''Everyone thinks they have a chance'published at 13:12 British Summer Time 6 August 2022
Men's 1500m final
Steve Cram
Athletics commentator on BBC TV
Everywhere you look here, there will be men who think they've got a chance of a medal.
Use play icon at top of the page to watch live coverage
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 1500m final
Steve Cram
Athletics commentator on BBC TV
Everywhere you look here, there will be men who think they've got a chance of a medal.
Men's 1500m final
Kenya's Abel Kipsang is taking this out - and it's fast.
Compatriot and Olympic silver medallist Timothy Cheruiyot comes through to join him at the front, with England's Elliot Giles hovering in third.
Men's 1500m final
And we're away!
Jake Wightman, Neil Gourley, Josh Kerr, Jake Heyward, Matt Stonier, Elliot Giles. Who can bring home a medal?
Men's light heavyweight semi-final
Wales' Taylor Bevan will fight for a gold medal after a thrilling battle with England's Aaron Bowen.
Both men had 19 points a piece going into the final round and there was fantastic scenes in the final seconds as neither boxer stood down from a shoot-out.
Bowen takes a deserved bronze medal while Bevan will face Scotland's Sean Lazzerini in the final on Sunday.
Men's 1500m final
Here we go then.
Ready for this? It should be some race.
Huge cheers as the names of the home nations athletes are announced to the crowd.
T20 semi-final: England 48-1 (6 overs) v India (164-5 - 20 overs)
Danni Wyatt is leading England's innings, hitting the boundary with a cut to move on to 28 off 21. India will be hoping to see the back of the England star ASAP.
The hosts require less than eight an over now.
Men's 74kg
England's Charlie Bowling will not have the chance to better his bronze medal from the Gold Coast four years ago, he was comfortably beaten 12-1 by India's Naveen Naveen and will go in a bronze medal match, but his opponent is yet to be determined.
There are actually two bronze medal matches in the wrestling, where athletes who lost in an earlier round to one who made the final get a chance at a bronze medal.
It's all very complicated, we know.
Men's 1500m final
Thomas Duncan
BBC Scotland at Alexander Stadium
Here we go, it's what the crowd has been waiting for after another noisy session.
A stacked men's 1500m final which includes loads of home nations athletes, including Scotland's world champion Jake Wightman.
The 12 men make their way out on to the track to a rapturous reception.
What drama awaits?
Men's hammer final
A huge throw from England's Joseph Ellis, he's up into second with a throw of 72.09m - but Canada's Ethan Katzberg responds to reclaim silver position, throwing 73.67m.
Compatriot Nick Miller leads the way after managing 76.43m with his fourth throw. The title defence is on!
T20 semi-final: England 42-1 (4 overs) v India (164-5 - 20 overs)
It's another great over from England with 14 runs coming from it.
Danni Wyatt is ticking along nicely on 20 runs from 14 balls with new batter Alice Capsey yet to face at the non-strikers end.
India were 40-0 at this stage. This is so close.
Men's 1500m
Can Jake Wightman complete the 1500m hat-trick?
The Scottish athlete had originally planned to compete over 800m in Birmingham, until he read an article in which Lord Coe urged him to make history by winning 1500m gold at all three major championships this summer, with the Europeans still to come.
In today's final he's be joined by Scottish team-mates Neil Gourley and Olympic bronze medallist Josh Kerr, who will also carry podium ambitions.
Welshman Jake Heyward English duo Matt Stonier and Elliot Giles are also involved, as is Kenya's Olympic silver medallist Timothy Cheruiyot.
It's going to be huge.
Men's 1500m final
We're just 10 minutes away from the men's 1500m final at Alexander Stadium...
Men's fours final
India are on the board in the men's fours final as skip Dinesh Kumar pinches a point with a precision final bowl in the fifth end.
Still a healthy lead for Northern Ireland, 7-1 with a third of the ends played.
In the bronze medal match it's England who are ahead at the same stage, leading 7-5 over Wales.
Scotland's Iain McLean needs a big turnaround as he goes into the 12th end of his men's semi-final versus Aaron Wilson of Australia with a 19-6 deficit.
NI's Gary Kelly has drawn level against Malaysia, making it 13-13 as they head into the 15th end.
Men's 4x100m relay heats
Nigeria, Kenya and Ghana come through the second men's 4x100m heat, with England posting the fastest time going into Sunday's final.
BBC Sport
England's women's 4x100m quartet spoke to BBC Sport after qualifying for Sunday's relay final. here's what they had to say:
Asha Philip: "To be honest I think I was blinded about half way through - but it was really nice. The home crowd, they lift you because the noise is so loud. Homes games, having three amazing women to hand the baton to, it's filled with joy and I hope I put them in a great position and now we're in the final."
Imani Lansiquot: "We're so experienced, we have a vengeance in our heart after what happened at the world championships. We really want to bring back gold for our country. the crowd is insane today. It's insane and we're ready for the final and tomorrow will be better."
Bianca Williams: "My third Commonwealth Games. It's nice to be out there with the team again. It's been a long time since I've done a relay and coming back from pregnancy, it's been great. It's nice to be in front of a crowd, and the crowd has been fantastic.
Ashleigh Nelson: "We came out and it's the heats. We've got a lot more to come. We're not worried."
Members of England's men's relay squad took on a slightly different challenge before the Games...
T20 semi-final: England 28-1 (2.5 overs) v India (164-5 (20 overs)
Sophia Dunkley is out for 19. Attempting to slog across the line, she misses the ball and is trapped leg before.
First wicket down for England.
Men's light heavyweight semi-final
Scotland’s Sean Lazzerini is into the final of the light heavyweight final after a split decision win over Tanzania’s Yusuf Changalawe.
Lazzerini is guaranteed a silver medal was cheered on by world champion Josh Taylor on social media, who has already tipped him for gold.
The 25-year-old was eliminated in the preliminaries rounds in the 2018 Commonwealth Games and is the second Scot to reach a boxing final today after Sam Hickey secured his place in the middleweight final.
Men's 4x100m relay heats
England's 4x100m quartet of Jona Efoloko, Harry Aikines-Aryeetey, Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake and Ojie Edoborun win the opening heat in 38.48 seconds.
Trinidad and Tobago are not far behind, and it's Guyana who take the third automatic qualification spot.
There's drama behind them, as Australia's final leg runner falls before he can get up and running.
Men's doubles quarter-finals
England's James Willstrop and Declan James produced a dominant display to progress to the men's double's semi-finals.
They beat Australian pair Cameron Pilley and Rhys Dowling in two games 11-7, 11-4 and will face Malaysia or India in Sunday's semi-final.