Olympian Eddy Alvarez shares emotional reunion with wife and baby son on TODAY

Eddy Alvarez is back home from Tokyo after a couple of whirlwind weeks representing Team USA — both as a co-flag bearer in the opening ceremony, alongside basketball star Sue Bird, and as a silver medal-winning baseball player.

But since home is where the heart is, his return couldn’t really be considered a homecoming until he was reunited with his wife, Gaby, and their 11-month-old son, Jett, which is just what happened on the TODAY plaza Tuesday morning.

The moment they've been waiting for.
The moment they've been waiting for.

“This is an incredible moment,” the 31-year-old said after kissing his wife and holding his son in his arms. “I appreciate everyone here that made this happen. A lot of sacrifice has gone on in this journey, and to have these two next to me is pretty incredible.”

It was clear that the feeling was mutual.

Welcome home, Eddy! (Nathan Congleton / TODAY)
Welcome home, Eddy! (Nathan Congleton / TODAY)

He and Gaby had spent 20 days apart before their sweet reunion, and they couldn't hide their enthusiasm to be back together again.

"She's been amazing, my No. 1 supporter ever since she allowed me to date her," he said of the woman he's known since they were school children. "I’m just over the moon."

He even brought her back a piece of Olympic history, the white denim Ralph Lauren jacket he wore as flag bearer.

"Is it weird that I’m fangirling?" Alvarez's wife asked.

Related: “I can’t be any more proud,” his father said.

This is actually the second time TODAY has had the pleasure of reuniting Alvarez with his loved ones. On July 23, just hours after doing his duty during the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Games, he was surprised on TODAY with a remote reunion with Gaby and Jett — and with his parents, Walter and Mabel.

During that emotional video visit, Alvarez, the son of Cuban immigrants, explained just how much it meant to him to carry the flag for Team USA.

“(It was) such an emotional moment for me, for my family, for my background,” he said. “Just to get the honor to represent the United States of America, to hold the flag, a symbol of liberty and freedom — my family came over to this country from Cuba in search of opportunity, and if it wasn’t for them doing that, I wouldn’t be in the position that I am now, the privilege that I had to hold the flag and lead Team USA through the opening ceremony.”

Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games - Opening Ceremony (Stephen McCarthy / Sportsfile via Getty Images)
Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games - Opening Ceremony (Stephen McCarthy / Sportsfile via Getty Images)

But that was just one part of his Olympic journey.

The Miami Marlins infielder went on to clinch the silver with the U.S. men’s baseball team in Tokyo, his second Olympic medal. His first came in 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, where he earned the silver in men’s short track speed skating 5,000-meter relay. He’s now the third American to medal in both the Summer and Winter Games.

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