Commonwealth Games cricket: England beat New Zealand to top Group B
Results; Medals table; Day-by-day guide; Coverage guide; SA v SL scorecard; Eng v NZ scorecard
Results; Medals table; Day-by-day guide; Coverage guide; SA v SL scorecard; Eng v NZ scorecard
Live Reporting
Jonathan Jurejko, Mike Henson, Becky Grey and Lorraine McKenna
All times stated are UK
Identical twins both aim to secure a medal inside an hour
Boxing quarter-finals
It's a busy day in the boxing ring at the NEC Hall Four with a host of quarter-finals with a victory today guaranteeing a fighter a bronze medal.
Twenty-year-old identical Welsh twins Ioan and Garan Croft are among those in action later on - Ioan at 14:00 BST at welterweight before Garan fights at light-middleweight 45 minutes later.
They are not the only siblings involved today as brother and sister pairing Aidan and Michaela Walsh are going in the light-middleweight and featherweight categories respectively for Northern Ireland.
Elsewhere, Lennon Mulligan (flyweight), Matthew McHale (bantamweight) and Tyler Jolly (welterweight) fight for Scotland; Dylan Eagleson (bantamweight) goes for Northern Ireland with Gemma Richardson (lightweight), Mohammed Akbar (light middleweight) and Lewis Williams (heavyweight) representing England and Jade Burden for the Isle of Man.
Simpson & Purchase begin hammer campaigns
Women's hammer qualifying
The first athletics action under way this morning is the women's hammer qualifying.
Welsh champion Amber Simpson and England's Anna Purchase are both involved, with the top 12 advancing to Saturday's final.
Canada's Camryn Rogers, world silver medallist last month, is among the competition, along with compatriot Jillian Weir, who was fifth at the Worlds.
Meanwhile, on the track, England's Harry Kendall is in 100m action as the men's decathlon gets under way.
Post update
Time to head back to Alexander Stadium.
Netball
Australia 46-40 Jamaica
A huge third quarter from Australia to extend a five-goal lead over Jamaica.
It was coming from the Diamonds and they won that crucial third period 16-11. Jamaica's Jhaniele Fowler might be a threat in one shooting end but Gretel Bueta is on fire at the other end - she has scored 32 of her 35 attempts under the post.
Jamaica are still in touching distance, though - don't write them off just yet.
'Let's hope I've still got some form'
Cycling: Men's time trial
Time travel
Cycling: Women's time trial
Cycling's women's time trial starts just after 10:00 BST with the racers setting off at one-minute intervals over a 29km distance, starting and finishing in Wolverhampton's West Park with the route taking the riders past Dudley Castle.
There were 36 people scheduled to take part, but there have been four withdrawals, including South Africa's Ashleigh Moolman Pasio, a top-10 performer at the Tokyo Olympics last year.
She had been due to go out last but is ruled out with the illness that forced her out of the final stages of last week's Tour de France Femmes.
However, there's still a strong field including Australia's Grace Brown, who came fourth in this race at last year's Tokyo Olympics, while Cyprus' Antri Christoforou, Scotland's Neah Evans and Lizzie Holden from the Isle of Man all finished inside the top 10 of this race at the 2018 Commonwealth Games in Australia.
England are represented by Abi Smith, Anna Henderson and Joss Lowden; Wales have Anna Morris, Elynor Backstedt and Leah Dixon; Scotland also have Anna Shackley; Joanna Patterson rides for Northern Ireland; Olivia Lett and Elaine Pratts go for Gibraltar; while Jessica Carridge and Rebecca Storrie also ride for the Isle of Man.
Cycling, diving, athletics - what to look out for on day seven
Introducing road cycling, diving, rhythmic gymnastics, and para powerlifting!
Yes, there are plenty of fresh sports joining the Birmingham 2022 party today. Here are a few things to look out for on day seven:
Follow all the action
First up today, we'll head back to Alexander Stadium for qualifying in the Women’s 200m, the men's 200m, the men's 1500m, the women's hammer, the women's high jump, and the start of the men's decathlon.
The athletics gets back under way from 10:00 BST.
Before then, the lawn bowls is already up and running, Australia face Jamaica in a big game in netball, South Africa are taking on New Zealand in hockey, and there's table tennis action not too far away as well.
You can find the relevant streams for all those sports on the right of this page if you're on desktop, or on the 'related stories' tab if you're following on mobile.
Enjoy!
Netball
Australia 30-29 Jamaica
Well...This one is getting tasty.
Top seeds Australia managed to draw out a four-goal lead midway through that quarter and it looked like they were going to run away with it as they started to dominate the ball and assert some authority on the game.
But Jamaica are right back in this game and there's just one goal in it. Jamaica are actually shooting at 93.5% compared with Australia's 90.9% - with powerhouse Jhaniele Fowler under the post if the Sunshine Girls can get the ball to her there's only one place it's going.
Medal table
Here is how the medal table looks after day six at the Commonwealth Games.
Australia still lead the way with eight gold medals more than England, while Scotland are up to fifth.
Wales are in eighth with 17 medals overall, Northern Ireland are now 13th with seven medals in total.
Wednesday's headlines
Here's where you can read more on yesterday's action:
Watch: Wednesday's best moments
Here's a quick recap of the rest of Wednesday's best bits:
Tune in
BBC One
The action is already under way over on BBC One, where you can currently follow the lawn bowls.
As always, you can watch that by clicking the icon at the top of this page.
Thompson-Herah & Omanyala take 100m titles
Meanwhile, the 100m titles were claimed by Jamaica's five-time Olympic champion Elaine Thompson-Herah, and Kenya's Ferdinand Omanyala - who only converted to sprinting from rugby in his late teens.
Davies does it for Wales
Men's F42-44/61-64 discus
Wales' three-time Paralympic champion Aled Sion Davies claimed F42-44/61-64 discus gold, having switched to the event after successive Paralympic shot put golds in 2016 and 2021.
Davies' best effort of 51.39m was short of the F42 discus world record of 56.21m he set in July. Team-mate Harrison Walsh took bronze behind Sri Lanka's Palitha Halgahawela Gedara.
Johnson-Thompson retains title
Heptathlon
There was gold too for England's Katarina Johnson-Thompson, who marked her return to the top of an international podium after three years of injury and coaching changes.
She finished on 6,377 points, 144 clear of Northern Ireland's Kate O'Connor.
"It has been tough couple of years so hopefully this can kickstart another part of my career," Johnson-Thompson said.
"It has been hard, I had moments where I didn't know if I wanted to carry on but to come out here and get the gold and prove to myself that pushing through was worth it."
McColgan takes biggest win of career
Women's 10,000m
Eilish McColgan has her first major title after a stunning 10,000m victory which saw her follow in the footsteps of her mother Liz, who won the same title at Edinburgh 1986 and Auckland 1990.
McColgan found herself locked together with Kenya's Irine Cheptai but McColgan surged clear late on.
"This is the most incredible moment of my career," McColgan said.
"I couldn't hear myself think or breathe, in that last 100m the crowd carried me.
Here's how she did it on the loudest night yet at Birmingham's Alexander Stadium.
Australia meet Jamaica in netball
Australia 11-11 Jamaica
Australia and Jamaica have both won four out of four at Birmingham 2022 so far to sit neck-and-neck at the top of Group A.
They meet this morning and there's very little to separate them so far. In fact, Australia have just drawn level again at 11-11 in the first quarter.
You can watch that over here.
About yesterday...
But before we get stuck into today's action, there's quite a bit to reflect on this morning.
Anyone fancy reliving a few of Wednesday's highlights?
Yep, I thought so.
What's happening on Thursday?
With the swimming over, there's a lower medal count compared with recent days, with 15 gold medals available on Thursday.
Here's what's up for grabs:
Athletics: Women's F42-44 and F61-64 discus and T53/54 1,500m, men's long jump, T11/12 100m, discus and 110m hurdles
Road cycling: Women's and men's time trial
Diving: Women's 10m platform, men's 1m springboard
Powerlifting: Women's lightweight and heavyweight, men's lightweight and heavyweight
Rhythmic gymnastics: Team