KEY POINTS:
BEIJING - Rowing golden girls Caroline and Georgina Evers-Swindell have won a dramatic Olympic Games gold, pipping Germany in a double sculls photo finish at Shunyi by one hundredth of a second.
So close was the finish, that the results originally posted Germans Annekatrin Thiele and Christiane Huth as winners, but the photo showed the New Zealand twins had got up on the last stroke of the race.
So, after 18 months of injury woes, hashed results and even form uncertainty coming to Beijing, the golden smiles that lit up Athens were back again, and, as at Athens, the twins had claimed the first New Zealand gold of the Games.
Germany led for much of the race, with world champions Qin Li and Liang Tian of China blown right out of the medals.
With 500m to row, Germany still had 1.65 seconds on the New Zealanders, but the black singlets descended like an avalanche in the last 100m to grab an unlikely win. Elise Laverick and Anna Bebington of Great Britain were third.
Even the twins could not believe they had got up to grab gold.
"It's a different feeling (than in Athens)," Caroline Evers-Swindell said.
"(Then) there was a lot of expectation on us and a lot of our own personal expectations, this time we were total underdogs, it is a bit of disbelief, actually. We are just pretty happy, everyone in that race was a chance to medal, China were the favourites. It is awesome to be there."
The twins were sweating on the finish. Even as they closed on the Germans, they feared they would be cut down from behind.
"We knew the other crews had a lot better finish than we did."
New Zealand also won two bronze medals at the Olympic Games rowing regatta, with single sculler Mahe Drysdale needing medical attention before climbing on to the podium to receive his.
Forty minutes after Drysdale faded to third in his race, men's pair Nathan Twaddle and George Bridgewater came home hard for a second but less dramatic bronze to New Zealand.
A medical crew was still with a vomiting Drysdale on the water 20 minutes after he crossed the line.
Three-times world champion Drysdale, 29, faded in the last 500m when he had the gold in his sights. He had come into the race with questions over his fitness, after being hit with a stomach bug early in the week.
Drysdale, who had received fluids intravenously earlier, required medical assistance after the race but was on the podium to receive his bronze medal.
"I am still not sure about crossing the line - I had to look up to see the result, the race on Wednesday took a lot out of me," he said.
"It's an Olympic final, at the end of the day you can only push as hard as you can."
He won the first New Zealand medal of the Games when cut back to third after storming to the front in the third 500m.
Defending champion Olaf Tufte of Norway, then Czech Ondrej Synek overhauled him in the shadow of the finish line.
Drysdale had barely qualified due to his illness, his semifinal time relegating him to the unfamiliar territory of lane six.
He trailed fast-starting Alan Campbell early, rowing through the opening 500m in fourth place, 1.01sec off the lead set by the flying Briton.
At the 1000m, he was still fourth, now 1.75secs behind new leader Tufte, but made a huge move to carve out a 1.61sec lead at the 1500m.
Tufte, who won bronze behind Drysdale at the last world championships, came back to win in six minutes 59.83 seconds. Synek clocked 7min 00.63sec and Drysdale 7min 01.56sec.
Drysdale held up the start of the race, when he pointed out to there was "a lot of weed" in his lane.
A boat carrying officials cleared the obstruction.
Twaddle and Bridgewater were nearly six seconds off a cracking pace after 500m, and about the same distance away in an all Commonwealth finish, with veteran Australians Drew Ginn and Duncan Free grabbing gold in 6min 37.44sec.
Ginn and Free survived a cut-throat battle with fast-starting Canadians David Calder and Scott Frandsen, who clocked 6min 39.55sec, with the New Zealand pair a further 4.64sec adrift.
In the women's pair New Zealand's 2005 world champions Juliette Haigh and Nicky Coles finished fifth in 7min 28.8sec, behind defending champions Georgeta Andrunache and Viorica Susanu of Romania, who won in 7min 20.60sec.
You Wu and Yulan Gao of China were second in 7min 22.28sec, and world champions Yuliya Bichyk and Natallia Helakh of Belarus third in 7min 22.91sec.
Sydney 2000 gold medallist Rob Waddell returned to the Olympics after an eight-year break to just miss out on a double sculls medal with Nathan Cohen, when they were a close fourth.
Australians David Crawshay and Scott Brennan held off Estonia, Great Britain and New Zealand, with world champions Luka Spik and Iztok Cop of Slovenia nowhere to be seen.
- NZPA
Courtesy of Television New Zealand, www.tvnz.co.nz/beijing2008.