Amy Broadhurst and Lisa O'Rourke could barely find the words to sum up their double gold medal heroics at the IBA Women's World Boxing Championships in Istanbul.
Broadhurst was triumphant in the light welterweight category against Algeria's Imane Khelif before O'Rourke followed that up with a win of her own against Alcinda Panguana of Mozambique in the light middleweight category.
The two gold medals represent a huge milestone in Irish amateur boxing; prior to this evening, only Katie Taylor and Kellie Harrington had won titles at World Championships.
Those wins for Taylor and Harrington came 12 years apart, with the Bray boxer first claiming a World Championship title in 2006 and Harrington achieving the same feat in 2018.
As Broadhurst and O'Rourke fought back-to-back, they created their own miniscule gap of roughly half an hour between World titles.
Broadhurst rarely looked troubled as she dominated all three rounds.
And she could hardly process what had happened afterwards.
She said: "I believe I still need days to understand what I did today.
"I have been dreaming about this day since my childhood and worked almost twenty years to win a big championships.
"I had to be patient today and not make any mistakes against the counter attacking Algerian.
"I felt in the second round that my strategy worked and I knew I could make it.
"I don't remember what my coach Zaur Antia told me in the second break but I gave it everything in the third."
The very next fight on the card was the meeting of O'Rourke and Alcinda Panguana of Mozambique.
Claiming the first round on a 3-2 scoreline from the judges, O'Rourke looked to carry the momentum into the second but Panguana did impart some solid body shots as she acclimatised to the pace set by the former.
The judges favoured the Mozambique fighter in the second which came as a surprise and set up a tense final round where O'Rourke suddenly had a point to prove.
And prove it she did, with a powerful right hand in the opening seconds crushing Panguana's spirit.
Both fighters led with some erratic swings midway through the third, but O'Rourke's right hand steadied the ship as the fight neared its end and she dealt enough damage to claim a 4-1 win on points.
And O'Rourke was feeling on top of the world like her Irish teammate Broadhurst.
She said: "I can't find any words now.
"I won the European U/22s in Croatia in March but this something unexpected for me.
"My game plan is always to be on top of the podium but I am over the moon after this success, I had to keep my distance in the final and follow Zuar's and John's instructions."
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