Kaylee McKeown was struggling to hold back her excitement after winning a gold medal at the Tokyo Games.
The Aussie swimmer came first in the 100m backstroke final and set a new Olympic record of 57.47 in the process.
She came from behind at the 50m mark and clawed back in front to beat Canada's Kylie Masse by just 0.02 of a second.
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Overcome with joy, Kaylee spoke to Channel 7 about how incredible it is to be an Olympic gold medalist, especially considering her father died less than a year ago.
Seven's Nathan Templeton asked whether she had a message to send back to her mum and sister and the swimming sensation didn't hold back.
"F**k yeah!" she said. "Oh s**t!"
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It was a quick message that was immediately realised and apologised for, however Kaylee was obviously brimming with excitement.
Before the X-rated answer, she spoke about the feeling of being written into the history books.
"It's definitely something that people dream of," she said. "Something I have dreamed of. To make it a reality is...really amazing.
"I'm just thankful I have a good support team. A few people before the race came up and said to just have all the faith in the world that you have got this."
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Her family back home was watching every stroke and jumped for joy when Kaylee touched the blocks in first.
But her mum Sharon had mixed feelings about the post-win interview, saying to Channel 7: "Swearing on TV!? I will have a word to her later.
"It hasn't sunk in. So happy and excited. I can't wait to give her a cuddle."
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Kaylee's sister Taylor was also thrilled to see a McKeown bring home a gold medal and thought it was even better that she set an Olympic record.
"That is so amazing. I don't even have words. I can't talk. I literally can't talk. I'm so happy for her. She just looks so beautiful on TV as well," she said.
"She is enjoying racing. This is a testament to her, her hard work. Ask anyone in her training group - she will push herself until she vomits. An absolute animal.
"She will be the Emily Seebohm to the Kaylee McKeown now. I hope lots of kids are inspired to get out there, train hard and achieve your dreams because anyone can do it if you put the work in."
Featured Image Credit:Topics: olympics, Tokyo Olympics, swimming, Australia