If the Olympics shows us anything, it's the immeasurable value of perseverance and co-operation, and few stories embody the Olympic spirit like that of Eric Moussambani, aka Eric the Eel.
In the run up to the 2000 Olympic games in Sydney, Equatorial Guinea put a call out for athletes to try out for its squad.
Among those who responded was the 22-year-old Eric Moussambani, who turned up for the trials for the swimming team.
I say 'among those', but in the end Eric made the team by default because he was the only man to actually turn up for the swimming trials alongside Paula Barila Bolopa, who competed in the women's category.
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There was one small problem though - Eric didn't know how to swim properly.
Not only that, but Equatorial Guinea didn't have the facilities for him to train.
The athlete recalled how he became an unlikely Olympic swimmer, saying: “I started swimming when I left school. We didn’t have a swimming pool."
In the end, the budding olympian had to train in a small hotel pool around 13 metres long.
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As for coaches? Forget about it, Eric trained by himself in the pool.
He said: “I trained on my own and I had no swimming experience. The pool was only available from 5am to 6am and I was only able to train for three hours a week."
Luckily, he was able to supplement this with swimming in rivers and the sea, assisted by some fishermen.
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He recalled. "The fishermen would tell me how to use my legs and how to swim. There was nothing professional about it at all.”
So Eric turned up to the Sydney Olympics in 2000 having never even swam in a full-sized Olympic pool, which are 50 metres long.
He said: "I was scared by the sight of the first pool I’d be racing in.”
The swimmer also had to borrow a pair of trunks, given to him by the South African coach, as he had turned up in swimming shorts.
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In a remarkable twist, the two other athletes in his heat were disqualified, meaning that Eric only had to complete the 100 metre swim to win his heat.
His subsequent race was cheered on by the surrounding crowd.
On his second length it looked like he might not make it and have to grab the lane rope to avoid going under the water, but amid the cheers of spectators he finished the race.
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He said: "I knew that the whole world was watching me - my family, my country, my mother, my sister and my friends. That’s why I was telling myself that I had to keep going, that I had to finish, even if I was alone in the pool. I wasn’t worried about the time. All I wanted to do was finish.”
In the end he clocked in a time of 1:52, but was not deterred.
After Sydney, Eric continued training and eventually got a personal best of 57 seconds - fast enough to have won him the gold in Helsinki in 1952.
Eric went on to become the coach for the Equatorial Guinea swimming team, and since his remarkable appearance the country has built two full sized Olympic swimming pools.
Olympics 2024 highlights - the biggest moments so far
Anthony Ammirati's penis costs him his medal
The 21-year-old French pole vaulter attempted to clear the 5.70 metres on 3 August when his knee - along with his private parts - got in the way, shattering his Olympic dreams.
Iconic shooter Yusuf Dikec wins silver medal with 'no equipment'
Turkey's Yusuf Dikec took a laid back approach when he was spotted looking incredibly relaxed with one hand in his pocket and without any shooting gear on.
It all paid off though as he took home the silver along with his partner Sevval Ilayda Tarhan.
Noah Lyles' 100m victory
Setting a new personal best, Lyles came out on top at the finish line by a margin of just 0.005 seconds, with a final time of 9.784.
The final also marked the fastest race of all time, with all eight athletes crossing the finish line in under 10 seconds.
Snoop Dogg in general
Snoop went viral after he rocked up to the dressage team Grand Prix Special fully kitted out in breeches, a dressage tailcoat and hard hat alongside pal Martha Stewart. Iconic.
Ana Carolina Vieira gets sent home for breaking athletes' village rules with boyfriend
Ana Carolina Vieira was sent home after she and her boyfriend Gabriel Santos - also a swimmer competing in the Olympics - left the village without permission, which is against the Olympic Village rules.
Team GB star becomes first ever Olympian to win medal in both male and female events
Coxswain Henry Fieldman made history when he won bronze at the women's crews event off the back of his bronze win in Tokyo on the men's team.
Fieldman was able to achieve the feat because of a rule change back in 2017 that allows coxes of either gender to steer the eights.
The River Seine drama
While Canada’s Tyler Mislawchuk vomited after swimming in the river, Belgian triathlete Jolien Vermeylen admitted she 'felt and saw things that we shouldn’t think about too much'.
It came after health concerns were raised over the pollution levels in the river, with the country splashing out a cool £1.18 billion on cleaning it up in time for the games.
Freddie Crittenden jogs for entire race on purpose
The Team USA star purposely put on a leisurely performance in his first heat of the Men's 110m hurdles and ended up being the last one to make it across the finish line with a time of 18.27 seconds.
The athlete said it was a calculated move to avoid aggravating a sore muscle in his leg and due to the introduction of repechage rounds, he knew that he'd have another chance at glory.
'Slow pool' accusations
The pool at the Paris La Défense Arena is 2.15 metres deep which is short of the minimum of 2.5 metres that World Aquatics recommends for an Olympic competition, prompting backlash from viewers.
As a result of the difference in depth, an issue called 'slow' swimming is created where the water is more volatile when dispersed than in a deeper pool.
Imane Khelif's opponent quits boxing match 46 seconds in
The Algerian boxer faced Italy's Angela Carini in the round of 16 match on 1 August when Carini - who has since apologised - decided to abandon the match after 46 seconds.
Khelif - who was born and raised a girl - was disqualified from last year’s Women’s World Boxing Championships in New Delhi amid claims from the International Boxing Association that she was not able to meet their unspecified eligibility criteria.
Khelif has since been at the centre of a gender row, and has urged people to 'refrain from bullying all athletes' amid abuse online.
Luana Alonso 'kicked out' of Olympic Village
The Paraguayan swimmer was said to have been asked to leave the village amid accusations of creating an 'inappropriate environment', according to a statement from her team.
Alonso - who also announced her retirement from the sport - has since denied the claims and urged people to 'stop spreading false information'.
Gold medal winner Thomas Ceccon spotted sleeping in park amid village complaints
The athlete, who won gold in the men's 100m backstroke, was spotted taking a nap outside by Saudi rower Husein Alireza who posted it to his Instagram account, tagging the spot as a location within the official Olympic Village.
Speaking about his accommodation, Ceccon said: "It's hard to sleep both at night and in the afternoon. Usually, when I'm at home, I always sleep in the afternoon. Here I really struggle between the heat and the noise."
Steven van de Velde booed while making his Olympic debut
The convicted child rapist was booed as he competed in the preliminary phase of the beach volleyball men’s tournament at the start of the games last month.
In 2016, Van de Velde was sentenced to four years in prison after admitting three counts of rape against a 12-year-old girl in August 2014, with many furious that he has been allowed to compete in the Olympics.
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