There's one thing for certain - Mahe Drysdale won't have to wait as long for his cash at Cambridge's newest ATM as he did to find out he had won gold in Rio de Janeiro's Olympic single sculls.
Drysdale had a long, lingering, doubt-filled wait as his photo-finish with fast-finishing Croatian sculler Damir Martin was scrutinised by officials. It seemed excruciatingly like an hour went by with both scullers unsure who had won - before Drysdale was shown to have crossed the line a fingernail ahead.
That fingernail lifted Drysdale into a glittering elite of New Zealand sportspeople who have won back-to-back Olympic golds - and it has also resulted in a glittering new ATM for Drysdale's home town of Cambridge.
ANZ, major sponsor of the New Zealand Olympic team, is turning ATMs across the country gold every time the country strikes gold in Rio. The first gold, also from rowing and men's pair Hamish Bond and Eric Murray, meant the ATM at 300 George St in Dunedin (Bond's home town) was the first.
Now it's Cambridge's turn as Murray, like Drysdale has his family home there - not far from Lake Karapiro, nursery of New Zealand's astonishing Olympic haul of rowing gold medals: 10 of them, to be precise.
Drysdale and Bond and Murray joined the following Olympic greats who have won back-to-back Olympic golds: Peter Snell, canoeing's Ian Ferguson and Paul MacDonald, Mark Todd and Valerie Adams.
Drysdale now has a mantelpiece creaking under the strain of 12 Olympic and world championship rowing medals, including those won by his three-time world champion (and Olympic bronze medallist) wife, Juliette Haigh.
They will soon be repairing to their 16-acre property near Karapiro, home not only to a mess of medals but dogs, cows, four chickens and two sometime-visitors, the Burmese cats who normally live with Mahe's mum.
Cambridge is in the Waipa District and the Mayor, Jim Mylchreest, offered huge "Waipa congratulations to our local golden champions."
"Three unbelievable athletes and two incredible races to watch," he said. "Mahe's race particularly was one myself and the rest of New Zealand will never forget. We are a small community who punch above our weight and have so much pride when we see our people compete on the world stage.
"We are proud to call ourselves the 'Home of Champions.'"
A spokesman for ANZ said the gold ATMs were designed to highlighted support for the Kiwi team: "Part of our role is helping them get to Rio to achieve their dreams. The communities the athletes come from are immensely proud of their athletes, as are we, and we wanted to create a way for ANZ to provide that physical acknowledgement in these towns, celebrating the towns' support and pride and the athletes' achievements."