It's winning Wednesday for Team GB at the Olympic Games, as Alex Yee lands gold in the triathlon, our women rowers beat the Dutch on the line and Fred Sirieix's daughter lands bonze in the diving.
The treble triumph takes Great Britain's total number of medals up to 16, with four for the canoe slalom, six for diving, four for equestrian and four for the triathlon.
Team GB currently sit at third on the medal table, behind France with a total number of 20 medals and the USA with 26.
This morning, Team GB's women's quadruple sculls made history after a late surge took them past the Netherlands to win the event for the first time at the Olympic Games.
Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgie Brayshaw had appeared destined for the silver medal in the closing stages of the race.
The British quartet trailed the Netherlands with 250 metres remaining of the race at the Stade nautique de Vaires-sur-Marne.
A stunning finish to the race saw the crew dramatically close the gap to the rivals.
Gold medalists Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgina Brayshaw of Team GB's rowing team celebrate on the podium
Princess Anne congratulates gold medalists Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgina Brayshaw of Team GB
Fred Sirieix with his daughter Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix and her diving partner Lois Toulson following their Bronze-medal win
Britain's Alex Yee celebrates after receiving the gold medal in the triathlon
Bronze medallists Britain's Andrea Spendolini Sirieix and Lois Toulson react in front of the platform following the women's synchronised 10m platform diving final at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games
Gold medalist Alex Yee of Team GB (C), Silver medalist Hayden Wilde of Team New Zealand (L) and Bronze medalist Leo Bergere of Team France (R)
The rival teams crossed the finish side by side, with a photo finish required to separate the boats.
Team GB's crew were soon able to begin celebrations after the photo revealed they had edged ahead of the Dutch at the finish.
The 2023 world champions finished the race in a time of 6min 16.31sec, ending just 0.15 seconds clear of their rivals to win gold.
Germany completed the podium places in 6:19.70.
'The crew today, Georgie, Lauren and Lola were amazing,' said Scott. We played it so cool up until the end.
'We had the confidence, we have done so many hard miles in training.'
The result means Britain have already improved on their gold medal tally from the previous Olympics, after coming away from Tokyo with only one silver and bronze.
Meanwhile, Team GB's Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix — daughter of TV chef Fred Sirieix — and Lois Toulson earned a hard-fought bronze medal in the women's synchronised 10m platform event.
The pair jumped into second at the end of round two, but entering the more difficult dives, they could only post 60.3 in the third round, causing them to tumble into fifth.
They responded well in the final rounds, scoring a 77.76 on their final dive and following a nervous wait their spot on the podium was all but confirmed after nearest rivals Canada could only score 68.16 on their last dive.
Chinese pair Chen Yuxi and Quan Hongchan successfully defended their Olympic gold, while North Korea pair Jo Jin Mi and Kim Mirae earned silver.
Bronze medallists Lois Toulson of Britain and Andrea Spendolini Sirieix of Britain pose with their medals
Fred Sirieix, father of GB's Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix celebrates at the Aquatics Centre following his daughter's Bronze medal win
Britain have won the women's quadruple sculls rowing gold for the first time at the Olympics
Gold medalists Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgina Brayshaw of Team Great Britain pose after the Rowing Women's Quadruple Sculls medal ceremony
There was British delight and Dutch devastation when the final result was confirmed
The photo finish showed the British crew, below, had narrowly edged ahead to clinch gold
Team GB star Alex Yee secured a superb gold medal with victory in the men's triathlon at the Paris Olympics.
Yee, forced to settle for silver in Tokyo three years ago, surpassed Hayden Wilde of New Zealand in the final stages of a thrilling race to snatch a last-gasp victory.
He finished in 1hr 43min 33sec to seal Team GB's fifth gold of the Games in the French capital.
Yee was 14 seconds down on Wilde going into the final 2km of the run but caught Wilde and surged past the New Zealander, who crossed six seconds behind the Brit.
The bronze medal went to Leo Bergere of France.
Alex Yee is the Olympic men's triathlon champion after winning the men's race in Paris
Gold medalist Alex Yee of Team GB celebrates on the podium
Yee caught New Zealand's Hayden Wilde (left) in the final stages of a thrilling race
The Team GB star celebrates a stunning triumph as he banished his Tokyo 2020 demons
An exhausted Yee is seen at the finish line after surging past Wilde in dramatic fashion
Victory saw Yee emulate Alistair Brownlee as Britain's second Olympic triathlon champion.
The 26-year-old won relay gold in Tokyo but had set his sights on individual glory in Paris.
And he achieved it in stunning fashion on the streets of the city. With less than a kilometre of the 10km race to go it looked as though Yee would again be left with the silver medal, although at one stage he was being challenged by Bergere.
But Yee put on the afterburners and sprinted clear as he realised his Olympic dream in one of the sport's most memorable comebacks.
Yee looked exhausted after his triumph, with the gruelling 1.5km swim, 40km bike ride and 10km run clearly taking its toll on the athletes.
The men's race had been due to take place on Tuesday but was cancelled at only a few hours' notice after water quality in the Seine was still deemed not up to scratch.
It was not confirmed that the races would be able to go ahead on Wednesday under the early hours, with the men pushed back to after the women's race.
Organisers said samples taken showed 'much lower' levels of bacteria than the threshold for the event to take place, with the hope now that the future events in the river, the triathlon mixed relay and marathon swimming, will not face such uncertainty.
Having seen his compatriot Beth Potter take bronze, Yee dived into the Seine and managed to keep in touch with the leaders, heading through the first transition in 16th place and quickly joining a big front group for the 40 kilometre bike leg around the centre of Paris.
Wilde was in the second pack so Yee tried to help drive the pace rather than sit in, but the two groups came together with three laps to go.
Yee crosses the finish line to win the men's individual triathlon race at the Paris Olympics
Alex Yee (pictured centre) with Samuel Dickinson of Britain and his team
The pace took its toll on one athlete in particular as Tyler Mislawchuk was seen vomiting at the finish
Wilde and Yee speak after a gruelling men's triathlon race on the streets of Paris
The Team GB athlete couldn't believe his triumph as he crossed the line six seconds clear
Sam Dickinson, making his Olympic debut for Britain, led the way onto the 10km run, with Yee well placed in fourth, and the Tokyo silver medalist soon surged into the lead as his team-mate called for crowd support.
Yee is a former British champion over 10,000m, and he sped off into the distance but Wilde refused to let him get away and put in a big effort to catch up.
The New Zealander was not content to sit with Yee, though, and quickly passed him, with the British athlete seemingly unable to respond as temperatures rose into the high 20s.
Yee settled into second, comfortably holding off France's Bergere behind him, but he had a final surprise in store as he surged to a second Olympic gold having also topped the podium as part of the mixed relay in Tokyo.
In the women's triathlon, Team GB's Beth Potter took home a brilliant bronze medal amid concerns the event would take place over the water quality in the Seine.
Potter emerged from the swimming leg of the race in the lead pack, and maintained her position in the cycling, with four women left battling for three medals in the 10km run.
She was alongside two Frenchwomen and a Swiss athlete in the final stages, with pre-race favourite Cassandre Beaugrand kicking for home to take a decisive lead and become France's first-ever Olympic triathlon champion.
Beth Potter claimed a bronze medal in the women's triathlon on Wednesday morning
Potter (left) collapsed to the ground in exhaustion after crossing the finish line following nearly two hours of racing
Cassandre Beaugrand took gold - becoming France's first-ever Olympic triathlon champion
Switzerland's Julie Derron just pipped Potter to the silver medal in the French capital
But Potter refused to go away, and managed to secure a brilliant third-place behind Switzerland's Julie Derron after holding off France's Emma Lombardi to earn Team GB their 13th medal of the Olympics.
Potter collapsed to the ground in exhaustion as she crossed the finish line after almost two hours of racing.
Reflecting on her performance, Potter told the BBC: 'I'm so happy, I was going for the gold but Cassandre and Julie were just too good for me today but I'm super happy to come away with the bronze. I've come a long way in eight years and I am so happy to be here with a bronze medal.
'I did it for me but I also did it for everyone who has helped me in eight years and believed in me from day one. It is for them back home as well.
'I dug deep and found something else.'
Potter's fellow Brits also performed well, with Georgia Taylor-Brown - a silver medalist in Tokyo - coming sixth, while rising star Kate Waugh was 15th.