BBC Scotland at the Olympics

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  1. Scott earns another medal chance in 200 IMpublished at 21:08 1 August

    Thomas Duncan at La Defense Arena
    BBC Sport Scotland

    Duncan Scott has given himself another shot at an Olympic medal after qualifying for Friday's 200m individual medley final.

    The 27-year-old was second in the first semi-final, finishing behind American Carson Foster but third fastest overall, with French superstar Leon Marchand quickest after winning his semi-final.

    Great Britain team-mate Tom Dean took fourth behind Scott and will also go in Friday's final.

    "It felt alright," Scott told BBC Sport.

    "I probably wanted to be out a bit quicker and work the backstroke a bit more. We'll look at it.

    "I should have an alright lane for tomorrow night so it should be a good one. I'm excited."

    Scott won silver in the event three years ago in Tokyo and will have the chance to climb on to the podium once again at 20:43 BST on Friday night.

    The Alloa swimmer could go above Sir Chris Hoy in Scotland's all-time Olympics list if he claims an eighth career medal, having already won a gold as part of Britain's 4x200m freestyle relay team in Paris.

    Duncan Scott of Team Great BritainImage source, Getty Images
  2. Shanahan makes backstroke final but has 'more in the tank'published at 20:41 1 August

    Thomas Duncan
    BBC Sport Scotland at La Defense Arena

    Glasgow swimmer Katie Shanahan booked her place in a second Olympic final in Paris as she made it to the medal race in the 200m backstroke.

    The 20-year-old finished fourth in her semi-final behind Kaylee McKeown of Australia, Peng Xuwei of China, and British team-mate Honey Osrin.

    Her time of two minutes and 8.52 seconds was enough to qualify as the seventh fastest swimmer overall.

    "I'm really happy to be in the final I knew it was going to be really tight to get again," Shanahan told BBC Sport.

    "But I'm not too happy with the swim. I feel like I've got more in the tank. It was a bit too slow but I can't really complain making my second final."

    Shanahan, competing at her first Olympics, claimed seventh spot in the 400m individual medley medal race earlier this week and will get the chance to try to match or improve that performance at 19:36 BST on Friday.

  3. Sterritt delayed medal chance as Skiff final rescheduledpublished at 20:15 1 August

    James Peters and Fynn Sterritt of Team Great Britain compete in the Men's Skiff 49er class on day four of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Marseille Marina Image source, Getty Images

    Scottish sailor Fynn Sterritt will have to come back to compete in the men's skiff final on Friday after the medal race was disrupted by wind.

    The race began before being interrupted amid changing conditions off the coast of Marseille.

    Sterritt and team-mate James Peters will return on Friday at 12:13 BST.

    “It was good fun, pretty difficult conditions and pretty hard to tell what the wind was doing," Sterritt said.

    "In actual fact it was retreating away from us most of the time.

    “But we obviously felt like we were in both of the abandoned races - we were in good places to keep attacking, but they made the right decision abandoning it.

    "The wind was just a bit too unpredictable, and when it gets like that it gets unfair to the sailors involved, so we get another shot to do it all again tomorrow.”

  4. Shanahan into 200m backstroke semi-finalpublished at 13:42 1 August

    Thomas Duncan in Paris
    BBC Sport Scotland

     Katie Shanahan of Team Great Britain competes in the Women’s 400m Individual Medley Heats on day three of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Paris La Defense Arena Image source, Getty Images

    Katie Shanahan is safely into Thursday night's 200m backstroke semi-final.

    The 20-year-old from Glasgow finished fifth in her heat but was the 11th fastest swimmer overall as the top 16 went through to the next round.

    Shanahan will race from lane seven in the second semi-final at La Defense Arena shortly after 20:20 BST.

    The eight fastest swimmers will progress to Friday night's final.

    Shanahan has already finished seventh in the 400m individual medley in Paris.

    Meanwhile, fellow Scot Lucy Hope helped Great Britain qualify for Thursday night's 4x200m freestyle relay.

    Hope swam the third leg as GB finished third in their heat behind the United States and Brazil, qualifying seventh fastest.

    The final is at 21:03 BST and, should Britain get a medal, Hope will receive one whether or not she is selected in the final quartet.

  5. 'Wretched Games continues for Scots'published at 13:23 1 August

    Richard Winton in Paris
    BBC Sport Scotland

    The news of Jake Wightman's withdrawal from the men's 800m after failing to recover from a hamstring injury is just the latest bit of wretched news to befall the Scottish contingent amid Team GB.

    From double gold medal-hunting cyclist Katie Archibald being ruled out of the Games after falling over a step in her garden, to world number one Seonaid McIntosh failing to make the final of the 50m rifle three positions, to Wightman's woes, it's been a grim few days.

    Add in a few missed medal opportunities here and there, and any pre-Olympic hopes of matching the record haul of 14 in Tokyo three years ago seems shot.

  6. Brash helps GB reach team jumping finalpublished at 13:15 1 August

    Richard Winton at Chateau de Versailles
    BBC Sport Scotland

    Scott BrashImage source, Reuters

    Scott Brash will have the chance to emulate his London 2012 team jumping gold medal after qualifying for Friday’s final at the 2024 Olympics.

    Brash, from Peebles, was the third of the three-strong team to go at the fabulous Chateau de Versailles venue outside Paris and recorded just one fault on horse Jefferson.

    Team GB finished third in qualification so advance to Friday's final, with a medal very much within their capabilites.

  7. Scott beats in Marchand in 200 IM heatspublished at 13:13 1 August

    Thomas Duncan in Paris
    BBC Sport Scotland

    Duncan Scott of Team Great BritainImage source, Getty Images

    Duncan Scott qualified second fastest for Thursday night's 200m individual medley semi-finals by beating France's triple gold medallist, Leon Marchand, in his heat.

    Scott, 27, won the third of four heats in one minute 57.77 seconds, 0.09 seconds ahead of Marchand.

    France's poster boy made history on Wednesday night by claiming two gold medals in a single session in the pool before returning to La Defense Arena this morning.

    Japan's Daiya Seto qualified fastest by winning heat four, with Scott's Great Britain team-mate and friend Tom Dean also making the semi-finals.

    Scott and Dean will go in the first of two semi-finals from 20:47 BST on Thursday.

    Marchand, the favourite to win a fourth Olympic title in Paris, and Seto are in the second race with the eight fastest swimmers progressing to Friday night's final.

    Scott claimed silver in the 200 IM in Tokyo and this is his final chance to win an individual medal in Paris, having finished fourth in the 200m freestyle before helping Team GB to gold in the 4x200m freestyle relay.

  8. Heartbreak for world number one McIntoshpublished at 13:11 1 August

    Seonaid McIntoshImage source, Reuters

    It's heartbreak for Scottish shooter Seonaid McIntosh in the women’s 50m 3P rifle at the Olympics.

    After starting like a train, the world number one led the way after the first position, kneeling.

    But by the time she'd completed her 20 shots in prone, the Edinburgh athlete had dropped to third.

    And, seemingly struggling to get to grips with the standing position, a disconsolate McIntosh finished 12th, with a score of 586-38x.

    Only the top eight progress to Friday's final.

    For McIntosh, this will be a hard pill to swallow as an Olympics which promised so much has ended with nothing.

    The 28-year-old had won all bar one of the World Cup events in this discipline this year, so was a favourite to win a medal, having struggled in the Tokyo Games.

    BBC Sport's Lewis Coombes at Chateauroux Shooting Centre

  9. Macinnes misses out on 200m butterfly finalpublished at 22:23 31 July

    Keanna Macinnes during her semi-finalImage source, PA Media

    Scotland's Keanna Macinnes has missed out on a place in tomorrow's women's 200m butterfly.

    The 22-year-old swimmer had won her heat at the París La Défense Arena to qualify for Wednesday night's semi-finals.

    But Macinnes, from Edinburgh, finished fourth in her semi behind China's Zhang Yufei, USA swimmer Alex Shackell and Abbey Lee Connor.

    Her time of 2m 8.04s was not enough to book a place in tomorrow's final, with teammate Laura Stephens securing a final's place by just over a tenth of a second.

  10. Sterrit into final of men's skiffpublished at 17:59 31 July

    Fynn Sterritt and James PetersImage source, Reuters

    Kingussie sailor Fynn Sterritt will compete for a medal in the men's skiff on Thursday after reaching the final round of the competition.

    The 35-year-old, along with partner James Peters, finished seventh overall in qualifying following today's final three races.

    Despite coming in 19th in race 10, their sixth place finish in race 11 and fifth in the final race cemented their berth place in the medal race.

    Sterritt and Peters, who won European bronze in 2022, will face nine other crews when the medal race gets underway at Marseille marina tomorrow afternoon.

  11. What's still to come on Wednesday?published at 11:11 31 July

    Keanna MacInnesImage source, Getty Images

    After Beth Potter started the day with triathlon bronze, and Amy Costello scored as Team GB's women's hockey team beat South Africa 2-1, the rest of Wednesday is quieter for the Scots.

    In the pool, with Keanna MacInnes will go in the 200m butterfly semi-finals (21:04) after the 22-year-old from Edinburgh won her heat to qualify seventh fastest.

    Also on the water earlier in the day is Fynn Sterritt in races 10-12 of men's skiff (from 13:50).

    The Kingussie sailor and crew-mate James Peters need to finish in the top 10 at the end of the day to advance to Thursday's medal race.

  12. Old, sore, but poised for little bit morepublished at 22:26 30 July

    Richard Winton
    BBC Sport Scotland at Roland Garros

    Andy Murray really doesn’t want to retire, does he?

    For the second round in succession in the men’s doubles here, the Scot and partner Dan Evans roared back from brink to maintain their hopes of winning an Olympic medal.

    Now in the quarter-finals, they are two wins from the podium.

    Dare Murray dream of a third gold? Given his laboured celebrations after this one - think Granda at the wean’s birthday party - his most pressing concern might be getting out of his bed in the morning.

    But a day of rest before their last-eight tie should straighten Murray up for what promises to be another epic contest.

  13. Relay gold draws Scott level with Hoypublished at 21:53 30 July

    Duncan Scott anchored Great Britain’s 4x200m freestyle relay team to gold to draw level with Sir Chris Hoy on seven Olympic medals - the record for a Scottish athlete.

    Scott now has two gold and five silver medals in his collection after banishing the disappointment of Monday night’s fourth place in the individual event.

    Team GB - defending their title from Tokyo three years ago - led from the start and Scott finished off with a powerful final leg.

    It is Britain’s first gold medal in the pool at the Paris Games.