Adam Peaty’s ex-girlfriend sends message as son George watches him win Paris 2024 Olympics silver with Holly Ramsay

4 months ago 70

ADAM PEATY’S ex-girlfriend has shared a heartfelt message after the swimmer won a silver medal at the Paris Olympics.

Italian underdog Nicolo Martinenghi pipped Peaty to gold by just 0.02 seconds in the men’s 100m breaststroke final last night.

INSTAGRAM @eirimunro
Adam Peaty’s ex-girlfriend Eirianedd Munro shared a heartfelt message to Instagram after he won silver[/caption]
INSTAGRAM @eirimunro
She posted images of Peaty and son, George, celebrating[/caption]
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George watched from the stands alongside Peaty’s girlfriend Holly Ramsey[/caption]
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Peaty and Eiri split in 2022[/caption]

However, there was still cause to celebrate as the 29-year-old won the sixth Olympic gong of his career.

Having previously won gold in the same event in Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020, this time around saw Staffordshire-born Peaty watched from the stands by his son, George.

Three-year-old George’s mother is Peaty’s ex-girlfriend Eirianedd Munro.

Following the race, Peaty headed into the stands where George and partner Holly Ramsey were waiting to congratulate him.

Emotional Peaty recalled hugging George and crying so much he felt like he had been “stung by a bee”.

Eiri shared pictures to her Instagram story of Peaty and a grinning George in the stands following the event.

She captioned her story: “Congratulations, Adam. George is so proud of you!

“He doesn’t see the worth of a medal, but the absolute strength and determination that got you it.

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“These are the qualities I pray he inherits. This moment will inspire him and drive him for the rest of his life. Thank you for giving him that.”

She followed it up by showing a close up of a beaming George and adding: “Look at the face.”

On celebrating with George, Peaty said: “George normally goes, ‘Daddy, are you the fastest boy?’ and I would’ve said, ‘Not today’.

“But he says, ‘I love you Daddy’ And that’s all I care about.”

Peaty and Eiri were together for three years before they acrimoniously split in August 2022.

The pair welcomed George in September 2020.

Adam Peaty beaten in thriller... but gutsy fightback has a silver lining

By Martin Lipton in Paris

HE WENT out slugging, giving it his all, not backing down.

A performance dragged from deep within, mining every part of his competitive desire.

At Paris La Defense Arena, Adam Peaty made sure he beat the man he expected to have to beat in the 100 metres breaststroke if he was to make ­Olympic history.

Yet instead of gold this time, it was ­silver. And a shared silver at that. Beaten, not by China’s Qin ­Haiyang, the swimmer who should NEVER have been allowed to take part in the race.

But beaten from way out wide in lane seven, by Italy’s Nicolo ­Martinenghi, whose name had rarely even been in the conversation about potential winners.

It was not really being mentioned until the final strokes of last night’s race, either. Peaty, sporting a cross and motto “Into the light” tattoo on his midriff, was slightly slow off the blocks and trailed Qin by 0.05 seconds at the turn.

But as he powered through in lane four, too strong for the Chinese, it seemed we were about to witness something truly special, one of the great comeback stories.

With ten metres to go, it was surely Peaty’s race. With five, four, three.
Not two metres or one, though, Martinenghi stealing the glory and the gold.

Martinenghi’s time of 59.03 was modest, more than two seconds slower than Peaty’s 2019 world record, slower than both the Brit and Qin had recorded in the semis on Saturday.

But none of that mattered. It is about the finishing place. For once, in that moment of greatest need, 29-year-old Peaty was found wanting.

Then again, given all that has happened to him in and out of the pool over the past 18 months, none of us should really have been surprised.

After all, when Peaty conquered the world in front of those banks of empty seats at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre, it was just business as usual.

He stood then as the dominant force, unbeaten for seven years.

That was a period he was to stretch by a further 12 months until he was dethroned by England team-mate James Wilby at the Commonwealth Games.

At that point he had posted the 18 ­fastest times in history.

But since then, Peaty has gone through injury, alcoholism, depression and the break-up of his long-term relationship with Eiri Munro, mum of his son George.

It made him look vulnerable, beatable, human. All too beatable, as it turned out — although not for the want of trying. At least he did not lose to Qin, one of the 11 members of the Chinese 2024 team who tested positive for banned heart medication TMZ BEFORE the Tokyo Games to have never served a ban for it.

Those claims the extractor fan, spice rack and drains at the kitchen in their hotel was contaminated was beyond risible.

The World Anti-Doping Agency’s acceptance of it remains utterly shameful.

Peaty said last week that he could handle defeat as long as it was a “fair fight”.

He had that all right, as his reaction to the winner — with both still in the pool — made clear.

There was no anger at the loss of his crown. Not publicly anyway, even if there were a few tears.

He said: “I’m so happy that I can race against the best in the world and still come joint-second.

“In my heart I have won, these are happy tears.

“I gave my absolute best every single day and I cannot be upset about that. I gave it my absolute all.

“I executed it as well as I could. It’s not about the end goal, it’s about the process.

“It doesn’t matter what time it says on the scoreboard, I think in my heart I have already won.”

Indeed, just getting into a position where he could try to retain that title was a testament to Peaty’s powers.

As he stood on the podium, receiving his silver medal from the Princess Royal, he bowed and smiled, aware that son George was there to see him.

He gave him a hug of true love soon afterwards, living up to the promise that it would be a victory in itself.

And there was a look of contentment, rather than frustration, as he waited for Martinenghi to ascend to the top platform.

Whether that lasts is open to question. Peaty has always been about winning above all else and the biggest test of all will be how he can handle defeat on the biggest stage.

Paris 2024 is not over for him. He will be a key member of both the 4x100m medley relay and mixed medley relay teams, with the chance to add more medals over the coming days.

Peaty admitted: “I’m almost an older man here now. I can’t have that relentless pursuit every single day without a sacrifice of some sort.

“That sacrifice could come in many ways, in time, in energy, in relationships.

“As an older man now it is difficult to keep up with the younger one.

“But I am so happy with that because I know in my heart I could have done more.

“My mind is on the relays, trying to get the best for the team now, seeing how we come through this.

“This is what the Olympics are about, they are about who can perform at that moment and I was just one per cent, two per cent out.

“That was a victory for me. It’s still six Olympic medals, right?

“I am a religious man and I asked God to show my heart and this is my heart.”

Read more from Martin Lipton here

At the time of their split, Peaty said: “Eiri and George, I’m sorry for letting you down. My only interest is for the well-being of our family at this difficult time.”

Eiri opened up about their split earlier this year and revealed she had moved on after breaking up with the star who has battled depression and alcoholism.

She told the Mail: “I’ve chosen to forgive and move forward – anything other than that does not serve the wellbeing of myself, my son and our family.

“We continue to love, care and pray for Adam and are wishing him a full recovery.”

Peaty said he had suffered three years of hell and revealed he had considered not getting back into the pool.

He and current partner, Holly, confirmed they were dating last June.

What's happening today at The Games?

WHAT TO WATCH TODAY...

THE PARIS 2024 Olympics is now well underway with medals being ticked off and huge events still to come.

SunSport brings you all the action taking place in the French capital on a what is expected to be a huge third day.

Tom Daley looks to retain his 10m synchro diving gold, this time with Noah Williams instead of Matty Lee (10am).

Tatt-mad Matt Richards and Tokyo silver star Duncan Scott are battling for 200m freestyle gold in the swimming pool (7.40pm).

Tom Pidcock goes in the mountain biking cross-country after winning gold three years ago (1.10pm) and it is the finals of equestrian eventing (team 11.15am, individual 2pm).

The men’s team gymnastics final – featuring Max Whitlock – starts at 4.30pm.

In hockey, Team GB women face Australia in their second pool match of this year, looking to make it bronze, gold, bronze, gold in the last four Olympics (4pm).

And there are Brits galore in the sailing down in Marseille (from 11am).

Swimmers Lilly King, Tatjana Smith, Ruta Meilutyte and Tang Qianting make up a star-studded quartet going for women’s 100m breaststroke gold (8.30pm).

It’s Novak Djokovic vs Rafael Nadal in a blockbuster second-round singles clash at Roland Garros, the tennis superstars’ 60th and probably final meeting (12.30pm).

Ukraine’s six-time fencing world champion Olha Kharlan was sent a personal letter by IOC chief Thomas Bach guaranteeing her place at a fifth Olympics.

She was disqualified from the fencing world champs last year for refusing to shake hands with her Russian opponent. The women’s sabre final is at 8.45pm.

Click here for all the events taking place at Paris 2024 today.

Follow all the action as it unfolds with our Paris 2024 Olympics LIVE blog.

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