Rio 2016 saw existing legends cement their place in sporting history; Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Mo Farah and so on. New stars such as Simone Biles and Nafissatou Thiam took centre stage and will look to build on their Brazilian success in four years time at Tokyo 2020.
But what about those lesser known athletes whose achievements might be overshadowed by the megastars? Here's five cult heroes from Rio.
Mónica Puig (Costa Rica)
Gold (Tennis, women's singles)
Puerto Rico's Monica Puig celebrates her gold-winning performance |
22-year-old Puig upset the formbook by capturing the women's singles by defeating world number two Angelique Kerber in three sets, winning her country's first ever Olympic gold medal in the process. Unseeded Puig richly deserved her gold medal, defeating the much fancied Garbine Muguruza of Spain in straight sets ahead of eliminating double Wimbledon winner Petra Kvitova in the semi finals. There were murmurs that Puig benefitted from the shock early exit of reigning champion Serena Williams but given her form, the result would be far from guaranteed. Never beyond the fourth round of a Grand Slam, more eyes than ever will focus on her progress in next week's US Open.
Nick Skelton (Great Britain)
Gold (Equestrian, individual showjumping)
Nick Skelton & Big Star on their way to gold in the individual jumping |
Joseph Schooling (Singapore)
Gold (Swimming, men's butterfly)
Singapore's first Olympic champion, swimmer Joseph Schooling |
Even the great Michael Phelps was left in the wake of Singapore's first ever gold medal winner. Schooling - at 22 with more surely still to come - became Olympic champion and broke his hero Phelps' Games record and beat the American into second place all in one race. His success was no fluke - he topped the timesheet in the heats ahead of Phelps and other better known swimmers including the reigning 200m champion in the same event, South Africa's Chad le Clos. A photo of the young Schooling meeting Phelps at the Beijing 2008 Games spread quickly across the internet following his success His attention will now settle on translating Olympic glory into World Championship gold next summer in Hungary.
Osea Kolinisau (Fiji)
Gold (Rugby sevens, men's competition)
Fiji captain Osea Kolinisau celebrates leading his team to victory |
Katie Ledecky (USA)
Gold x 4 (Swimming, freestyle. 200m, 400m, 800m, 4x200m relay)
Five-time Olympic champion Katie Ledecky of the USA |
In a Games packed with great stories, whose was your favourite story? One of my featured athletes? Someone else? Let me know in the comments.
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