Great Britain has produced some incredible Olympians over the years -- but who is the greatest? Cast your vote in our poll below.
Sir Ben Ainslie: With five Olympic medals -- four gold and one silver -- Ainslie is the most successful sailor in Olympic history. He won medals in five consecutive Olympic Games from 1996 to 2012, including four successive golds between Sydney 2000 and London 2012.
Charlotte Dujardin: The most successful British rider in dressage history. Riding Valegro, Dujardin amassed four medals -- three gold and one silver -- from both the London 2012 and Rio 2016 Games and has won every major title possible in the sport.
Mo Farah: Having won the 5,000m and 10,000m 'double' gold at London 2012, Farah is on course to win the 'double double' following his 10,000m victory in Rio. His domination of the two distances have seen him pick up numerous world and European titles -- and he coined the iconic 'Mobot'.
Sir Chris Hoy: Hoy became Britain's greatest ever Olympian in London when his two gold medals took his overall tally to six -- a total since matched by Jason Kenny. The Scot was awarded knighthood after winning three golds in Beijing in 2008.
Jason Kenny: Bolton's track cycling sprint specialist equalled Hoy's haul of six gold medals with a dramatic victory in the keirin in Rio. Kenny won six golds and a silver across three Olympics, from Beijing to Brazil.
Sir Steve Redgrave: The most successful British rower in history and the only man to win an Olympic gold medal in an endurance sport in five successive Games. His gold medal at Atlanta 1996 was Great Britain's only gold success of that Games. He has also been GB's flag-bearer at two separate Games.
Laura Trott: Great Britain's most successful female Olympian, with four gold medals. Trott won two at London 2012 -- in the women's team pursuit and the omnium -- before successfully defending both titles in Rio four years later.
Sir Bradley Wiggins: Team GB's most decorated Olympian with eight medals -- five golds, two silver and one bronze -- spanning across five Games. He started with bronze in the team pursuit in 2000, with his latest gold in the team pursuit in Brazil securing his place in British Olympic folklore.
