Athleticspublished at 21:25 British Summer Time 2 August 2022
Women's heptathlon
The women's heptathlon is coming to a close on day one and the final event tonight is the 200m.
Here's the standings ahead of the race, which is about to get under way.
Use play icons at top of the page to watch live coverage from Birmingham (UK only)
Swimming: England's Adam Peaty powers to 50m breaststroke gold
Swimming: England's Brodie Williams wins 200m backstroke gold
Athletics - Wales' Olivia Breen wins T37/T38 100m gold from England's Sophie Hahn; Hannah Cockroft leads England 1-2-3 in T33/34 100m final
Athletics: Katarina Johnson-Thompson leads heptathlon after day one
England finish with 10 gymnastics golds after Alice Kinsella, Jake Jarman and Joe Fraser win finals - Jarman now has four golds
3x3 basketball - England win men's gold and women's silver
Wales beat England 19-18 in lawn bowls men's pairs final; Scotland win gold in Para pairs
Netball - England beat Uganda 56-35 in pool match
Gary Rose, Tom Rostance, Neil Johnston and Sonny Cohen
Women's heptathlon
The women's heptathlon is coming to a close on day one and the final event tonight is the 200m.
Here's the standings ahead of the race, which is about to get under way.
Women's 3x3 gold medal match
England trail 12-10 with just over one minute on the clock but England have possession coming out of the timeout.
Fairly certain that Olivia Breen has not stopped smiling since she crossed the finish line to win gold. She is still beaming with delight as she waits for and then receives her gold medal.
The crowd cheer loudly as the medal is put round her neck. A hugely popular winner here.
Adam Peaty wants his partner Eiri Munro to pass their son down over the railings as he parades his gold medal but she wisely says no - it's quite a drop! He thoroughly enjoyed that medal ceremony and parade lap, as did Scotland's bronze-winning Ross Murdoch.
Women's 3x3 gold medal match
Half way through this final and the scores are tied. Crucially England have committed four fouls, six will see the opposition into the bonus and get free throws for every defensive foul.
Mike Henson
BBC Sport at Alexander Stadium
Australian pole vault gold medallist Nina Kennedy used her interview in the infield to praise the Birmingham crowd, atmosphere, stadium and...sunset.
And you know what, she's not wrong. It has been a peach.
Kennedy is from Perth, one of the most remote cities in the world, sandwiched between vast outback and the Indian Ocean. But sounds like Birmingham beats it for natural beauty. Or, at least gets somewhere close.
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
Women's discus final
As soon as I say no-one can get close, Nigeria's Chioma Onyekewere delivers an incredible throw of 61.70m and she leaps into first place.
Jade Lally gets her angle wrong on her next effort in response and she is in the silver medal position with two throws remaining.
Women's 3x3 gold medal match
Here we go again for gold as England take on Canada in the women's final and it is England who score first to take a 1-0 lead.
Women's discus final
Over in the discus final and England's Jade Lally remains in the gold medal position after three throws.
No-one is able to get close to her distance of 57.33m.
And so does the pool as Adam Peaty steps up to take his gold medal. What a great moment.
Women's pole vault final
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
Women’s 800m freestyle final (21:15 BST)
A brutal, doesn’t-bear-thinking-about 32 lengths of your local pool, this one. It’s a charity fundraiser not a sprint. Not for these athletes of course who will dust it off inside nine minutes.
Lani Pallister of Australia is yet to win a medal in a senior race but is the fastest qualifier, though team-mate and reigning champ Ariarne Titmus will start as the favourite.
Men's 10,000m final
The crowd are on their feet as Jacob Kiplimo powers away from the rest in the final 100m to take the gold!
He crosses the line with a new Games record of 27:09.19. Kenya's Daniel Ebenya takes the silver while his team-mate Kibiwott Kendi wins the bronze.
Scotland's Andy Butchart finishes seventh.
Women’s 200m IM SM10 final
Buuterfly, backstroke, breaststroke, freestyle. What a punishing race!
Jasmine Greenwood has a flier of a first 100m with Aurelie Rivard close behind. Toni Shaw of Scotland is third as they enter the breaststroke.
Keira Stephens comes through strongly though and it's Greenwood, Rivard, Stephens. Great race!
New Zealand (147-7) beat Sri Lanka (102-8) by 45 runs
New Zealand have beaten Sri Lanka by 45 runs at Edgbaston and that win confirms England's qualification for the cricket semi-finals.
Both England and New Zealand reach the last four with a game to spare and will face each other on Thursday with the victor advancing as Group B winners.
Earlier today England thrashed South Africa by 26 runs.
Men's 3x3 gold medal match
HUGE TWO FROM MYLES HESSON. Australia attempt a two to win the game despite only needing one and Daniel Johnson comes up short.
The loose ball finds its way to Myles Hesson who is wide open and he splashes the two from the corner to secure the overtime win for England and the gold medal winning 17-16.
Men's 10,000m final
Uganda's Jacob Kiplimo leads with 1,000m remaining. He has Daniel Ebenyo of Kenya right up behind him.
Men's 3x3 gold medal match
It is first to score two points here and Australia strike first at the rim, 16-15.
Women’s 200m IM SM10 final
This could be a truly epic race between five-time Paralympic champion Aurelie Rivard of Canada and 17-year-old Jasmine Greenwood of Australia. They are the class of the field.