Katarina Johnson-Thompson laid it all on the line to secure heptathlon silver at the Stade de France for her first Olympic medal.
The Liverpudlian sat 121 points behind Belgian champion Nafissatou Thiam entering the final event, the 800 metres.
She faced a nearly impossible task, needing to beat Thiam by more than eight seconds to surpass her main rival.
KJT HAS GOT SILVER!! š„
An incredible heptathlon comes to an end with @JohnsonThompson securing her FIRST Olympic medal! š pic.twitter.com/C7gf5cwmNn
ā Team GB (@TeamGB) August 9, 2024
Johnson-Thompson clocked a personal best 2:04.90, but it was not quite enough as she finished 36 points behind Thiam, who has now twice successfully defended her Olympic title.
The Briton told the BBC: āI canāt even describe the words. Iām just so relieved, Iām so, so happy that Iāve got an Olympic medal to add to my collection. Itās the only one I didnāt have. Itās been so hard getting to this point, getting back to this point, so Iām so relieved.
āIām a bit overwhelmed at the minute.
āIn the lead up to these Games all Iāve been saying is thatās what I want, obviously I wanted a medal, but I just wanted to have a chance at the start of the 800 and thatās what I had.
āIt was a very far off chance, itās an eight-second chance, but thatās what this sport is, getting to that point and then seeing whoās got it at the end.
āI canāt really complain. Nafi ran a PB. Nafiās one of, if not the greatest of all time, and Iām so blessed to be having one these big rivalries with one of the greatest of all time. I got a personal best myself so thatās all I can ask for.ā
Belgiumās Noor Vidts completed the podium.
Johnson-Thompson finished nearly six seconds ahead of the Olympic champion, and second-fastest overall behind the United Statesā Anna Hall.
Nine of the top 11 finishers clocked personal bests, while Hall equalled her seasonās best 2:04.39.
The fast-paced final followed rainfall over the Stade de France, and in a moment of added drama Thiam at one point appeared to slip, but remained on her feet to finish ninth in 2:10.62.
A maiden medal has been a long time coming for Johnson-Thompson, who finished 13th on Olympic debut at London 2012, then sixth at the Rio 2016 Games.
The 31-year-old was then forced to pull out of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics after sustaining a calf injury in the 200 metres.
Denise Lewis, the Sydney 2000 Olympic heptathlon champion, hailed Johnson-Thompsonās āsensationalā effort, telling the BBC: āShe has worked doggedly to be the best that she can be. Her demeanour has changed. She is more confident, she is trusting. She is resilient, absolutely resilient.
āShe is the national-record holder, a double world champion, had she not left this arena with a medal, I think she would have been really disappointed. It completes the set.
āThiam has been incredible. She knew the pressure she was under to achieve this incredibly rare feat. She has worked socks off to improve on her weaknesses. We will never see another heptathlete like this. She is sensational.ā
Jessica-Ennis Hill who famously claimed heptathlon gold on āSuper Saturdayā at London 2012, told the BBC: āThe last two years we have just seen a different Kat. She has had a completely lighter persona. You can see that she is so present and competitive.
āAs an athlete that has also picked up a silver medal behind Nafi Thiam, you know she is (Thiam) an iconic heptathlete. Itās a great feeling. She should be so proud. I know we have said it so many times but the resilience to keep coming back.
āI remember in Rio after we competed, she was almost ready to stop there. She had just had enough. But she kept going ā for two more Olympics! Itās so hard to put into words how challenging that is and how well she has done.ā
Johnson-Thompson began day two at the top of the table and maintained her place after landing 6.40m in the long jump to hold a narrow 45-point advantage over the rest of the field.
She threw a seasonās-best 45.49m in the javelin, but Thiam landed a mammoth 54.04m for a seasonās best of her own.
Johnson-Thompsonās two javelin attempts were the second and third best throws of her life, while on the first day of competition she set a personal best in the shot put of 14.44m, cleared 1.92m in the high jump ā her highest in five years ā and ran a seasonās best 13.40 in the 100m hurdles.
British Olympic heptathlon debutante Jade OāDowda finished 10th overall.
She said of the silver medallist: āSheās so inspiring.
āI was so lucky I got to watch it, literally in front of me. We spent the whole two days together, even the week, weāre sharing an apartment.
āSo we go down to breakfast together, go to the track together, literally incredible.
āIām so pleased for her, this is what sheās wanted, sheās wanted an Olympic medal and she gave it her all, there was literally nothing else she couldāve done.ā
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