Vote: Team GB’s Top 10 Olympic moments since 2000

Vote: Team GB’s Top 10 Olympic moments since 2000

With Paris 2024 fast approaching, BBC Sport is counting down Team GB’s greatest Olympic moments at a summer Games since 2000.

The Olympics open on Friday, 26 July and Great Britain are hoping for another successful edition after winning 64 medals at Tokyo 2020.

There have been so many breathtaking achievements in the past 24 years that it’s hard to pick the best.

But our expert panel of broadcaster Eleanor Oldroyd, BBC executive producer Ron Chakraborty and former GB Olympians Katharine Merry and Steve Parry have whittled things down to a non-exhaustive shortlist of 10 standout moments since Sydney 2000.

Vote for your favourite at the bottom of the page.

Results of the vote will be announced on BBC Radio 5 Live from 19:30 to 21:00 BST on Wednesday, 24 July, with Oldroyd presenting alongside Merry and Parry.

The vote opens at 08:00 BST on Thursday, 11 July and will close at 22:00 BST on Tuesday, 16 July.

When Great Britain edged Italy by just 0.38 seconds to win gold in the coxless fours rowing event at Sydney 2000, a roar bellowed out from the crowd of 22,000 spectators. Sir Matthew Pinsent fell into the water as he rushed to hug his fellow oarsmen.

Meanwhile, veteran Sir Steve Redgrave, who had just become the first Briton to win five Olympic gold medals, slumped over his oars in exhaustion.

Days after winning the 800m, Dame Kelly Holmes set a British record of three minutes 57.90 seconds in the 1500m event.

Starting the final lap eighth out of 12, she burst forward and even had time to look over her shoulder and raise her arms in triumph as she approached the finish line.

Holmes became the first Briton in 84 years to achieve the Olympic middle-distance double. The only other British athlete to achieve that feat is Albert Hill, in Antwerp in 1920.

Cypriot radio, lucky loos and pain – the inside story of Holmes’ double gold

In Beijing, Rebecca Adlington became Britain’s first female to win Olympic gold in the pool in 48 years with victory in the 400m freestyle. Days later, she added a gold in the 800m freestyle making her the most successful British swimmer in 100 years.

The then-19-year-old also set a world record in the 800m, finishing 2.12 seconds inside the previous world best.

A 32-year-old Sir Chris Hoy gave the victory salute as he crossed the line in the individual sprint in Beijing to claim a historic treble.

After winning gold in the team sprint and keirin, the cycling great beat team-mate Sir Jason Kenny in the individual event to claim his third gold medal of the Games.

The last Briton to achieve that feat was swimmer Henry Taylor, who did so in London in 1908.

In front of 80,000 spectators at London’s Olympic Stadium, Dame Jessica Ennis-Hill smashed her own British record to win the heptathlon.

Greg Rutherford became the first British man to win gold in the long jump since Lynn Davies in 1964.

And finally, Sir Mo Farah stormed to 10,000m gold, ending a run of four successive Ethiopian wins in the event.

Britain had already won golds earlier that day in men’s coxless four rowing, women’s double sculls and women’s cycling team pursuit.

How Ennis-Hill won a nation’s heart – the inside story

London 2012 – 10 things you may have forgotten

Women’s boxing made its debut at the London 2012 Games, 108 years after the men.

While fellow Britons Natasha Jonas and Savannah Marshall lost their first bouts, Leeds fighter Nicola Adams outclassed Chinese world number one lightweight Ren Cancan in the flyweight final, in front of a crowd of 10,000 at the ExCeL to take gold.

Before Rio 2016, Great Britain had never won an Olympic gold in gymnastics.

Max Whitlock changed that with two in one day.

First he claimed victory in the floor final before following that up with gold on the pommel horse, where he pipped team-mate Louis Smith.

Earlier in the Games he had also won GB’s first all-around medal in 108 years with a bronze.

Rio 2016 put women’s hockey on the map for Great Britain.

After a thrilling final against Netherlands finished 3-3 in normal time, the tie went to a penalty shootout.

Britain’s keeper Maddie Hinch made a string of remarkable saves during the match and stopped all four Dutch penalties in the shootout.

Meanwhile, Helen Richardson-Walsh and Hollie Webb scored the match-clinching efforts to seal Britain’s first Olympic hockey gold in dramatic fashion.

The night that put hockey on the map

The Rio Olympics were memorable for golden couple Laura Trott and Jason Kenny (now Dame Laura Kenny and Sir Jason Kenny) five weeks before they got married.

Kenny won three golds at the Games and took his overall tally to six, equalling Sir Chris Hoy’s record of the highest number of Olympic golds for any British athlete.

Meanwhile, his fiancée won two golds and became Britain’s most successful female Olympic athlete in history with four overall.

After an incredible medal haul, they shared a tearful embrace in the Rio Velodrome.

Tokyo 2020 was Tom Daley’s fourth Olympics.

Alongside Matty Lee, he put on a superb display in the synchronised 10m platform to pip Chinese pair Cao Yuan and Chen Aisen and end Chinas golden grip on the event, which dated back to 2000.

Wild celebrations followed as the result was confirmed and Daley, who had won bronze in Rio, wept with joy on the podium.

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