Bryony Page, Alex Yee and Darren Campbell were the big winners at Team GB Ball 2024.
Paris 2024 athletes came together to celebrate an Olympic year to remember in London, as Team GB revealed the Moment of the Games, Olympians' Olympian and Coach of the Year awards.
Olympians' Olympian
One of the most heartwarming golds of Paris 2024 was won at Bercy Arena as Bryony Page completed her Olympic set in style.
The 33-year-old was well-fancied in the trampolining following her World Championship success last year but was forced to modify that routine due to a niggling ankle injury.
Page has overcome countless setbacks over the years and did so again here, soaring to the top of the leaderboard and staying there to add to her Rio silver and Tokyo bronze.
It's fair to say that her determination and never faltering enthusiasm has led her to become a clear favourite amongst fellow Team GB athletes in recent years.
And with the success of claiming gold on her third try in Paris, Page completed not just her medal set, but her athletic arc of becoming the true Olympians' Olympian.
She said: "It feels amazing. I had no expectation of this whatsoever!
"My name was right next to Andy Murray's, and Emily Campbell's, Alex Yee and Emma Finucane. I really did not expect my name to be announced at all. I was really shocked.
"It just means so much. For my peers and people I am inspired by to feel a similar sort of way and reciprocate that feeling is really lovely."
Moment of the Games
Alex Yee and Hayden Wilde have developed a thrilling rivalry in triathlon since taking silver and bronze respectively in Tokyo.
While triathlon is an unpredictable sport with lots of contenders, conventional wisdom suggested that the Kiwi and the Brit would be the two main challengers for gold.
That is how it played out in the heart of Paris, but when Wilde pulled clear of Yee on the run, a second successive silver looked inevitable.
If anything, the French duo of Léo Bergère and Pierre Le Corre were the bigger concern, with Yee admitting afterwards that he was going through a bad patch.
He trailed by 15 seconds at the bell but with a kilometre and a half to go, Yee found his second wind and streaked past Wilde for a gold medal that was as impressive as it had seemed unlikely minutes earlier and earnt him nothing short of Team GB's Moment of the Games.
"It is really special to be voted the most iconic moment of the Olympics," he said.
"It makes me feel really proud of the moment and it is special that people thought of that moment as something that inspired them to take that next step in their sporting endeavours.
"I didn't really take too much time to look back on that one moment specifically, I was so quickly onto the next thing.
"It hasn't been until now that I have had that moment to pause and appreciate that mad moment that happened!
"It was amazing to have that moment and for people to have loved it so much."
Coach of the Year
Team GB were the only National Olympic Committee to win a medal in all five of the athletics relays at Paris 2024, and there was one man at the helm.
With one silver and four bronze medals, Team GB proved that they had no match when it came to relay events on the track.
Darren Campbell was part of the iconic British team that stormed to 4x100m relay gold in Athens 2004, with his own individual 200m silver from Sydney 2000.
At Paris 2024, Campbell worked as head of sprints and relays and delivered a brilliant five star performance with five medals from five relays.
All three 4x400m relays, mixed, men's and women's clinched bronze at the Stade de France, joined by the men's 4x100m team as the women's 4x100m relay took silver in an incredible performance.
And Campbell's support over the Olympic cycle to deliver such performances delivered him the iconic achievement of Coach of the Year.
“I am just so honoured and humbled to have received this award," he said.
"Most importantly I want to thank the personal coaches and the athletes for getting themselves in the best shape possible to be able to deliver something which was absolutely crazy.
"I still can’t believe it but I’m absolutely humbled and honoured to have received the Coach of the Year award."