Katie Ledecky’s Nine-Year U.S. Winning Streak Broken by Summer McIntosh

The seven-time Olympic champion’s epic run on American soil came to a shocking end Friday.
Katie Ledecky’s Nine-Year U.S. Winning Streak Broken by Summer McIntosh
Katie Ledecky’s Nine-Year U.S. Winning Streak Broken by Summer McIntosh /

For the first time in nearly a decade, seven-time Olympic champion Katie Ledecky lost a race on American soil. 

Ledecky saw her nine-year winning streak in the U.S. come to a shocking end on Friday when Canadian teenager Summer McIntosh narrowly beat her in the 200-meter freestyle at a Pro Series swim meet in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. McIntosh, a 16-year-old rising star on the international swimming scene, finished in a winning time of 1 minute, 54.13 seconds, 0.83 seconds ahead of Ledecky.

McIntosh also lowered her own world junior record with the swim, besting the mark she set at last year’s world championships. 

The loss marked Ledecky’s first in a freestyle long course race of 200 meters or longer in the U.S. since she lost to fellow American Allison Schmitt in 2014. Since that defeat, Ledecky has gone on to establish herself as one of the most dominant swimmers the sport has ever seen.

In addition to her seven Olympic gold medals, Ledecky boasts 19 world championship golds—the most in swimming history by a woman. She is also the world record holder in the women’s 800- and 1500-meter freestyle in both long course and short course events.

Ledecky is slated to compete in the 2024 Paris Olympics, but has not yet confirmed her schedule for the Games. McIntosh will also be present and stands to be a medal threat in a handful of the distance events. 


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Zach Koons
ZACH KOONS

Zach Koons is a programming editor at Sports Illustrated who frequently writes about Formula One. He joined SI as a breaking/trending news writer in February 2022 before joining the programming team in 2023. Koons previously worked at The Spun and interned for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He currently hosts the "Bleav in Northwestern" podcast and received a bachelor's in journalism from Northwestern University.