Summary

  • Watch lawn bowls replay at the top of the page

  • Athletics: England's Zharnel Hughes disqualified after initially winning men's 200m

  • England's Kyle Langford wins 800m silver; Dina Asher-Smith takes bronze in women's 200m

  • England's Sophie Hahn wins T38 100m gold, Scotland's Eilidh Doyle gets 400m hurdles silver

  • Diving: England's Jack Laugher wins men's 3m springboard, Lois Toulson gets women's 10m platform bronze

  • England's Annie Last wins cross-country mountain biking gold; silver for team-mate Evie Richards

  • Bowls: Scotland beaten in women's triples final, England take bronze

  • Hockey: England beaten by NZ in women's semi-final shootout

  1. Live nowpublished at 12:14 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Will it be Australia or India who book their gold medal match place?

    Watch their women's hockey semi-final right here.

    Or you can follow the women's 10m platform diving final over on this link.

  2. bronze medal

    Bronze Medal - Shara Proctor (England)published at 12:12 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Women's long jump final

    Two centimetres. That is all that separates England's Shara Proctor from a silver medal. Her best jump of 6.75m sees her take home the bronze medal in the women's long jump, agonisingly just behind Australia's Brooke Stratton in silver.

    That is Proctor's first Commonwealth Games medal, after picking up a World Championship silver in Beijing in 2015.

    Shara ProctorImage source, Getty Images
  3. gold-medal

    Gold Medal - Christabel Nettey (Canada)published at 12:09 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Women's long jump final

    England's Lorraine Ugen, with her last jump, in the long jump comes up with her best effort of the competition, a 6.69m, but it is not enough for a medal.

    Australia's Brooke Stratton takes silver, but she can't hold back the tears, sobbing on her coach's shoulder as she realises she has failed to take a gold in front of her home crowd.

    That means Canada's Christabel Nettey takes the gold.

    Christabel Nettey of CanadaImage source, Reuters
  4. athletics

    The Yellow Wall, Aussie stylepublished at 12:08 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Men's pole vault final

    Mike Henson
    BBC Sport on the Gold Coast

    wall

    They call in 'the Yellow Wall' at Borussia Dortmund's Westfalenstadion.

    And Carrara Stadium is pulling a similar look with a towering, if temporary, stand at one end of the track.

    It is quite yellow as well, populated by almost exclusively Aussies.

    A roar rips around the stand as well as pole vaulter Kurtis Marschall matches the height cleared by leader Canada's Shawn Barber.

  5. Johnson-Thompson wins 200mpublished at 12:07 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Women's heptathlon - 200m

    Katarina Johnson-Thompson had been first after two events of the heptathlon, dropped to third after the shot put, but ends day one of the competition on a good note, storming to victory in her 200m race in a time of 23.57 seconds.

  6. Proctor down to thirdpublished at 12:06 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Women's long jump

    England's Shara Proctor has been bumped down to third in the women's long jump, as Australia's Brooke Stratton has gone out to 6.75m, two centimetres further than Proctor's best.

    Two jumps for Proctor to improve.

    Lorraine Ugen is also in medal contention, currently fourth with two jumps remaining.

  7. Watch: Laugher seals diving goldpublished at 12:06 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Men's 3m springboard

  8. What's happened on day eight?published at 12:02 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    • England won their first ever Commonwealth medals in women's mountain biking as Annie Last took gold ahead of team-mate Evie Richards.
    • England's Jack Laugher took his third gold of the Games in the men's 3m springboard diving.
    • Scotland's Eilidh Doyle secured 400m hurdles silver for the third successive Commonwealth Games
    • England's Paralympic and world champion Sophie Hahn won the T38 100m title.
    • Scotland's Seonaid McIntosh won Commonwealth Games bronze in the women's 50m rifle prone event.
    • Wales' Curtis Dodge and England's Georgina Nelthorpe won bronze medals in freestyle wrestling.
    • England's Tiffany Porter and Alicia Barrett qualified for the 100m hurdles final.
    • England beat Canada to win bronze in the women's triples lawn bowls.
    • In hockey, England's women were beaten in a penalty shootout against New Zealand in the semi-finals.

  9. squash

    Work for Welsh pair to dopublished at 11:58 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Men's doubles round of 16: Wales 0-1 Australia

    Welsh pair Peter Creed and Joel Makin are trailing in their men's doubles last-16 match against Australia.

    They lost the first game quite comfortably and have some work to do if they are to get themselves back into the match.

    .
  10. bronze medal

    Bronze Medal - Luke Cutts (England)published at 11:58 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Men's pole vault final

    Luke Cutts picked up a silver in the pole vault four years ago, but the 30-year-old Englishman has to settle for bronze this time around after clearing 5.45m, but failing three times at 5.55m.

    Canada's Shawnacy Barber and Australia's Kurtis Marschall have both gone over 5.65m, and are battling it out for the gold between them.

    Another English competitor, Adam Hague also went over 5.45m, a season's best for him, but it is only fourth for him.

    Luke Cutts of EnglandImage source, Getty Images
  11. beach volleyball

    Australia trail Canadapublished at 11:57 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Women's final: Australia 0-1 Canada

    Australia duo Christopher McHugh and Damien Schumann claimed gold in the men's event earlier this morning but compatriots Taliqua Clancy and Mariafe Artacho del Solar have work to do after losing the first set in their women's final against Canada.

    There's almost nothing separating the two teams - like it was in the men's final - but can Australia claw their way back into the game and take it to a third and deciding set?

  12. Postpublished at 11:56 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Men's pole vault final

    There will be no gold for England in the pole vault. Both Luke Cutts and Adam Hague fail three times at 5.55m. Canada's Shawnacy Barber has just gone over 5.65m, but it is not over just yet.

  13. Postpublished at 11:54 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Men's pole vault final

    Luke Cutts and Adam Hague, both of England, have both cleared 5.45m in the men's pole vault final.

  14. Proctor second in the long jumppublished at 11:52 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Women's long jump

    We are getting to the end of the women's long jump final, and England's Shara Proctor has just gone second with a leap of 6.75m. That was her fourth attempt out of six.

    Canada's Christabel Nettey is out in front with a jump of 6.84m.

  15. ‘Devastated’published at 11:49 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Hockey: Women's semi-final: England 0-0 New Zealand (1-2 penalty shootout)

    Luke Reddy
    BBC Sport on the Gold Coast

    Alex DansonImage source, .

    England captain Alex Danson speaks to BBC Sport after that shootout defeat.

    “We are devastated,” she says. “We played a fantastic game and I’m so proud of how we came out. Credit to them. We have to hold our head and come out fighting for the bronze medal.

    “We had some chances, their keeper had a very good game. We will review it but you saw the fighting spirit and I’m proud of my team.”

  16. Contrasting emotionspublished at 11:48 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Women's semi-final: England 0-0 New Zealand (1-2 penalty shootout)

    New Zealand are ecstatic following that semi-final victory while Alex Danson, the England skipper who earned her 300th international cap today, was distraught as they are denied another chance to fight for that elusive gold medal.

    .
    .
  17. hockey

    'Heartbreaking'published at 11:47 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Hockey - women's semi-final: England 1-2 New Zealand (shootout)

    Kate Richardson-Walsh, who captained Great Britain to Olympic gold in Rio two years ago, says England's semi-final shootout defeat is "heartbreaking".

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  18. hockey

    The ultimate contrastpublished at 11:46 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Hockey - women's semi-final: England 1-2 New Zealand (shootout)

    Luke Reddy
    BBC Sport on the Gold Coast

    New Zealand celebrateImage source, .

    That will hurt.

    England’s players - shoulders slumped. New Zealand’s have all grown another six inches.

    It’ll be bronze or nothing for England. If Australia beat India in a few minutes we will have an Aussie-Kiwi final and that will be epic.

  19. hockey

    'Huge for New Zealand'published at 11:45 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Hockey - women's semi-final: England 1-2 New Zealand (shootout)

    Helen Richardson-Walsh MBE
    Olympic gold medal winning hockey player on BBC TV

    What a goal from Stacey Michelsen, the player of the game - she so calmly lifts the ball over Hinch.

    That is huge for New Zealand, who have lost to England in the last Commonwealth Games and lost to Great Britain in the Olympics. They've lost semi-finals consistently and this, psychologically for them, is huge.

  20. athletics

    'It is still tough on me'published at 11:43 British Summer Time 12 April 2018

    Athletics: Men's 400m hurdles final

    An emotional gold medal for Kyron McMaster, who has just won the first Commonwealth Games gold for the British Virgin Islands.

    The race is also only seven months after his coach Xavier Samuels died in Hurricane Irma.

    "For me it is a big deal, what we have been though, this is the first positive of a great future for the British Virgin Islands," said McMaster.

    "I'm still making adjustments, it is still tough on me, but with faith, God, praying, it is all just working bit by bit."

    Asked what he thought the reception would be back in his country, he said: "I can guarantee they are jumping for joy. Everyone gathered into a big spot to watch this on TV and I can imagine how they are right now."