- The day two live blog will appear below the first two paragraphs.
- Scroll below the blog to find a recap of day one - a golden Games opener for Aussies described as 'Disneyland'
- The day three three live blog will start at 3pm today
Day two in Paris promised to be another cracker following Australia's triple gold opener - and it has lived up to the hype.
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![Jessica Fox won gold in the K1 event. Picture AP Jessica Fox won gold in the K1 event. Picture AP](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/e7fdbaa7-ed8c-4c00-a3b9-fd89032507db.png/r0_0_1200_675_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Michelle Heyman nailed a winner to give the Matildas a thrilling 6-5 victory over Zambia while Jessica Fox's hunt for an elusive K1 Olympic gold medal finally over with the Australian superstar taking out the Paris final in commanding fashion.
While Emma McKeon fell short of adding to Australia's haul in the pool, two of her Dolphins teammates have set up the mother of all club meets in tomorrow's 200m freestyle final with Ariarne Titmus and Mollie O'Callaghan set for a gold medal showdown.
JESSICA FOX BREAKS THROUGH
Jessica Fox spent "years and years chasing this dream".
Years standing on the podium's smaller steps, as she did in London, Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo, where she left with medals coloured silver and bronze. Years persevering and picking herself back up.
All for this tearful embrace with her mother and coach Myriam Fox-Jerusalmi, a two-time Olympian who won bronze in this same event some 28 years ago at the Atlanta Games.
![Jessica Fox claimed a breakthrough gold. Picture Getty Images Jessica Fox claimed a breakthrough gold. Picture Getty Images](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/36vwtM5n3dmMVgNPycRBEHz/32736b5e-7078-41d9-831b-e30c8d93d4bd.jpg/r0_297_5811_3577_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Fox has finally clinched kayak singles gold at the Olympic Games, the prize she desired more than any other as she arrived in Paris chasing an unprecedented return of three medals.
The Paris gold didn't come easy. Fox only qualified for the final with the eighth-fastest time, meaning she was the fifth athlete down the course in the field of 12. But after a nervous wait, her time of 96.08 seconds was enough.
Already considered the sport's greatest, Australia's flag bearer finally has the ultimate prize.
"It's been years and years of chasing this dream, of getting really close, of persevering and picking myself back up, of a lot of teamwork and love and gratitude for everyone who's helped me to get here," Fox said with the gold medal draped around her neck.
![Jess Fox in the K1 event. Picture AAP Jess Fox in the K1 event. Picture AAP](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/b9b896fd-d021-483d-9640-bf7a8177da09.jpg/r0_14_6172_3498_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
"It was just the perfect day for me - it didn't start well, but it finished really well and it was just magical.
"It's very special with this French connection - to feel the energy from the crowd and the atmosphere.
"I've been chasing this for a few years and my mum before me was chasing this in '92 and '96 so achieve it in Paris is just very special for our family."
Fox is chasing an unprecedented three gold medals at the Paris Games, with the slalom kayak her first event in the whitewater program. Fox will defend her C1 crown and chase gold in the kayak cross.
An original piece of the Eiffel Tower is included at the heart of each Olympic medal, which is fitting for the French-born champion paddler.
While the superstar paddler is the pride of Australia after winning the K1 event - her second gold medal among her haul of five from four Games - Fox is also being celebrated in the host nation.
Born in Marseille, Fox still has family in France and her represented France in two Olympic Games, in 1992 and 1996.
"I failed to bring the gold twice in the two Olympics I competed in, and I know how hard it is," Fox-Jerusalmi said.
HEYMAN THRILLS FOR THE MATILDAS
If you'd woken up to watch the Matildas this morning, you could almost be forgiven for going back to bed after 40 seconds.
That's all it took for Zambia to score their first - and at the 56-minute mark, they led 5-2. The Matildas' medal hopes looked shot. But somebody forgot to tell them.
![Michelle Heyman, left, scored the winner in the 90th minute. Picture AP Michelle Heyman, left, scored the winner in the 90th minute. Picture AP](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/9f2f9d73-7cf4-4dc5-a0ec-bb28c9e64ffd.jpg/r0_0_2983_1684_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Michelle Heyman - who had played the last of 61 internationals some five years ago before earning a recall this year - nailed a 90th minute winner to mark one of Australia's most remarkable victories on Monday morning.
Steph Catley and Heyman combined to bring Australia back from the brink, breathing new life into their Olympic campaign leading into a clash with tournament heavyweights USA on Thursday morning.
USA look set to top the group, already picking up six points with a goal difference of +6. Germany sit second on three points with a goal difference of zero, while Australia sit third on three points with a goal difference of -2. Zambia are fourth on zero points with a goal difference of -4.
Australia could still progress to the knockout stage if they can finish as one of the two best third-placed teams across the tournament.
So you're saying there's a chance?
![Jess Fox, left, and Emma McKeon will be racing for medals on day two. Pictures AAP Jess Fox, left, and Emma McKeon will be racing for medals on day two. Pictures AAP](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/11ce4e02-6d79-44e3-bbae-d882fcd6165b.png/r0_0_1200_675_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
DAY ONE RECAP: Golden Games opener for Aussies described as 'Disneyland'
Everyone hoped. Everyone dreamt. But no one ever thought this was a day-one reality. Australia is on top of the world after a triple golden treat and double dose of silver on day one of the Paris Olympics.
Grace Brown, Ariarne Titmus and the Australian women's 4x100m relay - or better known as the "untouchables" - won gold medals to kick start the Games in perfect style.
Their results - as well as two more silvers in the pool - mean Australia is on top of the overall medal tally.
The glory will be short-lived given the power of the United States and China, but it was a dream way to wake up on a Sunday morning for Australian sports fans and sets the tone for what many are hoping will be the country's best Games in history in terms of medals won.
Elijah Winnington finished with silver in the men's 400 metres swim. And his mantra summed up how everyone in Australia was feeling after day one.
![The Australian 4x100m relay won Australia's third gold medal of day one. It put Australia at the top of the overall medal tally. The Australian 4x100m relay won Australia's third gold medal of day one. It put Australia at the top of the overall medal tally.](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/856af885-6983-4ebf-b78e-9d072682fbce.png/r0_0_1200_675_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
"Disneyland is one of my favourite places in the world. Everyone is happy in Disneyland. I was lining up for one of my favourite rides and I had to be reminded of my purpose," Winnington said.
THE REACTIONS
Where were you during the Tokyo Olympic Games? Shayna Jack was wandering around a zoo, green with envy while a nation celebrated gold.
A two-year doping ban ultimately cost Jack the chance to compete in Tokyo. Three years later she is an Olympic gold medallist - and an Olympic record holder - after helping Australia to its fourth consecutive triumph in the women's 4x100m freestyle relay.
Jack, Mollie O'Callaghan, Meg Harris and Emma McKeon - whose sixth Olympic gold medal means she now stands alone with more than any Australian in history - are the toast of a nation.
![Grace Brown, left, and Ariarne Titmus both won gold medals in stunning fashion. Grace Brown, left, and Ariarne Titmus both won gold medals in stunning fashion.](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/3bcb64cf-4749-4852-a973-063777314d47.png/r0_0_1200_675_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
So too is Titmus, triumphant in what was dubbed the race of the century. So too cyclist Brown, who blitzed the competition en route to Australia's first gold of the Games in the women's time trial.
Some turnaround for Jack, who has always maintained her innocence of doping and now turns her attention to the individual 50m and 100m freestyle events.
"I was at Australia Zoo," Jack said as she recalled missing the Tokyo Games.
"I'm a really big animal lover, so is my partner, and I went to Australia Zoo. I still was tempted to watch ... and cheer them on, I love those girls.
"It was joy for them but it was also envy that I couldn't be there. I messaged each one of them after. It was one of those moments that gave me that fight to come back. It actually drove that passion to come back and be part of this team.
"I have so many things I want to achieve this week. I'm going to take that time at the end of the week to reflect but for now it's getting back in the pool, getting ready and striving forward to see what else I can do. This is definitely a great start."
THE START OF THE GOLD RUSH
If you were woken by the roars of a housemate or a neighbour this morning, they have no reason to apologise.
It was because Ariarne Titmus raced into the history books, the women's 4x100m relay won their fourth-straight Olympic gold and Grace Brown dominated the time trial.
![Grace Brown wins Australia's first gold in the Womens Individual Time Trial at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. Picture by Tim de Waele/Getty Images Grace Brown wins Australia's first gold in the Womens Individual Time Trial at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. Picture by Tim de Waele/Getty Images](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/172575538/4698ed3a-1421-4ca9-90cb-e39d59593739.jpg/r0_272_5104_3142_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
For Titmus, her race was dubbed the race of the century. The reigning Olympic champion, a seven-time Olympic gold medallist, and a rising star set to challenge the greatest for years to come.
The 23-year-old defended her Olympic crown in the women's 400m freestyle at the Paris Olympic Games at the Paris La Defense Arena on Sunday morning.
Titmus claimed gold in 3:57.49, holding off Canadian Summer McIntosh [3:58.37] and American star Katie Ledecky [4:00.86]. All three have held the world record over this distance in the past three years.
Yet it was Titmus who reigned again, becoming just the second Australian woman after Dawn Fraser to successfully defend her individual Olympic swimming title - history 60 years in the making. Fraser won 100m freestyle gold at the 1956, 1960 and 1964 Olympics.
"I'm just the same old goofy Tassie girl living out her dream," Titmus said. "I hope it goes to show anyone can do what they want to do if they work hard and believe in themselves."
First came Grace Brown, "little old me". To say Brown clinched gold would be an understatement. She blitzed the competition by 91 seconds - yes, that's ninety-one - as everything went to script. Brown became Australia's first ever gold medallist, man or woman, in the discipline.
OPENING CEREMONY RECAP: Blue smurfs, headless singing and Celine in "wild" start
Paris was going to let nothing rain on its parade. Not even teeming rain. Not even an arson attack on the rail network earlier in the day. The Games of the 28th Olympiad are officially open.
![The opening ceremony had a bit of everything. The opening ceremony had a bit of everything.](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/b009fe8b-901f-4c30-b5b5-8f8fb5644616.png/r0_0_1200_675_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
It was the first opening ceremony in Games history to be held outside a stadium and it was unapologetically French. Aloof, maybe a bit weird, perhaps so clever that most of us didn't understand it.
You had every right to wonder that the burning piano represented as it accompanied a rendition of John Lennon's Imagine. What about the metal horsewoman who galloped along the surface of the Seine? And let's not even start thinking about the "pervy smurf", who was meant to represent the Greek god Dionysus. They should turn him into a limited-edition soft toy mascot.
The entertainment kicked off with a spot by Lady Gaga, metal band Gojira rocked it out singing about revolution, there was opera, DJs, classical and pop. All week there were rumours that Celine Dion would appear, her first performance since she revealed she had a rare progressive neurological disorder.
MORE OLYMPICS COVERAGE
By the time she appeared, almost four hours after the first boat full of athletes left port, the opening ceremony was struggling, but under the lights of the Eiffel Tower Dion looked regal and wrapped the whole thing up in such a classy way.
![The Australian team has arrived at the opening ceremony. Picture Getty Images The Australian team has arrived at the opening ceremony. Picture Getty Images](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/36aa7206-42c4-40d3-87b9-ee9ce2aad855.jpg/r0_316_6000_3695_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
If you were looking for athletes it was a little disappointing. The boats went by pretty quickly, some nations shared a boat, the USA looked like they were aboard a battleship there were so many of them. There was no footage from onboard the boats so the athletes were always at a distance, unlike the ceremonies inside a stadium where cameras weave and bob among the teams.
![The Australian team braved rain at the opening ceremony. Picture AAP The Australian team braved rain at the opening ceremony. Picture AAP](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/j2iwCiKfwhVWJky39Vsdpt/a29210ab-cc21-43d2-9e16-e1651811a195.jpg/r0_397_5757_3647_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Opening ceremony uniforms were perhaps a waste of money. We didn't get to see them close up, a lot of them were covered by cheap plastic ponchos once the rain set in. In this sense, it was a bit of a let down.
But was the whole thing a success? It was fabulous to tour through Paris, but really the athletes probably had the best view. From a television perspective it lagged a little, we just felt a little distant from it all.
At one point Australian film director Baz Luhrmann, there in the VIP area with fashion legend Anna Wintour, said the whole night had a certain "je ne sais quoi" about it.
This literally translates as "a quality which cannot be described or named easily."
That's probably an apt way to sum it up.