Swimmingpublished at 20:13 British Summer Time 1 August 2022
Women’s 200m IM final
Summer McIntosh leads but not by as much as you'd expect. Abbie Wood of England fighting hard...
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England’s Jake Jarman seeks a third gold in men’s floor and Joe Fraser is back
Afternoon session: 13:00-17:00 BST
Northern Ireland’s big gold-medal hope Rhys McClenaghan in men’s pommel (14:10)
Men's finals on the floor, pommel horse and rings
Women's finals on the vault & uneven bars
Tom Rostance, Gary Rose, Lorraine McKenna and Jess Anderson
Women’s 200m IM final
Summer McIntosh leads but not by as much as you'd expect. Abbie Wood of England fighting hard...
Women’s 200m IM final
Butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke, freestyle. Punisher of a race.
Women's 71kg
Wales' Faye Pittman has completed all three of her lifts, her best clean and jerk at 108kg. We'll have to wait for everyone else to go before we know where that leaves her.
We're getting into some heavy weights now.
Women’s 200m IM final
Summer McIntosh, who knows nothing of a world before YouTube, approaches the blocks with confidence. Another gold incoming?
Australia 5-4 England
Mike Henson
BBC Sport at Smithfield
Fans of nominative determinism take note, England's team contains Hannah Jump.
Fans of basketball take note too. Jump lands a sublime two-point shot (everything in the D is one, everything outside is worth two in 3x3) to cut the Australia lead to 5-4.
Team-mate Shanice Brandi Beckford-Norton is impressing with deft dribbing and smart rebounding.
Six minutes to go.
Women’s 200m IM final (20:08 BST)
Spare a thought for Kaylee McKeown who has only just raced in the 200m backstroke and is already straight back in the water!
All eyes will once again by on the Canadian phenom Summer McIntosh, who blitzed the field to win the 400m individual medley and is likely to do the same again.
Oh yeah, and she's only 15...
Judo: Women's -57kg
Golden Score unfortunately doesn't produce a golden moment for England's Acelya Toprak as Christa Deguchi of Canada pulls a perfectly executed counter-attack out of the bag to win by ippon and take the gold medal.
Men’s 100m butterfly semis
Another super-tight race which bodes well for an excellent final.
It's Chad le Clos who takes the win with Joshua Liendo Edwards of Canada in second place. Jacob Peters of England is fourth but will qualify for the final.
Men’s 100m butterfly semis
Chad le Clos, who has 17 Commonwealth Games medals at home (SEVENTEEN), is in this second semi-final. He is somehow still only 30 years old.
Men's 50m breaststroke semis
BBC Sport
England's Adam Peaty spoke to BBC Sport after cruising to victory in the men's 50m breaststroke semi-final.
"I'm still a second off. They need to really do something about that start, I'm not one to complain, but it's getting ridiculous now. We’re on that block for a 50m, and you're like this. And you never get held that long anywhere. We just have to adapt to that, hopefully tomorrow it's a bit better."
[Looking ahead to tomorrow's final] "It’s only a 50m breaststroke, I’m not going to overthink it. It’s one length of the bath. It doesn’t feel amazing but it doesn't feel bad either.
"It’ll probably be my last attempt tomorrow [at this race in the Commonwealth Games]. I'm not bothered about it. In the grand scheme of things, it’s about two years time [at the Olympics]. That's no disrespect but… I'm still four weeks into my programme, I can't put too many expectations on myself."
Men’s 100m butterfly semis
Great race, five men level at 70m or so. It's Matt Temple of Australia who comes through to nudge the win ahead of James Guy, who looked strong.
The final is tomorrow night.
Scotland 15-20 Australia
Mike Henson
BBC Sport at Smithfield
Australia are through to the final after seeing off a spirited Scotland. The Scots head into the bronze medal match. The Aussies can sniff the gold.
Could the final be a rematch against England, who the Aussies lost to earlier in the tournament?
England take on Canada in the second men's semi-final at 22:00 BST.
But first the women's semi-finals. They begin with an Anglo-Aussie clash.
Women's 71kg
Wales' Faith Pittman has just nailed a clean and jerk of 105kg. No problem.
That puts her third for now but there's a lot of weight still to be lifted.
Women's 200m backstroke
Scotland's Katie Shanahan, who claimed her second bronze of the meet in the 200m backstroke, speaking to BBC Sport Scotland: "I can't believe I've just gone and done that.
"I didn't think I'd get a medal at all! I've 100% exceeded my expectations. I came in just hoping to make a few finals and have a bit of fun, so to come away with two bronze medals..."
Katie Shanahan looks understandably proud as punch as she picks up her second medal of the Games. She parades with the Saltire once again...
Women's -57kg
Last bout and final gold medal of the night features England's Acelya Toprak, who is aiming to become Commonwealth champion in the women's -57kg division. Christa Deguchi of Canada stands in her way.
Men's featherweight round of 16
Michael Morrow
BBC Sport NI at The NEC
Wow, Northern Ireland's Jude Gallagher with a sensational first-round stoppage against home favourite Niall Farrell.
Birmingham's Farrell came out to a fantastic noise but was twice dazed by huge right hands from Gallagher in the first round, the second time was enough for the referee to wave the fight off.
Men’s 100m butterfly semis
James Guy of England, who took silver in this race four years ago, goes in the first semi alongside team-mate Jamie Ingram.
Judo: Women's -57kg
Phew!
Scotland's Malin Wilson just has enough left in the tank against English judoka Lele Nairne to snatch the bronze medal.
That was an epic contest.
Women's -57kg
We're deep, deep into Golden Score at Coventry Arena and there is nothing to separate Scotland's Malin Wilson and Lele Nairne of England in this bronze medal match.
Just as one judoka goes in for the attack, the other produces the perfect defensive response. Both are looking slightly disheveled now.
This bout is clocking on for the 10-minute mark...