Lorraine Ugen and Marc Scott ensured Great Britain avoided leaving the World Indoor Championships empty-handed.
The pair claimed bronze in the long jump and 3000m respectively on Sunday just as it looked like the squad would return from Serbia without a medal for the first time since 1996.
Ugen jumped 6.82m in Belgrade to win her second world indoor bronze, after also coming third in Portland in 2016.
Bronze for @loralski in the long jump at the #WorldIndoorChamps đ„
She jumped a season's best of 6.82m đ pic.twitter.com/0dBDVIFevL
â Team GB (@TeamGB) March 20, 2022
She said: âItâs been a little while as Iâve suffered with injuries and was deciding whether to retire or not, not having sponsorship behind me, but I was like âyou have to put the work in and do this to get back on the podiumâ to prove to myself that I can be back at the elite level again.
âI scared myself at the beginning with those two fouls and I was like âplease donât do this, donât foul three timesâ so I was so happy to get that third round jump in and it was enough to get on the podium.
âI wanted to come out here and get a seasonâs best but secretly I wanted another national record, as my personal best is from here and I knew I liked this track and wanted a cheeky British record â but itâs OK weâll save that for the outdoors, itâs coming, hopefully.â
Scott ran seven minutes 42.02 seconds to finish behind Ethiopian duo Selemon Barega and Lamecha Girma on Sunday.
He said: âI had it in my head that I wanted a medal and it weighed pretty heavily at times.
âYou never know whatâs going to happen in these races. I knew if I could get around a lot of bodies going into the last lap it would be very hard for them to come back past me.
âThe race was choppy and bruising but thatâs the way it goes. I have blood on my shin but I canât feel that now. Iâm sure I will later when all this sinks in. It doesnât dampen anything and the pain is worth it to come away with a medal.
âIâve always believed this is my level but I always had minor setbacks going into the major championships. This year I knew I could compete. It gives me great confidence going forwards.â
But it was disappointment for defending champion Andrew Pozzi, who failed to make the final of the 60m hurdles at the Stark Arena.
He clocked 7.60 seconds in his heat and semi-final but it was not quick enough to advance to the final.
The USAâs Grant Holloway equalled his own indoor world record of 7.29 seconds in the semi-final before winning gold in 7.39secs.
Britainâs Dave King came sixth in the final in 7.62s after his name was dramatically pulled out of a bag to secure his spot.
He and Japanâs Shusei Nomoto recorded exactly same time in the semi-finals.
They both ran 7.57s in their respective races and, with nothing to separate them, their names were drawn from a bag to decide who made the final.
King advanced to his first global championship final after his bib was pulled out in the call room.
Neil Gourley was sixth in the 1500m, with the menâs 4x400m relay team of Alex Haydock-Wilson, Ben Higgins, Samuel Reardon and Guy Learmonth also sixth.
The womenâs squad of Hannah Williams, Ama Pipi, Yemi Mary John and Jessie Knight came fifth.
Meanwhile, Swedenâs Mondo Duplantis set a new world indoor pole vault record after he cleared 6.20m to win gold.
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.