Scotland in actionpublished at 08:13 British Summer Time 13 April 2018
Hockey
Over in the men's hockey, Scotland and Malaysia are playing-off for fifth and sixth place.
At the moment's it's 1-1 in the third period.
Diving: England's Jack Laugher wins third gold of Games in 3m synchro springboard, alongside Chris Mears
Tom Daley & Dan Goodfellow take 10m synchro gold; Scotland's Grace Reid wins 1m springboard
Athletics: England's Katarina Johnson-Thompson wins heptathlon, bronze for team-mate Niamh Emerson
Bowls: Alex Marshall sets gold record as Scots win fours
Basketball: England women shock Canada to reach final
Hockey: England men beaten by Australia in semi-final
Wrestling: Wales' Kane Charig gets 65kg silver; bronze for England's Charlie Bowling
Caroline Chapman
Hockey
Over in the men's hockey, Scotland and Malaysia are playing-off for fifth and sixth place.
At the moment's it's 1-1 in the third period.
Mike Henson
BBC Sport on the Gold Coast
Considering their boy is on the brink of history I would say they look pretty relaxed.
Welsh wrestler Kane Charig goes in the gold-medal bout of the 65kg class in a little under half an hour against India's Bajrang.
He is already the first Welsh wrestler to make a gold-medal match at the Commonwealth Games. Everything beyond here is new ground.
Friend Michael, mum Lisa, dad Mark, girlfriend Kate, brother-in-law Joe and sister Tyler are in the stands to see just what precious metal Kane is going to come away with.
And this is where it will be decided - mat B of the Carrara Sports and Leisure centre.
Diving
Plenty happened in the men's sychronised 10m platform but in the end Tom Daley and Dan Goodfellow held on for gold.
Here's some of the best of the action...
Sad news coming from the Gold Coast.
There are no more Borobi mascot toys available at the Games.
More than 90,000 have been sold, with no more stock to satisfy demand.
"It's better to sell them all out and have a few disappointed people than buying a lot and ending up with a problem," said Gold Coast chairman Peter Beattie.
Apparently people are now selling them online for more than their $40 price tag.
Wrestling
From 08:00 BST there could be some wrestling medals coming the way of the home nations.
Charlie Bowling competes for England in the men's 65kg bronze medal bout while Wales' Kane Charig goes for gold.
Heptathlon
After a flat day yesterday, Katarina Johnson-Thompson performed well to increase her lead in the heptathlon to 174 points with one event remaining.
That equates to around 14 seconds in the 800m over second place Nina Schultz.
The final event is at 11:45 BST.
Rugby Sevens
Canada have scored the first try in women's rugby seven Commonwealth Games history.
They lead South Africa 29-0 in the second half.
Diving: England's Tom Daley and Dan Goodfellow beat compatriots Matthew Dixon and Noah Williams to win gold in the synchronised 10m platform.
Lawn Bowls: Alex Marshall led the Scotland's fours team to a bowls gold medal over Australia. That makes him the most successful Scottish athlete in Commonwealth Games history.
Athletics: England's Katarina Johnson-Thompson is on the brink of heptathlon gold with one event remaining. England failed to finish in the 4x100m relay as Matthew Hudson Smith pulled up injured in the first 50m, while in the 4x100m relay, England qualified fastest for the final.
Rhythmic gymnastics: A silver for Laura Halford gave Wales a 26th medal on the Gold Coast to surpass their previous Games overseas record set in Auckland in 1990.
Shooting: Scotland's Seonaid McIntosh won her second shooting medal of the Games, this time in the women's 50m rifle 3 positions. England's Sam Gowin also won bronze in the rapid-fire 25m pistol.
Women's trap finals
Big news for Northern Ireland - they've taken their fifth medal of the Games thanks to Kirsty Barr in the women's trap finals.
She finishes behind Australia's Laetisha Scanlan, who is crying her eyes out as she celebrates winning gold.
There's also another medal for Wales as Sarah Wixey takes bronze ahead of England Abbey Ling in fourth.
Rhythmic Gymnastics
A silver medal for Laura Halford in the rhythmic gymnastics this morning was a historic moment for Wales.
It secured their record medal tally at an overseas Games.
Morning (again).
We're getting to the crunch point now - only three days left of competition on the Gold Coast.
Here's what's coming up on day nine...
And on that fine note we are done. Thank you for joining us.
Here's Caroline Chapman to take you through the morning medal rush.
Men's squash doubles quarter-final
Ew. Just ew.
Heptathlon
England's 18-year-old Niamh Emerson sits in fourth position going into the final event of the heptathlon, 109 points behind Australian Celeste Mucci.
Emerson has an 800m personal best that is 16 seconds quicker than Mucci - a difference that would give her the points she needs to take bronze.
President of Commonwealth Games England Denise Lewis has her fingers crossed...
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Men’s 91kg
Luke Reddy
BBC Sport on the Gold Coast
Heavy hitting as Cheavon Clarke faces David Nyika of New Zealand in the 91kg semi-final. At this weight, the punches really do carry meat.
Only Luke McCormack has exited of the English names today and this is the last bout of the morning session so it’s been productive.
Clarke gets beaten unanimously on points. He was ranked higher than his rival too so that’s a shock.
That means at the end of the morning session the home nations have five fighters through to gold medal matches on Saturday.
Galal Yafai, Paige Murney and Lisa Whiteside fly the flag for England. Brendan Irvine and Carly McNaul do so for Northern Ireland.
“I don’t think it was quite good enough,” says Clarke. “He’s not a bad opponent. I’ve been injured for eight months and my first fight here was my first one back. I thought I’d maybe pick up a bit. No one really comes here for a bronze medal.”
Men's fours
We've told you it was a thriller in the men's fours as Scotland took gold and here are the highlights to prove it...
Bowls: Men's fours
Alex Marshall won a fifth Commonwealth Games gold medal to become Scotland's most successful athlete in the competition on day nine on the Gold Coast.
The Scottish four, including Ronald Duncan, Derek Oliver and Paul Foster, defeated host nation Australia 15-3, while England took the bronze medal against Wales.
Tennis player and fellow Scot Jamie Murray is among those to have congratulated the 51-year-old on social media...
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Boxing: men's 91kg
Any ideas how to pronounce Cheavon out there? We're struggling in the BBC Sport office. Shay-von is our best guess. Thankfully we only have to type it, not say it.
Both boxers go hell for leather in the final round, trying to rack up a winning margin. David Nyika is landing more punches though and looks to have done enough to win it.
Over to the judges... Nyika's arm is raised into the air. Cheavon Clarke, who trains in Gravesham in Kent, must settle for bronze.