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Emma Raducanu's US Open victory was remarkable but where does the teenager's historic success rank among great British sporting moments?
Assess the contenders and place your vote from our shortlist below.
We know it's far from comprehensive and it's not a definitive BBC list, but let's have fun with it anyway.
And if you think other notable triumphs deserve a mention, let us know in the comments section.
In the running...
1. England's football World Cup win
"Some people are on the pitch..." One of the most iconic moments in moments in footballing history and a feat the England team have been trying to recreate ever since.
Geoff Hurst scored a hat-trick as the Three Lions defeated West Germany at Wembley in 1966 to lift the country's so far only World Cup.
2. Murray's Wimbledon win
That's Sir Andy, to you. It was the prize he always dreamed of, and Andy Murray finally got his Wimbledon crown when he beat Novak Djokovic in 2013.
In doing so, the Scot became the first British player to win the Wimbledon men's singles title in 77 years, after the third of Fred Perry's three wins in 1936.
3. Super Saturday at London 2012
No-one will ever forgot what took place in front of 80,000 jubilant spectators at London's Olympic Stadium on Saturday, 4 August, 2012
Jessica Ennis-Hill smashed her own British record to win the heptathlon, Greg Rutherford took gold in the long jump and finally Mo Farah, who would go on to win the 5,000m seven days later, stormed to 10,000m gold - all in the space of a quite astonishing 44 minutes.
It came after Britain had already won golds in men's coxless four rowing, women's double sculls and women's cycling team pursuit earlier that day.
4. GB women's hockey gold
Great Britain's women's hockey team have never been considered serious Olympic contenders but all that changed in Rio in 2016.
Goalkeeper Maddie Hinch made a string of fine saves in a final against the Netherlands that finished 3-3 and then proved unbeatable in a dramatic shootout as Helen Richardson-Walsh and Hollie Webb scored the decisive penalties to clinch the team's first gold.
5. Wilkinson's World Cup-winning drop goal
The Rugby Union World Cup final of 2003 was delicately poised with just 26 seconds remaining at the Telstra Stadium in Sydney.
Cometh the hour, cometh Jonny Wilkinson, who took matters into his own hands with a dramatic drop-goal that sealed England a 20-17 victory against hosts Australia.
6. England's 2005 Ashes win
England have since won a World Cup but the 2005 Ashes series captured the imagination like no other as England and Australia battled through a series of incredibly tight Tests to leave the outcome to be decided on the final day.
England had not lifted the urn in 18 years and eight series, but Kevin Pietersen's maiden century on the final day at the Oval ensured the hosts earned a draw and 2-1 series victory.
7. Leicester City's Premier League triumph
You could have got odds of 5,000-1 on Leicester City winning the Premier League before the 2015-16 campaign began.
Boss Claudio Ranieri, talisman Jamie Vardy and co had other ideas, hitting form and never looking back as they sealed a remarkable top-flight title for the first time in the club's history.
8. England win netball gold
England's netballers stunned favourites Australia to secure the greatest result in their history and win their first Commonwealth Games gold medal in 2018.
In a dramatic final on the Gold Coast in Australia, Helen Housby scored in the final second to give England a 52-51 victory.
9. Asher-Smith becomes world champion
Dina Asher-Smith became the first British woman to win a major global sprint title as she stormed to victory in 200m at the 2019 World Championships.
She was the outstanding favourite and outclassed the field to take gold in a British record of 21.88 seconds in Doha.
10. Raducanu's fairytale of New York
No qualifier had ever won a Grand Slam before but 18-year-old Emma Raducanu created history when she came through to win the US Open without dropping a set.
Raducanu's sensational campaign climaxed with victory over fellow teenager Leylah Fernandez in the final, seeing the world number 150 become the first British woman to win a Grand Slam since Virginia Wade at Wimbledon 44 years ago.
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