Get involved #bbcglasgow2014published at 21:00 British Summer Time 1 August 2014
Derek:, external Tremendous race Lynsey Sharp Well done!
Stef Lamb:, external Sharp...Scotland...Silver...Super
Athletics - Sharp takes 800m silver for Scotland; Bolt leads Jamaica into 4x100m final
Athletics - Australia's Pearson wins hurdles gold; Lewis wins pole vault gold for England
Gymnastics - Fragapane wins fourth gold; Wilson and Purvis also win
Diving - Daley/Denny win 10m silver; Laugher/Mears win 3m gold
Bowls - Scotland win golds in men's singles and fours
Hockey - England women beat NZ in shoot-out to reach final
Jonathan Jurejko and Mike Henson
Derek:, external Tremendous race Lynsey Sharp Well done!
Stef Lamb:, external Sharp...Scotland...Silver...Super
Lynsey Sharp might need a pair of earplugs - the noise levels have gone through the imaginary Hampden roof. She collapses to the track in elation, then rises to her feet to lap up the acclaim of an adoring Glasgow crowd.
BBC Radio 5 live
Two-time Commonwealth Games medallist Christian Malcolm: "That was fantastic by Lynsey Sharp. I have seen her going through her troubles and this means so much to her. The fact that her father has won a medal at the Commonwealth Games, and now she has won a silver."
Steve Cram
BBC Sport athletics commentator
"When Lynsey Sharp gets into the home straight she never gives up. This was a brave run.
"Jessica Judd at 19 will have more to come. I know she will."
Allison Curbishley
BBC athletics expert, on Radio 5 live
"Wow, Lynsey Sharp! Her father took bronze in the 100 and 200m in 1982.
"She has 'get out strong and commit' written on her hand. She backed off with 200m to go and said she is going to run her own race. Finally she has delivered at Hampden."
Where did Lynsey Sharp come from?! A sensational run from the darling of Scottish athletics. Sharp kept calm down the back straight, where she looked to be trapped, before timing her burst down the outside to perfection.
The 24-year-old cruised past English rival Jess Judd, who ended in fourth, like a Jamaican sprinter to grab silver.
World champion Eunice Sum proves just why she was the firm pre-race favourite. She streaks home first in 2:00.31.
England's Jess Judd is running a fine first lap - she's ready to make her move. Scotland's Lynsey Sharp appears to be getting boxed in down the back straight though...
Paula Radcliffe
BBC Sport athletics expert & 2002 CWG champion
"You have to feel for Cam Levins. He slightly mis-judged it but he went for it and gave it everything. In the closing stages he knows he's got Kipsiro on his inside and Bett on his outside.
"He's just not get enough to hold off Kipsiro who is getting stronger with every stride to hold onto his title. When he think about I think he will be happy with a bronze but all he can see now is that it was snatched away in the last ten metres."
Canadian Levins - a training partner of double Olympic champion Mo Farah - was pipped in the final strides by Moses Kipsiro of Uganda and Kenya's Josphat Bett in a dramatic finish to the 10,000m.
Michael Johnson
BBC Sport athletics expert & 400m world record holder
"Is it strange to anyone else that in 2014 track & field still has athletes pin a paper name & number bid on their uniform?
"Allows event organizer to sell bib sponsorship. I get that but has to be more modern way. Paper & safety pins makes the sport look amateur."
Gold medallist Moses Kipsiro reveals he almost pulled out of the 10,000m final because of a painful knee injury.
"I've been having a lot of injuries so my knee was very painful," the Ugandan tells BBC Sport. "I said I wasn't going to take part but something deep inside said 'you can make it'. I stuck to it and now I'm really happy."
Reporter: "Jess, what's your prediction?"
Jess: "I predict pain."
"I love the pain of 800m running," Jess Judd tells BBC Sport. "I think I'm a bit sadistic. If I'm not ill at the end of a session, I think I haven't pushed myself enough. If I'm not lying on the ground, I haven't gone through the boundary."
England's Jessica Judd may have an unusual lopsided jaunt but, boy, does it work. The 19-year-old from Essex produced a fine display of front-running in the pouring rain to win her 800m semi-final in 2:02.26. Can she go all the way?
Home favourite Lynsey Sharp and England's Jenny Meadows line up against Judd after qualifying as fastest losers. But Kenya's world champion Eunice Sum is the woman to beat.
You've got to feel for Cameron Levins who disappointingly finger-clicks the air. However, he manages a smile - maybe a rueful one - when a Canadian flag is thrust into his hand. Moses Kipsiro skips around the track in delight, finding his family which includes a woman shrieking very loudly. And why not!
And, by the way, there was a smaller margin between gold and silver in the 10,000m final (0.03 sec Kipsiro to Bett) than in 100m final (0.10 sec Bailey-Cole to Gemili). Stunning.
Tom Fordyce
Chief sports writer in Glasgow
"Steve Lewis's pole vault gold will be a popular one in the England team - the Stoke man has struggled with form and injury, travelling the globe from Perth to Phoenix (and Loughborough) in search of inspiration.
"Adding Commonwealth gold to the silver he won in Delhi and bronze as a young shaver in Melbourne will make it all worthwhile - and, since he is sharing a room here in Glasgow with long jump champion Greg Rutherford, makes that the most successful set of twin divans in the camp."
Blockbuster finish! Canada's Cameron Levins surges around the bend with no-one in front of him, as the Scottish crowd cheer him to victory. But the sounds of Kenyan and Ugandan feet get louder. And louder. Reigning champion Moses Kipsiro edges past first to defend his crown, just a size 10 ahead of Kenyan Josphat Bett. Wonderful stuff.
Three Kenyan vests are stuck in the top five, along with New Zealand's Jake Robertson. The mullet-haired Kiwi decides to go bold just before the bell, but his challenges lasts a matter of seconds. All or nothing now...
England's Paul Drinkhall and Liam Pitchford put up a brave fight but lose their men's doubles bronze-medal match to number two seeds Zi Yang and Jian Zhan of Singapore 6-11 10-12 11-7 11-8 10-12.
Four laps to go in the 10,000m - this is where the calves start to burn. I'd imagine. Kenya's Peter Kirui leads, like he has for the past 3,000m, but I'm not sure he will be there in a few laps time. He's there to be dragged back by the waiting pack.
Commonwealth long jump champion Greg Rutherford:, external "So proud of my close friend and room mate Steve Lewis. He's gone through a hell of a lot and come out a champ. Great man."
Steve Lewis became the first Englishman to win a gold medal in the pole vault.