What’s better than one record? Six of them.

That was the result at Thursday’s men’s 400m hurdles event at theTokyo Summer Olympicsas the top four finishers and six of the finalists overall set records, with gold medal winner Karsten Warholm, of Norway, setting a world record.

Warholm, 25, bested the previous record-holder … himself.

American Rai Benjamin won silver and set an area (or continental) record. His time also broke Warholm’s previous world best.

Brazilian bronze medalist Alison dos Santos, meanwhile, set his own area record. And Kyron McMaster, from the British Virgin Islands, set a national record in fourth place — and so on.

The racers said it lived up to that hype.

Karsten Warholm

Karsten Warholm, Rai Benjamin

“I would say this was probably the best race ever, in Olympic history,” Benjamin, 24, told reporters afterward. “I don’t think any other race compares to what we just did, about two hours ago. It’s undeniable. Like, there’s nothing you can compare to what just happened out there.”

McMaster, 24, agreed: “What you saw today was the epitome of greatness.”

Warholm told reporters — in no uncertain terms — that the record and the gold meant so much to him and that he had “spent thousands of hours thinking about this.”

“I dream about it like a maniac, I tell you. I sleep all night on it,” Warholm said. “I spend all my time thinking about this, so just getting this last medal into my collection, it’s complete.”

Rai Benjamin, Karsten Warholm, Alison dos Santos

Benjamin grew teary and told reporters he was “just full of emotion. I got a medal, but it just hurts to lose.”

In the victory glow of his performance, Warholm still felt a little competitive, too.

Of Benjamin saying he had made a slip-up on the fourth hurdle, Warholm responded, “Big respect to him, and if that mistake has cost him the gold medal, he shouldn’t have done it in the Olympics.”

Benjamin clarified, however, that theirs is not a personal rivalry. “I feel like the media sometimes tries to pin me against him, but it’s not really like that at all,” he told reporters. “I mean, he’s a really cool guy. We just want to go out there and have fun and run fast times.”

To learn more about Team USA, visitTeamUSA.org. Watch the Tokyo Olympics now on NBC.

source: people.com