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Daley and Goodfellow celebrate bronze for GB

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Britain's Tom Daley and Dan Goodfellow won Olympic bronze in the men's synchronised 10m platform at Rio 2016.

The pair, who began training together last October, clinched only GB's eighth Olympic diving medal after pipping Germany to third place in a tense finish.

China's Lin Yue and Chen Aisen, the pre-competition favourites, won gold by a comfortable margin.

United States pair David Boudia and Steele Johnson claimed silver.

Daley is one of Britain's most recognisable Olympians after competing at the Beijing Games in 2008 aged 14 and then winning bronze in the 10m platform under intense pressure in his home Games in London in 2012.

While the 22-year-old is better known for his individual exploits, he and 19-year-old Goodfellow were fancied to win a synchro medal after taking European silver in May.

Chief sports writer Tom Fordyce: Tom Daley and Dan Goodfellow may not have been partners for long, but they have both been on fast-forward in terms of their development and rock-solid in their teamwork. There is trust there born of shared living quarters and long training sessions; while Daley might seem like the oldest 22-year-old in the GB Olympic team, he has found fresh enthusiasm and drive at his third Olympic Games in Goodfellow's less storied skills.

They were the last pair to dive in the open-air Maria Lenk Aquatics Centre, meaning they knew what they needed to do to overhaul Germany's former world champions Patrick Hausding and Sascha Klein with their final effort.

With a score of over 84 points needed, the British duo waited anxiously before leaping into the pool in celebration when the score of 89.64 came up.

"Going into the last round there's an intense pressure in any competition, but when it's the Olympics it multiplies by a million," said Daley.

Goodfellow added: "I was nervous. But when we first started we knew there would be pressure. And we knew we'd be the last divers to go.

"We just kept our nerve and stayed in the moment."

British pair keep composure

Daley and Goodfellow claimed Team GB's fourth medal in less than 24 hours

Daley and Goodfellow, who moved in with his older team-mate as a lodger before the Games, put themselves in medal contention from their first dive.

They were joint third in the standings after round one, remaining in the bronze medal position following their second and third dives.

A loose dive saw them drop to fifth after round four, but they moved back into third with a forward four-and-a-half-somersault dive described by BBC Sport expert Leon Taylor at the time as their "best of the day".

They then trumped that with their final effort, keeping their composure to secure a sixth-round score only bettered by the Chinese and Americans.

Chinese domination continues

China's Lin and Chen have dominated the synchro event since linking up last year, winning the World Championship, World Cup and four World Series events.

They showed why with a masterful display on their Olympic debut together.

Inspired to get into diving? Find out how to get into diving with our special guide.

Lin, 25, and Chen, 20, led from the opening round, winning with a total of 496.98 points ahead of Boudia and Johnson (457.11) and Daley and Goodfellow (444.45).

Their victory was China's fourth consecutive Olympic gold in the event and maintains the country's hopes of a clean sweep of the eight diving events.

Lin, pictured on the right, won 10m synchro gold as a 17-year-old at Beijing 2008 before taking a six-year hiatus

'Well done lads!' - social media reaction

Former British heavyweight boxing champion Frank Bruno praised Daley and Goodfellow

GB table tennis player Kelly Sibley congratulates her Olympic team-mates

Former GB tennis player Anne Keothavong was glued to her screen during the event

And he always knew it would happen…

Watch a spiky-haired 14-year-old Daley tell Gabby Logan in 2008 that diving from the 10m platform was "like doing loop-the-loops on a rollercoaster" and he was "scared" the first time he jumped from the 10m platform.

Archive video: Meet Tom Daley

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