SCOTTISH swimmer Duncan Scott has become the first Team GB athlete to win four medals at a single Olympics.
The Alloa-born athlete won gold in the men's 4x200 metres relay and silver in the 200m freestyle, 200m individual medley and 4x100 metres medley relay.
Several Team GB Olympians have won a hat-trick of gongs at one Games this century and, here we look at those the 24-year-old has leapfrogged with his feat at Tokyo 2020.
Adam Peaty and James Guy – Tokyo 2020
Peaty and Guy won their third medals at the same time as Scott made history in the men's 4x100m medley relay. It has been quite the Games for Peaty. He retained his 100m breaststroke title in style and was part of the group that set a new world record in the mixed 4x100m medley relay final. Guy was a winner in the relay events of the men's 4x200m freestyle and mixed 4x100m medley.
Max Whitlock – Rio 2016
After winning two bronzes at London 2012, he claimed a third at the outset in Brazil in the men's all-round gymnastics event, Team GB’s first medal in this discipline for 108 years. Later on in the Games, the then 24-year-old from Hertfordshire made further history by topping the podium in the individual floor exercise, the first time his nation had won Olympic gymnastics gold. Team GB did not have to wait much longer for a second one as within two hours Whitlock triumphed in the pommel horse, edging out team-mate Louis Smith.
Jason Kenny – Rio 2016
The publicity-shy Kenny was already a three-time Olympic champion, with a silver to boot, when he stepped off the plane in South America in an attempt to add to his legacy. Alongside Philip Hindes and Callum Skinner, the Manchester cyclist, then 29, claimed victory in the men's team sprint. Kenny then overcame Skinner in the final of the individual sprint before more success in the Keirin, his sixth Olympic gold, joining Sir Chris Hoy as the joint most successful competitors among Britons at a Games.
Chris Hoy – Beijing 2008
Hoy emulated Henry Taylor's 1908 feat of winning three golds at an individual Games and at the same time became Scotland's most successful Olympian. Cycling alongside Kenny and Jamie Staff, the Edinburgh rider eased to gold in the men's team sprint before defeating Team GB stablemate Ross Edgar in the Keirin. Another compatriot stood in his way in the shape of Kenny in the individual sprint but Hoy ultimately prevailed. He added another two golds at London 2012 before retiring from competitive cycling the following year.
Bradley Wiggins – Athens 2004
Much like many of those before him, the record of winning a trio of medals is hardly the most standout achievement of his career. Eight years before he won the Tour de France, Wiggins claimed gold in the men's individual pursuit, silver in the team pursuit along with Steve Cummings, Rob Hayles and Paul Manning, and bronze in the Madison with Hayles. He won two track cycling golds at Beijing four years later before switching his attentions to the road at London 2012, where he was the winner of the time trial. Wiggins was back in the velodrome at Rio five years ago and added a final gold to become the Briton with the most Olympic medals, with seven.
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