Postpublished at 15:28 British Summer Time 3 August 2022
Women's +87kg
Becky Grey
BBC Sport at The NEC
It's a Commonwealth Games record for Emily Campbell.
There are suddenly England flags everywhere.
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Morning session: 09:30-14:15 BST
Qualifying action in the women's singles, men's singles, women's classes 6-10, women's classes 3-5, men's classes 8-10 and men's classes 3-5
Steve Sutcliffe and Tom Rostance
Women's +87kg
Becky Grey
BBC Sport at The NEC
It's a Commonwealth Games record for Emily Campbell.
There are suddenly England flags everywhere.
Women's +87kg
Load it up! Emily Campbell ups the weight to 121kg.
This will be a new Commonwealth Games record if she is successful...
If? When. Lovely lift. Campbell is cruising out there.
Samoa's Feagaiga Stowers, who goes last, also lifts 117kg but then can't manage 121kg.
Women's +87kg
Becky Grey
BBC Sport at The NEC
The crowd loved that start from Emily Campbell.
She takes a calming breath as the fans fall silent. She bends, keeps them waiting for a worrying second, and bangs the bar above her head.
Campbell then opens her arms to the crowd like a circus ringmaster. Nailed it.
Women's cross-country final
Ned Boulting
Cycling presenter and commentator
Richards hears the bell, takes a drink and I would be fairly confident that she has extended the lead.
Looking down the finishing straight there is still no sign of the Australian Cuthbert, and Richards has built that buffer right up.
Women's cross-country final
Evie Richards is closing in!
The 2018 runner-up takes a big sip of her drink as the bell rings to let her know she is just one lap away from the Commonwealth Games gold medal.
Her advantage is growing - it's back out to 41 seconds as Australian Zoe Cuthbert puts daylight between herself and Candice Lill.
Scotland's Isla Short is 40 seconds down on Lill and a medal may just be out of reach now.
Women's +87kg
Here's what the NEC is here to see!
England's Emily Campbell receives a huge roar as she rips off her headphones. She'd have still heard the cheer if she'd left them on full power.
Campbell is the penultimate competitor to go, bidding to lift 117kg which will stick her into the lead.
Canada's Emma Frieson currently leads the way on 106kg.
First attempt for Campbell... here we go... excellent start.
Confident and comfortable lift, leaving her breaking into a beaming smile before spreading her arms wide in celebration.
Women's +87kg
Becky Grey
BBC Sport at The NEC
Emily Campbell wants more!
She was due to lift at 115kg first but, maybe hearing the massive roar from the crowd, goes up to 117kg.
She looks PUMPED.
Women's cross-country final
Rochelle Gilmore
2010 Commonwealth Games champion on BBC TV
Richards is asking for time-gaps to see how much time she lost, and she is having to dig really deep here.
Women's cross-country final
Australia's Zoe Cuthbert has re-joined South African Candice Lill and Scotland's Isla Short in pursuit of Evie Richards.
We'll get an update on the time gap here... Richards still leads by 26 seconds. She's holding her advantage after that scare.
She did well to avoid disaster - and she's done even better to respond to the setback and stay in control. The gold is still hers to lose.
Women's +87kg
Becky Grey
BBC Sport at The NEC
The weightlifting has got a bit of an auction vibe.
Athletes put their weight up in increments of 1kg and the announcer calls each one out.
101kg, a change - 102kg, now 103kg. The crowd gets more excited the higher the weight goes.
Men's quarter-finals
Richard Winton
BBC Sport Scotland at the NEC
Next up for Scotland is middleweight Sam Hickey against Adeyinka Benson of Nigeria. The 22-year-old Dundonian won European bronze earlier this year and is just three rounds away from securing at least the same colour of metal in the Commonwealth Games.
And immediate after Hickey is team-mate Sean Lazzerini against Keven Beausejour of Canada in the light-heavyweight division. Can Scotland claim a hat trick of medals after Reese Lynch guaranteed bronze earlier on?
Men's middleweight quarter-final
Richie Woodhall
Former boxing world champion on BBC TV
I think in this tournament you have got to show the judges that you can box going forwards as well as backwards. Lewis Richardson responded well to a big punch, bit down on his gumshield and really took it to Billy le Poullain.
Men's middleweight quarter-final
England's Lewis Richardson is guaranteed at least a bronze medal thanks to a win over Guernsey's Billy le Poullain in their men's middleweight quarter-final.
Richardson, from Colchester in Essex, secured a unanimous 5-0 win. He was caught with a great shot from Le Poullain in the second round, but responded well with an attack of his own at the end of that round, forcing Le Poullain, appearing in his second Commonwealth Games, to take a standing count.
Four of the five judges gave it to Richardson by a 30-27 margin, with the other one scoring it 30-26.
Women's +87kg
Want to know more about Emily Campbell's journey to weightlifting superstar? We've got just the thing.
As well as discussing how she wants to inspire others, the 28-year-old from Nottingham talks about the influence of her parents, her dual English-Jamaican heritage and switching from athletics to weightlifting when she was a student in Leeds.
Women's +87kg
Four more to go, starting with India's Purnima Pandey and England's Emily Campbell.
"Sloppy," says BBC analyst Michaela Breeze.
Not enough aggression and sharpness in the 103 kg lift, apparently.
She changes that with a much better attempt and tells the technical staff to load it up to 108kg.
Women's cross-country final
Ned Boulting
Cycling presenter and commentator
Evie Richards over-cooked a corner. There was no repeat of the calamity for Charlie Aldridge but the gap is now closing - she has lost 12 seconds to the Australian over half a lap.
Women's cross-country final
Steady!
Evie Richards' back wheel skids on a corner as she comes towards the end of lap five but she just about saves the situation.
That is going to cost her some time, though.
She crosses the line. Two laps to go. But her advantage is down to 26 seconds...
Women's +87kg
Sri Lanka's Thimali Wiyannalage is the current leader after lifting 89kg with her third snatch.
Next up is Australia's Charisma Amoe Tarrant. She smashes that with a 95kg lift, shakes her head and then returns to tackle 100kg.
That brings a huge roar from the NEC crowd, who are still being pumped up by tunes from mid 2000s student nights.
Unlike students of those days, Amoe Tarrant's feet can't stick to the floor. She drops her first effort but returns to successfully lift her second attempt.
Women's cross-country final
Evie Richards said she had endured "probably one of the worst" years she's ever had after picking up a back injury in February and then catching coronavirus last month, which forced her to miss two weeks of training.
But she added gold at Birmingham 2022 would "definitely turn the year around".
She's not far away from doing just that - so long as those missed weeks of training do not catch up with her.
Her lead has come down slightly, to around 38 seconds.
Uganda 45-19 Northern Ireland
It looks like Northern Ireland are going to have to wait a little longer for their first win of the Games.
Uganda have now taken a 45-19 lead going into the final quarter.
Northern Ireland are struggling to do the basics and are giving Uganda so much space down the side of the court to move freely.