Summer McIntosh, Ethan Katzberg named Canada’s flag-bearers for Paris 2024 closing ceremony

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Summer McIntosh, Ethan Katzberg named Canada’s flag-bearers for Paris 2024 closing ceremony

The most successful Canadian athlete at the Olympics will join Canada’s first hammer throw medallist in 112 years as the country’s flag-bearers at Sunday’s closing ceremony.

Teen swim sensation Summer McIntosh and hammer throw champion Ethan Katzberg will carry the flag, the Canadian Olympic Committee announced Sunday.

McIntosh, 17, won three gold medals and one silver during the first week of Paris 2024.

McIntosh became the first Canadian to win three gold medals at one Olympics.

The Toronto native flew home last week, but said she’d be happy to return to Paris if chosen to be flag-bearer.

“There’s been so many incredible performances at the Games, and for me to be chosen as flag bearer is pretty incredible,” McIntosh said in a Team Canada news release. I’m truly honoured to hold the flag for Canada.”

McIntosh is expected to be a strong contender to bring home more medals at Los Angeles 2028.

Katzberg, 22, became the youngest Summer Games hammer throw champ in history with a throw of 84.12 metres — just shy of the Olympic record of 84.80 metres, set by Russia’s Sergey Litvinov in 1988.

A native of Nanaimo, B.C., Katzberg captured the first gold by a Canadian male at Paris 2024.

His medal also marked Canada’s first Olympic gold in a throwing event since 1904 when Etienne Desmarteau won the 56-pound weight throw in St. Louis.

“The support over the past week has been absolutely incredible,” said Katzberg in the Team Canada release. “Not even this past week — people have been supporting me and rooting me on for a really long time now. To be able to have such an amazing Olympic experience has been incredible and to bring it home in the closing ceremony and wave that flag high and proud is truly an honour.”

Canada has won 27 medals in Paris, a national record for a non-boycotted Summer Games.

The closing ceremony starts at 2:15 p.m. ET / 11:15 a.m. PT.

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