Australias Insane Games Best gold haul since modern Olympics began
Tokyo: Australia has never won more gold, and dude, we have never been this cool.
For that, we can thank a couple of Chesty Bond paddlers and a skinny kid with a sandy mop of hair who skates with the freedom that our nation in lockdown so desperately craves.
As our menâs hockey team prepares to play Belgium in their gold medal match, Australiaâs 17th gold medal of these Games â" equal of our best haul since the modern Olympics began â" was won by 18-year-old Keegan Palmer, an Aussie-American skateboarder with a style as smooth as a Shinkansen train.
Keegan Palmer of Australia competes in the menâs park skateboarding finals on Thursday.Credit:AP
Palmerâs spectacular and seemingly effortless winning run at the skate park came within a few minute of kayakers Thomas Green and Jean van der Westhuyzen holding off Germanyâs world champion team to become the first Australian pair to win the 1000-metre event at an Olympics.
Green said it was beautiful. Van der Westhuyzen thanked God. Palmer was just stoked to be hanging with his friends in downtown Tokyo.
âSkateboarding is a family,â Palmer said of the new Olympic sport after sharing the podium with two of his best mates and sporting idols, Brazilâs Pedro Barros and American Cory Juneau.
âNo one cares about what country you come from. If you put down hard runs people will support you. I have known these guys since I was nine years old. Itâs what makes skateboarding so great.â
Mates: Keegan Palmer and Kieran Woolley at the menâs skateboarding final on Thursday.Credit:Getty Images
To anyone who follows skateboarding, Palmer was a star well before coming to Tokyo. At the age of 14, he became the youngest winner of the Bondi Bowl-a-Rama. Thatâs a big deal in this sport and since then, Palmer has been carving it up on the pro circuit.
To those watching top-level skateboarding for the first time, you should expect to see plenty more of this kid with a sun-kissed face and, remarkably for a skater boy, all his own teeth.
Palmer was born in California and grew up on the Gold Coast before returning to the US to pursue his sport. He learnt to skate from his father Chris, a touring surfer, and was soon popping tricks his dad could only dream of trying.
His favourite trick is a mind-boggling manoeuvre known as a kickflip body varial 540; a blur of spinning board and flying feet. Heâd already won gold when, just for kicks, he pulled one out in his final run in Tokyo.
In addition to English he speaks fluent Californese and, without taking a poll of all athletes in Tokyo, might just have the best lifestyle of anyone in the Olympic village. In an interview with Whistle, a popular YouTube channel, Palmer recently explained what a usual day in Carlsbad involves.
âIt is nice to go surfing in the morning when you wake up. Then when I get back I do school for like an hour, an hour and a half. And after that I pretty much just skate into the night.
âI canât even tell you how much I love being able to skate every day, dude. It is like sickly. Being able to skate every day is insane dude. It is crazy you can do that.â
It is crazy; kinda like Australiaâs two weeks in Tokyo.
The only other Games where Australia won 17 gold medals was Athens. That was four years after Sydney, when our swim team was powered by Ian Thorpe and Anna Meares, and James Tomkins was still rowing his boat. The menâs hockey team also won gold at those Games; a feat the Kookaburras were trying to repeat on Thursday night.
Chef de mission Ian Chesterman when asked about the milestone said he was happy for the athletes but didnât want to say too much. âThe real satisfaction will come when we can sit back and think on all these performances and what has been achieved.â
The last thing this Australian team needs is an old dude to kill the vibe. Besides, Chesterman and most of Australiaâs Olympians will have plenty of time for that when they return to Australia to two weeks of hard quarantine.
There are no such worries for Palmer, who will fly home to a California beach and dazzling bright future.
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Chip Le Grand is The Ageâs chief reporter. He writes about crime, sport and national affairs, with a particular focus on Melbourne.
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