Penny Oleksiak

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Penny Oleksiak
Penny Oleksiak in a swimsuit and jacket, seated on a bench by the Olympic pool.
Oleksiak at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Personal information
National team  Canada
Born (2000-06-13) June 13, 2000 (age 23)[1]
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Height 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)[1][2]
Weight 68 kg (150 lb)[1]
Sport
Sport Swimming
Strokes Freestyle, butterfly
Club Energy Standard
Toronto Swim Club, High Performance Center – Ontario[3]
Coach Bill O'Toole, Ben Titley

Penelope Oleksiak (born June 13, 2000) is a Canadian competitive swimmer who specializes in the freestyle and butterfly events.[4] Having won 7 medals at the Summer Olympics, she is Canada’s most decorated Olympian.[5] During the 2016 Summer Olympics, she became the first Canadian to win four medals in the same Summer Games and the country's youngest Olympic champion, with a gold in the 100 m freestyle, a silver in the 100 m butterfly, and two bronzes in the women's freestyle relays (4×100 m and 4×200 m). With her gold medal win, she became the first athlete born in the 2000s to claim an Olympic gold medal in an individual event.[6]

One year prior, Oleksiak had won six medals at the 2015 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships. She is the current junior world and Canadian record holder in the 100 m freestyle and 100 m butterfly, initially setting the records at the age of 15 while improving them at age 16. She currently shares the Olympic record in the 100-metre freestyle with Simone Manuel. Her success at the 2016 Olympics led to her being awarded the 2016 Lou Marsh Trophy as Canada's top athlete, the Bobbie Rosenfeld Award as Canada's top female athlete for 2016, and a member of the Canadian Press team of the year.

Career

After learning to swim at a neighbour's pool, Oleksiak took up the sport at the age of 9 encouraged by her father. She had also taken up gymnastics and competitive dance.[7] Oleksiak attempted to join several swim clubs in Toronto, but was rejected having trouble swimming the length of pool. She was eventually taken in by coach Gary Nolden at the Toronto Olympian Swim Team where she gained the foundation that started her swimming career. Looking back at how she began her swimming career at the Toronto Olympian Swim Team, Oleksiak said, "The coach there really helped me. He had a lot of faith in me. If I hadn't gone to that club, I don't think I would be where I am today."[8] Within a year, a race by Oleksiak at the University of Toronto drew the attention of coach Ben Titley, who would go on to lead Canada's Olympic team.[9] Titley would begin working with her, sporadically at first, then on a monthly and weekly basis. As a 14-year-old at the 2014 Canadian Age Group Championships, Oleksiak won 10 individual medals, five gold, three silver and two bronze, setting a personal best in each and every race, and then tacked on three relay golds.[10]

Extra investments came as the data analytics division of Canadian Tire appointed Oleksiak, whose top FINA ranking at the time was 319th, as a possible Olympic medalist in the 2020 Summer Games.[11] First indications of great potential for Oleksiak were identified when, six weeks after fracturing her elbow in a cycle accident, she was still able to win six medals at the 2015 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships. This included a gold in the mixed 4 × 100 m freestyle relay; silver in her signature 100 m freestyle event; silver in the 50 and 100 m butterfly; a silver in the 4 × 200 m relay and a bronze in the 4 × 100 m freestyle events.[3]

Her next goal was to qualify for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro as part of the Canadian national team; there she set the Junior world record in qualifying for the 100 m freestyle. After winning the race she said "being able to get the world junior record means quite a bit to me".[2] Oleksiak also beat Chantal Van Landeghem's Canadian record in the process; Van Landeghem joined Oleksiak in the 100 and 4 × 100 m freestyle events for the Olympics. Oleksiak also set the Canadian and World Junior records in the 100 m butterfly en route to the Olympics in that event.[12] Before the Olympics, Oleksiak had risen to 49th in the 100-metre freestyle rankings and 37th in the 100-metre butterfly, and the Canadian Tire analysts appointed her to possibly win a medal in Rio.[11]

2016 Short course world championships

In December 2016 Oleksiak participated in the short course world championships in the Canadian city of Windsor. As the event was her first international competition following the Olympics, in front of her own crowd, Oleksiak was the centre of attentions of fans and media. Oleksiak won a bronze medal in the women's 100-metre freestyle on the third day of competition,[13] breaking her 3rd World Junior record, and two days later helped the Canadian team win gold in the 4 × 200-metre freestyle relays.[14] In the final day of competition, Oleksiak anchored Canada to another gold, in the 4 × 50-metre freestyle relay, and a silver medal at the 4 × 100-metre medley relay.[15] Canada also finished third in the 4 × 100-metre freestyle relay, but wound up disqualified.[16]

As a result of her performances at the 2016 Summer Olympics and the 2016 short course championships Oleksiak was awarded the Lou Marsh Award as Canada's top athlete of the year and was named CBC's athlete of the year as well.[17][18] She was also given the Bobbie Rosenfeld Award as Canada's female athlete of the year,[19] and was named in the team of the year, anchoring the Canadian women's swim team in Rio and Windsor.[20]

2016 Summer Olympics

Oleksiak would compete for Canada's swimming team at the Rio 2016 Olympics in five races.[21] Her competition began on day one. In the heats of the 100 m butterfly, she broke the national record and world junior record with a time of 56.73 on her way to the semi-finals. Oleksiak also anchored the final leg of the women's 4×100 m freestyle relay team with Taylor Ruck, Chantal van Landeghem, Sandrine Mainville, and Michelle Williams with the latter only swimming in the heat. In the final of the relay event she held on to the third position against the United States and Australia, winning Canada's first Olympic medal in the women's freestyle relay in 40 years.[22] After the race, the 16-year-old said, "No one really expected this of Canada coming into the meet, but now that we are here, people are going to be surprised at what we do."[22]

The next night she competed in the 100 m butterfly final. Oleksiak started out fast, touching the halfway wall in third before finishing characteristically strong in second place, winning the silver medal. She again bettered her world junior record and Canadian record in the 100 m butterfly in the process. Oleksiak became the first Canadian to ever win a medal on each of the first two days of the Olympics. With the win she exclaimed that "I'm just happy that I made Canada proud and getting to look up into the stands and find my parents, it's just amazing for me and it's such a great feeling."[23]

Returning to the pool on day five, Oleksiak again had a record breaking qualifier followed by a relay medal. She broke the world junior record of the 100 m freestyle with 52.72, the second fastest time of the qualifying heats, and anchored the 4×200 m freestyle relay, again winning the bronze (along with Katerine Savard, Taylor Ruck, and Brittany MacLean). Oleksiak's leg time of 1:54.94 was the 4th fastest in the field after the three medalists of the 200 m freestyle.[24][25]

On day six, Oleksiak was seventh at the 50-metre turn of the 100 m freestyle, and eventually surged for a gold medal finish, tied with Simone Manuel and setting an Olympic record of 52.70.[26][10] Oleksiak is the youngest Canadian to become an Olympic champion, the first to win four Summer Olympics medals in the same edition, and has the second most medals of the country in a single edition after Cindy Klassen in the 2006 Winter Olympics. She is also the first athlete born in the 2000s to win an individual Olympic gold.[27][28] Day eight marked Oleksiak's fifth Olympic race and the only one she did not medal in that edition, being the butterfly swimmer of the 4 × 100 m medley relay that finished in fifth place.[29] It was announced the morning of the closing ceremony that Oleksiak would be Canada's flag bearer for the event.[30] Just days before the closing ceremony, Penny quietly returned to her home in Toronto for two days to go to Canada's Wonderland with her friends, before heading back to Rio.[31]

2017 season

Oleksiak's first competition in 2017 was the Arena Pro Swim Series in Mesa, Arizona, held in March. Hindered by injuries, she finished fourth in the 100 m freestyle.[32] Oleksiak had troubles with a shoulder injury for most of the year before suffering a concussion when she was hit in the head with a medicine ball in the gym.[33] Despite this she had more success at the Team Canada trials one month later, winning the 100m freestyle and butterfly races and earning spots for both in the 2017 World Aquatics Championships.[34][35]

In the world championships Oleksiak anchored the team in the 4 x 100 m relay, though the team finished just off the podium in fourth place. In the 100 m butterfly Oleksiak just missed the podium getting fourth place when she swam in 56.94,[36] followed by 5th in 50 m fly (25.62, a Canadian record),[37] and 6th in the 100 m freestyle (52.94).[38] However, she won two bronze medals in the mixed relays, after swimming the butterfly leg of the mixed 4 × 100 m medley – with the Canadian team tied for bronze with the Chinese team after Yuri Kisil swam the anchor leg -[39] and as anchor of the 4 × 100 m freestyle.[40]

Oleksiak competed at the World Junior Swimming Championships in Indianapolis.[41] Oleksiak did not participate in any individual events, but swam in all five possible relay events helping Canada to win all five gold medals, breaking the junior world record and championship record in four of them. Following the junior championships Oleksiak switched coaches from Ben Titley to Bill O'Toole, her original age group coach in the Toronto Swim Club.[42][43]

2018–20 seasons

In September 2017, Oleksiak was named to Canada's 2018 Commonwealth Games team.[44][45] While unsuccessful in the individual races, Oleksiak won three silvers in the relays.[46]

Despite qualifying wins at the Canadian Swim Trials, Oleksiak opted not to compete in the 2018 Pan Pacific Swimming Championships in August, instead resting before resuming training in September.[47] She would later say this was necessary as a way of dealing with the pressures of fame after the Rio Olympics, having found that "there was a lot of pressure behind my name. It wasn't really enjoyable for me, and no time was ever really good enough for me." She subsequently returned to training with Ben Titley at the national team training centre.[48]

In the Autumn of 2019 Oleksiak was member of the inaugural International Swimming League swimming for the Energy Standard Swim Club, who won the team title in Las Vegas, Nevada, in December.[49]

With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March of 2020, Oleksiak took an enforced break from training, having no access to the pool for four months. She would subsequently cite this as an opportunity to rethink her approach to training, contemplating that on return "I knew that we would just be head-down training, and we weren't going to really have any racing opportunities, so I knew I had to change my mindset. Now, I love training, and I find a lot of joy in looking at technique stuff." The 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo were delayed by a full year. She also became the first female global ambassador for Phelps Brand, a swim gear company co-founded by famed Olympian Michael Phelps. Oleksiak called Phelps a valuable mentor.[48]

2020 Summer Olympics

Appearing at the Canadian Olympic swim trials for her first proper competition since the pandemic, Oleksiak won the 100 m event with a time of 52.89 seconds, her fastest since the Rio Olympics and the fourth-best women's 100 m time to that point in the year.[50] She came second at the 200 m trial, finishing behind 14-year-old training partner Summer McIntosh. Oleksiak joked afterward "I love Summer. I hate training with Summer."[51] On June 24, 2021, Oleksiak was named to Canada's 2020 Olympic team.[52][53][54][55]

Oleksiak began her Olympics swimming the anchor leg for Canada in the 4×100 m freestyle relay. The team qualified for the final in third place and when Oleksiak dove in to swim the last 100 m she was behind familiar rival Simone Manuel but managed to overtake her in the last touch for second place to win Canada's first medal of the games.[56] Oleksiak next competed in the 200 m freestyle, an event she had not participated in during Rio Olympics. She had the fourth-fastest time in the heats, but only sixth in the semi-finals. In the event final, she set a new personal best time of 1:54.70 to take the bronze medal. This was her sixth Olympic medal, making her the most decorated Summer Olympian in Canadian history, and tying her with Clara Hughes and Cindy Klassen for the most Olympic medals won by a Canadian.[57]

Oleksiak was again part of the Canadian team in the 4×200 m freestyle relay, but despite breaking the Canadian record in the event final, the team finished in fourth place, one ordinal lower than their bronze medal performance in Rio.[58] She next competed in the 100 m freestyle, where she had won gold four years prior. Qualifying through the heats and semifinals to the final round, she set a new personal best and national record with a 52.59 second final performance, finishing fourth behind bronze medalist Cate Campbell by 0.07 seconds. She described her turn as "frustrating", but "it's still fourth in the world so I'm not complaining." This was Oleksiak's highest placement in a major individual 100 m contest since her gold medal in Rio.[59]

Her final event of the Games, and thus her final chance in Tokyo to break the national record for Olympic medals, was the 4 × 100 m medley relay, where the Canadian team had finished fifth five years earlier. Oleksiak had performed the butterfly leg of the relay in Rio, but in Tokyo that was assigned to Maggie Mac Neil, with Oleksiak anchoring the freestyle leg. They won the bronze medal and set a new national record in the process, with Oleksiak's 52.26 time being the second-fastest in the freestyle segment of the race. Reflecting on her becoming Canada's most-decorated Olympian, she said she preferred not to have achieved the result on an individual event, as it "makes it ten times sweeter knowing that I've accomplished this history with girls that are also making history."[60]

Personal life

Oleksiak is the youngest of five siblings, one of whom is NHL defenceman Jamie Oleksiak,[61] who plays for the Seattle Kraken. The rest of the family also has an athletic tradition: her father, Richard, is from Buffalo, New York and played basketball, football and field athletics and her mother held multiple Scottish Age Group swimming records in freestyle and backstroke.[62] Older sister Hayley was a rower at Northeastern University, and older brother Jake played college hockey.[63] She attended Monarch Park Collegiate Institute in Toronto, Ontario until leaving at the end of the 2016–17 school year.[12] Oleksiak has a dog named Jagr after hockey player Jaromir Jagr and a cat named Rio.[64]

Personal bests

Long course (50 m pool)

Event Time[65] Venue Date Notes
50 m butterfly 25.62 Danube Arena, Budapest July 29, 2017 NR
100 m butterfly 56.46 Olympic Aquatics Stadium, Rio de Janeiro August 7, 2016 WJR, NR
200 m butterfly 2:09.96 University of British Columbia, Vancouver June 3, 2018
50 m freestyle 25.38 26th International Meeting, Uster February 4, 2018
100 m freestyle 52.59 Tokyo Aquatics Centre, Tokyo July 30, 2021 NR
200 m freestyle 1:54.70 Tokyo Aquatics Centre, Tokyo July 27, 2021

Short course (25 m pool)

Event Time[65] Venue Date Notes
100 m freestyle 52.01 WFCU Centre, Windsor December 8, 2016 WJR, NR

See also

References

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External links