100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

DQ furore adds fuel to McKeown's fire at world titles

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Popular river island under threat as council flags ‘transition’

A renowned Sunshine Coast island is likely to be swamped by water in coming decades,  prompting the local council to consider removing facilities including More

Final blocks near CBD a last-chance opportunity

A master-planned community near the CBD has only a handful of blocks remaining for sale in its 11th and final precinct, sparking buyer demand. The More

2026 brings higher energy bills, cheaper medicines

Changes to government payments and policies will impact the finances of millions of Australian households in 2026. The maximum cost of medicines on the Pharmaceutical More

Summer safety alert following alarming fatality statistics

The community is being urged to put safety first this summer, after 15 children under five tragically drowned across Australia in 2024-25, with half More

Botanic garden transforms into open-air art showcase

Maroochy Bushland Botanic Garden has been transformed into an outdoor art gallery, with colourful works lining bushland paths as part of a free summer More

Photo of the day: morning calm

Jo Allayialis captured this photo of the Kings Beach Ocean Pool in the early morning. If you have a photo of the day offering, More

Sunshine Coast swimmer Kaylee McKeown is being fuelled by a “completely unfair” disqualification which robbed her of a likely medal at the world championships.

McKeown and Australian officials are labelling her disqualification from the 200m individual medley as unjust.

McKeown, a potential gold medallist in the event, was punted when judges ruled a stroke violation in her transition from backstroke to breaststroke in a semi-final on Sunday night.

“I had a bit of a cry,” McKeown said after her 100m backstroke heat swim on Monday in Fukuoka.

“A bit of an emotional rollercoaster but it’s sport and it’s what happens in sport.

“Unfortunately some people just get the bad hand and I got dealt that bad hand.

“It’s just a matter of trying to flip it into a positive and just give the big ‘f u’ kind of thing.

“We have footage and other angles that say otherwise to what the officials saw.

“I thought it was completely unfair.”

Swimming Australia’s protest, led by head coach Rohan Taylor, was rejected.

“I disagree, 100 per cent,” Taylor said of the verdict.

McKeown said her medley disappointment added to her motivation for further races, including the 100m backstroke.

The world record holder in the event, McKeown posted 58.90 seconds to be second-quickest qualifer for the semi-finals behind American Regan Smith (58.47) with Australia’s Madi Wilson (1:00.04) the 10th fastest.

“It has been a bit of an emotional rollercoaster from last night to this morning,” McKeown said.

“It probably hit me more this morning but it’s good to come out and blow the cobwebs off.”

McKeown hails from the Sunshine Coast. She went to Pacific Lutheran College and trained at UniSC Spartans, before joining the Griffith University swim club and training under renowned coach Michael Bohl.

Scroll down to SUBSCRIBE for our FREE news feed, direct to your inbox daily.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share