When Juliette Haigh and Rebecca Scown hit their pillows tonight, perhaps after treating themselves to a favourite dish of "yummy prawn curry", they can reflect on a successful Olympic campaign.
Their bronze is the first Olympic medal New Zealand has won in the women's pair since Nikki Payne and Lynley Hannen took the same alloy at Seoul 24 years ago. It is also the first podium finish of the rowing programme for New Zealand at the London Games.
Some might suggest "success" is stretching it, after coming into the regatta as double defending world champions. However, they hadn't beaten the British winners all season and Australia defeated them in the heat. What few know is Haigh suffered acute tendinitis in her arm three weeks ago at their camp in Belgium and had to sit out of the boat several days. She's certainly not the type to advertise such news, conscious it could be deemed an excuse. The injury stymied their momentum but they persevered, cheered from the Dorney Lake grandstand by an army of supporters in black T-shirts with "1boat2girls.co.nz" [the name of their website] emblazoned across them in pink.
"She had to ice her arm and look after it for days," says their coach John Robinson. "I don't think the result hinged on that but it was a relief when she got back in the boat."
There was more than tendonitis to worry about in the race.