NewsBite

LIVE

Touching moment Olympian Zac Stubblety-Cook reunites with partner Leah Neale

An Olympian has shared a moving moment with his partner after being reunited for the first time in almost two months.

Wednesday, August 14 | Top stories | From the Newsroom

An Olympian has shared a touching reunion with his partner after returning home from the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.

Australian Olympians touched down at Sydney airport on Wednesday morning after smashing the country’s record for the most gold medals won at an Olympics.

The Qantas choir rang out as the Olympians stepped off the plane to a massive crowd of adoring family friends.

Swimmer Zac Stubblety-Cook had a touching reunion with his partner and fellow swimmer Leah Neale, whom he hadn’t seen for about seven weeks.

The pair shared a moving hug before Today show co-host Karl Stefanovic pushed their chairs closer together.

Stubblety-Cook, taken aback, asked how Neale had managed to keep the reunion a surprise.

Swimmer Zac Stubblety-Cook had a touching reunion with his partner and fellow swimmer Leah Neale. Picture: Today
Swimmer Zac Stubblety-Cook had a touching reunion with his partner and fellow swimmer Leah Neale. Picture: Today
The pair shared a heartfelt hug at Sydney airport on Wednesday. Picture: Today
The pair shared a heartfelt hug at Sydney airport on Wednesday. Picture: Today

“Oh, it’s been so hard,” Neale said.

“It’s been strange (being apart), I mean the last two Olympics I’ve been at, so I’ve seen it from the spectators side, which is actually I think worse than being an athlete.
“You don’t have any control of what they’re doing and you want the best for them … it’s been fun to watch him.

“That heat though (when Stubblety-Cook trailed the leaders before winning with a late surge), it gave everyone a heart attack and I felt like I almost fell off my seat.”

“Even I was worried,” Stubblety-Cook added of the 200m breaststroke race.

“I was like ‘Oh no, I messed this one up, this is a little too close to call’.”

He added they would have a hectic next few weeks but hoped they would have some time to relax.

“I think we’ll have a few weekends away and a few other bits and pieces,” Stubblety-Cook said.

“I think like it’s about just relaxing and taking the next few weeks as they come. I think the next few weeks are a little bit busy and hectic but that’s just how it is.”

Neale represented Australia at the 2016 Rio and 2020 Tokyo Olympics, winning silver and bronze medals.

Aussie athletes get a hero’s welcome in Sydney after their best Olympics

Kaylee McKeown earlier told Today that her achievements hadn’t sunk in yet as she stepped off the plane.

“Definitely not. There’s definitely pinch me moments and being presented the flag, there was definitely one of those moments I’ll cherish for the rest of my life,” she said.

Her brothers Lachlan and Bailey Carter were there to give her warm hugs, sporting sparkly gold dresses and Australian scarfs while waiting for their sister.

The pair crowd-funded their way to the Olympics to support their sister, having taken to social media to enlist help to get them there.

“We’re very proud of what she’s accomplished … we’re proud of everyone, but Kaylee, she’s done amazing,” Bailey Carter said before the plane doors opened.

“If you combine her last two Olympics, she’s medalled in every event she’s done, so she’s a legend of the sport. And yeah, super proud of her, and just stoked to have her back on home soil now.”

A choir rang out as the Olympians stepped off the plane at Sydney Airport on Wednesday morning. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard
A choir rang out as the Olympians stepped off the plane at Sydney Airport on Wednesday morning. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard
A massive crowd of adoring family and friends were waiting for the athletes. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard
A massive crowd of adoring family and friends were waiting for the athletes. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard

BMX gold medallist Saya Sakakibara said she “can’t get that smile off (her) face”.

“I’m just so grateful that with this gold medal I can inspire the next generation of boys and girls in BMX racing,” she said.

“I’m just so grateful, can’t get this smile off my face … this feels amazing.”

Emma McKeon, the most decorated Australian in Olympic history, said she’d been looking forward to touching down in Australia, calling it a special moment.

“I guess it’s just everything you train for and everything you work hard for,” she said.

“And I guess all the support that we’ve got around us as well, it’s just as much their medal, so I think it’s just coming home and seeing this and having my special people here and all that, it’s just it makes it all worth it.”

Her younger sister, Caitlin, earlier told Today that it was “overwhelming” but “special” hearing about her sister’s achievements.

Australia’s Olympians have returned home after smashing the country’s record for the most gold medals won. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard
Australia’s Olympians have returned home after smashing the country’s record for the most gold medals won. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard
Jessica Mauboy performed during the welcome home ceremony for the Olympians. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard
Jessica Mauboy performed during the welcome home ceremony for the Olympians. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard

“I guess it’s pretty overwhelming, but it’s so special to know that she’s worked so hard for so many years and has been able to achieve what she has,” Ms McKeon said.

“And then just to hear, I guess, statements like that, it’s like, ‘Wow, that’s actually my big sister that’s done all that.”

She added there was “such a buzz” at the airport while waiting for McKeon to arrive.

Her message to her sister was: “Welcome home, I missed you.”

Australia’s youngest ever gold medallist Arisa Trew, who snatched up a skateboarding medal, said the flight back was “fun”, and she slept and talked with her friends the entire time.

“Me and my friends are like looking through the window and we’re like ‘There’s a lot of people down there’,” she said.

She added she would be in Sydney for a little before heading back to the Gold Coast.

“(I will) go to school tomorrow and just have fun and skate,” she said.

Noemie Fox said it was really special sharing the Olympic experience with her sister, Jess.

“I think it’s going to take me a long time to kind of come down from my little bubble, but it’s amazing to be here,” she said.

“We did the 2004 and 2008 welcome home, and I still have my book of signatures of all these Olympic athletes. And now to think that this is me and this is us, and we’re doing it together, it’s crazy.”

Jess added she had “no idea” how big the support from Australia was going to be during the Games.

“The number of people who were getting up in the middle of the night, setting alarms to watch our races, the messages of support, the kids dressing up in schools, the communities,” she said.

“I think we had no idea just how big it would be. And after Tokyo, the games that were a little bit restricted, to be able to do it in this way, come home in this way and then get back out there in the communities will be so special.”

Noemie Fox said it was really special sharing the Olympic experience with her sister, Jess. Picture: Jack GUEZ / AFP
Noemie Fox said it was really special sharing the Olympic experience with her sister, Jess. Picture: Jack GUEZ / AFP

Cameron McEvoy, who won gold in the men’s 50m freestyle said it was nice to step off a massive flight to “this type of reception” and added he hadn’t fully grasped his win yet.

“Every two or three hours, I’d turn to whoever was near me and just go ‘I just won Olympic gold’,” he said.

“It still comes in waves. You kind of forget, and you do normal stuff, and then it just hits you again. So I think once I’m back here and settled down, it’ll really hit like a train.”

He also said he had his fingers crossed for the Los Angeles Olympics.

“Father Time I think has a little bit more in store for me in the sport, if things go well,” he said.

“So I have my fingers crossed for that … I’ve got the Olympic gold, I can go into LA now with the mindset of title defence.”

Boxer Harry Garside, whose two-year dream of winning gold at the Olympics was ripped from his hands after he lost the men’s 63.5kg class, said he was “grateful to be home”.

“I just got off the plane, we’re all very tired. But to walk into this, it’s amazing and just really showing the Australian spirit,” he said.

“So a massive thank you to everyone for coming out and throughout the last two weeks, the support back home has been amazing.”

He said he would unpack the Olympics over the next few weeks.

“Obviously, it wasn’t the campaign that I wanted, but to come home now, I think the next few weeks will sort of slowly but surely start unpacking what happened and what went well, what didn’t go well,” he said.

“And I can really start re-evaluating what’s next, but just grateful right now to be home and enjoying this and enjoying the Olympic spirit.”

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said all Olympians had ‘done Australia proud’. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said all Olympians had ‘done Australia proud’. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard

The family of swimmer Ariarne Titmus, who won two gold and two silver medals in Paris, said they were excited to see her hit “home soil” after eight weeks away.

“We’re massively proud of not just what she did in the pool, but how she behaved out of the pool as well,” her parents told the Today Show.

“She’s a wonderful young woman, and she’s become a lady who we are just enormously inspired by.”

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese also made an appearance, telling Today it is a “proud day”.

“I mean, not every athlete who gets off that plane is bringing home a medal, but every single one of them is worth their weight in gold,” he said.

“They have just done Australia proud and they’ve done their best. Whether they’ve won gold, silver, bronze or just put in a performance, they’ve all done us proud.”

Mr Albanese added watching the Olympics “just lifted the whole country up”.

“It was full of joy. I mean, the moment where, you know, Jess Fox and the whole family jump in because Noemie has won gold — how good is that?” he said.

“You can’t you can’t make that up. That moment of the two sisters bringing home three gold between them.”

He also said sport is a “unifying factor” as conflicts continue across the globe.

“At a time when there’s so much conflict in the world, the world coming together, celebrating everyone as individuals is a good thing as well,” he said.

“When you look at what’s going on in the Middle East and in Russia and Ukraine and so many parts of the world, sport is a unifying factor that can be really important.”

Originally published as Touching moment Olympian Zac Stubblety-Cook reunites with partner Leah Neale

Original URL: https://www.themercury.com.au/sport/olympics/i-missed-you-touching-scenes-as-olympians-welcomed-home/news-story/865cb844265993720e6b99ecb32e136c