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From Oliver Hoare’s 1,500m win to the boisterous Birmingham crowds, here are our picks for the best moments from the 2022 Commonwealth Games

The Commonwealth Games closing ceremony gave us a bright, bold, and banging Brummie farewell, and an uplifting handover to Victoria 2026.

So with the Games now officially over, we’ve picked out some of our favorite moments from the 11 absorbing days of competition.

Oliver Hoare stuns hot field to win 1,500m

From an Australian perspective, when it comes to a pure sporting spectacle against a world-class field, Oliver Hoare’s win in the men’s 1,500 meters is at the top.

An Australian male 1,500 meter athlete crosses the line in first place as a Kenyan opponent stumbles.
Oliver Hoare won in breathtaking fashion.(Getty Images: David Ramos)

Hoare was racing against the current world champion as well as the reigning Olympic bronze and silver medalists.

It was perhaps the strongest field of any athletics event at the Games.

And not only did Hoare win it, he did it in the most breathtaking fashion.

Coming fourth around the bend, he started gaining ground in that final stretch, with those watching thinking, ‘He’s going to get bronze, he’s going to get silver … OH MY GOSH, HE’S WON IT!’

He lunged to the line as Kenya’s Abel Kipsang stumbled, and cemented his place in Australia’s middle-distance running folklore.

Packed crowds create brilliant atmosphere, especially for local athletes

When the members of the ABC Sport team turned up to Birmingham a few days before the Games began, we were a little worried.

The people we spoke to seemed almost oblivious that the Games were about to start, and there was an air of indifference around the town.

But once the opening ceremony rolled around, it was like a flick was switched, and Brummies turned out in force and in full voice.

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Kelsey-Lee Barber pips Australian teammate Mackenzie Little to win Commonwealth Games javelin gold

World champion Kelsey-Lee Barber has delivered when it mattered most, claiming the Commonwealth Games gold medal in the women’s javelin with her final throw.

Australian teammate Mackenzie Little had led the competition into the sixth and final round after producing a personal best of 64.27 meters with her fifth effort.

But Barber — who was struck down by COVID-19 on the eve of the Commonwealth Games — showed cool nerves to unleash the winning throw of 64.43m with her final attempt.

Little took the silver medal only a fortnight after she finished fifth behind Barber at the world championships in Eugene.

She had set what was a personal best of 64.03m with her first attempt in the Birmingham final.

Mackenzie Little smiles widely in her Team Australia singlet
Mackenzie Little set a new PB with a throw of 64.27 meters.(Getty Images: David Ramos)

Barber’s win in Eugene was her second world championship, while she was a bronze medalist at the Tokyo Olympics.

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Australia’s Georgia Baker wins women’s road race at Birmingham Commonwealth Games

Georgia Baker has capped a faultless Australian team effort to win the Commonwealth Games women’s road race.

It is Baker’s third gold medal in Birmingham, after she also won on the track in the team pursuit and the points race.

Teammate Sarah Roy finished third in the 112-kilometre road race at Warwick, south of Birmingham, while Scotland’s Neah Evans took second.

The Australians had the strongest team in the seven-lap race around Warwick and they policed ​​the peloton throughout.

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US

Alabama town disbands police department over racist text

VINCENT, Ala. — A racist text message sent by a police officer has prompted officials in a small Alabama town to disband their police department and fire the police chief and assistant chief.

Vincent Mayor James Latimore on Thursday confirmed that Police Chief James Srygley and Assistant Chief John L. Goss had been dismissed, al.com reported.

The Shelby County Sheriff’s Office on Friday condemned the two officers’ actions and said it stands with the city “in providing emergency law enforcement related service to the citizens (of Vincent) at this time.”

In the message, which recently surfaced on social media, someone identified as “752″ texts: “What do y’all call a pregnant slave?” An unidentified recipient responds twice: “?” and “??”

“752″ answers: “BOGO Buy one, get one free”

“This has turned this community apart. It doesn’t matter what color we are as long as we do right by people,” City Councilman Corey Abrams said during Thursday’s council meeting.

On Tuesday, Latimore said “appropriate action has been taken” against the officer alleged to have sent the text, though at the time he would not name the person or anyone involved.

The city’s website lists three people in its department: Srygley, Goss and Officer Lee Carden.

During the council meeting, Latimore announced he had suspended the chief and assistant chief, and the council voted to end the agency. Latimer said Carden turned in his resignation via text message just hours after the city council voted to dissolve the department.

Located in central Alabama, southeast of Birmingham, Vincent has a population of just under 2,000 people. It’s located in Shelby, St. Clair, and Talladega counties.

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Oliver Hoare wins remarkable 1,500m gold for Australia at Commonwealth Games

Australian Oliver Hoare has stormed home to claim a remarkable victory in the men’s 1500 meters final at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games.

Hoare was fourth at the top of the final straight but powered home to win in three minutes and 30.12 seconds, lunging across the line to edge out 2019 world champion Timothy Cheruiyot from Kenya by 0.09.

Reigning world champion Jake Wightman from Scotland was third, with the first seven runners across the line all breaking the Games record.

It was a remarkable turnaround for Hoare, who only two weeks ago failed to earn a place in the final at the world championships.

Hoare’s triumph provided Australia with a triumphant end to a mixed session at Alexander Stadium.

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Rose-gold Aussies revel in bronze as wrestler Jayden Lawrence fights for his sport’s survival in the Commonwealth Games

The Boomers made bronze fashionable at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, with their historic medal dubbed “rose gold” in the men’s basketball.

And at the Commonwealth Games, the rose gold glow is real.

By Australian standards, it has been a long wait for a wrestling medal of any color – 12 years.

Jayden Lawrence had been to two previous Games and missed a bronze medal in Glasgow 2014.

Two wrestlers, one wearing blue and one wearing red, compete on a yellow mat
Lawrence competed in the men’s freestyle wrestling 74kg at the Glasgow Games in 2014, but just missed the medals.(Getty Images: Richard Heathcote)

He earned another shot at bronze, this time against South Africa’s Edward Lessing, in the men’s freestyle 86kg, and he won a tight match 12-11.

“Unbelievable, honestly. I’m stoked,” he said.

“This is what Australian wrestling has been after those two previous we didn’t medal at all in the Games.

“But I guarantee you, we’re gonna get more this time around. I guarantee it.”

Lawrence suffered a torn lateral cruciate ligament in his last match, “so last two wrestles I was battling [on] one and a half legs,” he said.

The 27-year-old from Sydney collapsed on his back and put his hands over his face as he soaked in the moment at the end of the clash.

“I’ve given up a lot to do this sport, but it’s so worth it,” he said.

“We don’t get paid too much; I get nothing. But I’ll do it again.”

At this stage, wrestling is not on the program for the Victoria 2026 Games, and Lawrence hopes his success will force a re-think.

“Hopefully this brings us over the line and we get the wrestling back.”

Bronze for new diving duo

At the diving, Sam Fricker was buzzing after claiming bronze with Li Shixin in the men’s synchronized 3m springboard.

“I’m so excited, it was a dream to make the Commonwealth Games to walk away with a medal is just incredible,” Fricker said.

The 20-year-old Fricker and 34-year-old former Chinese world champion Li — who has been competing for Australia since 2019 — were competing together internationally for the first time.

Two male divers bounce off a springboard at an event
Li (right) came out of retirement to compete in Tokyo after becoming an Australian citizen.(Getty Images: PA Images/Tim Goode)

“This is the beginning. Sammy is young,” Li said.

“We have a long, long time. He’s Diving Australia’s future. I just help him get better.”

Li was recruited to Australia as a diving coach in 2014 – he earned citizenship in 2019, and came out of retirement to compete at last year’s Tokyo Olympics.

Fricker said he was honored to compete with his legendary teammate, and used some advice from one of the team veterans, Melissa Wu, to remain composed.

“You’ve just got to be in the moment,” he said.

“When you’re at breakfast, have breakfast, when you’re on the bus, enjoy the ride.

“When you have that one dive to do, that’s all you focus on, and that’s all you have control over. So whether we’re first or last, that’s what we try and do with that one moment.”

England’s Anthony Harding and Jack Laugher won gold, while the Australians finished just 2.25 points the Malaysian silver medalists Gabriel Daim and Muhammad Syafiq Bin Puteh.

Australia picked up a couple more diving medals at Sandwell Aquatics Centre, with Brittany O’Brien claiming silver in the 1m springboard, behind Canada’s Mia Vallee.

And Dom Bedgood and Cassiel Rousseau got bronze in the men’s 10-meter synchro, with gold going to England, and silver to Canada.

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Race walker Jemima Montag embodying ‘Australian values’ as a role model to inspire next generation of athletes

Australian race walker and reigning Commonwealth Games champion Jemima Montag says she’s embracing the pressure of defending her crown just days away from competing at the Birmingham Games.

The Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games gold medalist is shaping to be the walker to beat at the event, aiming to become the first woman since Jane Saville in 2006 to successfully defend a gold medal in walking.

The event distance has been shortened from a 20km road race and will now be contested as a 10km track race inside Alexander Stadium.

“I’m keen for it to be half the distance,” Montag said.

Jemima Montag crosses the line as she celebrates her gold medal in the Women's 20km Race Walk Final at Gold Coast, 2018.
Jemima Montag is aiming to defend her 2018 Commonwealth Games gold medal at this years’s 10km Race Walk Final in Birmingham.(Getty Images: Michael Dodge)

“I really feed off the crowd’s energy and excitement. I remember back to 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast and there were so many Australians … just giving us their energy for that entire hour and a half.”

In February, Montag broke Saville’s long-standing 18-year 20km Australian and Oceania record by 13 seconds. It’s a moment in which she reflects on, after her ‘turning point’ when pulling on the green and gold four years ago at Gold Coast.

“Representing Australia means embodying the Australian values ​​of mateship and a fair go and giving our all to something. I think that’s what the Australian audience really want to see us doing,” she said.

“Crossing the line and hitting the tape at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was the first moment I believed in myself as capable of competing on the world stage and representing my country well.

“I tried to enjoy the final couple of laps and interact with the crowd and grab the flag, and crossing that line, hitting the tape, and then having Nathan Deakes pop the medal around my neck.

“It felt like a real rite of passage and a sense of belonging after years of struggling with self-belief.

“I feel pressure and expectation to bring some medals home (at Birmingham), but I remind myself that all the Aussies and my family just want to see us going out and being leaders, setting a good example for the younger generation and embodying those values .”

Australian race walker Jemima Montag stops her watch and smiles after crossing the finish line.
In February, Montag broke Jane Saville’s 18-year record for the Australian 20km race walk event.(Athletics Australia / Steve Christo)

Change in mentality for national record

Montag said the Australian and Oceania record — at a time of 1:27:27 — came about from a motivational shift in mental techniques. The change lifted the weight of her off her shoulders, going on to reset goals for the remainder of the year.

“We got to the finish line about 30 seconds quicker than the national record,” Montag said.

“I’ve done a lot of reflecting since then about the power of values-based motivation as opposed to fear-based motivation.

“It was a very special day, I think that it was bigger than winning the Commonwealth Games or making it to the Olympic Games or anything.

“Being the fastest woman in the country to cover that distance is pretty cool.”

It was only a matter of minutes after the race that an exhausted Montag received a call from her idol, Saville, who celebrated the achievement with her.

“It was amazing. I was in the tent half-dead on the physio table, and she was there on the phone, so supportive,” she said.

“I think that’s a true sign of an excellent sportswoman when they just want to see their sport moving forward … and she had the record for a couple of decades or whatever it was and she was she was so happy.”

The importance of role models

Despite the accolades on the track, winning doesn’t appear to be everything for Montag. The near misses are cause for just as much celebration, after coming fourth at the World Athletics Championships by just 19 seconds in July.

“Humans have just decided that 1-2-3 get medals and fourth is one spot away from that. I think that fourth rocks, it doesn’t suck,” Montag said after the meet in Eugene, Oregon.

Being successful off the track and showing there’s a human behind every athlete is just as important as Montag inspires the next generation of athletes.

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Australian racewalker Jemima Montag talks about the impact her Nana has had on her

A medicine student who loves to cook and spend time with family, the 24-year-old also talks about superstitions; like the lucky number three, her her lucky pajamas, and a lucky golden bracelet she wears from her late grandmother.

“I lost my nana about a year ago, just before the Olympic Games, and it’s only in the months that have followed that we’ve really been able to unpack her story as a Holocaust survivor,” Montag said.

“It’s something that understandably she didn’t want to talk about much, and there was a lot of pain and trauma there.”

A golden necklace became a keepsake for Montag and her two sisters, who split it into three bracelets to continue her nana’s legacy.

“I wear my nana’s bracelet as a lucky charm now. And it reminds me of that strength and resilience,” she said.

“It’s just a really tangible reminder of what she sacrificed for dad and then me to even be alive. Sometimes, you know, sport is hard and it comes with its challenges.

“(But) it’s a reminder that I choose to be out there day in, day out at these competitions doing what I do. And it’s hard, but it should be fun.”

Australian race walker Jemima Montag competes on the race track at night.
Jemima Montag became the first Australian track and field athlete to be nominated for the Commonwealth Games for the UK campaign.(Athletics Australia / Steve Christo)

Walking is ‘much bigger’ than just a sport

Montag is using walking as the ‘vehicle’ to create positive messages as a role model.

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“Race walking to me is much bigger than the physical sport. It’s somewhere I belong and it’s a vehicle through which I can explore my values ​​of the pursuit of mastery, of challenging myself, of inspiring the next generation of boys and girls, and just exploring my mental and physical limits,” Montag said.

The Australian champion was chosen as one just 25 athletes across the globe — the sole representative from Oceania — in the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Young Leaders Program from 2021-2024.

“We’re choosing a pressing local issue that we’re passionate about that connects to the sustainable development goals, and we’re building a sport-based solution,” Montag said.

“I’ve chosen to focus on the decline of young women and girls in sport and physical activity, which is something I’m passionate about because I’ve seen how much sport and physical activity has brought to me.

“I’ve also seen friends that I’ve made through sport gradually face barriers and drop out and how challenging it’s been for them and how I was almost driven out of the sport.

“I was able to get to the bottom of: what are the unique barriers to women and girls in sport, what’s driving them out at twice the rate of boys?

“Then the tricky part was what do we do about it? Because if we had all the answers, then I’m sure they’d be being enacted already.”

Through Montag’s program ‘Play On’, a vision of creating enabling environments through education and training for young women is changing perceptions.

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Racewalker Jemima Montag on navigating adolescence and puberty as a female athlete

“So often I found that girls and women are blamed for being lazy or just not committed enough for choosing to drop out of sport,” she said.

“And we’re not really questioning whether the environments are made for them or welcoming them or attuned to their needs.

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“I built a team of 14 women experts who are very diverse — some Paralympians and Olympians, some are community leaders, some are doctors, some in the political space.”

With four topics to address positivity — female athlete health, mental health, nutrition, and inclusivity — Montag is aiming for a stronger connection between schools and parents, who often rely on one another to address responsibility gap issues of retaining women in sport.

“We challenge the idea that there has to be a cookie cutter image of what a female athlete looks like that’s tall, blonde, thin, able-bodied, neurotypical of a certain race,” Montag said.

“I’m hoping that by listening to the experts in those four areas, 15-year-old girls have what I wish I had at their age, and that they’re armed with the tools to navigate any challenge that might come up for them and to help themselves.

“Having the opportunity to be a role model for the younger girls and women coming through has added a whole new layer of meaning and enjoyment to my sport.

“No longer is it a lonely individual pursuit, it’s something that I can really leverage and use to make a difference to other people’s lives, which feels amazing.”

That pursuit this weekend at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games is something Montag is hoping to use as inspiration for future walkers who will be watching her race.

“It’s something that’s a really important biological marker of health that we should celebrate and just learn how to navigate on the track and in life,” she said.

“I’m really careful with the legacy that I’m leaving to the next generation and the words I choose and what I say to them.

“It really doesn’t matter what any of us do, it’s really about ‘why’ behind it.

“And so that ‘why’ is belonging to a community and being a good leader and inspiring younger women and girls to take up whatever physical activity it is that feels good for them to look after their physical and mental health.”

Montag will compete in the women’s 10,000m Race Walk Final on Saturday at 7:30pm AEST.

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A dozen years after waking up from a coma in Birmingham, Micky Yule returns to the city to win bronze in para powerlifting

There was no way Micky Yule was leaving Birmingham without a medal.

The Scottish heavyweight para powerlifter came to the Commonwealth Games with the greatest drive and purpose of all, fueled by having his daughter, Tilly, in the crowd.

As the six-year-old held a homemade sign reading “DAD”, it was all the inspiration he needed.

“I could see her in the crowd and I looked for her. I needed to see her and [think]’Listen, your daughter’s here tonight, you’re not gonna leave without a medal when she’s here’,” he explained.

A man wearing a blue and white jacket hugs his daughter.  She has long, blonde hair pulled back in Dutch braids and blue ribbons
Micky Yule says his daughter is his biggest inspiration.(Getty Images: Al Bello)

The 43-year-old was bursting with magnetic passion and emotion reflecting on his performance, tightly gripping Tilly’s hand while speaking to reporters.

“Maybe in other competitions I have missed [lifts]. But I wasn’t going to do it today. I was looking her straight in the eye, and I was bringing that emotion.

“I couldn’t just drift through this competition. I needed to be emotional. I needed it to mean more than ever. I needed to lift like it was my last-ever lift and that’s what I’ve done.”

End of a chapter

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In 2010, Yule was serving in Afghanistan with the Royal Engineers when he stepped on an improvised explosive device (IED).

He immediately lost his left leg, and his right leg also had to be amputated, while he was left with other significant injuries.

Afterwards, he was flown to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, still in a coma, and spent eight weeks there undergoing multiple surgeries.

In the lead-up to the Games he described his return to the city as a full-circle moment. Perhaps now, leaving with the bronze, it’s something else.

“Maybe it’s a chapter closed and maybe it’s the next one to be opened,” he said.

“The people of Birmingham have been here for me before, when I came back from Afghanistan cut in half, in a coma, and now, hopefully, they’ll witness that and [the medal is] for everyone.

“It’s for Scotland, Birmingham, the whole country.”

Spurred on by crowd and fellow Scot, Eilish McColgan

Yule didn’t just lean on his daughter to get him through the competition. He also urged the crowd to cheer him on for each of his three lifts from him.

He’d had the disappointment of missing out on a medal at his home Games in Glasgow in 2014 and thought he might never get to experience that crowd again.

But the Brummies embraced Yule as their own, and he re-paid them.

“I wanted to whip the crowd up. I wanted to get the Birmingham crowd behind me,” he said.

A man wearing black and white punches the air during a weightlifting competition
After each lift, Micky Yule turned to the crowd to try to amp them up.(Getty Images: Al Bello)

He admits he also felt some responsibility to perform, having carried the Scottish flag at the opening ceremony, alongside badminton player Kirsty Gilmour.

“You don’t just be the flag-bearer [who] comes in and competes and, maybe, same old excuses for Micky,” he said.

“You compete and you win a medal and you make sure that not only the flag-bearer is a memory but the medal’s a memory as well.”

Yule also looked to fellow Scot Eilish McColgan, who produced one of the highlights of the Games the previous night, sprinting to the line to win the women’s 10,000m to join her mum, and coach Liz, as a Commonwealth champion in the event.

“I must have watched that 20 times,” Yule said.

“She fought back, and she fought back when everybody thought she was going to quit and she didn’t quit.

“Seeing her run to her mum [when she won], I said: ‘Right, that run to her mum is my daughter. Don’t you dare quit on yourself’.”

It has been an extraordinary para sport journey for Yule, one that started in Birmingham in one of his lowest moments, and now — as he suggests he’ll likely retire — he’s finished with one of his highest.

“[Sport] gave me a drive from having surgeries and learning how to walk and being in pretty dark place. It took my mind off it,” he said.

“Elite sport will give you highs and it’ll give you lows as well, and I’ve had them [both]certainly, but this is a high end and it feels like a pretty good time to go out.”

Watson soaks up her coming of age in para sport

Australia’s Hani Watson was another athlete ecstatic to be on the medal dais, after winning bronze in the women’s heavyweight division.

“I was about to lose my banana peel up there and start crying,” she said.

Watson says it has been a tough year, juggling back-to-back competitions, while working full-time, but the bronze is the perfect pay-off.

A woman wearing yellow and white celebrates after lifting a weight
Hani Watson of Australia also captured a bronze medal in the women’s for powerlifting.(Getty Images: Al Bello)

“It can be exhausting, but it’s also very thrilling and very exciting at the same time,” she said.

“I feel old sometimes. I’m 39, about to turn 40, and this is epic. This is a great 40th birthday present to myself. It’s just nuts.”

Watson had been targeting a top-five finish and, after failing her second attempt at 125kg, she went all out on her last effort and lifted 127kg.

It was the “cherry on top” of her first Commonwealth Games experience, which has galvanized her in so many ways.

“As a kid growing up and wanting to be an elite athlete, I couldn’t do that because I had a disability and it wasn’t introduced into the right areas,” she said.

“But then it sunk in when I was at the opening ceremony to come out and to see everyone cheer you on: their energy, it was overwhelming for me.

“I’m not just a potato at home bench-pressing. This is real. This is epic.”

And Watson has a warning for the world: she’s only just getting started.

“I told you Australia was coming. And now we’re coming in 2024, we’re gonna get gold for Paris [2024 Paralympics].

Meanwhile, Australia’s Ben Wright was fourth in the men’s heavyweight division.

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Madison de Rozario becomes first Australian para-athlete to win four Commonwealth Games gold medals

Five days ago, Madison de Rozario won one of the toughest marathons of her career.

It left her completely exhausted — usually the marathon is the final event in for track and field.

However, she wasn’t going to let that stop her from adding to her growing legacy as one of Australia’s finest athletes.

So, the defending champion hit the track for the 1,500-meter race and, in the process, won her fourth Commonwealth Games gold, the most of any Australian para athlete.

Paralympic gold medalist smiling with the Australia flag after winning gold in the women's marathon
Madison de Rozario will be one of the biggest names competing for the Australian team. (Getty Images: Alex Davidson)

De Rozario had hoped to sit back in the race and watch the field fight it out in front of her before making her charge.

However, it was a slow start, and she knew that, if she was going to win, she was going to have to change her tactics and go for broke.

“I realized I was going to be out front from one lap in. When you commit to taking the lead, you have to just back yourself,” she said.

While she looked comfortable for most of the race, the final stretch was tense.

De Rozario looked to be tiring, as Scotland’s Samantha Kinghorn started to push up.

The Australian — who is coached by retired legendary para athlete Louise Sauvage — managed to find just enough to pull ahead once again, while compatriot Angie Ballard produced a barnstorming final few meters to pip Kinghorn for silver.

“I definitely lost it for a little bit there. Angie came home so strong and Sam’s last 300 [metres] was unbelievable. [I’m] so happy I just managed to hold on to win,” Rozario said.

It was extra special to share the podium with her teammate, too.

“She has been in my corner since day one. We’ve been to four Paralympic Games together and to get to do this is its amazing,” she said.

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It was even more impressive considering the physical toll the marathon took on her — she described it as one of the most challenging courses she had ever tackled.

And, even though the 28-year-old thought she had recovered, she quickly realized that wasn’t the case.

“About maybe 600 meters into my warm-up, I was like, ‘Oh no, I’m definitely still feeling those 42kms in the arms today’. So, definitely brought that with me out there.”

De Rozario’s racing wheelchair was damaged in transit to Birmingham, and she had to rely on a cable-tie quick fix to hold it together for the marathon.

It’s been a hectic few days since then to get it ready for the track.

“This chair’s been driven all over the UK to try [to] get it fixed and, and I’ve had so many people come together [to help],” she said.

“Finishing touches this morning on it, so it’s something in the last-minute, kind of pulled together.”

De Rozario collected two Commonwealth Games gold medals on the Gold Coast in 2018, in the 1,500m T54 race and the T54 marathon.

It’s difficult to ask athletes to reflect on their achievements while they’re still in the thick of competing, so Rozario is simply enjoying this one before moving on to the next.

“Each race really does exist on its own, and so each one means as much as the last one.

“It’s incredible to look back on a career and be proud of it as a whole, but you remember each race and how it felt at the moment.”

And this moment feels as good as gold.

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Australian squash player Donna Lobban to face Scottish husband in Birmingham Commonwealth Games quarter-final

Australian squash player Donna Lobban says she has already started a campaign of “mental warfare” against her Scottish husband, who will meet in the mixed doubles quarter-final at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games.

Lobban, playing with her cousin Cameron Pilley, will face off against her husband Greg Lobban and his partner Lisa Aitken tonight.

“I have already started the mental warfare,” Lobban said.

“I’ve started to wind him up already. I was telling him we were fist-pumping when we got that draw.”

Donna Lobban and Pilley are defending Commonwealth mixed doubles champions.

The pair downed India’s Joshana Chinappa and Harinder Pal Singh Sandhu in straight sets, 11-8 11-9, in the round of 16 on Thursday.

Hours later, Greg Lobban and Aitken won their clash for Scotland.

Pilley said other pairs would be increasingly wary of the Australians on the road to the medals.

“Every single team is a potential speed bump,” Pilley said.

“We’re not even seeded in the top four so probably the seeds … if they see us along their road, they are probably more worried about us, being defending champs.

“When you go to the Comm Games… you’re not going in hoping for a medal, you’re going for gold.

“Having done that once, for us it was the best thing ever. So we’re going after it again.”

A female and male squash player composite image
Donna and Greg will compete against each other in the quarter-final of the squash mixed doubles.(Getty Images: Luke Walker/Alex Pantling)

Australia’s flag-bearer Rachael Grinham and her mixed doubles partner Zac Alexander also won their round-of-16 encounter on Thursday, defeating England’s Georgina Kennedy and Patrick Rooney 11-8 11-6.

Alexander and his men’s doubles partner Ryan Cuskelly breezed past Cayman Islands duo Jake Kelly and Jace Jervis, winning 11-2 11-1.

In the women’s doubles, Australia’s Alex Haydon and Jess Turnbull lost their round-of-16 match with England’s Georgina Kennedy and Lucy Turmel, who triumphed 11-4 11-7.

But the Aussie women’s doubles team of Lobban and Grinham march on after defeating India’s Sunayna Sara Kuruvilla and Anahat Singh 11-4 11-4.

AAP

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