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Steve Larkin

Australian swim silver medallist hails French hero

Australia's Zac Stubblety-Cook (left) on the Paris Olympic podium with French hero Leon Marchand. (Dave Hunt/AAP PHOTOS)

Australian silver medallist Zac Stubblety-Cook felt like he was a rugby game, not an Olympic swim meet.

Stubblety-Cook is hailing the emergence of French hero Leon Marchand as "awesome" for swimming - despite it costing him another Olympic gold medal.

Stubblety-Cook claimed a silver medal behind Marchand in the final of the 200m breaststroke when the Parisian powerhouse basked in home-town support.

"It didn't feel like a swim meet," Stubblety-Cook said.

"It felt like at a rugby game ... you can't hear yourself think.

"A crowd I'll never swim in front of that big again, it's awesome for the sport."

Marchand is now a triple gold medallist at his home Games and his every appearance has come amid wild backing from a 17,000-strong crowd at the Paris La Defense Arena.

The Frenchman won two golds in a one-hour span on Wednesday night, his second triumph denying Stubblety-Cook consecutive Olympic titles in the breaststroke event.

And the Dolphin said the best was yet to come from the 22-year-old Marchand, who is the French face of their Games.

"He's got a motor and he's hungry ... he is probably on the cusp of being arguably the greatest swimmer to come," Stubblety-Cook said.

"We're only just seeing the beginning of Leon.

"It's his moment. And maybe if it was someone else, I wouldn't be as happy for him.

"But I'm stoked for him to have that moment in front of a home crowd, for him to soak that up is awesome and see him achieve that.

"I can't complain."

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