Summary

  1. golf

    Men's golf medals to be decided todaypublished at 08:40 British Summer Time 4 August

    Men's golf - all tee-times BST

    The final round of the men's golf competition is being played today, with the first players teeing off at 09:00. Those near the top of the leaderboard are the last to go and you can see all the expected contenders and their tee-times below:

    10:06 - Ryan Fox (NZ), Collin Morikawa (USA) Carlos Ortiz (Mex)

    10:17 - Stephan Jaeger (Ger), Wyndham Clark (USA), Shane Lowry (Ire)

    10:55 - Christiaan Bezuidenhout (SA), Thorbjorn Olesen (Den), Victor Perez (Fra)

    11:06 - Ludvig Aberg (Swe), Jason Day (Aus), Joaquin Niemann (Chi)

    11:17 - Scottie Scheffler (USA), Tom Kim (Kor), Thomas Detry (Bel)

    11:28 - Nicolai Hojgaard (Den), Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn), Rory McIlroy (Ire)

    11:39 - Jon Rahm (Spa), Xander Schauffele (USA), Tommy Fleetwood (GB)

  2. Final round of the golf on iPlayerpublished at 08:38 British Summer Time 4 August

    BBC iPlayer

    It's the fourth and final round of the men's golf at Le Golf National today and, as we mentioned a little earlier, the action is already under way.

    The leaders aren't out quite yet but you can watch on BBC iPlayer and the red button as some of those further down the leaderboard try to make a dramatic late surge towards the medal places.

  3. triathlon

    Triathlon familiarisation postponed againpublished at 08:31 British Summer Time 4 August

    Mixed team triathlon

    River SeineImage source, Getty Images

    Sunday's swim familiarisation for tomorrow's mixed team triathlon was cancelled by organisers over an expected drop in water quality.

    It is the second day running that the familiarisation has had to be cancelled.

    In a statement on Saturday, Paris 2024 organisers said: "We are expecting an improvement on the conditions in the next hours, but not to a level to which the swim familiarisation planned for tomorrow can take place."

    They added that the decision was made following "heavy rain over the nights of the 31 July and 1 August, which had been particularly intense upstream of Paris".

    Last week's men's triathlon was postponed a day after poor water quality in the River Seine.

    Team GB have selected Alex Yee, Georgia Taylor Brown, Sam Dickinson and Beth Potter for Monday's event which can be pushed back to Tuesday as a contingency.

  4. golf

    Fitzpatrick withdraws from final roundpublished at 08:28 British Summer Time 4 August

    Men's golf

    There will only be one Team GB golfer in action at Le National today, after Matt Fitzpatrick withdrew last night due to a thumb injury.

    Fitzpatrick was five-over par after three rounds and out of contention for a medal.

    His team-mate Tommy Fleetwood, meanwhile, is in the hunt for a podium place.

    “Team Great Britain's Matt Fitzpatrick, who entered this week with a preexisting right thumb strain, has withdrawn due to injury following the third round of the men's Olympic golf competition,” said a statement from the International Golf Federation.

    Matt FitzpatrickImage source, Getty Images
  5. shooting

    Women's skeet pushed backpublished at 08:20 British Summer Time 4 August

    Women's skeet qualifying

    Team GB's Amber Rutter in women's skeet at 2024 Paris OlympicsImage source, Getty Images

    A quick update to bring you with the last two rounds of the women's skeet now set to start at 09:05 BST.

    It was originally scheduled for 08:30 BST so a slightly longer wait for Team GB's Amber Rutter.

    She's in a good position to make the final after the first round qualification rounds, missing just one shot out of 75 so far.

    Rutter's fifth and final qualification round will now be at 11:00 BST.

  6. athletics

    Hinchliffe & Hughes progress to 100m semispublished at 08:15 British Summer Time 4 August

    Men's 100m

    It's also a busy couple of days for Team GB's men as Louie Hinchliffe and Zharnel Hughes safely made their way through the first round of the 100m, with Hinchliffe beating USA's Noah Lyles in his heat.

    But there was heartbreak for Jeremiah Azu, who was disqualified because of a false start.

    The semi-finals take place tonight at 19:05 before the final at 20:50 BST.

  7. athletics

    Team GB trio in 200m qualifierspublished at 08:10 British Summer Time 4 August

    Ahtletics - women's 200m heats

    Daryll Neita finished fourth in the women's 100m last night and had mixed emotions in her post-race interview.

    But, she did say she would be using it as motivation in the 200m, alongside Dina Asher-Smith, who was disappointed not to reach last night's final.

    Bianca Williams completes the British trio in the first round with Neita going in heat three, Williams in five and Asher-Smith in heat six. The first heat takes place at 9:55 BST.

  8. athletics

    Alfred storms to Olympic 100m gold in Parispublished at 08:05 British Summer Time 4 August

    Athletics - women's 100m final

    Harry Poole
    BBC Sport in Paris

    The athletics continues this morning with the women's 3000m steeplechase first rounds at 9:05 BST.

    Last night saw several eye-catching performances on the track as Julien Alfred stormed to the women's 100m title at Paris 2024 to make history as St Lucia's first Olympic medallist.

    As the rain teemed down at a raucous Stade de France, Alfred, 23, dominated the final and took victory by a clear margin in a national record 10.72 seconds.

    American world champion Sha'Carri Richardson took silver in 10.87, with compatriot Melissa Jefferson (10.92) third.

    Great Britain's Daryll Neita finished four-hundredths of a second off the podium in fourth, crossing the line in 10.96.

    Read the full report here

  9. BBC One coverage live nowpublished at 08:00 British Summer Time 4 August

    BBC One

    We're now live on BBC One.

    The coverage will begin with women's beach volleyball at 8:10 BST before the men's hockey at around 8:55.

  10. golf

    Fleetwood and McIlroy stay in medal huntpublished at 07:50 British Summer Time 4 August

    Golf - men's singles

    Jonathan Jurejko
    BBC Sport at Le Golf National

    Fleetwood hits a shotImage source, Getty Images

    Britain's Tommy Fleetwood remains in strong contention for an Olympic medal as a host of superstars stack the leaderboard going into the final round of the men's golf event.

    Fleetwood started Saturday's third round in a share of the lead, and carded a two-under 69 to end the day in the bronze medal position.

    It was a solid if not spectacular round from the 33-year-old Englishman as the other challengers knocked in plenty of birdies.

    Fleetwood is one shot behind Spain's Jon Rahm, who hit a five-under 66, and defending champion Xander Schauffele of the United States.

    Rory McIlroy, playing for Ireland, is four shots behind the leaders after a 66.

    Read the full report and see the current leaderboard here

  11. gymnastics

    Whitlock 'gave it every shot' but falls just shortpublished at 07:45 British Summer Time 4 August

    Gymnastics - men's pommel horse final

    Sonia Oxley
    BBC Sport in Paris

    Max Whitlock bows out from his glittering career without the medal and record he had been chasing since returning to the sport.

    The 31-year-old had considered retiring after successfully defending his title at Tokyo, taking an 18-month break from the sport to deal with mental health struggles.

    But he returned, motivated in large part by the desire to win in front of his young daughter Willow. The five-year-old has been one of her father's most vocal supporters in the stands at the Bercy Arena.

    "I really hoped it could end in a bit of a better way, but I always said coming in here it doesn’t matter what the result was, I've made my decision, it's going to be my last competition," Whitlock said.

    Read the full report here

  12. get involved

    Get involvedpublished at 07:43 British Summer Time 4 August

    #bbcolympics, text 81111 (UK only - standard rates apply) or WhatsApp 03301231826

    I feel so sorry for Emma Wilson in the windsurfing. The format is so unfair and it is different to the rest of the sailing events where the best performer over the whole week wins. It is like Man City winning the Premier League by 25 points and then being required to have a penalty shootout to decide who wins the title. It is actually worse than that as her rivals get to experience the specific conditions on that day before the final in two races and she doesn't. It is a system designed to make it unlikely that the best windsurfer actually wins. It seems designed for five minutes of exciting TV rather than ensuring the Olympics are won by a performer who was head and shoulders over the rest over the week.

    Martin, Leeds

  13. tennis

    Zheng wins women's singles gold for Chinapublished at 07:40 British Summer Time 4 August

    Tennis - women's singles final

    Zheng Qinwen beat Donna Vekic in straight sets to win Olympic women's singles gold for China in Paris.

    Zheng, who lost in the Australian Open final in January, was a 6-2 6-3 winner on Court Philippe Chatrier at Roland Garros.

    The 21-year-old raced into a 3-0 lead in the first set against Croatian world number 21 Vekic and converted her first set point, also on the Vekic serve.

    The second set was a much tighter affair, but Zheng - ranked seventh in the world - broke in a pivotal eighth game before serving out the match.

    Vekic, 28, was appearing in the gold medal match less than a month after narrowly missing out on the Wimbledon final, losing her semi-final to Jasmine Paolini in a deciding set tie-break.

    Read the full report here

  14. boxing

    Eligibility-row boxer Khelif secures Paris medalpublished at 07:38 British Summer Time 4 August

    Boxing - women's welterweight

    Boxer Imane Khelif, whose gender eligibility has been called into question, was in tears after guaranteeing a welterweight medal at the Paris Olympics by beating Hungarian Luca Anna Hamori.

    The Algerian is one of two boxers competing in Paris despite being banned from last year's World Championships by the International Boxing Association (IBA) after she was reported to have failed gender eligibility tests, a situation which has sparked huge controversy.

    The 25-year-old's previous bout lasted just 46 seconds but Khelif, having entered the ring to cheers from loud Algerian support, went the full three rounds on Saturday, winning by unanimous decision.

    "I feel good," an emotional Khelif told BBC sports editor Dan Roan.

    Read the full report here

  15. sailing

    GB's Wilson 'done with the sport' after windsurfing bronzepublished at 07:35 British Summer Time 4 August

    Windsurfing - women's IQFoil

    Windsurfer Emma Wilson says she is "done with the sport" after coming away with bronze in the women's IQFoil event.

    The 25-year-old was guaranteed Great Britain's first sailing medal at the Paris Olympics after dominating the opening series off the Marseille coast.

    But she had to settle for bronze in the final as Italy's Marta Maggetti won gold and Israel's Sharon Kantor took silver.

    Wilson had finished well clear at the top of the standings after winning eight of the 14 preliminary races, coming outside the top three just once, but was third in the one-off final.

    Read the full report here

  16. badminton

    Badminton on iPlayer and red buttonpublished at 07:32 British Summer Time 4 August

    Badminton - women's singles semi-finals

    BBC iPlayer

    The first action of the day is about to begin as top seed An Se Young of South Korea takes on Indonesia's Gregoria Mariska Tunjung in the badminton women's singles semi-finals.

    You can watch that live now on BBC iPlayer and on the red button.

  17. Postpublished at 07:29 British Summer Time 4 August

    A gold medal and most iconic image of this Olympics so far?

    All in a day's work for Remco Evenepoel.

    Remco EvenepoelImage source, Rex Features
  18. cycling (road)

    Evenepoel survives late puncture to win second goldpublished at 07:25 British Summer Time 4 August

    Road Cycling - men's road race

    Joe Rindl
    BBC Sport journalist

    Belgium's Remco Evenepoel survived a late puncture to secure a dominant victory in the Olympic men's road race in Paris and add to the gold medal he won in the time trial seven days ago.

    The 2022 world champion became the first man to win both road cycling events at the same Games.

    Evenepoel, 24, attacked from the peloton and bridged across to the front group inside the final 40km.

    He then set a punishing pace with the last rider, France's Valentin Madouas, dropping off his wheel on the penultimate climb with 15km to go.

    The Belgian had a late scare, having to change bikes after a puncture inside the final four kilometres, but he had already built a substantial lead and cruised to victory one minute and 11 seconds ahead of Madouas in second.

    Read the full report here

  19. gymnastics

    McClenaghan wins gold as Whitlock misses out in final eventpublished at 07:23 British Summer Time 4 August

    Gymnastics - men's pommel horse final

    Sonia Oxley
    BBC Sport in Paris

    Rhys McClenaghan won Olympic pommel horse gold for Ireland as Team GB's Max Whitlock finished out of the medals in his final competition before retirement.

    The world champion, from Northern Ireland, posted 15.533 to edge out Kazakhstan's Nariman Kurbanov (15.433) and American Stephen Nedoroscik (15.300).

    Defending Olympic champion Whitlock, who was seeking to become the first gymnast to win medals on the same apparatus at four successive Games, was just 0.100 off the podium in fourth.

    McClenaghan, 25, was the top qualifier for the eight-man final and put in an even better routine to win a third gold for Team Ireland in Paris in front of a packed Bercy Arena with plenty of noisy support for him.

    Read the full report here

  20. boxing

    Boxer Richardson secures medal for Team GBpublished at 07:20 British Summer Time 4 August

    Boxing - men's light-middleweight

    Matthew Henry
    BBC Sport in Paris

    It has been a tough Games for the Team GB boxers but light-middleweight Lewis Richardson secured at least a bronze medal for them at the Paris Olympics by beating Zeyad Eashash to reach the semi-finals.

    The southpaw, 25, dropped to his knees after securing a split decision victory over his Jordanian opponent.

    After a scrappy, hectic bout, Richardson was given the win by three of the judges with two awarding the fight to Eashash.

    Richardson will fight 22-year-old Mexican second seed Marco Verde in the semi-finals on Tuesday, when the boxing moves from the North Paris Arena to the tennis courts of Roland Garros.

    Read the full report here