Matt Weston and Marcus Wyatt are no strangers to making history on the skeleton track.
Once again, the dynamic duo are making headlines after clinching Great Britain a first-ever one-two finish in the men's skeleton overall World Cup standings.
Victory for Weston also meant he became the first Briton to win back-to-back crystal globes in the event, having also taken the crown during the 2024 season.
The 27-year-old finished on 1640 points, 83 ahead of his compatriot Wyatt in second, as reigning Olympic champion Christopher Grotheer of Germany rounded off the podium.
Weston won medals in seven of the eight World Cup events this season and is excited to see where his flying form can take him in the lead up to a possible second Olympics.
"To come away with two crystal globes in a row and do something no British man has ever done is pretty special," he said.
"I don’t think what I’ve achieved this season and over the past few years has sunk in yet and it probably won’t until I retire.
"To have British athletes ranked number one and two in the world when we don’t even have an ice track in the UK is amazing.
"We’ve been able to achieve so much this season and we’ve still got more individual and team development to come. We’re in a very good place to go to the Olympics in Milan-Cortina next year and absolutely fly."
The World Cup event doubled up as the European championships in Lillehammer and Wyatt and Amelia Coltman both graced the podium for the second year in a row.
The pair clinched silver in their respective races, with Wyatt totalling 1:42.82, just 0.01 seconds behind winner Samuel Maier, and Coltman upgrading last year's bronze with a combined run of 1:44.98.
"I started the year on a high with my first World Cup gold, had a bit of a drop off but then picked myself up and have performed really solidly throughout the season," said Coltman.
"I’ve changed a few things with my mindset and it’s unleashed the potential that’s always been there. I’ve still got things to improve on but I’m really excited for next year now."
Brad Hall and Taylor Lawrence backed up a historic weekend on the track as they claimed Britain's first two-man bobsleigh European medal since 1968.
Back then, Patrick Evely and Toni Fields took silver ahead of fellow Brits John Blockey and Mike Freeman in bronze, before a quiet period of 57 years.
They became the first non-German team to clinch a two-man medal in 2025 as they clocked a combined run time of one minute 41.63 seconds, and Lawrence noted the gravity of their success.
"Whenever you split the Germans in the two-man, it’s a good day," he said.
"Our push starts were much closer to where we think they should be so we’re super happy with that.
"The form that we’re showing in both the two-man and the four-man is on an upward trajectory and, hopefully, come the World Championships next month we’ll be back on the podium."
Just one day later, Hall and Lawrence were back in the sled and on the podium alongside Arran Gulliver and Leon Greenwood as they won four-man European bronze.
The quartet tied for third with Switzerland's Team Vogt in a time of 1:40.05, with Germany's Johannes Lochner piloting his sled to a record fifth European title.
Sportsbeat 2025