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Dawson making waves in Canadian breaststroke

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Oliver Dawson warms up at the Canadian Swimming Trials, in Montreal, Monday, July 6, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov (Christopher Katsarov)

MONTREAL — Alex Dawson moved his family from England to northwestern Alberta some 11 years ago, embarking on an unlikely journey to help build up the swimming program in Grande Prairie.

He didn’t know it then, but his seven-year-old son, Oliver, would become one of its biggest success stories.

Now 18, Oliver Dawson has spent the last couple of months breaking Canadian breaststroke records and establishing himself as one of the country’s brightest swimming prospects.

“I moved to Grande Prairie to coach. Having Ollie come along and do that, be successful to that (extent), that was not by design,” Alex Dawson said with a laugh in a phone interview. “It’s just how it goes, right? He’s done many other sports, but he always came back to swimming.”

On consecutive days in May, Oliver Dawson took down a pair of long-standing Canadian standards at the AP Race London International. He posted a time of 27.29 seconds in the 50-metre breaststroke to surpass Scott Dickens’ 2009 benchmark, then went 59.55 in the 100 preliminary heat to beat another Dickens record from 2012.

Dawson lowered his own time to 59.33 in the final, finishing just 0.18 behind childhood idol and world-record holder Adam Peaty of Britain.

“To look at the board and see that I was under the time, to know that it was broken and now I hold that is pretty crazy,” Dawson said. “To think I’m the fastest Canadian ever in the 50 and 100 and super close in the 200 is outstanding.

“And then to race Adam Peaty, that was a whole other thing to basically go toe-to-toe with him.”

Dawson expects the 200 record of 2:08.84 — set by Mike Brown at the 2008 Beijing Games — to drop before the summer is over. He was scheduled to race in the 100 at the Canadian swimming trials Thursday night in Montreal after claiming the 50 and 200 titles.

It’s the type of outcome his dad couldn’t have imagined when they packed up for Canada in 2015.

Alex Dawson had been the longtime head coach at City of Leicester Swimming Club when he reached his ceiling and began looking for a new challenge, whether in England or abroad.

There were several job opportunities, but the prospect of becoming Director of Swimming for the Grande Prairie Piranhas quickly caught his attention.

Dawson had a relationship with Swimming Canada high-performance director John Atkinson and then-Swim Alberta coach Mark Perry — both British natives — and wanted to be a part of the blossoming swimming program in the country.

Grande Prairie even had an Olympic-sized pool — something his Leicester facility did not — and offered a welcome change of pace.

“I grew up in a village as a little kid and my wife did, too, and Grande Prairie is not a very big place,” he said. “I could buy a house, wave my kid off to school, then I could go to work and then I’d be back as well.

“A bit more time together as opposed to being in the rat race in England.”

Oliver, meanwhile, had a quick rise in Canada.

After coming up through the Piranhas program, he chose to swim for his adopted country internationally, becoming a citizen at 14. A year later, he made the world junior team, and a year after that he won the Olympic trials at 16, though he fell short of making the Paris Games roster.

Dawson’s emergence is good news for the Canadian swimming team, which has long been searching for someone to fill the breaststroke void in the men’s medley relay.

“It was a leg of the men’s medley relay that we were looking to develop, but you can’t produce senior males overnight,” said Atkinson, also Swimming Canada’s national coach. “If you look at where Oliver is … he has come on and progressed all year in both the 100 and more importantly the 200, and still having speed for the 50.

“Two years ago he was a young man, now he’s turning into a man. When you look at his physique and what he has done and how he’s swimming the race, both he and his dad have done a great job.”

His role as a breaststroke specialist has already paid off. Dawson contributed to Canada’s mixed medley relay bronze at last summer’s world championships in Singapore.

“That piece has always been missing, so to fill that spot, yeah, means quite a lot,” he said. “I’m going to do my best and hopefully I can do that.”

The father-and-son duo will both start new chapters in the fall.

Alex will coach next season at the Killarney Swim Club in Calgary and Oliver is heading to the University of Indiana on a scholarship to train under veteran coach Ray Looze.

Dawson has dreams of making his Olympic debut at the Los Angeles Games in 2028, but first he plans to make the most of this summer.

He’s set to compete in the Commonwealth Games from July 23 to Aug. 2 in Glasgow, Scotland, and the Pan Pacific Championships from Aug. 12 to 15 in Irvine, Calif.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 9, 2026.

Daniel Rainbird, The Canadian Press