Summary

  • Athletics - Adam Gemili silver in men's 100m; Jamaica's Kemar Bailey-Cole gold

  • Scotland's Libby Clegg wins Para-100m gold

  • Swimming - Jazz Carlin 800m gold for Wales; Sophie Taylor & Oliver Hynd golds for England

  • Boxing - Nicola Adams wins opening bout

  • Squash - Matthew beats Willstrop to win gold

  • Up to 12 live streams - Live Coverage tab

  1. Love is in the airpublished at 08:40 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    Scotland enjoyed a cycling love-in at the Games as they won a total of five medals in the velodrome.

    And the romance extended beyond the track on the closing day on Sunday thanks to Chris Pritchard.

    Chris Pritchard proposes to his partnerImage source, Getty Images

    The Scot, 31, got off his bike at the end of the keirin event and climbed into the crowd to propose to girlfriend Amanda Ball.

    The gesture stunned the watching crowd, if perhaps not Amanda herself, who thankfully said "yes."

    "I have been nagging for long enough," she said. "The ring is just like the one I took a picture of and left on the iPad." Lovely.

  2. Postpublished at 08:37 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    Medal table

    Scotland are third in the medal table, but failed to win a gold on Sunday. They need one more victory to win 12 gold medals for the first time at a Commonwealth Games.

  3. Today's action (part 2)published at 08:36 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    There will also be medals won in these competitions...

    Shooting: Men's 50m pistol and 50m rifle prone events, women's trap and 50m rifle prone events

    Squash: Men's and women's singles

    Swimming: Men's 200m back, 50m breast, 100m fly and Para-sport 200m SM8 medley, women's 800m free, 100m free, 100m breast and 200m fly

    Table Tennis: Men's team

    Weightlifting: Women's 69kg, men's 85kg.

  4. Today's actionpublished at 08:32 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    Today's action

    There will be action in athletics, badminton, boxing, gymnastics (artistic), hockey, lawn bowls, netball, shooting, squash, swimming, table tennis and weightlifting.

    Gold medals won today: 27.

    Today's medals will be won in...

    Athletics: Men's 100m, shot put, Para-sport 100m T37 and Para-sport discus F42/44; women's 100m, hammer throw and Para-sport 100m T12)

    Badminton: Mixed team final

    Lawn bowls: Men's pairs and triples

  5. Yesterday's newspublished at 08:28 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    New Zealand v South AfricaImage source, Reuters

    All good runs must come to an end eventually. New Zealand's rugby sevens' record was perfect, they had won gold every time they had competed.

    But this time they had to settle for silver as they lost 17-12 to South Africa in the final.

  6. Yesterday's newspublished at 08:21 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    But before we go any further, here are some headlines that you may have missed from last night.

    In the pool, Fran Halsall won her second gold of these Games, third Commonwealth title and 10th Commonwealth medal overall, as England claimed another two golds in the pool.

    Siobhan-Marie O'ConnorImage source, Getty Images

    Halsall, 24, emulated her 50m freestyle success in the 50m butterfly after Siobhan-Marie O'Connor (pictured), 18, had won the 200m individual medley.

    Scotland's men's 4x200m freestyle team won silver, while compatriots Hannah Miley, 24, and Erraid Davies, 13, both took bronze, as did England's Liam Tancock in the men's 50m backstroke.

  7. Johnson unimpressed with Gemilipublished at 08:20 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    But not everyone was impressed by Gemili's effort and BBC pundit Michael Johnson, an Olympic gold medallist at 200m, 400m and 4 x 400m relay, wants to see more from the English sprinter.

    "I wasn't that excited by Gemili's performance," said the American. "What has impressed me so much over the last couple of years is his technique, but he looked a little tight.

    "When he runs well I'd like to see him look more like he expected it, not like 'Oh my god, that was great'."

  8. From Stamford Bridge to Hampden Parkpublished at 08:19 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    If things had worked out differently, Adam Gemili could be a Premier League footballer now. By 22:00 BST tonight, he could be the men's 100m Commonwealth Games champion.

    Gemili, 20, spent nearly eight years at Chelsea's academy but was released in 2008 before spells at Reading and Dagenham and Redbridge.

    Adam GemiliImage source, Getty Images

    However, a trip to local athletics club Blackheath and Bromley in 2010 changed his life. Less than a year later he won his first 100m race in under 11 seconds and decided to give up football to become a sprinter.

    Now he has a gold medal from the 2012 World Junior Championships and was the fastest qualifier in Sunday's 100m heats, clocking a time of 10.15 seconds.

  9. The main attractionpublished at 08:15 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    So, Rosefelo Siosi was one of the athletics stories of yesterday, but today things get serious on the track.

    Today is the main attraction, the blue riband event, the race everyone wants to see. Today is 100 metres final day.

  10. Hello againpublished at 08:10 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    Hello and welcome to BBC Sport's live text commentary for day five of the Commonwealth Games. Thank you for joining us and as usual this is the place to be for live streams and live commentary of all the action in all the sports from Glasgow 2014.

    Stay with us for all the latest news from the Games, best reaction and video clips.

  11. A long way from homepublished at 08:06 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    The other 23 athletes in the men's 5,000m had long completed the race but Rosefelo Siosi, who had been lapped three times by the leading runners, was desperate to finish.

    Only 17 years old and without a coach, Siosi, running 9,000 miles from home, was cheered on as if he was from Glasgow by a packed crowd at Hampden Park.

    Rosefelo SiosiImage source, Jonathan Overend

    He finished more than one-and-a-half minutes behind his nearest competitor and almost four minutes behind Kenya's winner Caleb Ndiku.

    But Siosi never gave up, ran a personal best, set a new national record, won the crowd's hearts and typified the spirit of the Commonwealth Games.

  12. It's not the winning...published at 08:02 British Summer Time 28 July 2014

    Not everyone can win gold. For some, reaching the finish line against all odds is their victory, their triumph, their moment of glory.

    Eddie the EagleImage source, AFP

    Great Britain's Eddie 'The Eagle' Edwards waved and launched himself into notoriety with his fearless ski jumping antics, as he soared through the Calgary sky at the 1988 Winter Olympics - and came last.

    Eric the eelImage source, AFP

    Eric 'The Eel' Moussambani from the tiny African country of Equatorial Guinea became a swimming hero in the 2000 Olympics as he raced against himself, despite looking like a man who might need rescuing at any moment.

    Hamadou Djibo IssakaImage source, Getty Images

    At the 2012 Olympics, Hamadou Djibo Issaka of Niger, who had only been rowing for three months, was cheered on by 20,000 people in London as he battled to finish the men's single sculls event.

    Rosefelo SiosiImage source, PA

    And now we can add the name of teenage 5,000m runner Rosefelo Siosi from the Solomon Islands to the list of athletes that show that sometimes it is all about the taking part. He came, he saw, he finished.