Team GB cruelly LOSE silver medal after Paris Olympics ‘balls up’ following incredible photo finish

4 months ago 25

TEAM GB were cruelly demoted from silver to bronze after a ‘balls up’ in the triathlon mixed relay.

Alex Yee, Georgia Taylor-Brown, Sam Dickinson and Beth Potter took it down to the wire but were pipped to the finish line by Germany.

Great Britain thought they had won silver in the mixed triathlon relay, but it's bronze.🥉

So what happened? #BBCOlympics #Olympics #Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/d3LqabBifV

— BBC Sport (@BBCSport) August 5, 2024
three female athletes including potter gbr and knibb usaEPA
Team GB were denied a silver medal[/caption]
a woman is running with a omega logo on the bottomBBC Sport
It went down to a photo finish[/caption]
a team gb advertisement for silver medalists in the triathlon mixed relayX / @TeamGB
Team GB thought they had secured silver[/caption]

The remaining two medals were then determined by an incredibly tight photo finish.

Following a nervy wait, Team GB were handed the silver – only to then be downgraded following a post-race review.

Everyone involved was under the assumption that Yee, Taylor-Brown, Dickinson and Potter took silver, with Team GB’s social media account even congratulating the quartet on coming second.

But the change was confirmed just over 15 minutes after the race conclusion.

Rowing legend and BBC pundit Matthew Pinsent branded the situation a “total balls up”.

He took to X to write: “Total balls up by Tri officials to not get the photo finish absolutely right in the first instance. GB bronze correct but there are procedures in loads of sports to learn from that are better than this.”

British Triathlon performance director Mike Cavendish said: “We thought it was silver, the display showed it was silver. The judges will look at a video still, that isn’t great to go off. When it’s come to the official photo finish, America were just ahead of us.

“It’s very rare that it goes to a photo finish. I’m still so proud they got a bronze, it’s just a brilliant advert for our sport.”

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a group of runners are running in front of a sign that says paris 2024Getty
Alex Yee got GB off to a flying start[/caption]

Men’s gold medallist Yee had kicked off the race for Team GB, building up a strong 16-second lead by the end of the first leg.

Taylor-Brown then took over and maintained the lead until the last stretch of the 1.8km run, when Germany’s Lisa Tertsch edged in front.

With just one second separating GB and Germany, Dickinson and Lasse Luehrs were neck and neck throughout the third leg.

But the Brit dug deep to pick up a five-second advantage by the final changeover.

Potter, who won a bronze medal in the women’s individual triathlon last week, then took the reigns for the last section.

She couldn’t quite keep the pace in the cycle, dropping to third behind Taylor Knibb and Laura Lindemann.

But a speedy transition put her back in front to set up a thrilling finale.

Lindemann crossed the finish line first, but it went down to a photo finish between Potter and Knibb.

Triathlon controversy

The conclusion of the mixed relay sees the triathlon events come to an end after much controversy.

The mixed relay training session was cancelled at the last minute on Sunday due to concerns surrounding the safety of the River Seine.

Organisers admitted heavy rain affected the river’s water quality, making it far too unsafe to swim in.

Belgium were forced to pull out of the main event after one athlete was hospitalised with an E. coli infection.

Claire Michel took part in the women’s triathlon last Wednesday and fell ill the following day.

Reports claim Adrien Briffod of Switzerland also fell seriously ill following the men’s event.

Unlucky GB

This wasn’t the first time Team GB have been unlucky at the Paris Olympics.

Sprinter Jeremiah Azu was disqualified from the men’s 100m for a false start in his heat having left his block 0.073 seconds before the gun.

Luke Greenbank was disqualified from the 200 metre backstroke for being underwater beyond the 15-metre mark at the start.

Emma Reid was dismissed from the women’s -78kg judo event following three penalties.

And Amber Jo Rutter missed out on women’s skeet shooting gold in controversial circumstances.

She was judged to have missed one of two shots but insisted that she had not missed the mark.

Replays showed she had clipped the skeet but Olympic rules do not allow decisions to be overturned.

What's happening today at The Games?

WHAT TO WATCH TODAY

TODAY’S BRIT MEDAL HOPES

One of the hottest spectacles of Paris 2024 is the 1500m men’s final (7.50pm) – will it be gold for either Josh Kerr or Jakob Ingebrigtsen in their epic rivalry?

World champion Sky Brown, now 16, wants to upgrade her Tokyo bronze to Paris gold in the women’s park skateboarding final but is battling back from a dislocated shoulder (4.30pm).

Ben Maher on board Dallas Vegas Batilly is into the final of the individual jumping equestrian alongside Harry Charles and Scott Brash after coming through the 74-rider qualifying and could defend his Tokyo gold after already securing the team title in Paris (9am).

BRITS TO WATCH

Jack Laugher goes in the 3m springboard diving preliminaries with Jordan Houlden (9am) before Andrea Spendolini Sirieix goes in the 10m platform final (2pm).

Lewis Richardson is already guaranteed a bronze in the 71kg boxing but has his semi-final at Roland Garros at 8.45pm.

The women’s 200m gives Dina Asher-Smith a chance to make up for her disappointing 100m result (final 8.40pm).

Jack Carlin, Ed Lowe and Hamish Turnbull team up in the track cycling men’s team sprint today with the final at 7.10pm, hoping to wrestle back the gold they won in Beijing, London and Rio.

GLOBAL STARS TODAY

Emma Hayes’ USA women’s football team face Germany in the semi-final in Lyon (5pm).

Kellie Harrington will go for back-to-back Olympic gold medals in the ring with the Irish star’s 60kg final vs China’s Yang Wenlu at 10pm – two bouts after Imane Khelif’s 66kg semi-final.

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It wouldn’t be the Olympics without some wrestling would it?

There is both freestyle and Greco-Roman disciplines throughout the day at the Champ-de-Mars Arena in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower.

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

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