The Cairns Post

GOLDEN GIRLS Light up the pool

Aussies lift nation with stunning worldrecor­d time to win our first gold

- JULIAN LINDEN

Aussie wonder women Cate and Bronte Campbell, Meg Harris and Emma McKeon have lifted the Covid gloom with a stunning victory in Tokyo. The remarkable quartet destroyed their rivals in the 4x100m freestyle relay, setting a world record as they smashed through the 3min 30sec barrier to claim Australia’s first gold of the Games.

YOU can add Australia’s wonder women swimmers to death and taxes as the only certaintie­s in a world gone crazy.

Just when the whole nation needed a lift, our golden girls delivered right on cue, winning the 4x100m freestyle final at the Tokyo Olympics.

It is the third time in a row Australia has won the event but this was the sweetest of the lot after all the heartbreak and agony that everyone has gone through in the last year.

It was a moment to savour especially for Cate Campbell, who almost quit the sport after she was savaged by online trolls for not winning her individual races in Rio, 2016.

Australia’s flag-bearer at the opening ceremony, Campbell once again produced when it mattered, anchoring the team to a world record of three minutes 29.69 seconds, smashing the old record the Dolphins set at the 2018 Commonweal­th Games.

There was a poignant moment when she joined her sister Bronte – who led off the relay in possibly her last Olympic race – and the other team members, Emma McKeon and Meg Harris, on the podium.

Collecting their medals from a tray because of social distancing rules, the

four Australian­s presented each other with their prizes in what already ranks as one of the most touching moments of the Tokyo Games.

“We push each other and challenge each other but we do that in a really supportive way,” Cate said.

“There is no malice and no animosity towards one another and I think that has just spoken volumes.

“This is the third Olympics in a row that Australia has won this event and that in itself really needs to be celebrated.

“To do that for 13 years in a row is incredible.”

Bronte and McKeon were also on the team that won gold in Rio but Cate is the only member who was also part of the team that won in London so joins Dawn Fraser and Libby Trickett as the only Australian swimmers to win gold medals at three Olympics. If this is the last time the Campbell sisters swim together then it was the perfect way to sign off.

“Rio was our first time on the podium at the Olympics and to replicate that – I don’t know that anyone’s ever done that,” Bronte said. “I know these girls are like my family and we’ve all grown up together but Cate is literally my family so to stand up with my sister pretty is incredible.

“Every single career has a journey you go on, and for us being in the relay has always been a high point and we’ve always really loved it.”

It remains a travesty that Cate, in particular, has never been given the full credit she deserves because she hasn’t won an individual gold medal at the Olympics.

She still may - though her biggest obstacle appears to be her own teammate McKeon - who is now the oddson favourite to win the individual 100m freestyle title after a blistering split time of 51.35.

The truth though is it doesn’t matter anymore because Cate’s place in the hearts of all Australian­s is assured as she has never let her country down in relays.

Part of the reason Campbell excels in the relays has to do with her height. Anyone watching her carry the flag with Patty Mills will have noticed how tall she is, which is both a blessing and a disguise for freestyle sprinter.

No matter how much she practices, she cannot get off the blocks from a standing start as quickly as her shorter competitor­s, and those valuable fractions of a second can be the difference between winning a medal or not.

But in relays, when swimmers are allowed to start moving forward just as the incoming swimmer approaches, she doesn’t lose any time and actually gets an advantage the extra kick she gets off her legs gives her the advantage.

“We’ve all really had to step up year in and year out, but also supporting each other,” she said.

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 ?? Race. Pictures: AFP, Getty ?? Bronte Campbell, Meg Harris, Emma McKeon and Cate Campbell are our first gold medallists of the Games. An emotional Cate Campbell (inset) at the end of the
Race. Pictures: AFP, Getty Bronte Campbell, Meg Harris, Emma McKeon and Cate Campbell are our first gold medallists of the Games. An emotional Cate Campbell (inset) at the end of the
 ??  ?? Unbridled joy ... the relay trio celebrate as Cate Campbell touches the wall in world record time.
Unbridled joy ... the relay trio celebrate as Cate Campbell touches the wall in world record time.
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 ?? Picture: AFP ?? Bronte Campbell, Meg Harris, Emma McKeon and Cate Campbell show off their gold medals, a job well done (above) and the Aussies embrace (below).
Picture: AFP Bronte Campbell, Meg Harris, Emma McKeon and Cate Campbell show off their gold medals, a job well done (above) and the Aussies embrace (below).

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