Summary

  1. That's all for nowpublished at 22:00 British Summer Time 4 August

    Athletes cross the line in the men's 100m final at Paris 2024Image source, Getty Images

    The curtain comes down on day nine of Paris 2024 and it has been another one full of excitement, drama and most importantly of all... medals.

    Team GB added four to their tally with Tommy Fleetwood (golf) and Amber Rutter (skeet) picking up silver, while Lottie Fry (dressage) and Harry Hepworth (vault) claimed bronze.

    We saw two new world records set in the pool - both by the USA - in the women's 4x100m medley relay and by Bobby Finke in the men's 1500m freestyle.

    And last, but certainly not least, Noah Lyles sealed gold in the men's 100m final by five-thousandths of a second.

    Fancy a bit more?

    We'll be back to do it all over again bright and early tomorrow morning.

    See you then!

  2. Watch Tonight at the Games on BBC Onepublished at 21:59 British Summer Time 4 August

    BBC One

    If you missed any of the brilliant day nine action, you can catch up with it all on Tonight at the Games on BBC One at 22:45 BST.

  3. What can you expect to watch on Monday evening?published at 21:58 British Summer Time 4 August

    All times BST

    Keely Hodgkinson of Team Great BritainImage source, Getty Images

    18:00: Athletics - men's pole vault final

    18:55: Cycling - women's team sprint final (possibly involving GB)

    18:55: Athletics - men's 200m round one (GB's Zharnel Hughes)

    19:00: Football - men's semi-final (France v Egypt)

    19:30: Athletics - women's discus final

    19:45: Athletics - women's 200m semi-finals (GB's Daryll Neita, Bianca Williams & Dina Asher-Smith)

    20:10: Athletics - women's 5,000m final

    20:45: Athletics - women's 800m final (GB's Keely Hodgkinson)

  4. What can you expect to watch on Monday afternoon?published at 21:57 British Summer Time 4 August

    All times BST

    Kimberley Woods of Team Great BritainImage source, Getty Images

    12:00: Climbing - women's boulder & lead qualification

    12:30: Gymnastics - men's horizontal bar final

    13:00: Hockey - women's (Argentina v Germany)*

    13:20: Gymnastics - women's floor final (Simone Biles)

    14:00: Diving - women's 10m platform semi-final (possibly involving Lois Toulson & Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix)

    14:00: Shooting - mixed skeet bronze and gold medal matches

    15:55: Canoe Slalom - women’s kayak cross final (possibly involving Kimberley Woods & Mallory Franklin)

    16:00: Canoe Slalom - men’s kayak cross final (possibly involving Joe Clarke)

    16:30: Hockey - women's quarter-final (Netherlands v GB)

  5. What can you expect to watch on Monday morning?published at 21:56 British Summer Time 4 August

    All times BST

    Simone Biles of Team USAImage source, Getty Images

    07:00: Triathlon - mixed relay (GB in action)

    07:55: Beach volleyball - women's: Germany v Latvia

    08:30: Shooting - men’s 25m rapid pistol final

    09:00: Climbing - men's boulder & lead semi-final (GB's Hamish McArthur & Toby Roberts)

    10:45: Gymnastics - men's parallel bars final

    11:00: Athletics - women's 400m round one (GB's Laviai Nielsen, Amber Anning and Victoria Ohuruogo)

    11:35: Gymnastics - women's beam final (Simone Biles)

  6. gold-medal

    What happened on day nine of Paris 2024?published at 21:55 British Summer Time 4 August

    What a finish to day nine of Paris 2024, with that astonishing 100m race. Here are the main headlines.

    • Novak Djokovic beat Carlos Alcaraz in the final of the men's tennis singles.
    • It was silver for GB in the men's golf, where Tommy Fleetwood was runner-up to USA's Scottie Scheffler.
    • Boxer Cindy Ngamba, who lives and trains in Britain made history by guaranteeing the Refugee Olympic Team a first Games medal
    • Team GB won a fifth equestrian medal as Lottie Fry claimed bronze in the dressage individual final.
    • GB's Harry Hepworth won bronze in the men's vault final
    • And France superstar Leon Marchand won his fifth medal of the Games as the hosts came third in the men's 4x100m medley behind China and the USA. GB, with Adam Peaty in their ranks, were fourth.

  7. Team GB still on track to beat Tokyo tallypublished at 21:54 British Summer Time 4 August

    Team GB are still on track to better their Tokyo performance three years ago.

    You can keep up to date with all of the British medals here.

    Team GB's medal tracker
  8. Watch: Team GB's medals on day ninepublished at 21:52 British Summer Time 4 August

    Four more medals in the bag for Team GB....

  9. Day nine medal tablepublished at 21:51 British Summer Time 4 August

    Noah Lyles' 100m gold has put the USA top of the medal table.

    Medal table, with USA top and China secondImage source, BBC Sport
  10. athletics

    'One of the greatest races ever'published at 21:50 British Summer Time 4 August

    Men's 100m final

  11. athletics

    'I hope you like Noah because there's a lot more coming'published at 21:49 British Summer Time 4 August

    Athletics - men's 100m final

    Noah Lyles has one gold medal in the bag after winning the 100m by the finest of margins.

    The American still has the 200m and 4x100m relay to come in Paris and has vowed that "there's a lot more coming" over the next few days.

  12. swimming

    Watch: Finke breaks world recordpublished at 21:48 British Summer Time 4 August

    Swimming - men's 1500m freestyle

    All the headlines were about Team Ireland's Daniel Wiffen after he took gold in the 800m freestyle on Tuesday but he could only take bronze in the 1500m freestyle, with Bobby Finke in a league of his own.

    Finke sealed gold in stunning fashion, finishing almost four seconds clear of silver medallist Gregorio Paltrinieri, and he set a new world record in the process.

    Sun Yang of China set the previous world record in a time of 14:31.02 seconds at London 2012 but Finke touched the wall in 14:30.67 seconds.

    Watch his remarkable performance below.

  13. swimming

    Watch: USA set new world recordpublished at 21:47 British Summer Time 4 August

    The La Defense Arena has been the place to be over the past nine days and the final race of the meet did not disappoint.

    The USA set a new world record in the women's 4x100m medley relay, wrapping up victory in a time of 3:49.63 seconds and beating great rivals Australia into silver to pip them to topping the swimming medal table for most golds.

    The Americans leave the pool with eight from 28 medals, while Australia end with seven golds and 18 overall.

  14. sailing

    What's been happening in the sailing?published at 21:46 British Summer Time 4 August

    Eleanor Aldridge in kiteboardingImage source, Getty Images

    Kiteboarding made its Olympic debut on Sunday, with the men and women taking off from the beach in Marseille on their featherweight foiling boards.

    It is a fast and furious sport, where competitors can reach speeds of up to 50mph.

    The Mediterranean wind hasn't always played ball this week, but there was plenty of breeze as Austria's Valentin Bontus won the first race in the men's event, with Britain's Eleanor Aldridge taking the honours in the women's.

    Elsewhere, in the men's dinghies there were swings at the top of the leaderboard, with eight of the 43 men penalised for being over the line at the start for race seven in their series.

    Team GB's Micky Beckett was one of those who fell foul, dropping to fourth overall, while Australia's Matt Wearn managed to hang on to his overall lead despite two 10th place finishes.

    "He's got two very difficult races to navigate, so far he is doing reasonably well and has been by far the most consistent. But every day has its curve balls and tomorrow won't be any different," Beckett said when asked if Wearn was catchable.

    The remaining two races of the pre-medal series of the event are scheduled for Monday.

  15. boxing

    Watch: Ngamba makes historypublished at 21:45 British Summer Time 4 August

    Boxing - women's 75kg

    Boxer Cindy Ngamba said she was "just human like any other refugee" after making history by guaranteeing the Refugee Olympic Team a first Games medal.

    The 25-year-old beat sixth-seeded Frenchwoman Davina Michel by unanimous decision to reach the women's 75kg semi-finals.

    With both losing semi-finalists awarded bronze, the Cameroon-born fighter is assured of a medal at Paris 2024.

    Ngamba moved to the UK aged 10, but cannot compete for Team GB because she does not have a British passport.

    "It means the world to me to be the first ever refugee to win a medal," she said. "I'm just a human, just like any other refugee and athlete all around the world."

    The Refugee Olympic Team first competed at Rio in 2016, but prior to this Games the team's best results were two fifth-placed finishes in Tokyo through Hamoon Derafshipour in karate and Kimia Alizadeh in taekwondo.

  16. gold-medal

    Gold Medal - Japanpublished at 21:44 British Summer Time 4 August

    Fencing - Men's foil team

    Japan team celebrateImage source, Getty Images

    Japan have won gold in the men's foil team with a dominant win over Italy in the final.

    The 45-36 victory secures Japan's fifth fencing medal in Paris.

    France won a historic bronze by beating the United States 45-32. That medal was the hosts' 44th, ensuring the nation's best total at an Olympics since 1900.

  17. shooting

    'I don't know how it gets much better than this'published at 21:43 British Summer Time 4 August

    Shooting - Women's skeet final

    Amber Hill with husband and baby boy after silver medal winImage source, Getty Images

    Great Britain's Amber Rutter won silver earlier on Sunday in the women's skeet final.

    It was just over three months after giving birth to her first child, Tommy, and the she was surprised afterwards by her husband, who had brought their son to Paris without her knowing.

    "It is just a dream," she told BBC Sport. "The fact that I'm able to be a mum and come away with a medal for my country, I am on top of the world right now."

    Rutter was forced to miss the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 after contracting Covid-19 on the eve of the Games.

    "The fact that I am able to be here, I believe everything happens for a reason," she added. "It really was to prove a point and come back here and really chase down those medals.

    "The fact that I am here now, Tommy with me and with an Olympic medal, I don't know how it gets much better than this."

  18. tennis

    'I couldn't be prouder or happier'published at 21:42 British Summer Time 4 August

    Novak Djokovic has won 24 Grand Slam titles but he's had to wait until today to win a 'Golden Slam'.

    Djokovic, appearing at his fifth Olympics, beat Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 (7-2) in front of a packed crowd at Roland Garros.

  19. shooting

    Watch: GB's Rutter takes silverpublished at 21:41 British Summer Time 4 August

    Great Britain's Amber Rutter says it is a "dream" to come away with an Olympic silver medal, despite the controversial end to her gold medal bid in the women's skeet final.

    The 26-year-old finished tied on 55 shots from 60 targets with Chile's Francisca Crovetto Chadid.

    They went to a shoot-off and were still tied after three rounds but, in a moment of contention, Rutter was called to have missed a shot which slow motion replays appeared to show she hit.

    She contested the call, but shooting's version of a video assistant referee or Hawkeye is not in use at the Olympics and the judges did not overturn the decision.

    Crovetto Chadid, 34, struck with both her next shots to clinch her country's first ever shooting gold medal.

  20. athletics

    Who won what?published at 21:39 British Summer Time 4 August

    Here's a breakdown of the medal winners in the Stade de France tonight...

    Women's high jump

    • Gold: Yaroslava Mahuckikh (Ukraine)
    • Silver: Nicola Olyslagers (Australia)
    • Bronze: Iryna Gerashchenko (Ukraine) and Eleanor Patterson (Australia)

    Men's hammer throw

    • Gold: Ethan Katzberg (Canada)
    • Silver: Bence Halasz (Hungary)
    • Bronze: Mykhalo Kokhan (Ukraine)

    Men's 100m final

    • Gold: Noah Lyles (United States)
    • Silver: Kishane Thompson (Jamaica)
    • Bronze: Fred Kerley (United States)