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    Paris 2024 Olympics day nine: athletics, Fry takes individual dressage bronze, golf and more – live

    By Geoff Lemon (now) with Martin Belam and Megan Maurice (earlier),

    7 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3o9sSI_0un4qqXT00
    Grant Holloway of United States composes himself before round one of the men’s 110m hurdles. Photograph: Sarah Meyssonnier/Reuters

    12.31pm BST

    Individual dressage gold at the horse party

    Equestrian: Look, I’m not qualified to pass judgement on horse dancing, and not convinced by a sport where you need to own a country estate to participate. But Laudruf-Dufour looks a little less fluid than Bredow-Werndl in her routine performed to a schmaltz medley of Celine Dion, Adele, and some other bits and pieces. And so it proves, she comes in fifth despite scoring high yesterday.

    Which means Bredow-Werndl takes gold and Werth silver in a German eins-zwei, and Charlotte Fry holds onto bronze for Great Britain.

    12.20pm BST

    Equestrian: Jessica von Bredow-Werndl, which must be fun to write on immigration forms, reads her audience well. She finishes with a series of piaffes while playing Edith Piaf! Probably not the first to think of it, but it’s going to play well en France. And she cracks a 90! The first to do it today, the defending champ, and now it’s just about whether Cathrine Laudruf-Dufour can channel her hyphen into a podium performance.

    12.17pm BST

    Equestrian: Carl Hester is out of the medals, with the Dutch rider Dinja van Liere scoring 88.432 on Hermes, the winged messenger or the handbag, for third spot. Two riders to come.

    12.15pm BST

    “Technically I think it’s God Save the King now?” advises Mark Hooper. “Tbf she did include the French national anthem too.”

    Years of conditioning, Mark. No contest on the better anthem, either, even if the French one is a bit… murdery.

    12.12pm BST

    Fencing: France beat China in the end, 45-35.

    12.11pm BST

    Boxing: Billal Bennema has taken France into the gold bout in the men’s 51kg. Yunior Alcantara Reyes gets a bronze for the Dominican Republic. Sofiane Oumiha has won for France in the 63.5kg semi, with Wyatt Sanford bronze for Canada.

    12.08pm BST

    Fencing: So, USA have beaten Egypt, Italy beat Poland, and the France-China match is finally back underway in the men’s team foil table of eight.

    12.07pm BST

    “Thank you for the 105,000 words so far,” writes in David Hahn. “I’m not sure who was responsible for coining my favourite ones at 0934 - ‘season’s beast’. Can we have a report of a personal beast later on?”

    We all have our personal beasts, David. At the Grauniad, it’s the humble typo.

    (And I’m blaming Martin for that one, which he now can’t correct because we’ve stitched him up.)

    Updated at 12.12pm BST

    12.06pm BST

    Fencing: There’s some huge kerfuffle in the France-China match. The scores are 40-32 to France, but combat has been suspended for at least ten minutes now. The whole French team were out on the… mat? course? stage? for a while there. Now there are officials everywhere. Lots of arms folded and glum faces. Must be some sort of protest, some of the Chinese officials were debating with judges earlier. I have no commentary of this match, so if somebody knows what’s going on, do email me.

    12.04pm BST

    Equestrian: Fabulous ride from Charlotte Fry on Glamourdale, although doing it to a club remix of God Save the Queen is indescribably naff. Tempting fate by combining a neutral jury and a national anthem. But she has supreme control. Doesn’t quite get to the top, but goes to the silver slot. Hester to bronze. Three riders left.

    11.56am BST

    Hockey: Belgium and Spain are scoreless in their men’s quarter-final.

    11.55am BST

    Basketball: Belgium have thrashed Japan 85-58 in the women’s basketball pool match. They’re both stuck behind USA and Germany though in Group C, so that’s the end of the Games for both teams. USA and Germany play in a few hours to determine who finishes top.

    11.50am BST

    Equestrian: Isabell Werth goes to the gold medal spot! Sorry, Carl, you’re bumped. Four riders to come, so she doesn’t have it in the bag, but it was an amazingly well controlled ride from the German veteran of seven Olympics.

    11.47am BST

    Equestrian: “It’s a big week for a ten-year-old mayor,” says the commentator, which yes, is frankly astonishing for someone so young to ascend to such an office. Wait, let me check that.

    11.46am BST

    Tennis: In the women’s doubles bronze match, Spain’s Busca and Sorribes Torno have taken the first set from Czechia’s Muchova and Noskova. I guess the Czechs couldn’t get muchova the net.

    11.43am BST

    Equestrian: Speaking of the equestrian, we’re near the business end of the individual dressage. German champion Isabell Werth is the fifth-last rider. Carl Hester is currently leading for GB with Becky Moody in third. Daniel Bachmann Andersen of Denmark is in the silver spot.

    11.40am BST

    Snoop Dogg Watch: He’s at the fencing today. Did the horsies yesterday.

    11.39am BST

    Fencing: In the men’s foil team event, several matches ongoing and one has finished. Japan thrashed Canada by 19 points. Currently, France is bossing China, Egypt and the US are tightly placed, and Italy is leading Poland 30-27. Teams have to reach 45 to win.

    11.33am BST

    Boxing: Chang Yuan of China has advanced to the gold medal match in the women’s 54kg division, beating Pang Cholmi of North Korea.

    11.30am BST

    Long jump: We have our qualifiers for the men’s final.

    Greece: Miltiadis Tentoglou
    Czechia: Radek Juska
    China: Wang Jianan
    Suisse: Simon Ehammer
    Croatia: Filip Pravdika
    Italy: Mattia Furlani
    Jamaica: Wayne Pinnock
    Great Britain: Jacob Fincham-Dukes
    China: Mingkun Zhang
    Colombia: Arnovis Dalmero
    Jamaica: Carey McLeod
    Germany: Simon Batz

    The best was 8.32, which is about 60cm off the world record.

    11.21am BST

    Sailing: There’s been a delay in the sailing, which has happened in a lot of the open water events due to weather or pollution or other things. Homicidal birds? Not sure. Anyway, the men’s kite event was supposed to have started a moment ago but it has been postponed until 1pm at the earliest, which is 100 minutes from now.

    11.15am BST

    Australian boxer Caitlin Parker guaranteed a medal

    She has just won a points decision against Khadija Mardi of Morocco, with four out of five judges going her way. The Estonian judge had a dissenting score on two of the three rounds, which is interesting. Mardi really didn’t get in there to attack, even near the end when she probably needed a KO to advance. Parker was able to dance around to run the clock, then threw in some punches near the end. She’s in the semi-finals which means a bronze for the loser, and a gold-silver punch-off for the winner. That semi is on Thursday against China’s Li Qian.

    That’s in the women’s 75kg class, the highest weight.

    Updated at 11.37am BST

    11.11am BST

    Good morning, European time! Good evening to anyone in that part of the world, or perhaps you’re enjoying an afternoon somewhere. Either way, it’s heading up towards the lunchtime hour, which is sacred on the continent where the Olympics take place, and we have a cavalcade of sport continuing in the next couple of hours. Archery, boxing, sailing, athletics, basketball, plenty more.

    Updated at 11.11am BST

    10.59am BST

    I counted up last night from our stats platform, and since I fired up the live blog for the opening ceremony that Friday night, between us all we’ve written over 105,000 words of live blogs on these Olympics. Some of them even had the letters in the right order. I’m off for a break now, so the next few hundred are coming from Geoff Lemon. See you in a bit …

    10.57am BST

    Simone Biles has joined the voices arguing that media questioning of athletes directly after events isn’t exactly subtle. She has posted to social media to say:

    You guys really gotta stop asking athletes what’s next after they win a medal at the Olympics. Let us soak up the moment we’ve worked our whole lives for.

    10.54am BST

    Athletics: blink and you miss it, the heats for the men’s 110m hurdles have started in Stade de France. Rachid Muratake (JPN), Enrique Llopis (ESP) and Eduardo Rodrigues (BRA) are the first three to qualify.

    10.51am BST

    Absolute jubilation at the end for India there in the men’s hockey, and you can’t say they didn’t deserve it. The way they celebrated at the end of regulation time having held the match to 1-1 while being a man down for so long, you felt that mentally they were in a stronger place to win the shootout.

    10.46am BST

    Men’s hockey: India beat Team GB in the shootout 4-2!

    Men’s hockey: India win the shootout 4-2! Team GB are heading home. India played 42 minutes a man down, and were under the cosh for a lot of that time. They had nerves of steel in the shootout.

    Updated at 11.07am BST

    10.44am BST

    Men’s hockey: Great Britain blink first in the shootout. India lead 3-2. Conor Williamson skied his attempt, Lalit Kumar Upadhyay made no mistake. Team GB miss their fourth!

    Updated at 10.44am BST

    10.35am BST

    Men’s long jump: qualifying is taking place for this event too today. Radek Juška of the Czech Republic with 8.15m and Miltiadis Tentoglou of Greece with 8.32m are the first two to reach the qualifying standard.

    10.33am BST

    Men’s hockey: the stats have all been in Team GB’s favour, with 11 shots and ten penalty corners, but the one that counts is the score. It has finished 1-1. It will be a shootout to decide who goes to the semi-finals between India and Great Britain .

    10.29am BST

    Men’s hockey: I’m beginning to bite my nails as it remains India 1-1 Great Britain with two minutes left of this quarter-final. India have had to play two-thirds of the match with a man down.

    10.27am BST

    Daryll Neita of Team GB was back in 200m action this morning, after finishing fourth in the women’s 100m last night. She said when she’d got back to her accommodation last night her coach had told it her she was allowed one Instagram post and then had to sleep.

    Asked on Eurosport if finishing fourth in the 100m gave her even more motivation for the 200m, she told viewers:

    One thing about me is that I don’t give up. I’ve been called ‘Miss Momentum’ which I like, because I’ve just got to carry on the momentum, believing in myself. Trust me, the motivation is more than ever.

    10.21am BST

    Women’s hammer throw: group A of the qualification contest has finished in Stade de France. Camryn Rogers of Canada and Annette Nneka Echikunwoke of the USA were the only two athletes to reach the 73m qualification standard, so they are assured of places in the final.

    All athletes meeting the qualification standard or at least 12 best performers advance.

    10.13am BST

    Another bit of withdrawal news – Team GB having to adjust the marathon lineup with Clara Evans coming in to replace the injured Charlotte Purdue .

    10.10am BST

    Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson has pulled out of the 200m. The two-time world champion had already withdrawn from the 100m. It is another blow to Jamaica’s running team, after Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce also withdrew from the 100m.

    10.03am BST

    Athletics: newly crowned women’s 100m Olympic champion Julien Alfred has safely progressed through round one of the 200m in the first heat just hours after her triumph. She won it in 22.41 seconds.

    “I’m really tired” she said afterwards, in maybe understatement of the Olympics so far. She told viewers on Eurosport that her plan had been to attack the first bend to “get it done.”

    9.59am BST

    Hosts France are in a men’s football Olympics semi-final tomorrow against Egypt. Philippe Auclair is in Paris, and has this on how Thierry Henry has harnessed the Olympic flame to stake a claim for the France job …

    Related: Thierry Henry harnesses Olympic flame to stake claim for France job

    9.53am BST

    Men’s hockey: it is 1-1 between Great Britain and India at half-time. The Indian goal came from Harmanpreet Singh via a penalty corner, just minutes after India were on the receiving end of a red card. Lee Morton equalised from close range in the 27th minute.

    9.50am BST

    Dressage individual Grand Prix freestyle: you can’t really explain the Olympic schedule to a horse so I imagine there were some very surprised looking equine faces in the stables this morning going “What, again?”

    It is the individual competition today. Glamourdale , Hermes , TSF Dalera BB and Freestyle will be the four to watch after their impressive scores in the team event yesterday.

    Oh, and their riders – Charlotte Fry (GBr), Dinja van Liere (Ned), Jessica von Bredow-Werndl (Ger) and Cathrine Laudrup-Dufour (Den). I’ll be surprised if the medals go anywhere else.

    Updated at 10.15am BST

    9.35am BST

    Men’s hockey: that red card seems to have irked India into a different gear – they have just taken a 1-0 lead against Great Britain .

    9.34am BST

    Women’s 3000m steeplechase: Team GB ’s Lizzie Bird has just made a stunning late move in the second heat, and with a dip at the line she moved from seventh place to fourth place in the final 30 metres, just squeezing through on inside of the track. She qualifies for the final.

    No such luck for teammate Aimee Pratt in the first heat, who despite posting a season’s beast was well off the qualifying pace.

    9.30am BST

    Men’s handball: a comfortable 40-27 win for Sweden over Japan means the Swedes go through. The last remaining quarter-final spot from Group A will be decided tonight when Spain face Croatia . A draw will be enough for Spain to progress in that, Croatia need the win.

    9.28am BST

    Men’s hockey: it is still 0-0 between Great Britain and India in the quarter-final here but a controversy as a red card is shown to Amit Rohidas for a high stick in the face. It looked accidental and the India team are very unhappy with the decision.

    9.16am BST

    Beach volleyball: both the men’s and women’s competitions have reached the round of 16 elimination stage, and those match-ups happen throughout today and tomorrow. Zoe Verge-Depre and Esmee Boebner of Switzerland are the first pair through to the quarter-finals after victory over Chen Xue and Xinyi Xia of China 2-0.

    9.13am BST

    Triathlon mixed relay training cancelled due to water quality in Seine

    Paris Olympics organisers have cancelled Sunday’s swimming training session for the triathlon mixed relay event after recent heavy rain affected water quality levels in the Seine river, Reuters reports.

    The decision was made late on Saturday after tests showed water quality did not meet the required threshold after rain on 31 July and 1 August.
    The mixed relay race is scheduled for Monday.

    “We are expecting an improvement on the conditions in the next hours, but not to a level to which the swim familiarization planned for tomorrow can take place,” organisers said in a statement.

    “In view of these conditions, we have decided to cancel the swim familiarisation tonight to avoid late communication to athletes.”

    Pollution in the Seine after heavy rains had caused the men’s race to be postponed for a day, after swimming practice sessions were cancelled two days in a row.

    Updated at 9.17am BST

    9.09am BST

    Athletics: the morning session has begun in Stade de France. I do love a bit of distance and endurance, and the first event on the track is the first heat of the women’s 3,000m steeplechase . Aimee Pratt goes for team GB. Peruth Chemutai of Uganda is setting the early pace. The first five qualify.

    9.06am BST

    Men’s hockey: the tournament has reached the quarter-final stage. Defending champions Belgium face Spain at 12.30, the Netherlands face Australia at 17.30 and Germany play Argentina at 8pm. First up though is a tasty looking clash between eight-times champions and Tokyo bronze medallists India and Great Britain . That is 0-0 after five minutes.

    8.47am BST

    I put the curse of the commentator on France ’s Thomas Chirault there. As soon as I mentioned he was in front, Mete Gazoz of Turkey , the defending champion, showed why he is a champion, and came back from 3-1 down to win on a single arrow shootout. Sorry, France.

    8.40am BST

    Men’s handball: in Group A Sweden, Spain and Croatia are all locked on four points and only two can progress. Spain play Croatia in the final group game at 9pm tonight Paris time. The opening match today is Sweden v Japan , who are already eliminated. Sweden are doing their best to give themselves the chance to progress. They lead 16-9 at half-time.

    8.37am BST

    Men’s archery individual: a lot of excitement from the host fans at Invalides at the moment as in the opening match today France ’s Thomas Chirault has opened up a 3-1 lead against defending champion Mete Gazoz of Turkey . This is a qualification match for the quarter-finals. I did joke in the comments yesterday that this sport looks like it would be an awful lot easier if they just stood nearer the targets.

    8.26am BST

    Men’s golf: play has begun at Le Golf National on the final day of the men’s competition. Jon Rahm and Xander Schauffele are in the lead on 14 under, with Britain’s Tommy Fleetwood starting today a shot behind. The leaders tee off at 12.39 Paris time, so we are some ways away from the business end of that yet.

    8.23am BST

    Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce shares 'disappointment' after withdrawal

    One woman who was missing from the stellar lineup in last night’s 100m race was the legendary Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce from Jamaica.

    Reuters reports that on Instagram overnight she has posted that she struggled “to find the words” to describe “the depth of disappointment” that she is feeling.

    She continued:

    I know that my supporters share and shoulder this disappointment with me. The support of my fans, my country and the larger community has rooted me in immense gratitude that has sustained me throughout my career. With every step and win, you all have been there for me. My faith has always affirmed my trust in the journey.

    The International Olympic Committee said in a statement that Jamaica’s chef de mission Ian Kelly confirmed Fraser-Pryce’s withdrawal was due to an injury sustained during her warm-up, after reports surfaced online that it had been because she was denied entry to the venue.

    Fraser-Pryce has won eight Olympic medals in total, and is still scheduled to run with the Jamaicans’ 4x100m relay team.

    She will always be a legend to me, anyway, just for rocking up that time and destroying the field in her son’s sports day race for the mums.

    Updated at 10.22am BST

    8.11am BST

    Ewan Murray has been in Paris, and offers this diary of his week …

    Related: Extortionate launderettes and sub-par coffee: seven days at the Olympics | Ewan Murray

    8.09am BST

    Hello! Thank you Megan. It is Martin Belam here in London. It has just gone 9am in Paris which is, as ever, the cue for lots of the action to start. If you have just joined us, here is what we have lined up in the medal department today …

    Medal events

    🥇 Golf – men’s stroke play (from 9am)
    🥇 Equestrian – dressage individual grand prix freestyle (10am)
    🥇 Tennis – women’s doubles / men’s singles (12pm)
    🥇 Cycling – women’s road race (2pm)
    🥇 Table Tennis – men’s singles (2.30pm)
    🥇 Archery – men’s recurve individual (2.33pm)
    🥇 Badminton – men’s doubles & singles / women’s singles (3pm)
    🥇 Gymnastics – men’s rings, vault, parallel bars & horizontal bar / women’s uneven bars, beam & floor exercise (from 3pm)
    🥇 Shooting – women’s skeet / men’s 25m rapid fire pistol / mixed skeet (3.30pm)
    🥇 Swimming – women’s 50m freestyle & 4×100m medley relay / men’s 15oom & 4×100m medley relay (from 6.30pm)
    🥇 Fencing – men’s team foil (7.10pm)
    🥇 Athletics – women’s high jump / men’s hammer throw & 100m (from 7.55pm)

    [All times local to Paris]

    8.01am BST

    Alas my liveblogging time has come to an end, but I will leave you in the very capable hands of my colleague Martin Belam. He’ll guide you through the next few hours, covering the initial excitement of day nine. Enjoy and I’ll catch you next time!

    7.55am BST

    We’re getting close to 9am Paris time, which means there are plenty more events about to begin – those earlybird badminton players were just the tip of the iceberg. Here’s what is happening as soon as we get to 9am:

    Beach Volleyball: Round of 16 match between China and Switzerland.

    Golf: Men’s individual stroke play round 4.

    Handball: Men’s preliminary round match between Sweden and Japan.

    Shooting: Men’s 25m rapid fire pistol qualification.

    Volleyball: Women’s preliminary round match between Italy and Türkiye.

    7.48am BST

    I will never tire of talking about Simone Biles. I hope to one day be a very old woman sitting in a rocking chair, rabbiting on to my great-grandchildren about how I was alive to witness her dominance. She has been the highlight of the Games for me and I loved Tumaini Carayol’s story about her seventh gold medal.

    So often in gymnastics, the higher difficulty attempted, the more execution deductions they receive as they strain to perform these extremely difficult skills. The remarkable part of Biles’s first vault, and so many of her skills, is how the execution is also elevated despite the mindblowing difficulty. She was rewarded with a 9.4 execution score.

    Related: Simone Biles wins seventh Olympic gold medal in stunning vault final

    7.39am BST

    Reader Pete Garvey has got in touch about the day eight images and his heart was firmly at the Stade de France track.

    I fully agree with on not getting past Simone Biles. She was astonishing in the women’s vault final and is undoubtedly the GOAT, but the other standout picture and performance for me came Julien Alfred winning the gold in the women’s 100m final for Saint Lucia. It was an astonishing performance by her and I feel very proud of her and what she has accomplished.

    I was gutted for Daryll Neita. I hope she can qualify and get a medal in the women’s 200m race and let’s see if Dina Asher Smith can too. Here is hoping.

    7.32am BST

    Badminton is the first sport to get underway today – it’s currently 8:30am Paris time and the women’s singles badminton semi final between Republic of Korea’s An Se Young and Indonesia’s Gregoria Mariska Tunjung is up first.

    7.26am BST

    This Olympics hasn’t been short on controversy, but having not one, but two controversies about surfboard designs wasn’t on my bingo card. Australian surfer Jack Robinson has had to paint over a design on his board that garnered complaints over it being offensive in parts of East Asia, while Brazilian Joao Chianca was reportedly told to remove an depiction of the Christ The Redeemer statue. Kieran Pender has all the surfboard controversy here.

    Related: Jack Robinson forced to change board design before Olympic surfing finals

    7.17am BST

    OK, it’s time to get back to Snoop Dogg. He’s been popping up around the place all through the Olympics, most notably supporting Simone Biles at the gymnastics, which has been the go-to event for celebrities. But yesterday he decided to make an appearance at the equestrian, which was unusual not just because of the relative lack of star power, but also because Snoop Dogg has a fear of horses. But in one of the more unexpected inspirational stories of Paris 2024, he overcame his fear and went to the dressage with Martha Stewart. You have to read the whole story, it doesn’t get less bizarre.

    Related: Snoop Dogg steals show at Olympic dressage – despite fear of horses

    7.05am BST

    Another great story out of Stade de France on Day 8 was Thea LaFond winning Dominica’s first ever Olympic medal, taking gold in the triple jump with a 15.02m jump. Dominica sent only four athletes to the Paris Games, so it is a remarkable achievement for the small island nation.

    6.54am BST

    Like many people, I watched Sprint – the Netflix documentary covering the highs and lows of the fastest runners in the world. I loved it – the fascinating stories behind life on the track had me captivated. So that only made last night’s huge upset in the women’s 100m even more incredible. While the world was watching Sha’carri Richardson and Shericka Jackson, Julien Alfred was quietly going about her business and getting ready to rip up the script. From running barefoot in her school uniform at home in St Lucia to blitzing the field in Paris, hers is a story that we will surely hear more about in the future.

    Related: Julien Alfred puts Sha’Carri Richardson in shade to win women’s Olympic 100m

    6.43am BST

    Some absolutely sensational shots in here that really capture all the emotion of day eight. Personally I can’t go past this fantastic shot of Simone Biles, but I’d love to know what your favourites are? You can let me know via email – the link is at the top of the page.

    Related: Paris Olympics 2024: day eight – in pictures

    6.35am BST

    The track cycling will get underway on day 10 and hot off the presses, here is Kieran Pender’s fantastic interview with Australian coach Tim Decker. From small town South Australia to the world stage, this is a truly fascinating story.

    Related: Meet Tim Decker: the inspiring Australian cycling coach who took a hard road to Paris | Kieran Pender

    6.23am BST

    It’s been pretty heartbreaking to witness the way people respond to athletes who don’t meet their expectations. It’s something we see a lot of in professional sport, but for some of these Olympians who are thrust into the spotlight from having virtually no public attention, it must be even harder to take. Olli Hoare has had a particularly hard time of it after not making it through the repechage for the 1500m. What can be done to combat social media abuse and getting people to realise athletes are only human?

    Related: ‘Heartbreaking’: Australia’s Olli Hoare faces up to online hate amid Olympic pain | Jack Snape

    Updated at 7.13am BST

    6.14am BST

    It’s been interesting seeing the way Nielsen have made their predictions and adjusted as the Olympics have gone on. Do you think they’re on the money with this virtual medal table?

    6.04am BST

    Kieran Pender has been hard at work in Paris and has this great story about how Australia’s women are leading the way in bringing home the gold this Olympics.

    Related: Australia enjoys its best start to an Olympics as women lead gold rush in Paris | Kieran Pender

    Updated at 6.33am BST

    5.53am BST

    The women’s high jump is gearing up to be a hotly contested event after Ukranian Yaroslava Mahuchikh jumped a record 2.10m at the Diamond League three weeks ago. But Australians Nicola Olyslagers and Eleanor Patterson are determined they can match her. The final is on today and it’s sure to be thrilling. Jack Snape has this great interview with Olyslagers to get you up to speed before it all kicks off.

    Related: ‘Such a fire in me’: Nicola Olyslagers ready to hit new heights as bar raised for Olympic final | Jack Snape

    5.44am BST

    While we’re on the topic of medals, let’s check out the medal tally. China retain top spot, while the US has clawed their way back into the second. The host nation France are sitting comfortably in third, with Australia sliding down to fourth as the swimming begins to wrap up. Great Britain, Republic of Korea, Japan, Italy, Netherlands and Canada round out the top 10 with plenty more medals still to be won.

    Related: Paris Olympics 2024 medal table

    5.33am BST

    If you’re all about the medals, there are plenty up for grabs today! Here’s what you can expect:

    Medal Events

    🥇 Golf – men’s stroke play
    🥇 Equestrian – dressage individual grand prix freestyle
    🥇 Tennis – women’s doubles / men’s singles
    🥇 Cycling – women’s road race
    🥇 Boxing – women’s 54kg / men’s 51kg, 63.5kg, 80kg, 92kg
    🥇 Table Tennis – men’s singles
    🥇 Archery – men’s recurve individual
    🥇 Badminton – men’s doubles & singles / women’s singles
    🥇 Gymnastics – men’s rings, vault, parallel bars & horizontal bar / women’s uneven bars, beam & floor exercise
    🥇 Shooting – women’s skeet / men’s 25m rapid fire pistol / mixed skeet
    🥇 Swimming – women’s 50m freestyle & 4x100m medley relay / men’s 15oom & 4x100m medley relay
    🥇 Fencing – men’s team foil
    🥇 Athletics – women’s high jump / men’s hammer throw & 100m
    🥇 Surfing – men’s & women’s shortboard

    5.19am BST

    Day Nine Schedule

    There is so much in store for us all today, it’s that most wonderful point of the Olympics where we have some swimming and athletics crossover, which is always chaotically amazing. You can check out the live schedule to get all the latest updates and times in your timezone.

    Related: Paris Olympics 2024: live schedule

    For those in Australia, we also have quite a lot of Australians in action – you can read all about it and get the event times in this great guide.

    Related: Olympic Games: Australians in action on day nine in Paris

    5.06am BST

    Preamble

    Hello everybody and welcome to live coverage of the ninth official day of competition of the Paris 2024 Summer Olympics.

    I hope you’ve all been enjoying it so far – here in Australia there have been a lot of late nights and early mornings, but Australian sports fans are well accustomed to dealing with sport induced sleep deprivation.

    Day eight was full of action, with probably the biggest news of the day being the huge upset of St Lucia’s Julien Alfred taking out the 100m women’s gold ahead of Sha’carri Richardson. Elsewhere on the track, Dutch runner Femke Bol came from nowhere to drag her team to victory in the 4x400m mixed relay. There was more Simone Biles magic , as the star gymnast picked up her seventh gold medal, and over in the pool Katie Ledecky got the better of Ariarne Titmus to win her fourth 800m gold in a row. Snoop Dogg stole the show at the equestrian (words I never could have imagined typing in my wildest dreams) and Remco Evenepoel picked up the gold for Belgium in the men’s cycling road race.

    So that’s the whirlwind tour, but we’ll do a deeper dive over the next few hours and very soon I’ll be getting into the day nine schedule and what to expect and look forward to throughout today! I’ll be your host for the next three hours or so, so settle in, relax and let’s get into some Olympics!

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