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Tokyo Olympics: Britwatch - how did Team GB athletes perform in Tokyo?

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Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Relive every Team GB gold medal at 2020 Games

Day 16 - Sunday, 8 August

Athletics

Men's marathon: Chris Thompson was the leading Brit, completing the course in 2:21:29 to finish 54th. Ben Connor and Callum Hawkins failed to finish.

Boxing

Women's middleweight: Lauren Price beat China's Li Qian on a unanimous decision.

Cycling

Women's omnium: Laura Kenny ended on the track in a crash in the points race, but came back to win the tempo race. She then went out early in the elimination race and, despite winning the final points race, finished sixth overall.

Men's keirin: Jason Kenny won the gold medal in the final, surprising the other riders by pushing off the front as the durney left the track. Jack Carlin, eliminated in the semi-final Kenny won, finished eighth overall with second place in the B final. Both had finished second in their quarter-finals earlier in the day.

Women's sprint: Katy Marchant was second in her classification race to finish sixth overall in the event.

This page will be updated throughout the day as British athletes compete.

Day 15 - Saturday, 7 August

Athletics

Men's 1500m: Josh Kerr pushed through in the final lap to win bronze with a personal best of 3:29.05. Jake Heyward and Jake Wightman finished 9th and 10th respectively.

Women's 10,000m: Eilish McColgan took ninth in the final with a time of 31:04.46, with Jessica Judd placing in 17th.

Women's 4x400m: Team GB's quartet of Ama Pipi, Jodie Williams, Emily Diamond and Nicole Yeargin finished fifth in the final.

Women's marathon: Stephanie Davis was GB's best finisher, finishing 39th with a time of 2:36.33, while Steph Twell and Jess Piasecki finished 68th and 71st respectively.

Women's high jump: Morgan Lake withdrew from the final after picking up a foot injury in qualification.

Boxing

Men's flyweight: Galal Yafei took gold for GB, beating Carlo Palaam of the Philippines on a 4-1 split decision.

Cycling

Men's madison: Omnium champion Matt Walls won his second medal of the Games as he partnered Ethan Hayter to silver with a surging final sprint.

Men's keirin: Jack Carlin won his heat to advance automatically to Sunday's quarter-finals. Jason Kenny finished fourth in his race, but recovered to win his repechage race and reach the quarters.

Women's sprint: Katy Marchant beat Canada's Lauriane Genest in the 1/8 round, before losing her quarter-final in two straight races to Hong Kong's Lee Wai-sze.

Diving

Men's 10m platform: Tom Daley won bronze to add to the earlier gold he won in the synchronised event.

Equestrian

Jumping team: The British team of Holly Smith, Harry Charles and Ben Maher finished tenth in the final.

Golf

Women: Jodi Ewart Shadoff finished the event in joint 40th following a round of one over. Mel Reid carded -3 to finish in 55th position.

Modern pentathlon

Men: Joseph Choong led going into the final Laser Run and fought off a final lap challenge from Egypt's Ahmed Elgendy to win gold. Teammate Joseph Cooke finished the event in ninth.

Day 14 - Friday, 6 August

Athletics

Men's 4x100m relay: The British team of Chijindu Ujah, Zharnel Hughes, Richard Kilty and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake claimed silver, their first podium finish in the event since Athens 2004, but were beaten on the finish line by Italy.

Women's 4x100m relay: The British team of Asha Philip, Imani-Lara Lansiquot, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita got off to a rocky start but recovered well to finish third, repeating their achievement from Rio five years ago.

Women's 1500m: Setting a new British record, Laura Muir ran a brilliant race to finish in the silver medal position.

Women's 400m: Jodie Williams finished in sixth place in the final, matching the personal best she had set in the semi-final.

Men's 4x400m relay: The British quartet of Cameron Chalmers, Joe Brier, Lee Thompson and Michael Ohioze could only manage sixth place in their heat and failed to qualify for the final.

Men's 5,000m Andrew Butchart finished 11th in the final with a time of 13:09.97.

Boxing

Women's middleweight: Lauren Price secured a place in Sunday's final with a 3-2 split decision over Nouchka Fontijn of the Netherlands.

Cycling

Women's madison: Laura Kenny and Katie Archibald dominated to win the event with Kenny becoming the first British woman to win golds at three different Olympics.

Men's sprint: Jack Carlin lost his semi-final 2-0 to eventual champion Harrie Lavreysen of the Netherlands, but won in the bronze medal play-off, beating ROC's Denis Dmitriev in two straight races.

Women's sprint: Katy Marchant qualified eighth fastest with a time of 10.495 seconds before beating Japan's Yuka Kobayashi and Hong Kong's Lee Wai-sze to make Saturday's 1/8 round.

Diving

Men's 10m platform: Tom Daley qualified comfortably for the semi-finals, posting two scores over 90 on his way to a fourth-placed finish, but Noah Williams failed to qualify.

Equestrian

Jumping team: The British team of Holly Smith, Harry Charles and Ben Maher qualified in seventh for Saturday's final.

Golf

Women: Jodi Ewart Shadoff sits joint 34th and Mel Reid joint 56th after the third round, with the pair carding -1 and +5 respectively.

Hockey

Women: Team GB beat India 4-3 to win the bronze medal, with Elena Sian Rayer, Sarah Robertson, Hollie Pearne-Webb and Grace Balsdon scoring the goals.

Modern Pentathlon

Women: Kate French produced a stunning performance, moving up from fifth place entering the Laser Run, to claim gold in the women's modern pentathlon. Joanna Muir finished fourteenth overall.

Day 13 - Thursday, 5 August

Athletics

Women's pole vault: Holly Bradshaw won bronze in the final to claim Team GB's first-ever pole vault Olympic medal.

Men's 1500m: Jake Wightman qualified for Saturday's final after finishing first in his semi-final with a season's best time of 3:33.48. Josh Kerr and Jake Heyward also progressed after finishing third and sixth in their respective semi-final races.

Women 4x400m relay: Emily Diamond, Zoey Clark, Laviai Nielsen and Nicole Yeargin finished third in their heat and qualified for Saturday's final with a season best time of 3:23.99.

Men's 20km walk: Callum Wilkinson finished tenth, while Tom Bosworth placed 25th.

Men's 4x100m relay: The GB squad claimed a place in the final with a time of 38.02 seconds, which made the quartet of Chijindu Ugah, Zharnel Hughes, Richard Kilty and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake fifth-fastest qualifiers.

Women's 4x100m relay: The GB squad, boosted by the return to action of Dina Asher-Smith, won their first-round heat and set a new British record of 41.55 seconds with Daryll Neita, Asha Philip and Imani Lansiquot also featuring.

Men's 110m hurdles: Andrew Pozzi, in his third Olympic Games, finished seventh in the final in a time of 13.30 seconds.

Women's high jump: Morgan Lake qualified for Saturday's final, setting a mark of 1.95m but Emily Borthwick narrowly missed out, despite posting a personal best of 1.93m.

Boxing

Men's flyweight: Galal Yafai produced an incredible semi-final performance by defeating Kazakhstan's Saken Bibossinov 3-2 on points to reach the gold medal final.

Canoe Sprint

Women's kayak single 500m: Deborah Kerr exited the competition by finishing last in her semi-final.

Men's kayak single 200m: Liam Heath set the fastest time of 3:39.985 in the semi-finals and went on to claim a bronze medal in the final.

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Tokyo Olympics: GB's Heath wins bronze in 200m kayak final

Cycling

Men's omnium: Matthew Walts won gold with 153 points and was crowned Olympic champion on his debut, earning Team GB's first track cycling gold medal at the Tokyo Games.

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Tokyo Olympics: GB's Matt Walls wins the gold medal in the men's omnium

Men's sprint: Jack Carlin beat Sebastien Vigier of France in the 1/8 finals, before defeating Germany's Maximilian Levy 2-0 in the best of three race quarter-final. Jason Kenny lost his 1/8 race with ROC's Denis Dmitriev but returned to the competition with victory over Malaysia's Azizulhasni Awang and Japan's Yuta Wakimoto in a three-man repechage. He was then eliminated in his quarter-final, losing 2-0 against the Dutchman Harrie Layreysen and finished last in the 5-8th placing race.

Women's keirin: Katy Marchant missed out on a semi-final place after falling down in her quarter-final and finishing fifth.

Diving

Women's 10m platform: The British pair Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix and Lois Toulson finished seventh and ninth in the final after qualifying eighth and ninth in the semi-final.

Golf

Women: Jodi Ewart Shadoff finished T34 and Mel Reid finished T53 in the second round.

Modern pentathlon

Men's individual: Joseph Choong finished in top place in the fencing ranking round with 250 points, while team-mate James Cooke finished with 208 points in 16th place.

Women individual: Kate French finished sixth in the fencing ranking round with 220 points and team-mate Joanna Muir finished 33rd with 178 points.

Swimming

Marathon swimming: Hector Pardoe was forced to retire from the event after being hit in the eye by a stray elbow from a fellow competitor.

Day 12 - Wednesday, 4 August

Athletics

Women's 400m: Jodie Williams qualified for Friday's final after clocking a personal best of 49.97 to finish second in her race, but Ama Pipi faded to finish seventh in her semi-final.

Women's 1500m: Laura Muir finished second in her semi-final to qualify for Friday's final. Katie Snowden exited the competition after finishing ninth in her race.

Women's 3,000m steeplechase: Elizabeth Bird set a national record of 9:19.68 as she finished ninth in the final.

Women's heptathlon: Katarina Johnson-Thompson has withdrawn from the heptathlon after she pulled up injured in the 200m. She had been sitting in fifth going into the stage, having finished joint seventh-fastest in the 100m hurdles, joint-second in the high jump and 15th in the shot put.

Men's 110m hurdles: Andrew Pozzi qualified for Thursday's final as a fastest loser, but teammate David King missed out on a spot after finishing seventh in his semi-final.

Men's hammer throw: Nick Miller finished sixth in the final with a season-best 78.15m

Boxing

Men's light heavyweight: Ben Whittaker won a silver medal after losing a hard-fought final against Cuba's Arlen Lopez.

Men's super heavyweight: Frazer Clarke won Olympic bronze after his semi-final contest against Uzbekistan's Bakhodir Jalolov ended in the third round due to a cut.

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GB's Ben Whittaker earns silver after defeat in final by Cuba's Arlen Lopez

Canoe Sprint

Men's kayak single 200m: Liam Heath progressed from his heat, and qualified for Thursday's semi-finals with an Olympic-best time of 33.985 seconds in the quarters.

Women's canoe single 200m: Katie Reid made it through her heat, but failed to qualify from her quarter-final, finishing fourth with only the top two going through.

Women's kayak single 500m: Both British athletes progressed through their heats, but Deborah Kerr took a step further into Thursday's semi-finals, while Emily Lewis missed out on qualification from the quarter-finals by just one hundredth of a second.

Cycling

Women's keirin: Katy Marchant was relegated from her heat after being judged to have deviated from her racing line. She returned to finish top of her repechage and book her place in the quarter-finals.

Men's team pursuit: Ethan Hayter, Oliver Wood, Ethan Vernon and Charlie Tanfield secured seventh position for Team GB as they beat Switzerland in their placings final.

Men's sprint: Jack Carlin and Jason Kenny were third and eighth fastest respectively in qualification before progressing through the 1/32 and 1/16 finals. Carlin beat Nathan Hart of Australia and Muhammad Shah Firdaus Sahrom of Malaysia, while Kenny defeated Malaysia's Azizulhasni Awang and Japan's Yuta Wakimoto.

Diving

Women's 10m platform: Both Lois Toulson and Andrea Spendolini Sireix qualified for tomorrow's semi-final by finishing seventh and tenth in the preliminary round.

Equestrian

Individual show jumping: Ben Maher won show jumping gold aboard Explosion W by 17 hundredths of a second. Scott Brash finished seventh while Harry Charles retired.

Golf

Women: Mel Reid and Jodi Ewart Shadoff sit joint 41st and joint 47th respectively after carding two and three over in the first round.

Hockey

Women: Team GB were beaten 5-1 by Netherlands in the semi-final. They will now compete for the bronze medal on Friday against India.

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Netherlands beat Team GB in women's hockey semi-final

Sailing

Women's 470: Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyrewon gold as their fifth-place finish in the medals race was enough to hold off silver medallists Poland.

Men's 470: Luke Patience and Chris Grube finished eighth in the medals race, securing them a fifth-place finish overall.

Skateboarding

Women's park: Sky Brown became Team GB's youngest-ever summer Olympic medal winner as she won bronze aged 13 years and 23 days. Team-mate Bombette Martin failed to advance past the prelims.

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'Fantastic' Sky Brown takes bronze to become youngest GB medallist

Sport Climbing

Women's combined: Shauna Coxsey missed out on a place in the event's inaugural final, placing 13th in qualification.

Swimming

Women's 10km: Alice Dearing finished 19th out of 25 athletes.

Day 11 - Tuesday, 3 August

Artistic swimming

Women's duet: The British pair of Kate Shortman and Isabelle Thorpe finished 14th after scoring 85.1548 in their preliminary technical routine and failed to advance to the final.

Athletics

Women's 800m: Keely Hodgkinson took silver in the final but team-mate Jemma Reekie just missed out on a medal by finishing fourth. Alex Bell finished in seventh.

Men's 1500m: James Hayward won his heat to guarantee himself a place in the semi-finals. Jake Wightman is through after finishing third in his heat, while Josh Kerr also secured qualification.

Women's 400m: Jodie Williams powered into the semi-finals after winning her heat. Amai Pipi also booked her place in the semis as one of the fastest losers, but Nicole Yeargin misses out after being disqualified for lane infringement.

Men's 200m: Adam Gemili pulled up with a hamstring injury after leaving the blocks in his men's 200m heat, eventually finishing last in his heat, while Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake narrowly missed out on a fastest loser's slot.

Men's triple jump: Ben Williams finishing 22nd in qualification, failing to reach the final.

Women's long jump: Jazmin Sawyers finished eighth and Abigail Irozuru 11th in the women's long jump final.

Men's 110m hurdles: Andrew Pozzi progressed after finishing fourth in his heat, while David King, who placed sixth in his race, qualified as a lucky loser.

Men's 5,000m: Marc Scott did not advance after finishing sixth in his heat, one place outside of automatic qualification, but Andrew Butchart is through to the semis after qualifying as lucky loser with a seventh place finish in his race.

Men's high jump: Harry Coppell finished seventh in the final after failing three times at the 5.87m mark.

Men's shot put: Scott Lincoln's best of 20.42m was not enough to see him progress from qualifying, as he finished 18th overall.

Boxing

Men's welterweight: Pat McCormack won a silver medal after losing a hard-fought contest to Cuba's Roniel Iglesias.

Men's flyweight: Galal Yafai is through to the semi-finals and is guaranteed a medal after defeating Cuba's Yosvany Veitia by on a 4-1 points decision.

Women's lightweight: Caroline Dubois lost to Thailand's Sudaporn Seesondee on a 3-2 split-decision in the quarter-finals.

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Tokyo Olympics: Caroline Dubois loses quarter-final bout on narrow split decision

Canoe Sprint

Women's kayak single 200m: Deborah Kerr finished eighth in the final having earlier crossed the line second in her semi-final.

Cycling

Men's team sprint: Having placed second in qualifying, Ryan Owens, Jack Carlin and Jason Kenny beat Germany in the first round before taking silver in the final, as the Netherlands claimed gold.

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Tokyo Olympics: Jason Kenny equals medal record with silver in men's team sprint

Women's team pursuit: The British quartet of Katie Archibald, Laura Kenny, Josie Knight and Neah Evans beat the United States in the first round to reach the final. There they won silver as Germany broke the world record to win gold.

Men's team pursuit: Team GB's Ethan Hayter, Charlie Tanfield, Ethan Vernon and Oliver Woodlost their first round tie against Denmark and so will only contest the final for 7th/8th place.

Diving

Men's 3m springboard: Jack Laugher and James Heatly finished third and fourth respectively in the semi-final. Later in the day, Laugher held his position to win bronze, but Heatly fell back to finish in ninth place.

Equestrian

Men's individual: Ben Maher, Scott Brash and Harry Charles all safely advanced to the individual final.

Gymnastics

Men's parallel bars: Joe Fraser finished eighth in the men's parallel bars final.

Sailing

Men's Finn: Giles Scott retained his title after finishing fourth in the medal race.

Men's 49er: Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell won gold, narrowly edging out Germany in a thrilling finish to the medal race.

Mixed Nacra17: John Gimson and Anna Burnet secured silver with a fifth place finish in the medal race.

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'Centimetres on the line' - Team GB snatch gold against Germany in sailing 49er

Women's 49erFX: Charlotte Dobson and Saskia Tidey finished seventh in the medal race to end up sixth overall.

Men's 470: Luke Patience and Chris Grube finished their regular regatta with seventh and 10th-place finishes, going into Wednesday's medal race in fifth place.

Women's 470: Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre lead the fleet and are guaranteed a medal on Wednesday after finishing the regular regatta with ninth and third-place finishes.

Day 10 - Monday, 2 August

Artistic swimming

Women's duet: The British pair of Kate Shortman and Isabelle Thorpe scored 84.7333 in their free routine, with the second stage of the preliminary round to come on Tuesday.

Athletics

Media caption,

Muir and Snowden progress to 1500m semi-final

Women's 1500m: Laura Muir comfortably advanced to the semi-finals, finishing second in her heat. Katie Snowden also progressed, taking the last automatic qualification place from her heat with a sixth-place finish and a personal best time of four minutes 2.77 seconds. Revee Walcott-Nolan also ran a PB - 4:06.23 - but agonisingly missed out, finishing seventh in her race and missing out on being a fastest loser by one hundredth of a second.

Women's pole vault: Holly Bradshaw reached the final with her first attempt in qualification.

Women's 200m: Beth Dobbin exited after finishing fifth in her semi-final. She had advanced second from her heat with an equal-season best of 22.78.

Men's hammer throw: Nick Miller qualified for Wednesday's final with the sixth longest throw in qualifying, registering 76.93m, but compatriot Taylor Campbell finished 28th of the 31 entrants.

Women's 400m hurdles: Jessica Turner is out after finishing seventh in a semi-final marred by torrential rain.

Canoe Sprint

Women's kayak single 200m: Both Deborah Kerr and Emily Lewis advanced from their heats, but while Kerr won in the quarter-final, Lewis finished third in the same race and, with only two advancing, missed out by just five thousands of a second.

Cycling

Women's team pursuit: The British quartet of Kate Archibald, Laura Kenny, Elinor Barker and Josie Knight qualified second, behind Germany's new world record time.

Men's team pursuit: Ethan Hayter, Ed Clancy, Ethan Vernon and Oliver Wood finished fourth and will face fastest qualifiers Denmark in the next round.

Diving

Men's 3m springboard: James Heatly and Jack Laugher safely advanced through qualifying, finishing fourth and sixth with the top 18 advancing.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Oliver Townend leads GB to gold medal in eventing

Equestrian

Eventing: The British trio of Oliver Townend, Tom McEwen and Laura Collett scooped GB's first eventing team gold since 1972. All three riders qualified for the individual jumping final, in which McEwen won silver, and Townend and Collett finished fifth and ninth respectively.

Gymnastics

Women's floor: Jessica Gadirova finished sixth in the final, scoring 14 points, just 0.166 below the gymnasts tied for bronze. Her twin sister Jennifer, who came in as a reserve after Simone Biles withdrew, finished a place lower in seventh, scoring 13.233.

Hockey

Women: Team GB secured their place in the semi-finals as goalkeeper Maddie Hinch repeated her Rio 2016 heroics, saving all four of Spain's attempts in a shootout as they won 2-0 following a 2-2 draw.

Sailing

The day's sailing was postponed with insufficient wind speeds to create fair and competitive races. Cancelled events included the men's 49er and women's 49erFX medal races and the completion of both regular 470 regattas.

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Tokyo Olympics: Emily Campbell becomes first British female weightlifter to medal

Weightlifting

Women's +87kg: Emily Campbell won silver after lying fourth after the first round, she lifted 161kg in the clean and jerk to grab a spot on the podium.

Day Nine - Sunday, 1 August

Athletics

Men's 100m: Zharnel Hughes set a season's best time of 9.98 seconds to win his semi-final and qualify sixth fastest but then false-started and was disqualified from the final. Reece Prescod was disqualified from his semi-final, while Chijindu Ujah's time of 10.11 seconds saw him eliminated at the same stage.

Women's 3,000m steeplechase: Elizabeth Bird finished fifth in her heat to qualify for Thursday's final as one of six fastest losers, however Aimee Pratt missed out after finishing 11th in her race.

Women's long jump: Abigail Irozuru produced a season's best of 6.75m to qualify for the final, her jump the exact distance of the automatic qualifying mark. Jazmin Sawyers' mark of 6.62m also saw her advance as one of the top 12, but Lorraine Ugen is out after she could only record 6.02m.

Women's 100m hurdles: Tiffany Porter failed to qualify for the final, posting a time of 12.86 seconds. Cindy Sember was also unsuccessful, with a time of 12.76.

Men's 800m: Daniel Rowden's season's best of of 1:44.35 was not enough to see him progress from his semi-final, as he finished fifth. Elliott Giles led for more than a lap of his semi and finished third, but his time of 1:44.74 was not enough to take a place in the final, despite a collision between two of the favourites 180m from the tape.

Men's high jump: Tom Gale set a mark of 2.27m as he finished 11th in the final.

Boxing

Men's welterweight: Pat McCormack advanced to Tuesday's final after Irish semi-final opponent Aidan Walsh pulled out with an ankle injury. McCormack is now guaranteed at least a silver.

Men's light-heavyweight: Benjamin Whittaker will also win at least a silver after beating ROC's Imam Khataev 4-1 on points to reach the final.

Men's super heavyweight: Frazer Clarke is also guaranteed of a medal, advancing from his quarter-final when opponent Mourad Aliev of France was disqualified for use of the head.

Cycling

Women's BMX freestyle: Charlotte Worthington produced a stunning second run of 97.5 to win gold in the final.

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Tokyo Olympics: GB's Charlotte Worthington wins BMX freestyle gold in dramatic final

Men's BMX freestyle: Declan Brooks won bronze with a second run that scored 90.8, improving from his first run score of 89.4.

Equestrian

Men and Women individual: GB lead the team event and are well-placed in the competition. Oliver Townend tops the standings, with Laura Collett third and Tom McEwen sixth.

Showjumping: The medals will be determined through the showjumping on Monday, GB will have a lead of 17.9 points to defend in the team competition.

Golf

Men: Paul Casey was one of seven players to tie for third on 15-under, but bogeyed the first play-off hole to miss out on a medal. Tommy Fleetwood finished in a tie for 16th.

Gymnastics

Pommel horse: Max Whitlock became the first man to defend the Olympic title since 1980 when he scooped gold for Team GB with a score of 15.583. Joe Fraser finished 11th.

Hockey

Men: Team GB went out of the hockey tournament at the quarter-final stage, beaten 3-1 by India.

Sailing

Women's Laser Radial: Alison Young finished eighth in the medal race and tenth overall.

Men's Finn: Giles Scott finished is guaranteed a medal after finishing the regular regatta with a nine-point lead, winning his first race and placing seventh in the other.

Men's 470: Luke Patience and Chris Grube dropped to fourth in the standings after finishing ninth and sixth in Sunday's races.

Women's 470: Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre moved top of the standings, finishing first and third in the day's two races.

Mixed Nacra17: John Gimson and Anna Burnet are guaranteed a medal, they sit second overall after completing the regular regatta with finishes of fifth, second and fourth.

Swimming

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Duncan Scott becomes GB's most decorated Olympian at a Games

Men's 4x100m: The medley team of Luke Greenbank, Adam Peaty, James Guy and Duncan Scott won silver in a European record time of 3:27.51. Peaty came in for James Wilby, who swam in the heats.

Men's 50m freestyle: Benjamin Proud finished fifth in the final.

Men's 1500m freestyle: Daniel Jervis placed fifth in the final.

Weightlifting

Women's 76kg: Emily Godley finished seventh in the category, topping the 'B' final. Godley's total lift was 222kg.

Day Eight - Saturday, 31 July

Athletics

Women's 100m: Daryll Neita finished eighth in the final after she qualified from the semis as a fastest loser. Dina Asher-Smith and Asha Philip failed to qualify from their respective semi-finals, finishing third and eighth respectively.

Men's 100m: In the heats, Zharnel Hughes led a trio of British qualifiers for the semi-finals with a season's best of 10.04 seconds. Chijindi Ujah finished third in heat seven in a time of 10.08 to qualify as of right. Reece Prescod finished fifth in his heat in 10.12secs - a season's best - having survived being investigated for a potential false start.

Women's 800m: Keely Hodgkinson and Jemma Reekie progressed by finishing first and second in their respective semi-finals, while Alex Bell qualified as a fastest loser in 1:58.83, the fastest time of the trio.

Women's 100m hurdles: Sisters Tiffany Porter and Cindy Sember both qualified for semi-finals.

Women's 400m hurdles: Jessica Turner qualified for the semi-finals but Jessie Knight - who did not finish after falling at the first hurdle - and Meghan Beesley both missed out.

Men's 800m: Elliot Giles and Daniel Rowden booked their places in the semis, while Oliver Dustin lost out in his bid to qualify.

Men's high jump: Harry Coppell advanced to the final.

Mixed 4x400m relay: The quartet of Nick Baker, Nicole Yeargin, Emily Diamond and Cameron Chalmers finished sixth in the final.

Boxing

Women's featherweight: Karriss Artingstall had to settle for bronze after losing her semi-final to Japan's Irie Sena on a 3-2 split decision.

Women's middleweight: Lauren Price reached the semi-finals with victory by unanimous decision over Panama's Atheyna Bylon, guaranteeing herself a medal.

Men's flyweight: Galal Yafai progressed to the quarter-finals with a 3-2 split decision win over Zambia's Patrick Chinyemba.

Men's lightweight: Luke McCormack lost by unanimous decision in the last 16 to Cuban world champion Andy Cruz.

Cycling

Women's BMX freestyle: Charlotte Worthington placed fourth in her seeding run.

Men's BMX freestyle: Declan Brooks is seeded seventh after his initial run in the event.

Media caption,

Watch: Worthington and Brooks in debut BMX freestyle runs

Equestrian

Eventing: Team GB are top of the table after the third dressage session. Oliver Townsend is second in the individual rankings and Laura Collett sits sixth, while Tom McEwen is 12th.

Golf

Men: Paul Casey shot a five-under-par 66 and is joint third on 12 under after the third round, two shots off leader Xander Schauffele of the United States. Tommy Fleetwood rose to joint ninth on 10 under after carding a seven-birdie 64.

Hockey

Women: Goals from Susannah Townsend and Hannah Martin gave Team GB a 2-0 win over Ireland in their final group stage match, as they qualified for the quarter-finals.

Rugby Sevens

Women: Team GB missed out on a medal after losing 26-19 to France in their semi-final, before being defeated 21-12 by Fiji in the bronze medal match.

Sailing

Women's RS:X: Emma Wilson claimed a bronze by finishing second in the medal race.

Men's RS:X: Tom Squires finished seventh both in the medal race and overall.

Men's Finn: Giles Scott finished sixth in his first race and won the second to continue to lead the standings.

Men's 49er: Going into Monday's medal race, Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell slipped from first to second overall after recording results of ninth, sixth and seventh in their three outings.

Women's 49erFX: Charlotte Dobson and Saskia Tidey sit in fifth in their standings entering Monday's medal races, after recording finishes of 15th, fourth and 18th.

Mixed Nacra17: John Gimson and Anna Burnet held onto their second position in the programme, finishing fifth and tenth before winning their last race of the day.

Shooting

Mixed team: Kirsty Hegarty and Matthew Coward Holley failed to make it past the qualification round in the trap shooting competition.

Women's 50m rifle: Seonaid McIntosh missed out on the final and eventually finished in 14th place.

Swimming

Mixed 4x100 medley: Team GB - Kathleen Dawson, Adam Peaty, James Guy and Anna Hopkin - recovered from a slip at the start to take gold, setting a new world record in the process.

Men's 50m freestyle: Ben Proud progressed after finishing third in his semi-final.

Triathlon

Mixed relay: Team GB took gold after an emphatic performance by Jess Learmonth, Jonnie Brownlee, Georgia Taylor-Brown and Alex Yee.

Day Seven - Friday, 30 July

Archery

Women's individual: Bryony Pitman was beaten 6-0 at the last 16 stage by eventual silver medallist Elena Osipova of the Russian Olympic Committee.

Athletics

Women's 100m: Dina Asher-Smith cruised through behind the USA's Teahna Daniels in the opening heat. Daryll Neita ran a personal best of 10.96 to qualify in second place in her preliminary-round heat and Asha Philip also finished second in her heat in 11.31.

Media caption,

Asher-Smith, Thompson-Herah & Fraser-Pryce through to 100m semis

Men's high jump: Tom Gale made it to the final with a season's best jump of 2.28m.

Women's 800m: Jemma Reekie won her heat in one minute 59.97 seconds, while team-mates Keely Hodgkinson, who finished second in her heat, and Alex Bell, who was one of the fastest losers, also qualified.

Men's steeplechase: Phil Norman and Zak Seddon exited in the opening round after finishing 13th and 14th respectively in their heats.

Men's discus: Lawrence Okoye failed to qualify for the final after three foul throws in qualifying on his return to the sport. It was the British champion's first major individual competition since he finished 12th at London 2012.

Mixed 4x400m relay: The GB squad of Cameron Chalmers, Zoey Clark, Emily Diamond and Lee Thompson qualified as a fastest loser for the final, setting a national record time of 3:11.95 in the process.

Men's 10,000m: Marc Scott finished 14th while team-mate Sam Atkin pulled out of the race around the halfway mark.

Women's shot put: Sophie McKinna's throw of 17.81m in the qualifying was the 17th best of the day and not enough to put her into the final.

Women's 5,000m: The British trio of Eilish McColgan, Jessica Judd and Amy-Eloise Markovic were eliminated in the heats, although Markovic's time of 15:03.22 is a personal best.

Boxing

Men's welterweight: Pat McCormack is guaranteed a medal after beating Bobo Usmon Baturov 4-1 to reach the semi-finals.

Men's light-heavyweight: Ben Whittaker reached the semi-finals and guaranteed himself an Olympic medal by defeating Brazil's Keno Machado 3-2.

Women's lightweight: Caroline Dubois defeated USA's Rashida Ellis on points in the round of 16 and is through to the quarter-finals.

Canoe Slalom

Men's kayak: Bradley Forbes-Cryans progressed through the semis before finishing sixth in the final.

Cycling

Women's BMX: Beth Shriever won all three semi-final heats before taking gold in the final.

Men's BMX: Kye Whyte progressed through the semi-finals and claimed silver in the final, finishing just behind the Netherlands' Niek Kimmann.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Team GB's Bethany Shriever wins gold in BMX final

Diving

Women's 3m Springboard: Grace Reid qualified as a reserve for the semi-final with a score of 268.15, but Scarlett Mew Jensen was eliminated after scoring 243.25.

Equestrian

Eventing: World number one Oliver Townend rode to an early lead in the first session of the dressage round of the equestrian competition.

Football

Women: Team GB's women went out of the Olympic tournament at the quarter-final stage after a 4-3 defeat in extra time against Australia.

Golf

Men: Paul Casey had his round halted after the 17th hole because of dangerous weather. He is seven under, four shots behind leader Xander Schauffele of the United States. Tommy Fleetwood is three under after a two-under-par 69.

Gymnastics

Women's trampoline: Bryony Page won bronze to add to her silver medal in Rio. Laura Gallagher did not progress beyond the semi-finals.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Bryony Page wins bronze for GB in the gymnastic trampoline final

Hockey

Men: Team GB drew 2-2 with Belgium in their final group match.

Judo

Women's +78kg: Sarah Adlington was eliminated by ippon at the last 32 stage by Nihel Tun Cheikh Rouhou of Tunisia.

Rowing

Men's eight: Team GB picked up a bronze medal and were pipped to silver by Germany as New Zealand took gold.

Women's single sculls: Vicky Thornley finished fourth to just miss out on a bronze medal in the final.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: GB's men's eight crew win bronze in 'incredible' final

Rugby Sevens

Women: Team GB defeated Kenya 31-0 in their final group stage match and then beat the USA 21-12 in the quarter-finals.

Sailing

Men's Laser: Elliot Hanson finished second in his first race of the day, but missed out on Sunday's medal race, after a retirement in the final race of the regular regatta left him in 12th-place overall.

Women's Laser Radial: Alison Young secured the 10th and final place in Sunday's medal race despite finishes of 14th and 27th in the day's races.

Men's 470: Luke Patience and Chris Grube remain second in the standings after finishing fifth and 10th in their two races.

Women's 470: Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre remain second in the overall standings after third-place finishes in Friday's two races.

Men's 49er: Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell still hold the lead in the class after claiming second, 16th and third-place finishes.

Women's 49erFX: Charlotte Dobson and Saskia Tidey finished 16th, 13th and 14th in their races and dropped to fourth overall.

Swimming

Men's 200m individual medley: Duncan Scott claimed his third Tokyo medal with silver, finishing behind China's Shun Wang in the final.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Duncan Scott wins silver in 200m individual medley

Men's 200m backstroke: Luke Greenbank took bronze in the final.

Men's 4x100m medley relay: Greenbank and Scott later returned to the pool and set the second-fastest time with James Wilby and James Guy as GB qualified for the final.

Women's 4x100m medley relay: The women's squad failed to qualify for their final, missing out by 0.42 of a second.

Women's 200m breaststroke: Molly Renshaw and Abbie Wood finished sixth and seventh respectively in the final.

Women's 100m freestyle: Anna Hopkin finished seventh. Hopkin did not swim in the 50m freestyle heats later in the day.

Men's 50m freestyle: Ben Proud set the 13th fastest time in the heats to secure a place in the semi-finals.

Men's 1500m freestyle: GB's Dan Jervis set the fifth-fastest time in the heats to guarantee a place in Sunday's final.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Luke Greenbank claims bronze in 200m backstroke

Day Six - Thursday, 29 July

Archery

Men's individual: James Woodgate bowed out in his first match, losing 7-3 to Kazakhstan's Ilfat Abdullin.

Badminton

Men's singles: Toby Penty was beaten 21-10 21-15 by Denmark's third seed Anders Antonsen in their last-16 match.

Boxing

Men's super-heavyweight: Frazer Clarke opened his campaign with a 4-1 split decision victory over Ukraine's Tsotne Rogava, reaching the quarter-finals.

Women's flyweight: Charley-Sian Davison was beaten by China's Chang Yuan in a unanimous points decision in the round of 16.

Canoe Slalom

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Mallory Franklin wins silver in nail-biting women's canoe slalom debut

Women's canoe: Mallory Franklin finished sixth in her semi-final but rose to win silver in the final, finishing second behind Australia's Jessica Fox.

Cycling

BMX racing: Bethany Shriever and Kye Whyte reached the men's and women's semi-finals after finishing first and second respectively in their heats.

Golf

Men: Paul Casey started the event with a four-under-par 67, four shots behind the leader, Sepp Straka of Austria. Tommy Fleetwood finished on one under, having his round interrupted by a storm.

Gymnastics

Women's all-around: The Gadirova twins - Jessica and Jennifer - finished 10th and 13th respectively in the final, won by American Sunisa Lee.

Hockey

Men: Team GB came from 2-0 behind to draw 2-2 against Netherlands and are through to the quarter-finals with a game to spare.

Women: Team GB faced the Dutch in their group game, losing 1-0 thanks to a first-half penalty.

Judo

Women's -78kg: Former world number one Natalie Powell lost by ippon to South Korea's Hyunji Yoon in the round of 16.

Rowing

Women's pair: Helen Glover and Polly Swann came fourth in the final.

Lightweight women's double sculls: Emily Craig and Imogen Grant finished fourth, missing out on a medal by 0.01 seconds.

Women's single sculls: Vicky Thornley progressed after finishing second in her semi-final.

Rugby Sevens

Women: Team GB began their rugby sevens campaign with a 14-12 win over the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) but lost their second group stage match 21-16 against New Zealand.

Sailing

Men's RS:X: Tom Squires qualified for Saturday's medal race in sixth place overall after today's finishes of second, sixth and tenth.

Women's RS:X: Emma Wilson is guaranteed at least a bronze medal after finishing the regular regatta with sixth, first and fifth-place finishes. She is second overall heading into Saturday's medals race.

Men's Laser: Elliot Hanson finished seventh and 20th in his races and sits 12th overall.

Women's Laser Radial: Alison Young is eighth in the women's standings after finishes of 10th and eighth.

Men's Finn: Giles Scott moved into first place overall after two more race wins.

Men's 470: Luke Patience and Chris Grube are in second place overall after second and fourth-place finishes in the day's races.

Women's 470: Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre finished seventh and first in their races to sit second in the standings.

Men's 49er: Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell held onto first place overall with second and 12th-place finishes.

Mixed Nacra17: John Gimson and Anna Burnet won their first two races and finished second in the last of the day to rise to second overall.

Shooting

Men's trap final: Matthew Coward-Holley won bronze after finishing third and only missed out by a shot on a gold medal play-off.

Media caption,

GB's Matthew Coward-Holley wins bronze in the men's trap shooting.

Swimming

Mixed 4x100m medley: Team GB qualified fastest for the final with an Olympic record time of 3:38.75.

Men's 200m individual medley: Duncan Scott is through to final after winning his semi-final with a time of 1:56.69.

Women's 200m breaststroke: Molly Renshaw and Abbie Wood are both through to the final after finishing third and fourth respectively in their semi-finals.

Men's 200m backstroke: Luke Greenbank is through to the final after finishing top in his semi-final with a time of 1:54.98. His team-mate Brodie Williams came last in his semi-final.

Women's 100m freestyle: Anna Hopkin qualified for the final after finishing fourth in the second semi-final with a time of 53.11 but Freya Anderson is out after finishing sixth in the first semi-final.

Men's 200m breaststroke: James Wilby failed to make the podium in the final after finishing sixth.

Women's 200m butterfly: Alys Thomas finished seventh in the final.

Men's 100m butterfly: James Guy pulled out of the heats, while Jacob Peters finished sixth in his heat and missed out on a place in the semi-finals.

Women's 200m backstroke: Cassie Wild missed out on a place in the semi-finals after finishing seventh in her heat.

Day Five - Wednesday, 28 July

Archery

Women's individual: Naomi Folkard was beaten 6-2 by China's Wu Jiaxin in her opening match. Sarah Bettles, who beat Colombia's Valentina Acosta Giraldo 6-4 in her first encounter, was then knocked out 6-2 by Wu in the last 16.

Men's individual: Patrick Huston was eliminated in his opening match, losing 7-1 to Marcus D'Almeida of Brazil.

Badminton

Women's individual: Kirsty Gilmour bowed out, beaten 21-9 21-18 by Japan's number four seed Akane Yamaguchi in the group stage.

Men's individual: Toby Penty beat Thailand's Kantaphon Wangcharoen 21-19 21-12 in his final group game to qualify for the round of 16.

Mixed doubles: Marcus Ellis and Lauren Smith lost 21-13 21-18 to Hong Kong's Tang Chun Man and Tse Ying Suet in the quarter-finals.

Boxing

Women's featherweight: Karriss Artingstall is guaranteed a medal after reaching the semi-final with a 3-2 split-decision win over Australia's Skye Nicolson.

Men's light-heavyweight: Ben Whittaker is through to the quarter-finals after a unanimous points win over Egypt's Abdelrahman Salah Orabi Abdelgawwad.

Women's middleweight: In her opening fight, Lauren Price defeated Mongolia's Myagmarjargal Munkhbat by a unanimous points decision to reach the quarter-finals.

Canoe Slalom

Women's canoe: Mallory Franklin is through to the semi-finals after finishing the heats with the quickest times in both the first and second runs.

Men's kayak: Bradley Forbes-Cryans made it through to the semi-finals with finishes of fifth and 21st on his two heat runs.

Cycling

Men's individual time trial: Geraint Thomas and Tao Geoghegan Hart finished 12th and 29th respectively.

Women's individual time trial: Anna Shackley finished in 18th place.

Diving

Men's synchronised 3m springboard: Jack Laugher failed to retain his title as he and partner Dan Goodfellow finished seventh.

Equestrian

Individual dressage: Charlotte Dujardin became Team GB's most decorated female Olympian after taking bronze. Carl Hester placed eighth, while Charlotte Fry was 13th.

Media caption,

Charlotte Dujardin wins bronze in the individual dressage - her sixth Olympic medal

Gymnastics

Men's all-around: James Hall and Joe Fraser finished eighth and ninth respectively in the final.

Judo

Women's -70 kg: Gemma Howell was defeated by Puerto Rico's Maria Perez in her opening bout.

Hockey

Women: Team GB continued the defence of their title with a convincing 4-1 victory against India in Pool A.

Rowing

Men's quadruple sculls: Harry Leask, Angus Groom, Tom Barras and Jack Beaumont claimed silver in a tight race as Team GB's rowers won their first Olympic medal in the final.

Men's four: Team GB's dominance of this event ended as their crew of Oliver Cook, Matthew Rossiter, Rory Gibbs and Sholto Carnegie finished fourth in the final.

Men's double sculls: Graeme Thomas and John Collins finished fourth in the final.

Women's four: Rowan McKellar, Harriet Taylor, Karen Bennett and Rebecca Shorten finished fourth in the final.

Women's pair: Helen Glover and Polly Swann finished second behind Greece in the semi-finals to confirm their place in Thursday's final.

Lightweight women's double sculls: Emily Craig and Imogen Grant are through to the final after dominating their semi-final.

Men's eight: Team GB made it through to the final by finishing second to New Zealand in the repechage.

Women's eight: The GB boat are eliminated after finishing last in the repechage.

Women's quadruple sculls: The GB boat of Hannah Scott, Lucy Glover and Mathilda and Charlotte Hodgkins Byrne won the B final.

Rugby Sevens

Men: Team GB finished without a medal after a 17-12 defeat by Argentina bronze-medal match. They had lost 29-7 to New Zealand in the semi-finals.

Sailing

Men's RS:X: Tom Squires got his first Olympic win amid other finishes of fourth and eighth. He lies fifth overall.

Women's RS:X: Emma Wilson won her first two races and, though disqualified in the third, remains in the lead overall.

Men's Finn: Giles Scott won his two races, to move up to fourth overall.

Men's 470: Luke Patience and Chris Grube finished third and eighth in their opening two races to sit fourth in the standings.

Women's 470: Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre opened their regatta with fourth and third-place finishes and are third in the standings.

Men's 49er: Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell finished eighth, fourth and first in their races and sit first overall.

Women's 49erFX: Charlotte Dobson and Saskia Tidey placed fourth, second and fifth in their outings, and remain in first place overall.

Mixed Nacra17: John Gimson and Anna Burnet started their campaign with finishes of seventh, fifth and second, to sit fourth overall.

Swimming

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Tom Dean & Duncan Scott lead Team GB to 4x200m freestyle relay gold

Men's 4x200m freestyle relay: Tom Dean, James Guy, Matthew Richards and Duncan Scott won gold in the final.

Women's 200m individual medley: Abbie Wood narrowly missed out on a bronze medal after finishing fourth in the final. Her team-mate Alicia Wilson finished last in eighth place.

Men's 200m breaststroke: James Wilby progressed from the semi-finals after finishing second in his race, while team-mate Ross Murdoch missed out on final after tying for fifth in his semi.

Men's 100m freestyle: Jacob Whittle was eliminated after finishing sixth in his semi-final.

Women's 200m butterfly: Alys Thomas finished fourth in her semi-final to progress, but Laura Stephens is out after finishing sixth in her race.

Women's 100m freestyle: Anna Hopkin and Freya Anderson finished third and sixth in their respective heats to reach the semi-finals.

Men's 200m backstroke: Luke Greenback won his heat to reach the semi-finals, where he'll be joined by Brodie Williams who finished fifth in his race.

Women's 200m breaststroke: Mollie Renshaw finished second and Abbie Wood seventh as they reached the semi-finals in the same heat.

Men's 200m medley: Duncan Scott finished joint fourth in his heat to reach the semi-finals, but Joe Litchfield is out after finishing last in his race.

Tennis

Men's doubles: Andy Murray and Joe Salisbury lost 4-6 7-6 (7-2) 10-7 against Croatia's Marin Cilic and Ivan Dodig in the quarter-finals.

Men's singles: Liam Broady lost in the quarter-finals, beaten by France's Jeremy Chardy 7-6 (7-3) 4-6 6-1.

Day Four - Tuesday, 27 July

Archery

Women's individual: Bryony Pitman defeated Chinese Taipei's Ya-Ting Tan 6-4 and then followed that up with a 6-2 win against Mexico's Aida Roman to reach the quarter-finals.

Men's individual: Tom Hall finished 33rd overall after losing 7-3 against Bangladesh's Ruman Shana in his first contest.

Badminton

Men's singles: Toby Penty won his first group stage match by beating Germany's Kai Schaeffer 21-18 21-11.

Women's singles: Kirsty Gilmour was victorious in her first match of the group stage, beating Pakistan's Mahoor Shahzad 21-14 21-14.

Women's doubles: Chloe Birch and Lauren Smith's participation ended with a third group stage defeat, losing 21-19 21-16 Chow Mei Kuan and Lee Meng Yean of Malaysia.

Men's doubles: Ben Lane and Sean Vendy ended their tournament with a 21-17 21-19 group stage defeat to India's Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chiragat Shetty.

Boxing

Men's welterweight: Pat McCormack began his campaign with a unanimous points win against 21 year-old Aliaksandr Radzionau of Belarus.

Women's lightweight: Caroline Dubois claimed a unanimous points victory against Kosovo's Donjeta Sadiku in her opening fight.

Men's heavyweight: Cheavon Clarke was beaten 4-1 on points in his opening bout by Abner Teixeira of Brazil.

Canoe Slalom

Women's kayak: Kimberley Woods advanced from the semi-final with a sixth-place finish but failed to pick up a medal in the final after finishing tenth.

Cycling

Women's cross-country: Evie Richards finished in seventh place in the final.

Diving

Women's synchronised 10 metres: Eden Cheng and Lois Toulson finished seventh in the final.

Equestrian

Team dressage: Charlotte Dujardin equalled Katherine Grainger as Team GB's most decorated female Olympian after taking bronze alongside Carl Hester and Charlotte Fry.

Football

Women: Team GB secured top slot in group E, after Caroline Weir's late equaliser earned a 1-1 draw with Canada.

Gymnastics

Women's team event: Team GB claimed their first medal for almost a century, as Jennifer and Jessica Gadirova, Alice Kinsella and Amelie Morgan took bronze.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: GB gymnastics quartet win historic team bronze medal

Hockey

Men: Team GB suffered their first defeat of the Tokyo Olympics with a 5-1 loss to Germany in Pool B.

Judo

Women's -63kg: Lucy Renshall lost her opening bout to Miku Tashiro of Japan.

Rugby sevens

Men: Team GB suffered a 33-7 defeat against Olympic champions Fiji in their Pool B decider but managed to defeat the USA 26-21 in the quarter-finals to set up a semi-final clash against New Zealand.

Sailing

Men's Laser: Elliot Hanson finished 10th, third and 28th in his races and stands in 8th overall.

Women's Laser Radial: Alison Young finished 12th in both her races and sits in the same place in the standings.

Men's Finn: Giles Scott started his regatta with two ninth-place finishes and occupies the same place in the standings.

Men's 49er: Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell finished second in their opening race.

Women's 49erFX: Charlotte Dobson and Saskia Tidey won their first two races and finished sixth in their third to lead the opening day standings.

Swimming

Media caption,

Tom Dean wins gold for Team GB with Duncan Scott clinching silver

Men's 200m freestyle: Tom Dean won gold with team-mate Duncan Scott taking silver. It is the first time since 1908 that two male British swimmers have finished on the Olympic podium together.

Men's 4x200m freestyle: Dean returned to the pool to anchor a heat win alongside Matthew Richards, James Guy and Calum Jarvis and win a spot in Wednesday's final

Women's 100m backstroke: Kathleen Dawson finished sixth in the final.

Women's 200m freestyle: Freya Anderson failed to progress, finishing seventh in her semi-final.

Women's 200m medley: Abbie Wood and Alicia Wilson are both through to tomorrow's final after finishing second and third respectively in their semi-final.

Men's 100m freestyle: 16-year-old Jacob Whittle, the youngest member of the British swimming team in Tokyo, won his heat to advance to the semi-finals. Matthew Richards did not start his race.

Men's 200m breaststroke: James Wilby and Ross Murdoch move into the semi-finals after finishing fourth and fifth respectively in the same heat.

Women's 200m butterfly: Alys Thomas finished second and Laura Stephens third in their respective heats and advance to the semi-finals.

Men's 800m: Kieran Bird missed out on the final, finishing sixth in his heat.

Taekwondo

Men's +80kg: Mahama Cho lost to China's Sun Hongyi in his first contest by golden points.

Women's +67kg: Bianca Walkden won bronze for GB with a 7-3 victory over Poland's Aleksandra Kowalczuk.

Tennis

Men's doubles: Andy Murray and Joe Salisbury won their second round match against Germany's Kevin Krawietz and Tim Puetz.

Men's singles: Liam Broady beat Polish seventh seed Hubert Hurkacz 7-5, 3-6, 6-3 in the second round.

Triathlon

Women: Georgia Taylor-Brown won silver, while teammates Vicky Holland and Jessica Learmonth finished ninth and 13th respectively.

Media caption,

GB's Taylor-Brown fights back from puncture to win silver as Duffy makes history

Weightlifting

Women's 59kg: Zoe Smith finished eighth in the final.

Women's 64kg: Sarah Davies finished in fifth place in the final.

Day Three - Monday, 26 July

Archery

Men's team: Patrick Huston, Tom Hall and James Woodgate beat Indonesia 6-0 in the opening round but then lost 5-3 to the Netherlands in the quarter-finals.

Badminton

Mixed doubles: Marcus Ellis and Lauren Smith made it three wins out of three in their group, beating Dechapol Puavaranukroh and Sapsiree Taerattanachai of Thailand 21-12 21-19.

Men's doubles: Ben Lane and Sean Vendy lost their group match 21-17 21-14 to Chinese Tapei's Chi-Lin Wang and Yang Lee.

Women's doubles: Chloe Birch and Lauren Smith lost their group game 21-11 21-13 to Indonesia's Apriyani Rahayu and Greysia Polii.

Boxing

Men's flyweight: Galal Yafai won his opening bout, stopping Koryun Soghomonyan of Armenia in the round of 32.

Women's featherweight: Karriss Artingstall advanced to the quarter-finals after beating Brazil's Jucielen Romeu 5-0.

Canoe Slalom

Men's canoe: Adam Burgess finished eighth in the semis, before just missing out on the medals with a fourth place finish in the final.

Cycling

Men's cross-country: Tom Pidcock claimed gold for Team GB in the mountain biking.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Team GB's Tom Pidcock wins gold in mountain bike cross-country

Diving

Men's synchronised 10m: Tom Daly and Matty Lee overcame reigning Olympic champions China to win gold.

Fencing

Men's individual foil: Marcus Mepstead lost a see-saw bout 15-13 against Mohamed Hamza of Egypt in the opening round.

Gymnastics

Men's team: Team GB finished fourth overall in the gymnastics team event.

Hockey

Men: Team GB secured their second successive win, beating Canada 3-1.

Women: Ellie Rayer netted twice as Team GB got the defence of their Olympic title back on track with a 4-1 win over South Africa.

Rugby Sevens

Men: Team GB beat Canada 24-0 in their opening match and went on to better that, with a 34-0 win over Japan.

Sailing

Men's RS-X: Tom Squires finished second, 10th and third in his races, and now sits in seventh place overall.

Women's RS-X: Emma Wilson finished first, fourth and second in her races, and currently sits second in the standings.

Men's Laser: Elliot Hanson finished 12th and 17th in his races, and is now 10th overall.

Women's Laser Radial: Alison Young placed in ninth and 20th in her races and is now in 15th place overall.

Swimming

Men's 100m breaststroke: Adam Peaty made history, defending his Olympic title to win a second gold. James Wilby finished fifth.

Men's 200m freestyle: Duncan Scott won his semi-final, while Tom Dean, who finished fourth in the same race, also qualified for the final.

Women's 100m breaststroke: Sarah Vasey finished fifth in her semi-final, just missing out on the final.

Women's 100m backstroke: Kathleen Dawson finished third in her semi-final to qualify for the final, but Cassie Wild missed out, finishing last in the same race.

Women's 200m freestyle: Freya Anderson secured her place in the semi-finals with a fourth place finish in her heat.

Women's 200m medley: Abbie Wood won her heat, while Alicia Wilson, who finished fifth in the same race, also qualified for the semi-finals.

Table Tennis

Men's singles: Liam Pitchford and Paul Drinkhall both went out in the third round. Drinkhall lost 4-1 to Woojin Jang of South Korea and eleventh-seed Pitchford, in his first match of the competition, was beaten 4-2 by Slovenia's Darko Jorgic.

Taekwondo

Women's -67kg: Lauren Williams won silver in the final after a battling performance against Croatia's Matea Jelic.

Media caption,

Tokyo Olympics: Lauren Williams takes taekwondo silver for Great Britain

Tennis

Men's doubles: Jamie Murray and Neal Skupski lost 6-3 6-4 to Kei Nishikori and Ben McLachlan of Japan in the second round.

Triathlon

Men: Alex Yee won silver while Jonny Brownlee finished fifth.

Day Two - Sunday, 25 July

Media caption,

Tokyo 2020: Former Olympic champion Jade Jones loses to Kimia Alizadeh

Archery

Women's team: Sarah Bettles, Naomi Folkard and Bryony Pitman lost 5-3 to Italy at the last-16 stage.

Badminton

Mixed doubles: Marcus Ellis and Lauren Smith enjoyed a 2-0 group stage win over Canada's Joshua Hurlburt-Yu and Josephine Wu.

Boxing

Men's light-heavyweight: Benjamin Whitaker won his first-round bout 4-1 against Colombia's Jorge Luis Vivas.

Men's lightweight: Luke McCormack advanced from his opening fight by defeating India's Manish Kaushik 4-1.

Women's flyweight: Charley-Sian Davison scored a 5-0 points win in the first round over Morocco's Rabab Cheddar.

Canoe Slalom

Men's canoe: Adam Burgess finished fourth and second in his two runs to secure a place in the semi-finals.

Women's kayak: Kimberly Woods placed eighth in both her runs to move into the semi-finals.

Cycling

Women's road race: Lizzie Deignan, who won silver in this event at London 2012, finished 11th, but team-mate Anna Shackley did not complete the race.

Diving

Women's 3m synchronised springboard: Catherine Torrance and Grace Reid finished sixth in the finals.

Equestrian

Grand Prix: Team GB topped the table in the qualifying round.

Women individual: Charlotte Dujardin finished second to confirm qualification for the final.

Gymnastics

Women's artistic: Team GB secured qualification for the finals with sixth place.

Women's all-around individual: Jessica and Jennifer Gadirova both qualified for the finals.

Hockey

Women: Team GB got off to a losing start in defence of their Olympic title, beaten 2-1 by Germany.

Judo

Women's -52kg: Chelsie Giles became Team GB's first medallist, beating Switzerland's Fabienne Kocher to win a bronze medal.

Media caption,

Judoka Chelsie Giles wins Team GB's first medal at Tokyo 2020

Rowing

Men's double sculls: John Collins and Graeme Thomas placed second in their semi-final to make it through to the final.

Women's single sculls: Victoria Thornley finished third in her quarter-final to reach the semis.

Men's quadruple sculls: Team GB's Harry Leask, Angus Groom, Tom Barras and Jack Beaumont won their repechage to reach the final.

Women's four: The GB boat of Rowan McKellar, Harriet Taylor, Karen Bennett and Rebecca Shorten won their repechage to reach the final.

Women's quadruple sculls: Team GB's Hannah Scott, Lucy Glover and Mathilda and Charlotte Hodgkins Byrne could only finish fourth in their repechage and will contest the B final for placing.

Sailing

Men's RS:X: Tom Squires recorded results of ninth, 13th and 14th in the opening day's races and sits in 14th in the standings.

Women's RS:X: Emma Wilson finished in fifth, second and sixth in her races and lies fourth overall.

Men's Laser: Elliot Hanson finished fifth in the day's only race.

Women's Laser Radial: Alison Young finished 24th in her first race but recovered to place eighth in her second, which puts her in 14th overall.

Swimming

Men's 100m breaststroke: Adam Peaty and James Wilby reached the final.

Men's 400m medley: Max Litchfield came joint fourth in the final.

Women's 400m medley: Aimee Wilmott finished seventh in the final.

Women's 4x100m freestyle relay: Team GB finished fifth in the final.

Women's 100m backstroke: Kathleen Dawson and Cassie Wild finished second and fourth in the same heat to reach the semi-finals.

Women's 100m breaststroke: Sarah Vasey qualified for the semi-finals, finishing sixth in her heat.

Men's 200m freestyle: Tom Dean and Duncan Scott both finished second in their heats to reach the semi-finals.

Men's 100m backstroke: Luke Greenback missed out on a place in the semi-finals, finishing sixth in his heat.

Men's 4x100m freestyle relay: Team GB finished fifth in their heat, missing out on the final.

Table Tennis

Men's singles: Paul Drinkhall advanced to the third round with a 4-1 win over Austria's Robert Gardos.

Taekwondo

Men's -68kg: Bradly Sinden won silver in the final after losing to Ulugbek Rashitov.

Women's -57kg: Double Olympic gold medallist Jade Jones lost to Kimia Alizadeh, of the Refugee Olympic Team in the opening round.

Tennis

Men's singles: Andy Murray withdrew because of a thigh strain but Liam Broady made it through to the second round with after a three-hour 7-5 6-7 (4-7) 6-2 win over Argentina's Francisco Cerundolo.

Day One - Saturday, 24 July

Media caption,

Helen Glover and Polly Swann: Team GB pair third in Tokyo Olympics heat

Archery

Mixed team: Team GB's duo of Sarah Bettles and Patrick Huston beat China 5-3 but were then beaten 6-0 in the quarter-finals by Mexico, who went on to win bronze.

Badminton

Men's doubles: Ben Lane and Sean Vendy lost their opening group match to Indonesia's Marcus Fernaldi Gideon and Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo 21-15 21-11.

Women's doubles: Chloe Birch and Lauren Smith were defeated 21-13 21-14 in their opening match by Sayaka Hirota and Yuki Fukushima of Japan.

Mixed doubles: Marcus Ellis and Lauren Smith won their opening group match, beating France's Thom Gicquel and Delphine Delrue 21-18 21-17.

Boxing

Women's featherweight: Karriss Artingstall made it through her first fight, beating Keamogetse Sadie Kenosi of Botswana 5-0 on points.

Men's featherweight: Peter McGrail exited the event after his first fight, losing 5-0 on points to Thailand's Chatchai-Decha Butdee.

Cycling

Men's road race: Adam Yates was the top finisher from the GB team finishing ninth, while Geraint Thomas and Tao Geoghehan Hart retired following a crash. Simon Yates finished 17th.

Football

Women: Ellen White scored the winner as Team GB beat Japan 1-0 to guarantee a place in the knockout stages.

Gymnastics

Pommel horse: Max Whitlock made it through to the final after qualification at the Budokan.

Men's all-around: Joe Fraser and James Hall secured their place in the final.

Hockey

Men: Team GB got off to a winning start with a 3-1 group stage victory over South Africa.

Judo

Men's -60kg: Ashley McKenzie lost to Azerbaijan's Karamat Huseynov in his first bout.

Rowing

Women's pair: Helen Glover and Polly Swann finished third in their heat, but advanced to Tuesday's semi-finals.

Women's lightweight double sculls: Emily Craig and Imogen Grant finished second in their heat to advance to the semi-finals.

Men's four: Team GB's crew of Oliver Cook, Matthew Rossiter, Rory Gibbs and Sholto Carnegie won their heat to progress to the final.

Women's four: The GB boat of Rowan McKellar, Harriet Taylor, Karen Bennett and Rebecca Shorten face a repechage after finishing fourth in their heat.

Men's eight: Team GB finished third of three in their heat and will go into the repechage.

Women's eight: The GB boat finished last in their heat and go into a repechage.

Shooting

Women's 10m air rifle: Seonaid McIntosh finished 12th in the qualification, missing out on the final.

Swimming

Men's 100m breaststroke: Adam Peaty and James Wilby secured their place in the semi-finals.

Men's 400m medley: Max Litchfield qualified for the finals but Brodie Williams missed out.

Women's 400m medley: Aimee Wilmott secured her place in the finals.

Women's 4x100m freestyle relay: Team GB reached the finals.

Men's 400m freestyle: Kieran Bird failed to reach the semis.

Women's 100m butterfly: Harriet Jones missed out on the semi-finals.

Table tennis

Men's singles: Paul Drinkhall won in his first round match, beating Iran's Nima Alamian 4-1.

Women's singles: Tin-Tin Ho lost to India's Mandika Barta 4-0 in the first round.

Tennis

Men's doubles: Andy and Jamie Murray advanced to the second round with their respective partners Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski.

Women's singles: Heather Watson lost to Anna-Lena Friedsam in the first round.

Friday, 23 July

Archery

Men's individual: Patrick Huston, James Woodgate and Tom Hall placed 25th, 38th and 48th respectively in the ranking round.

Women's individual: Sarah Bettles, Bryony Pitman and Naomi Folkard placed 15th, 38th and 47th respectively in the ranking round.

Rowing

Women's single sculls: Victoria Thornley won her heat to qualify for Monday's quarter-finals.

Women's quadruple sculls: Team GB's Hannah Scott, Lucy Glover and Mathilda and Charlotte Hodgkins Byrne finished third in their heat and will go into the repechage.

Men's double sculls: The pair of Graeme Thomas and John Collins finished second to the Dutch boat in their heat, but qualified for the semi-finals.

Men's quadruple sculls: Team GB's Harry Leask, Angus Groom, Tom Barras and Jack Beaumont finished third in their heat and face the repechage.

Wednesday, 21 July

Football

Women: Team GB started their campaign with a 2-0 win over Chile.

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