Gold - Wyclife Kinyamal - Kenyapublished at 19:38 British Summer Time 7 August 2022
Men's 800m final
Gold for Kenya!
Wyclife Kinyamal drops to his knees and raises his arms as his gold is confirmed in a time of 1:47.52.
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Afternoon session: 12:00-15:30 BST
Alison Waters and Sarah-Jane Perry & James Willstrop and Declan James in action for England in the women's & men's double semi-finals
Women's doubles semi-final: Malaysia v New Zealand (12:00 BST), England v Malaysia (13:45 BST)
Men's doubles semi-final: England v Malaysia (14:30), England v Scotland (14:30)
Home nations semi-final as England's Daryl Selby & Adrian Waller face Scotland's Greg Lobban & Rory Stewart
Men's doubles plate semi-final: Cayman Islands v Papua New Guinea (12:00 BST), Cayman Islands v Barbados (12:45 BST)
Women's doubles plate semi-final: Canada v Pakistan (13:45), Australia v Botswana (14:30)
Evening session: 18:00-20:15 BST
Mixed doubles bronze medal match: India v Australia (18:00 BST)
Mixed doubles plate final: Guyana v Sri Lanka (18:00 BST)
Mixed doubles gold medal match: New Zealand v England (19:00 BST)
England's Alison Waters and Adrian Waller in mixed doubles final
Amy Lofthouse, Jonathan Jurejko, Tom Mallows and Craig Nelson
Men's 800m final
Gold for Kenya!
Wyclife Kinyamal drops to his knees and raises his arms as his gold is confirmed in a time of 1:47.52.
Men's 800m final
Kenya's Wyclife Kinyamal pulls away, followed by Australia's Peter Bol, but Pattinson is speeding through for bronze...
Men's 800m final
Oh, Ben Pattinson and Guy Learmonth have run themselves into a bit of a box as the bell goes...
Mixed doubles
When a point goes to the squash equivalent of VAR some very dramatic music plays - X Factor elimination style. Alison Waters and Adrian Waller were saved by the VAR on this occasion and managed to get a run going but we're at match ball already for the New Zealand pair after just 30 minutes of play.
They have had too much fire power for the English duo.
Women's featherweight gold medal bout
It wasn't only a celebratory hug which Michaela Walsh wanted from her brother Aidan... she was also after a bottle of fizzy pop.
After all the hard work and calorie-counting, Walsh celebrates winning gold with a sugary treat.
Might be a splash of rum to go with the cola tonight...
Men's 800m final
A clean start, and away they go.
Men's 800m final
England's Ben Pattison cups his ear, asking the crowd to give him a little more noise as the names are read out.
Women's 3m springboard final
Leon Taylor
Olympic diving silver medallist on BBC TV
With that dive of 74.40, Nur Sabri - less than halfway into this competition - is going to give the other competitors the heebie jeebies.
But England's Yasmin Harper is giving it everything here.
Women's 3m springboard final
Alistair Watkins
BBC Sport at Sandwell Aquatics Centre
After two rounds, England's Yasmin Harper and Desharne Bent-Ashmeil are fourth and fifth while Scotland's Grace Reid is in eighth.
Still three rounds to go yet so plenty of time to get into a medal position.
Men's 800m final
Onto the next one...
There will be no Max Burgin in the final - the Englishman, who is the fastest man in the world this year over the distance, withdrew after developing a deep vein thrombosis.
There will be home nation representation in the form of England's Ben Pattinson and Jamie Webb
Scotland's Guy Learmonth, who finished sixth in the 2014 Games, is also in action.
Defending champion Wycliffe Kinyamal of Kenya finished eighth in the world championships a few weeks ago, but won over the distance in the Doha and Paris Diamond League races last year.
Women's featherweight gold medal bout
Michael Morrow
BBC Sport NI at The NEC
Lord knows Michaela Walsh has been through the ringer on her journey to Commonwealth gold.
Lost in 2014, and again in 2018. A champion now, and a worthy one at that. That's an emphatic win.
Also while I'm here, Ciara Mageean has just won a silver in the 1500m?!
Northern Ireland were in dreamland after Wednesday, this is simply ridiculous now.
18 medals, for a nation of 1.8 million. Sensational.
Women's featherweight gold medal bout
Confirmed!
Finally Michaela Walsh gets her hands on a Commonwealth gold.
Stunning stuff from the 29-year-old who, despite lacking the height and reach of her opponent, had too much quality.
Glasgow 2014 - silver.
Gold Coast 2018 - silver.
Birmingham 2022 - GOLD!
Walsh bounces out of the ring and immediately beckons her brother Aidan - who earlier won gold in the men's light-middleweight event - down the stairs to celebrate with her.
Women's 1500m final
Laura Muir has come jogging over to chat to Jeanette.
How she still has the energy to run I do not know.
Women's featherweight gold medal bout
Nigeria's Elizabeth Oshoba still thinks she can win this.
Ooof! Lovely shot catches Michaela Walsh, giving her reminder this gold isn't in the bag just yet.
Oshoba will need a knockout though after Walsh won the first couple of rounds and after that taking blow, she resets to see out the bout.
It will be gold for Walsh, but we're waiting for official confirmation...
Final: Australia 161-8 v India 94-2
Harmanpreet Kaur is leading the charge for India.
The India skipper reaches her half-century off just 34 deliveries, which included a monster six off the bowling of Jess Jonassen.
India need 68 from 47 balls.
Mixed doubles
In the squash Alison Waters and Adrian Waller have lost the opening game to New Zealand's Joelle King and Paul Coll 11-3. A bit of a landslide victory in the opening game from the 2017 World Champions.
The Kiwis, who won bronze four years ago in Australia but have been unable to play together much this year after King sustained an injury, were clinical and efficient in that first game.
Women's 1500m final
Laura Muir will leave Birmingham with 1500m gold and 800m bronze, to go with the world 1500m bronze she won in Oregon a few years ago.
And we've still got the European Championships to come...
Richard Winton
BBC Sport Scotland at Alexander Stadium
NEVER. IN. DOUBT.
She might have had to dig and scrap for bronze in the 800m, but that was an accomplished a run as you could hope to see from Laura Muir.
That's 12 golds now for Scotland. The same as Melbourne in 2006. Only at Glasgow 2014 has that mark been breached. And there might be more to come before the night is out.
Women's 1500m final
Steve Cram
Athletics commentator on BBC TV
That was hard - Laura never makes it easy for herself, she had to dig deep because she went so hard, so early.
That race from last night I'm sure started to bite in the last 60 metres as she started to look tired for the first time.
She is starting to get a collection - and gold medals are beautiful.
Women's 1500m final
And a season's best time for Ciara Mageean clinches the silver!
There's hugs all around as Laura Muir congratulates her. What a run that was from Mageean, particularly at the end as Australia's Abbey Caldwell advanced.
Caldwell takes the bronze, with Jemma Reekie fifth.