Summary

  • Swimming: England win two golds and Scotland's Daniel Wallace also triumphs

  • Cycling: England's Joanna Rowsell wins pursuit gold; Jason Kenny sprint silver

  • Para-cycling: Scotland's Neil Fachie and Craig Maclean win gold

  • Judo: Golds for England's Williams, Livesey and Fletcher and Scotland's Clark

  • Wales: Silver and bronze in rhythmic gymnastics plus shooting silver

  1. Lawn Bowlspublished at 08:46 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    And if you are interested in a specific sport then make sure you cast your glance to the 'Live Coverage' tab on this page.

    First up is Lawn Bowls, with the group stage of the men's triples and women's fours under way.

  2. BBC Coveragepublished at 08:41 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    Where can you watch all the action? More like, where can't you watch all the action. BBC Sport has every base covered...

    06:00-01:00: BBC Radio 5 live

    09:00-13:00: 13:45-18:00 & 19:00-22:00: BBC One

    09:00-22:00: BBC Three

    13:00-13:45, 18:00-19:00 & 22:00-22:30: BBC Two

    22:40-23:40: Tonight At The Games, BBC One

    23:40-23:55: Sports News, BBC One

  3. On today's menupublished at 08:37 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    The majority of the medals will be won later in the day, but there will be plenty of fierce competition in Glasgow this morning.

    Swimming: The pool will see Thursday's star men Ross Murdoch and Michael Jamieson resume their rivalry in the 100m breaststroke heats at 11:16 BST, while Robbie Renwick begins his 200m freestyle title defence at 10:44.

    Track cycling: England will hope to improve on Thursday's two silvers with Jason Kenny going in the individual sprint quarter-final at 11:01, before Joanna Rowsell, Dani King and Laura Trott compete in the individual pursuit from 11:19.

    All the home nations are represented as judo resumes at the SECC from 10:00, Wales' men open their hockey campaign against India at 09:00, while the shooting and lawn bowls get under way in a matter of minutes...

  4. Judopublished at 08:35 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    Kimberly RenicksImage source, AP

    Kimberly Renicks, who had the honour of winning Scotland's first gold, says the vociferous home support helped her to victory.

    "The crowd was absolutely brilliant. They were behind you so much. When they announced your name they just erupted and it really did give you that extra boost," she tells BBC Breakfast.

    "The first two girls I fought I had never fought before and I didn't know their style, so the first 30 seconds I was just seeing what they would do."

  5. Medal tablepublished at 08:27 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    Glasgow 2014

    However, that quadruple was still not enough for Scotland to fly to the top of the medal table. Instead it is the 'Auld Enemy'. England are setting the early pace after the likes of triathletes Jodie Stimpson and Alistair Brownlee won gold.

  6. Postpublished at 08:26 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    But, even before the Scottish swimmers made a splash, the host nation had already bagged two 100g circles of gold. And they were snaffled by the same family.

    Sisters Kimberley and Louise Renicks won Scotland's first gold medals of the Games with thrilling judo victories before a raucous home crowd.

    Kimberley, 26, beat India's Sushila Likmabam in the -48kg weight category before Louise, 31, overcame England's Kelly Edwards in a nervy -52kg final.

    Mr and Mrs Renicks will be beaming from ear-to-ear today.

  7. Postpublished at 08:20 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    Before we dive head first into that lot, let's recap on what you might have missed.

    Glasgow 2014Image source, Getty Images

    Host nation Scotland enjoyed a wonderful first day, claiming four golds in the space of three hours.

    Swimmer Ross Murdoch, 20, upset home favourite Michael Jamieson to win a thrilling 200m breaststroke final. That came after Hannah Miley broke her own Commonwealth Games record in the pool to win the 400m medley.

  8. Today's highlightspublished at 08:13 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    I know what you're thinking. Nope, not "what should I have for breakfast?". You're thinking "what Commonwealth Games fun can I watch today?" Here's what you can't afford to miss over the next 15 hours...

    09:00 - Shooting: England's Amber Hill, who won the BBC Young Sports Personality of the Year award in 2013, competes in the women's skeet.

    11:00 - Track cycling: World champion Joanna Rowsell will be the favourite for England in the women's individual pursuit, though Canada and Australia will be well represented and Scotland's Katie Archibald has a strong shot at a medal, as does Elinor Barker for Wales.

    19:00 - Swimming: A chance to see Michael Jamieson try and make amends for his 200m defeat in the men's 100m breaststroke semi-finals.

  9. Postpublished at 08:09 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    Glasgow 2014
  10. Postpublished at 08:05 British Summer Time 25 July 2014

    If you were one of those in any doubt about what the Commonwealth Games means to these athletes, then the opening day must have changed your mind.

    There were tears of joy. There were tears of frustration. There might even have been a few tears of laughter as the Queen's 'photo bombing' was retweeted, liked and shared thousands of times across the social networking world.

    The Queen and Jayde TaylorImage source, @_JaydeTaylor

    The bar was raised high. Can we clear it today? We're about to find out - welcome to day two of Glasgow 2014.

  11. Postpublished at 21:14 British Summer Time 24 July 2014

    There were plenty of whispers. "No-one really cares about the Commonwealth Games," hissed the naysayers. "It's just a poor man's Olympics," they moaned.

    Ross MurdochImage source, Reuters

    Say that to Ross Murdoch.

    Renicks sisters - Glasgow 2014Image source, Getty Images

    Say that to Kimberley and Louise Renicks.

    Glasgow 2014: Sir Bradley WigginsImage source, Getty Images

    Say that to Sir Bradley Wiggins.