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British synchronised diving gold medallist Chris Mears once injured himself so badly in practice he was expected to die

Aug 11, 2016, 03:13 IST

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL - AUGUST 10: Jack Laugher and Chris Mears of Great Britain compete in the Men's Diving Synchronised 3m Springboard Final on Day 5 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at Maria Lenk Aquatics Centre on August 10, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.Photo by Adam Pretty/Getty Images
Photo by Adam Pretty/Getty ImagesRIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL - AUGUST 10: Jack Laugher and Chris Mears of Great Britain compete in the Men's Diving Synchronised 3m Springboard Final on Day 5 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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Jack Laugher and Chris Mears won Great Britain's first Olympic gold medal in the men's synchronised springboard diving in Rio tonight. The scores:

  • GB, Jack Laugher and Chris Mears: 454.32, gold.
  • US, Sam Dorman and Mike Hixon, 450.21, silver.
  • China, Qin Kai and Cao Yuan: 443.70, bronze.

It's a miraculous story for Mears. The BBC has a great story about how Mears nearly died while diving seven years ago:

For Mears, winning an Olympic title is a particularly poignant moment - having battled back from near-death.

The 23-year-old from Reading was given a 5% chance of survival in January 2009 after contracting the life-threatening Epstein Barr virus.

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He collapsed with a ruptured spleen, losing five pints of blood, before eventually leaving hospital a month later after having his spleen removed.

Mears ruptured his spleen during training as a youth for an Olympic event in Sydney .

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