1. Raygun’s routine breaks out the memes
Watching Rachael Gunn’s Olympic appearance on a warm afternoon at La Concorde, it was clear she was out of place. It wasn’t the Australian’s relative lack of athleticism, or her team-issued tracksuit. The Olympics was a platform on which breaking had never stood, yet Raygun’s choreography appeared to be taking the sport to a whole other realm.
The 37-year-old had been tight, technical, smooth and stylish in her victory in the Oceania qualifier at the Sydney Town Hall the year before, but in Paris she was different. In a sport known for its commitment to protest, here was a middle-class Australian university lecturer assuming the role of radical.
Gunn’s sprinkler was met with mirth. The strut-around and faux yawns, quaint accompaniments. The kangaroo hop? Sure, why not. At the time it all looked a bit lame, but no more than an Australian side-note to a contest that had already been dropped from the LA 2028 program. Then the memes hit, prompting patriotic outrage, misinformation, endorsements, the stage show and an immediate cease-and-desist letter. Her competitive breaking career may be over, but the Raygun phenomenon has only just begun.
Read more: What will Raygun do next? I foresee a very lucrative career
2. Resurgent Wallabies stun rivals with last-gasp magic
The calendar might have said nine years, yet it felt like an eternity since the Wallabies last beat England at Twickenham. So it was business as usual entering the dying stages of the November clash, the home side up 37-35 three minutes into time added on.
In truth, Wallabies fans might not have been too disappointed had it ended then and there, a defeat not the end of the world for a rebuilding team. New recruit Joseph-Aukuso Sua’ali’i had shown promise on debut, and apart from a poor opening the tourists had largely been the better side.
But the men in gold weren’t listening as they spread it left, avoiding jamming English defence and finding Len Ikitau. The Brumbies centre has been a consistent performer in Super Rugby, but missed last year’s World Cup with a shoulder injury.
Making up for lost time, he cantered away from his opposite defender and drew in the English winger, flicking the ball to streaking substitute Max Jorgensen. The 20-year-old launched himself over the try line and into Wallabies folklore with an arcing dive befitting the moment.
Read more: Last-gasp Max Jorgensen try sees Australia edge England in thriller
3. Mollie dethrones Arnie to seal crowning glory
It was the invitation that echoed the sentiments of a nation. Mollie O’Callaghan gestured for Ariarne Titmus to join her on the top step of the dais, the pair celebrating a one-two finish in the 200m freestyle in Paris.
In the slow Paris pool, the 20-year-old needed an Olympic record to win her first individual gold and upstage her more established rival, who was fresh off winning the 400m freestyle in the so-called “race of the century” against Katie Ledecky and Summer McIntosh two days earlier.
Had Titmus won again, she would have become the only swimmer in history to successfully defend Olympic titles in both the 200m and 400m freestyle. But while she bettered the rest of the world, the woman they call “Arnie” couldn’t beat her training partner.
Amid the hyper-patriotism of the Olympics, obliging the national tradition of swimming success, O’Callaghan said afterwards: “To be honest, I did it for the country.”
Read more: Mollie O’Callaghan’s Olympic dream is one to share with rival inspiring greatness
4. Gout Gout’s rapid rise shatters records
“He looks like young me.” Usain Bolt put an exclamation mark on what we had all been thinking; the long stride, the high knees, the straight and steady upper body. Teenage sensation Gout Gout broke on to the scene with a style resembling the sprinting great. Just a few months later and the now 17-year-old has been running quicker than Bolt at the same age.
Gout is still fine-tuning his burst out of the blocks. Once on the move he glides. He ran the fourth-fastest U18 100m of all time in a wind-assisted 10.04s in December. The next day he broke Peter Norman’s longstanding 200m Australian record when rocketing around the track in 20.04s. A sub-10s 100m is now within reach. The U18 200m world record of 19.84s is also in sight. In the meantime, Gout will rub shoulders with sprint royalty then complete his Year 12 studies. His athletics career is just getting started. But Australia’s next star of the track has arrived.
5. The Blues smash hoodoo to win Origin battle
The Blues looked embarrassing in 2024’s State of Origin game one, a comprehensive defeat most memorable for the early send-off to rugby recruit Joseph-Aukuso Sua’ali’i. A near-perfect second match at the MCG was an impressive response from rookie Origin coach Michael Maguire and his players, but it still left one of rugby league’s greatest challenges ahead.
The Blues hadn’t won an Origin decider in Brisbane since 2005, and cunning coach Billy Slater included the NRL’s most feared game-breakers Kalyn Ponga and Reece Walsh in an imposing Maroons side. Yet an all-in shoving match close to half-time involving the Blues bench showed the southerners were up for the challenge.
The contest hung in the balance until Queensland almost forced an error in midfield with 15 minutes to go, leaving the ball with Jarome Luai on his heels. The five-eighth accelerated quickly, scything through the Maroons’ right side and finding a rampaging Bradman Best to score the decisive try. An opportunistic four-pointer from Mitchell Moses not long after secured New South Wales one of their finest Origin victories.
Read more: Blood, sweat and beers: how the Blues won this State of Origin battle for the ages
6. Fantastic Fox sisters celebrate golden week
Against the odds Jess Fox had claimed her first gold in Paris – and second Olympic title – despite qualifying for the final of the kayak single in sixth. She then produced a dominant performance in the canoe single three days later, a third individual gold asserting claims to the title of Australia’s greatest Olympian.
The obscure sport of whirlpools and gates rarely enters the broader Australian consciousness, and this was surely its finest hour. Here was the team’s flag-bearer celebrating on top of the dais in the country of her birth, her legend secured. That sentiment firmed when Jess was eliminated early in the kayak cross heats, ending her quest for an unlikely third Paris gold.
There was only Fox’s unheralded sister Noémie left, after she survived the race that eliminated her elder sibling. The 27-year-old had spent her life in the shadows of Jess, but masterfully paddled her way to an unlikely gold. Jess plunged into the water to celebrate, the Foxes’ week of barely imaginable highs now soaring into Australian Olympics lore.
Read more: Noémie Fox reframes family dynamic and writes her own story with Olympic gold
7. Lions roar back to life on AFL premiership march
Brisbane were widely tipped to go one better after a gut-wrenching defeat in last year’s grand final. But a sluggish start to this season left the Lions chasing their tail. Nine consecutive wins and an emphatic statement in their first final renewed fading premiership hopes until they finally ran out of steam against Greater Western Sydney. The Lions’ season was dead and buried as the Giants slammed on seven straight goals in their semi-final. The margin blew out to 44 points. Only two teams in V/AFL history had overcome a bigger deficit in a final, and none for more than 50 years.
The Lions roared back into contention with five goals in nine minutes to set up a tense final term. Then it had to be Joe Daniher, so often maligned for blending wonders with blunders, let alone his erratic shooting for goal. The key forward threaded a set shot from the boundary line to reduce the margin to one. A minute later, Daniher plucked a mark from a one-on-one contest with the best defender in the game, Sam Taylor. A second clutch goal and the Lions had pulled off a heist. The best was still to come as Brisbane overran Geelong a week later, then dismantled Sydney in the decider for their first AFL flag in 21 years.
Read more: Brisbane bury their AFL demons as stubborn optimism turns into unbridled joy
8. Sakakibara completes bumpy ride with emotional victory
The race that won Saya Sakakibara her gold medal was done in a flash, yet the pain that took her to that point seemed never-ending. There was physical trauma, and the crashes that left the 25-year-old with lingering concussion symptoms and shattered her confidence; the brain injury suffered by her brother Kai in competition – himself once a promising BMX racer – who now competes in para-rowing; the building pressure of never having nailed a big event.
So when the Australian crossed the line in Paris comfortably ahead of silver her disbelief was understandable. She kept her helmet on long after she finished, embracing her boyfriend – French bronze medal winner Romain Mahieu – Kai and the rest of her family.
Around her were some of the Paris Games’ biggest celebrations for the men’s event, which delivered the first all-French podium since the Olympics were last held in Paris. In the midst of the mania, Sakakibara’s story was already most affecting. Then in the media zone, she revealed a secret: she tested positive to Covid that week, barely having enough time to lift herself from bed before competition, thereby adding another twist to a tale too rich already.
Read more: Saya Sakakibara overcomes setbacks and trauma to win BMX gold for Australia and her brother
There were whispers of ice-creams shared on a first date. But Matildas attacker Mary Fowler and NRL playmaker Nathan Cleary remained tight-lipped as romance rumours began to swirl. That was until Cleary took to social media several months later to celebrate their blossoming relationship.
An Instagram post with the caption “That’s life” and an ice-cream emoji took a cheeky swipe at the intense speculation. A photo of the rugby league great lying back on Fowler on the beach with an adoring smile was the first hint of Cleary’s softer side. Fowler responded with her own photos and love heart eyes, and now the sporting glamour couple regularly fill their feeds with snaps of each other. A shot of Cleary and Fowler sharing a kiss at Sydney airport was final confirmation that their perfect match had been sealed.
Read more: Why two of Australia’s biggest sporting stars are posting each other messages of love and support
10. Spurs dismantle champions in defining moment for ‘Angeball’
Australians love nothing more than one of their own prospering overseas. Since the former Socceroos coach took over Tottenham at the beginning of last season, he has on occasion thrilled with his particular brand of gung-ho football – but also managed to divide opinion with a stubborn commitment to “Angeball” that has so far failed to bring the consistent results so badly craved by the success-starved club and its fans.
But when Angeball works, it’s poetry in motion. And never more so than one night at the end of November when he masterminded an utter demolition of Manchester City, the four-in-a-row Premier League champions. City had not lost at home for 52 matches, but that record came crashing down as Postecoglou’s team took them apart in gloriously thrilling fashion. Truth is that City were there for the taking and already well into a shocking slump but forget that for a moment. Forget that Spurs followed up this result with a run of three draws and two defeats. Forget that the jury is still very much out on Postecoglou and his tactics. This was a defining moment in his managerial career and in a vacuum a moment to cherish – for him and for Australian football.
Read more: Obstinate Ange Postecoglou must find consistency at Spurs or a crunch will come