American Katie Moon and Australia's Nina Kennedy have decided to share the women's pole vault gold medal in another magical moment at the world athletics championships at Budapest.
Their decision had echoes of Qatar's Mutaz Barshim and Italy's Gianmarco Tamberi sharing the high jump gold at the Tokyo Olympics.
The two women cleared 4.90m in a dramatic final that stretched two hours and 10 minutes, but both missed on all three attempts at 4.95m and decided to share the victory, rather than go to a jump-off.
"I jumped out of my skin tonight, it was super crazy," Kennedy said. "I cannot explain it, it was surreal.
"I jumped 4.82 2-3 years ago, so I knew I had some higher heights in me and tonight I just placed them together.
"To win a gold medal, it is just a dream come true. I knew I could get on the podium, but it was a miracle to get the gold, so I think a miracle happened tonight."
It was the second consecutive world title for Moon, 32, who also won Olympic gold at Tokyo. Armed with a personal best of 4.95m and a season's best of 4.90m, she appeared to be the favourite, but Kennedy had other ideas.
She surpassed the Australian record and her own personal best by eight centimetres, when she sailed over 4.90m and then held back tears, as she looked up at the steady bar in joyful disbelief.
Moon and Kennedy chatted briefly after their three misses to decide the outcome, then embraced.
"I am a big softie, it is so beautiful," said Britain's 2012 Olympic heptathlon champion Jessica Ennis-Hill on the BBC. "It really displays what our sport is about - two epic performances and they've both come away with that gold medal."
Moon says, when the night began, she would not have considered sharing gold as a great outcome.
"Now I am completely satisfied," said the American. "What a battle it was.
"When it became obvious that only Nina and I were still jumping, the show had just started. I think we both motivated each other.
"When she had a good attempt, I also wanted to have it. It was tiring, but worth the effort.
"What an amazing night. I hope everyone enjoyed that one, we did."
Wilma Murto of Finland tied her season's best of 4.80m for bronze, missing all three of her attempts at 4.85m. She became the first Finnish woman to win a Diamond League title, when she beat Moon at the London event on July 23.
The event featured the two world-leading heights, two national records and three personal bests among the top six jumpers, and captivated the National Athletics Centre crowd, who - prompted by an ominous rhythmic thumping over the sound system, when each jumper stepped up to the runway - clapped along in time.
"I felt like the whole stadium was watching every single jump," Kennedy said. "They were all around us tonight, it was really incredible."
Reuters