Keely Hodgkinson dealt with the pressure like a true Olympic champion to strike 800m gold.
When the late challenge came from Kenya’s Mary Moraa, Hodgkinson surged clear and punched the air as she crossed the line.
The 23-year-old snapped a streak of four straight major intercontinental silvers in style and became the third British woman to win the 800m at the Olympics.
“I’ve worked so hard for this,” said Hodgkinson.
“The crowd was just absolutely incredible. It felt like a home Olympics for me, there are that many Brits in the stadium.
“It just spurs me on and I’m super happy that I’ve been able to fulfil what I feel like I could do.”
The moment Keely Hodgkinson became an Olympic champion! 🥇🏃♀️#Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/VK8vvHovfr
— Eurosport (@eurosport) August 5, 2024
One year ago, Hodgkinson became Britain’s first new Olympic gold medallist in athletics since London 2012 and is now primed to be the face of Team GB for years to come.
This was a masterful display of front-running as she led the field through the first 400m in a measured 58.4 seconds, giving her plenty in the tank to kick for home.
Hodgkinson worked hard on her top-end speed for that exact moment, clocking a significant 400m personal best in May and competing in the one-lap event at the UK Athletics Championships in June to hone her explosiveness.
Ethiopia’s Tsige Duguma and Moraa could not match the Brit, who cut the tape in 1:56.72, as they settled for silver and bronze respectively.
Hodgkinson said: “I wanted to be up near the front anyway, probably quicker after the first lap, but doing the semi-final and the final back to back everyone was tired.
“It’s tough. I trusted myself, I could feel Mary coming at me down the back straight. But I showed composure and I got to the line first this time.
"I had a cheeky look at the screen just to make sure but you can't do anything until you cross that line. I'm now the Olympic champion for the next four years and nobody can take that away from me."
Athing Mu’s fall at US Trials meant the rival who beat her in Tokyo and at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene no longer stood in her way.
✨'Golden girl' Keely Hodgkinson is an inspiration to future generations of athletes 🤩@keelyhodgkinson | @TeamGB | #Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/q1FZpvnjed
— Eurosport (@eurosport) August 6, 2024
And Moraa, who bested Hodgkinson at the Commonwealth Games in 2022 and at last year’s Worlds in Budapest, could not touch her in the closing metres.
"I feel like I've really grown over the last couple of years and this year is the year I've really tried to make that step up," said Hodgkinson.
"The other girls are incredible. I knew to cross that line first I had to go one better than I ever had. I'm just so pleased to do it. The future is bright.
Just how badly Hodgkinson was injured over the winter prior had flown under the radar.
She missed nine weeks of training between November 2023 and January 2024 after tears to a knee ligament and tendon, which extended into her hamstring. That Hodgkinson didn’t compete indoors as a result appears to have been a blessing in disguise.
In that recovery process, she has leant on the pioneering medical support provided by UK Sport’s National Lottery-funded World Class Programme.
"I've seen all the support from home, I've seen people messaging me and I haven't got back to everyone yet but I will do and I've seen it all," she said.
"It couldn't feel more amazing to that have support. I'm super happy to bring it home for everyone. It's not just me, it's a whole team effort and they know who they are. This is our gold medal."
On a magical night at the track, Sweden's Mondo Duplantis broke the pole vault world record and retained his Olympic title.
With Swedish monarch Carl XVI Gustaf watching on, Duplantis cleared 6.25m to become the first man since the 1950s to successfully defend that crown.
It just makes sense 👑
— Team GB (@TeamGB) August 5, 2024
Take a bow, @keelyhodgkinson #Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/DUG9GfnFqj
Earlier, Daryll Neita and Dina Asher-Smith ensured there will be two GB representatives in the final of the women's 200m.
Neita continued her excellent Games by making a second final, having finished fourth in the 100m.
“Two finals, you can’t knock that,” said Neita. “It’s an amazing achievement.”
Having registered the third-fastest time in the heats, Asher-Smith made it through the semi-finals but looked to be in discomfort while leaving the track.
“It was good because I didn’t use much energy, I’m saving what I can for tomorrow,” she said.
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