wall in 24.83 seconds, Walsh was nearly half a second better than runner-up Alex Perkins, who set an Australian record of 25.31 seconds.

There was more cheer for the US as Jack Alexy, Patrick Sammon, Kate Douglass and Torri Huske combined to win the non-Olympic mixed 4x100m freestyle gold in a world record time of 3:18.83, shaving nearly half a second off Australia’s mark of 3:18.83 from the event two years ago in Fukuoka.

Apart from McIntosh’s 400m IM title bid, there are seven other gold medals on offer in a packed programme on the final day.

Marchand, the “French Phelps”, will look to add the 400m IM title to his 200m IM gold, while German iron man Florian Wellbrock will gun for the 1,500m freestyle title to boost his bumper haul after sweeping the open water events.

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