GB DOUBLE-GOLD WINNERS
Kelly Holmes' double gold in the 800m and 1500m has been hailed as one of the greatest achievements in Olympic history.
Holmes set a new British record and ended up as the only Team GB athlete to claim individual track and field gold.
But she did more than merely save her under-performing team-mates' blushes and more than simply fulfil a personal Olympic dream.
In doing the 800m-1500m double, the 34-year-old from Tonbridge achieved a rare Olympic feat.
Olympic middle-distance great Sebastian Coe, who was Holmes' idol growing up, described her achievement as "phenomenal".
Lord Coe, who himself won 1500m Olympic gold but was unable to clinch the double, said: "A lot of people have tried it, few people have done it. In historic terms and athletic terms, what Kelly did was supreme."
Another former British runner convinced of the magnitude of Holmes' accomplishment is former Olympic 10,000m bronze medallist Brendan Foster.
The BBC pundit's emotional commentary as Holmes sank to her knees after clinching victory in the 1500m left viewers in no doubt as to how high he ranked her achievement.
"Britain's first ever gold medal in the Olympic Games was in the 1500m and now (this is) our most glorious moment in athletics history as far as I can see," he said.
"She is the double Olympic champion - we've never had one like you before. The last British athlete that came close to it was Sebastian Coe and he ended up as Lord Coe. Surely we going to call her Dame Kelly Holmes after that performance."
To compare Holmes' gold-winning achievements over six days with Sir Steve Redgrave's five-gold rowing haul amassed over 20 years is to attempt the impossible.
GB OLYMPIC GREATS
But the statistics show the enormity of Holmes' achievement:
Holmes came into the Athens Olympics rated a 100-1 outsider by bookmakers to do the 800m-1500m.
After her victory in the 800m, an open-top bus parade around her home town of Tonbridge was planned - now that looks likely to be scaled up into a national party.
Not only did Holmes make a mockery of the odds, she now finds herself odds-on for a host of other things - from winning the BBC Sports Personality of the Year to getting a gong in the New Year's Honours list.
Her life will be changed with monumental fame and lucrative financial opportunities there for the grasping.
But what will surely be most precious to her is the place that her Athens performances have earned her in the pantheon of Olympic greats.