Athleticspublished at 21:06 British Summer Time 2 August 2014
Alana Boyd now clears 4.40m at the first attempt. The Australian is almost home and hosed, given Sally Peake of Wales has just one attempt left.
Athletics - Bolt leads Jamaica to 4x100m gold; England win 4x400m
Athletics - Wales' Peake wins pole vault silver; Pavey 5,000m bronze at 40
Diving - Daley wins 10m platform gold
Boxing - England five golds, Scotland and Northern Ireland two each
Hockey - Australia beat England in shootout to win women's gold
England's Paul and Joanna Drinkhall win table tennis gold
Jonathan Jurejko and Mike Henson
Alana Boyd now clears 4.40m at the first attempt. The Australian is almost home and hosed, given Sally Peake of Wales has just one attempt left.
Right, so Alana Boyd of Australia has now cleared 4.35m at the first attempt after Wales' Sally Peake failed.
Peake passes on her final two attempts, meaning we move on to 4.40m . . . which happens to be the Welsh woman's own national record, set at this very stadium last month.
Darren Campbell
BBC Sport athletics expert on BBC Radio 5 live
"It was always going to be a large task to take on and beat the Jamaicans. They are a classy outfit. The English girls tried their best and they went for it. Unfortunately against the best in the world, it wasn't enough. They shouldn't be too disappointed with a bronze."
It's stalemate at half-time between Australia and England.
Kellie White had the best scoring opportunity for the reigning champions but she flashed her attempt across an open goal, and the Aussies also failed to make a late penalty corner count.
Although they are lacking opportunities up-front England have held possession well, but they'll need to turn their good work into goals if they're going to go for gold.
We thought England may push Jamaica - not a chance. The legs of Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce go into a spin down the straight as Jamaica set a new Games record of 41.83. That means the previous record (set by them) lasted about 24 hours.
England's quartet of Asha Philip, Bianca Williams, Jodie Williams and Ashleigh Nelson finish third, just behind Nigeria.
Fancy becoming a Commonwealth champion? It takes hard work, dedication and...hours watching YouTube. At least in the case of Kenya's Julius Yego, who used the website as a training tool after a disappointing show at the 2010 Commonwealths. "I saw my technique was pathetic," he moaned.
Now, four years later, his sleek technique has bagged him a gold medal. His throw of 83.87 leaves the rest of the field with square eyes. Wales' Lee Doran finishes eighth.
Karen Pickering
BBC Sport swimming & diving, on Radio 5 live
"That was a procession this evening from Tom Daley. A masterclass in diving. He even managed to get his bogey dive down. He was so far clear with one dive to go, he would have had to have failed it to lose the gold medal."
England finish the 2014 Commonwealth diving competition with double figures - 10 medals from the four days of competition an incredible return and the crowd got what they came for tonight, a Tom Daley victory by an incredible 82.85 points, with a total of 516.55. His lead was so great that he had secured bronze before he went for his final routine.
James Denny, who won synchronised silver alongside Daley on Friday night, was sixth with a total of 397.65. Matthew Dixon, the 14-year-old from Plymouth, was ninth with 366.15. His best effort was an inward three-and-a-half somersault which scored an impressive 81.60.
Sally Peake makes the first move, the Welsh woman clearing 4.25m at the first attempt. Over to you, Alana Boyd . . .
Scottish 400m runner Gemma Nicol:, external Another team selfie - @EilidhChild demanding to be in this one! Haha #diva #2014Athletics
Hold on, though. Defending champion Alana Boyd has finally posted a mark by clearing 4.15m at the third attempt. The Australian moves into the silver medal position.
She and Sally Cooke of Wales will now squabble over gold and silver at 4.25m - the Welsh women is ahead on count-back - while England's Sally Scott and Alysha Newman of Canada will share bronze.
Two-time CWG champion Kelly Holmes:, external "OMG. She did it. She got a medal. I love my ex-roomie Jo Pavey so gutsy. She should be an inspiration to many. 40 years and mother of two."
Scottish steeplechase runner Eilish McColgan:, external "I want to be Jo Pavey when I'm older! #legend"
In, out, in, out, shake it all about. Wales did the relay version of the hokey cokey last night. Finally, they were left standing at the end, being reinstated after initial disqualification, and line up in the women's 4x100m final.
Jamaica's quartet, anchored by the reigning Olympic and World sprint queen Shelley-Anne Fraser-Pryce, are red-hot favourites after setting a Games record as fastest qualifiers.
The race will start in the time it takes you to go and grab a cold one from the fridge.
Nick Hope
BBC Sport in Glasgow
"Finally big cheers from the crowd for Tom Daley, they've been a nervous bunch this evening but a stunning 102.60 has eventually put them at ease. Daley is now so far ahead (64.2) only a failed dive would realistically cost him gold now."
England's Sally Scott and Alysha Newman of Canada are also assured medals thanks to their clearances of 3.80m before Noah sailed by in his ark. That height would have been good enough for 12th and last place in Delhi. Remarkable.
Usain St. Leo Bolt:, external "Let's do this!!! #TeamJamaica"
Tom Daley is nearly there, a superb back 3.5 somersault for his fifth dive earning a score of 102.60. With one dive left, the 20-year-old Englishman is a long way ahead of Vincent Riendeau of Canada.
Sally Peake is very much in command now. The Welsh women becomes the only athlete to cleare 4.15m and she is now guaranteed a medal of some hue.
Aimee Lewis
BBC Sport in Glasgow
"Fewer than 15 minutes remaining of this Ashes ding-dong and it's still level. The overwhelming majority of the play has happened in England's half but the ladies in red and white are holding firm. The Aussies, though, did earlier squander a glorious chance. England, of course, were beaten by the Aussies in the group stages so perhaps revenge, as well as threatening dark clouds, in the air?"
So, Alana Boyd has finally appeared. However, the Australian's first attempt of the competition - at 4.15m - is aborted twice while in mid-air. She is not best pleased by the whole affair it seems, striding up and down the runway in a ferocious lather.
As it stands, Wales' Sally Peake remains in the lead after clearing 4m.