CAN dominating second setpublished at 16:35 British Summer Time 6 August 2022
Men's semi-finals: Canada 15-21, 10-6 England
More Canadian success from Daniel Dearing on the block. Canada go ahead by four as England call a timeout.
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Medals will be won in the hoop, ball, clubs and ribbon final
Hoop final: England's Marf Ekimova & Gemma Natasha Frizelle of Wales (10:00)
Ball final: Wales' Elizabeth Petrova Popova & Gemma Natasha Frizelle & England's Marfa Ekimova (10:42)
Clubs final: Scotland's Louise Christie, England's Saffron Severn & England's Elizabeth Petrova Popova (12:02)
Ribbon final: Scotland's Louise Christie & England's Marfa Ekimova & Alice Leaper
Amy Lofthouse, Jonathan Jurejko, Craig Nelson and Tom Mallows
Men's semi-finals: Canada 15-21, 10-6 England
More Canadian success from Daniel Dearing on the block. Canada go ahead by four as England call a timeout.
Men's semi-finals: Canada 15-21, 8-6 England
Some swing crosscourt from Joquain Bello to win yet another England point straight after Canada look to edge ahead.
This is so tight.
Men's semi-finals: Canada 15-21, 5-3 England
Canada are maintaining their mini-break. You win, we win.
The second set has been far tighter than the first.
Men's light welterweight semi-finals
Wonder if Reese Lynch has left the arena or is planning to stick around and watch his gold-medal rival?
Mauritius' Louis Colin meets Ghana's Abdul Omar in the second semi-final.
There is a British presence in the ring with Wales' Mark Williams refeering. Not that one.
Men's light welterweight semi-finals
Richie Woodhall
Former boxing world champion on BBC TV
A good performance from Reese Lynch. Well done. Listen, at the moment it just gets better and better for Scotland.
Men's semi-finals: Canada 15-21, 2-0 England
Canada have bounced right back in second set with a winner from a block and then one with a smash. That's two points for the top seeds on their serve. Big.
England 51-60 Australia
BBC Sport
England captain Natalie Metcalf told BBC Sport:
"We gave ourselves a little bit too much to do too soon in the game and credit where it is due the Diamonds came out all guns blazing today but to be able to play in front of this crowd is an absolute privilege. I'm so proud to be able to play in front of these guys.
"There's still one more game to play for. We are going to regroup and try and play really strong tomorrow.
"We didn't look after turnover ball enough. credit to our defenders, they won us some ball and we didn't look after that properly enough in attack. We will go back and look at the tape and see where we can correct some of that tomorrow.
"The margins of our game are so small so it's important that we sit on this, we reflect on this, pull ourselves up, pull our shoulders up and we have another opportunity tomorrow to play in front of this crowd.
They've been phenomenal throughout this, the country's been amazing in being right behind us. There is still one game to play for and we're going to do everything possible to get that bronze medal."
Men's light welterweight semi-finals
Ronald McIntosh
Boxing commentator on BBC TV
Scotland's Reese Lynch asking the fans to raise the roof here at the NEC. With a cry of "come on" Lynch progresses. A job well done and Lynch will contest Commonwealth Games gold after a very clever display indeed.
Men's light-welterweight semi-finals
Richard Winton
BBC Sport Scotland at the NEC Arena
Reese Lynch's brothers used to hang him from door frames - "they'd just leave me there dangling but it made me who I am today" - so maybe they can take some credit after the Scottish light-welterweight claimed a place in Sunday's gold-medal match.
Lynch, 21, gave Wyatt Sanford of Canada a bit of a chasing in the last four and will go for glory in 24 hours.
Men’s light welterweight semi-finals
Scotland's Reese Lynch needs to maintain his discipline here as Canada's Wyatt Sanford looks to win it.
The bell goes and Lynch sticks both arms in the air.
He thinks he's won it and, judging by Sanford's reaction, the Canadian thinks so too.
Here comes the decision... yes, he's got it!
Unanimous decision in the Scot's favour and he bows to each side of the NEC.
Lynch is assured of at least a silver medal. More Scottish success in the ring!
Men's semi-finals: Canada 15-21 England
They've done it! England take the opening set. One foot in the final.
Men's semi-finals: Canada 14-20 England
Set-point Bello twins as another smash at the net is a winner.
FT: England 51-60 Australia
Here are the thoughts of England Roses head coach Jess Thirlby, speaking to BBC One following her side's semi-final defeat by Australia:
"We gave ourselves too big a mountain to climb - Australia weren't going to let a swing like Jamaica happen again. A 10-goal margin deep into the game was a tough ask. We made it really hard for ourselves - we were finding it difficult to get shooting opportunities early in the game and then we were found wanting trying to get turnover ball.
"You're trying to find that winning ball and that has been a strength of ours but we struggled to find space. Credit to Australia - they're a great team but our execution wasn't great, they starved us of the ball that we needed. It's really disappointing - it's not the way you want to be prevented to getting to the final but as with all sport we have to bounce back.
"We didn't give up - but we've put yourselves in a tricky position. When you're chasing the score it's not great, we were still found wanting.
"They're a great team in possession - they made errors against Jamaica so they will have gone and tidied those up. There's nothing we weren't expecting but we were too slow on the shooter exit, Gretel Bueta handled the ball too much and attack wise we did get more depth on them in the second half but it's not enough.
"We could stand here all day long but that team were better than us today. We tried to find a way through it but the clock beat us.
"Tomorrow is massive."
Men's semi-finals: Canada 11-17 England
The Bello twins are on fire. They win a point on their own serve with a fortuitous block before tricking Canada with a shorter serve to go five up.
The crowd roar and England respond. They continue their dominance with an excellent Javier winner to take a 17-11 lead.
Men’s light welterweight semi-finals
Solid start from Reese Lynch, who earns a clean sweep in the first round and is looking good in the second.
But then the Scot gets a point deducted in the second and that changes the complexion of the bout.
It's a super Saturday all right, with 33 gold medals being decided today.
While so much has already happened, there's still plenty more to come. Here are just a few highlights:
Men's semi-finals: Canada 11-14 England
Incredible rally as Canada's Sam Schachter saves the point twice with improbable dives.
No joy for the Canadians though as Javier Bello wins it with a devastating effort. England remain on top in the first set.
Missed any of today's action?
Here are a few clips rounding up some of the big moments from day nine.
Men's semi-finals: Canada 9-12 England
We go to the technical timeout with England still leading as Canada's Daniel Dearing fires in another unforced error, this time hitting his serve a metre too long.
Third seeds England have blown the top seeds away with a blistering start.
Men’s light welterweight semi-finals
Reese Lynch became Scotland’s first World Championship medallist when he won a bronze medal last November.
Can he add another medal to collection?
The 21 year-old from West Lothian faces 23-year-old Canadian Wyatt Sanford, who has aspirations of becoming a policeman apparently.
Let's see if he lock up Lynch today.
Both men already assured of bronze medals, remember.