Swimmer Lauren Boyle joined an elite club when she won gold and bronze at the short course world championships in Turkey this month.
The club could be titled: 'New Zealand athletes single-handedly maintaining the wellbeing of their sport'.
Lisa Carrington and Marina Erakovic are arguably doing the same with canoeing and tennis respectively. There have been past examples - rower Rob Waddell circa 1998-2000; boxer David Tua for most of the 1990s through to his 2000 heavyweight title fight with Lennox Lewis and, appropriately enough, swimmer Danyon Loader at the 1996 Olympics.
Boyle secured a gold medal in the 800m freestyle and a bronze in the 400m, becoming the first New Zealander to win two medals at the same short course world championships. It was buoyant news despite Swimming New Zealand's 16 years without an Olympic medal. Swimming was demoted as a targeted sport by High Performance Sport New Zealand last week. It will now contest for annual funding rather than being guaranteed investment to Rio de Janeiro in 2016.
The news is not as dismal as it sounds. The sport will still receive $1.4 million next year - a fraction less than the figure they applied for - to try to conjure up a medal at the Barcelona world championships in July and August. That compares to the average of $1.65 million per year during the 2009-12 Olympic cycle.