Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

Summer McIntosh wins Northern Star Award after memorable 2024 

|
|

Teen swimming phenom Summer McIntosh ends a remarkable 2024 season being named recipient of the Northern Star Award (formerly the Lou Marsh Trophy), awarded to Canada’s top athlete during each calendar year. 

The 18-year-old soared to new heights in 2024, dominating in the pool at the Summer Olympics while adding to her already impressive resumé with a noteworthy performance at the World Aquatics Championships. 

McIntosh dazzled in front in the Paris Olympic crowd, winning three gold medals — a Canadian single-Olympic Games record — and a silver, while setting two world records. Her four total medals helped her join Penny Oleksiak as the only Canadians to win four medals at a single Games, as McIntosh was the first swimmer since Oleksiak in 2016 to win the award and the ninth swimmer overall. 

She set a world record in the 200m individual medley with a time of 2:06.56 while also setting a record in the 200m butterfly, finishing the race in 2:03.03. 

The Toronto native added another first-place finish in the 400m individual medley — an event in which she set the world record earlier in the year at the Canadian Olympic Trials — and finished second in the 400m freestyle. 

Her standout performance earned her the honour of being the Canadian flag bearer for the closing ceremony, a nomination from the Canadian Olympic Committee that is awarded to the Olympian who performed exceptionally at the Games.  

But McIntosh wasn’t satisfied with just Olympic triumph. 

The former Etobicoke Swim Club member set a new standard in December’s FINA World Aquatics Championships, finishing the competition with three gold medals, a silver and a bronze, while setting three world records in Budapest. 

McIntosh swam to glory in the 400m individual medley (4:15.48), 200m butterfly (1:59.32) and 400m butterfly (3:50.25) events, setting short course world records — 25m length pool as opposed to Olympic-size 50m length — in all three events. 

She added to her lucrative medal haul in 2024 with a second-place finish in the 200m backstroke and placed third in the 4x100m relay with teammates Oleksiak, Mary-Sophie Harvey and Ingrid Wilm. 

Her successful 2024 season with a combined nine medals between the Olympics and World Championships earned her 2024 World Aquatics Female Athlete of the Year honours while being named The Canadian Press Female Athlete of the Year to go along with her Northern Star Award as the country’s top athlete. 

The Northern Star Award is awarded annually by the Toronto Star in consultation with journalists countrywide. 

The finalists for 2024 included Connor McDavid, who led the Edmonton Oilers to the Stanley Cup Final; Natalie Spooner of the PWHL’s Toronto Sceptres, who led the league in scoring and won the inaugural league MVP; Ethan Katzburg, who became Canada’s first hammer throw Olympic champion and the youngest hammer throw gold medalist of all-time; and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who was the recipient of the 2023 Northern Star Award and led the Canadian men’s basketball team to their first Olympic appearance since 2000. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Was NBA All-Star weekend finally saved?  

Since the pandemic shut down sports around the world, All-Star games in all four major sports leagues have taken a hit in terms of player participation and overall draw. NBA players have treated the weekend like a joke, turning an event that is supposed to showcase the league's best players into a train wreck. Fast forward to 2026, many considered this past event to be the best in years. However, it didn’t come without its flaws. Let’s look at the good, the bad and the ugly of the 2026 NBA All-Star weekend. 

Brock sweeps Ottawa away in quarter-final matchup   

Another year called for another OUA playoff appearance for the Brock women’s volleyball team, as they took on the Ottawa Gee-Gees in the first round on Feb. 20 in the Bob Davis Gymnasium.

The memorable headlines from the Milano-Cortina 2026 games 

While the Winter Olympics feature a smaller field of athletes competing across fewer disciplines, there’s something about the cold-weather Games that makes them uniquely susceptible to drama, scandal and unforgettable cultural moments.  

Alysa Liu’s unforgettable rise at Milano-Cortina 

At just 20 years old, Alysa Liu did what many figure skaters once believed was impossible: become a better skater after retirement. 

Women’s March Madness takes shape 

As Selection Sunday nears on March 15, women’s college basketball fans are gearing up for one of the most compelling March Madness tournaments in recent memory. The 68-team field will be revealed that night, officially kicking off the road to the Sweet 16, Elite 8, Final 4 and ultimately the National Championship. 

All-Star ratings rebound after years of decline  

For more than a decade, the NBA All-Star Game has been fighting slow, but noticeable, rating declines. What was once a guaranteed television draw — regularly pulling between eight and 10 million viewers in the early 2010s — gradually lost traction as fan frustration grew over lackluster effort, inflated scores and minimal defence. By 2023 and 2024, the number had fallen to roughly 4.6 to 4.7 million viewers, marking some of the lowest audiences in the event’s history.  

Khelif Willing to Undergo IOC Testing for LA 2028 

Imane Khelif, the Algerian boxer who became an Olympic champion in 2024, continues to be at the centre of one of the most contentious and widely covered sports eligibility stories in recent years. While she remains celebrated for her achievements in the ring, the conversation around her eligibility and future competence career has significantly evolved since her gold medal run at the Paris Olympics. 

Pockar dominates as Brock takes down Ottawa in quarter finals   

The Brock Badgers men’s basketball team hosted the Ottawa Gee-Gees in a quarter-final matchup on Feb. 21 in a game holding major stakes for both teams.