The trophy room at Emily Seebohm's household is already a sight to behold, according to the world champion backstroker's coach David Lush.
And it seems it is only going to get more impressive after Lush claimed Seebohm has emerged as a "new athlete" since overcoming health issues that sabotaged her Rio Olympics.
At 25, Seebohm turned back the clock to set a new national record and defend her 200m backstroke crown, claiming Australia's first gold on the penultimate night of the eight-day world swimming championships in Budapest.
Lush is excited by what she could produce next, admitting he had only just started to work with a fully fit Seebohm since linking with the two-time Olympic gold medallist in mid-2015.
Seebohm - an 11 year national team veteran - has no shortage of medals, as Lush discovered to his amazement.
And it's why Lush reckoned Seebohm would have been savouring her winning time of two minutes, 05.68 seconds - a new Australian and Commonwealth mark - more than a gutsy 200m gold after he health battle.
"That's probably the biggest thing for her, it's not the medal," Lush said.
"If you go to her house her trophy room is huge.
"It is incredible to actually tangibly see what this woman has achieved over her time in the sport.
"But for her it is the self improvement, the pursuit of excellence every day.
"That emotional outburst was about getting a return from putting in 110 per cent."
An emotional Seebohm couldn't fight back the tears after she went from fourth at the last turn to defy local hope Katinka Hosszu, to claim 200m gold.
It capped a remarkable comeback for Seebohm, who contemplated post-Rio retirement after a battle with endometriosis, a painful condition in which tissue that usually grows in the uterus is found thriving outside of it.
Lush admitted he thought Seebohm was just showing her age when she failed to back up after hard sessions at training before the 2015 world titles and an ill-fated Rio Games.
Then Seebohm successfully underwent surgery for endometriosis in late 2016 - and everything changed.
"She always gives 110 per cent so it wasn't like 'oh she's trying harder now'," Lush said.
"However, before (world titles) trials last April you could see the body language (change) and I was starting to see back-to-back sessions of quality happen more frequently.
"I had worked with her since mid-2015 but that was probably new for me to be honest.
"Going into Rio I thought it was the norm when she had sporadic times when she just couldn't back up but I just chalked that up to a mid-20s athlete needing more recovery."
Seebohm already has her sights set on a fourth Olympic campaign at Tokyo 2020.
"It's a testament to her mental resolve," Lush said.
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