ALLOA’S Duncan Scott became the first Scot to win a medal for Team GB at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

The 24-year-old finished in silver spot in the Men’s 200m Freestyle Final early on Tuesday morning, beaten only by his GB team-mate Tom Dean.

After collecting his medal, Scott said: “I’m buzzing for Deano, he’s had a really strange 18 months with Covid twice and a monster PB at trials but to see him move it on again and win gold is phenomenal.

“Our best possible outcome is one-two and we delivered on that, and I got a PB in the final as well so I’m really happy, can’t complain at all.”

Scott won two silvers at Rio 2016 and has claimed golds at world, European and Commonwealth level, but he acknowledged this runner-up finish in the Japanese capital was the high point of his singles career.

“It’s probably the biggest medal of my individual career,” he added. “I’ve won Commonwealth and European but I wouldn’t say that’s matched by an Olympic medal, the pinnacle of our sport, so yeah I’m delighted.”

Dean and Scott were third and sixth respectively at the halfway stage of Tuesday morning’s race before going up a gear in a thrilling contest. Dean edged out Scott by a wafer-thin 0.04 secs, with Brazil’s Fernando Scheffer third.

Gold for Dean and silver for Scott, who was heavily fancied after qualifying quickest in the semi-finals the day before, was the first time since the 1908 Games that two male British swimmers have finished on the podium together.

“Duncan and I are great mates,” added Dean. “Duncan’s an absolute class act. I’ve looked up to him for a long time. To share a pool and a podium with him is amazing. Going one-two with another Brit on the podium.

“What more could you ask for, really?”

Not since Henry Taylor and Thomas Battersby in the 1500m freestyle, and Frederick Holman and William Robinson in the 200m breaststroke, in London more than a century ago have two British men been in the top-three in a swimming event.