Tokyo Olympics LIVE: Sky Brown seals famous bronze while Team GB claim yet more sailing gold
Tokyo Olympics LIVE: All the latest as 13-year-old Sky Brown seals a famous bronze in the park skateboarding for Team GB, while Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre take sailing gold and Ben Whittaker settles for boxing silver
After being pushed back by a year due to the outbreak of coronavirus, the Tokyo Olympics is finally here.
The Games will be like none other seen in the past, with fans prohibited from the venues with Tokyo under a fourth state of emergency.
With fans absent it’s the athletes that will take centre stage. And the action is now officially underway, with a jam-packed schedule to complete until the closing ceremony brings an end to the Games on August 8.
With the Olympics taking place in Japan, a large proportion of the action will take place between midnight and 3pm BST for UK viewers.
But not to worry, as Sportsmail will keep you up-to-date with all the latest news and updates right through until the closing ceremony on August 8.
Tom Daley dons a trilby and mirrored shades for hilarious snap inside the Tokyo 2020 Olympic village as he prepares for men’s 10m platform diving event
Tom Daley took some time for fun inside the Tokyo 2020 Olympic village as he dressed up in a comical snap shared to Instagram on Wednesday. The diving sensation, 27, was in his element as he donned a navy trilby, holographic shades and a gilet for an uncharacteristically dressed up snap.
First Dates’ Fred Sirieix’s daughter Andrea, 16, competes in the Women’s 10m Platform diving preliminaries at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics
Fred Sirieix’s daughter Andrea took to the world stage to compete in the Women’s 10m Platform diving preliminaries at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics on Wednesday. The First Dates star’s daughter, who is aged just 16, is Team GB’s youngest diver and competing in her first Olympics at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre.
Sydney McLaughlin glad to ‘push the boundaries of what’s possible’ after setting new world record to pip Dalilah Muhammad to Tokyo Olympics gold in women’s 400m hurdles
RIATH AL-SAMARRAI IN TOKYO: In the same discipline that brought Karsten Warholm to new heights via an immense battle with Rai Benjamin on Tuesday, Sydney McClaughlin’s duel with Dalilah Muhammad (inset) was even tighter. The 21-year-old American (left and right), who broke the record initially in June, slashed 0.44 off her mark in an astonishing run of 51.46sec. She had trailed Muhammad with 30m to go, but they were level off the final hurdle before McLaughlin pipped her US team-mate on the line, winning by just 0.12sec.
Jason Kenny through to last 16 of cycling sprint as he bids for ninth medal to become Great Britain’s most successful Olympian and defend his title… but team-mate Jack Carlin breaks his Olympic record during qualification as he also progresses
Team GB pair Jason Kenny and Jack Carlin both safely navigated the 1/32 finals of the men’s sprint after winning their respective heats to advance to the last 16. As well as defending the sprint titles he won in London and Rio, Kenny is now looking to become Great Britain’s most successful Olympian of all time with a ninth medal in Japan. In head-to-head heats where the winner advanced, Kenny defeated Mohd Azizulhasni Awang of Malaysia while Carlin made little work in seeing off Nathan Hart of Australia to reach the last 16.
Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre take GOLD in the women’s 470-Class as Great Britain’s sailing success continues at the Tokyo Olympics
JONATHAN MCEVOY AT ENOSHIMA YACHT CENTRE: Hannah Mills became the most successful female Olympic sailor in history by taking gold in the women’s 470 as Britain continued to rule the waves. After a terrific Tuesday at Enoshima Yacht Centre that saw two golds and a silver for the British team – including a second title for Giles Scott in the Finn – it was Mills who took centre stage with her team-mate Eilidh McIntyre. They came into the medal race with a commanding 14-point lead but even that margin of advantage can count for little with double points on offer and the tension ratcheted up. Scott nearly squandered a big lead before winning in the dying moments.
Team GB’s Ben Whittaker settles for silver as Cuban Arlen Lopez wins Olympic men’s light heavyweight final by split-decision… having claimed gold at Rio 2016 at middleweight
MIKE KEEGAN IN TOKYO: The slick Wolverhampton 24-year-old skilfully jinked and ducked around the ring but struggled to land a glove on the more experienced, powerful 28-year-old, who took gold at middleweight in Rio. Towards the end of the second Whittaker did manage to land a sharp one-two combination, which Lopez acknowledged, but openings were few and far between.
Agony for Frazer Clarke as his Olympic semi-final super-heavyweight fight with Uzbekistan’s No 1 seed Bakhodir Jalolov is stopped due to a nasty cut over his right eye… but Team GB star will still take home bronze!
MIKE KEEGAN IN TOKYO: Frazer Clarke will take bronze after losing his super-heavyweight semi-final against Uzbekistan brute Bakhodir Jalolov. The Burton-on-Trent fighter, 29, bravely stepped into the ring against the heavy favourite and delivered a huge right hand in the second – practically the first glove landed on the 27-year-old – during the Games so far. At the start of the third he needed treatment for the cut over the right eye and returned to the battle needing a miracle.
Sailing duo Chris Grube and Luke Patience miss out on medal for Team GB in the 470 class with fifth place finish as Australia cruise to dominant gold medal
Chris Grube and Luke Patience were edged out of claiming a medal in the men’s 470 dinghy, after failing to improve on their overall fifth place heading into the final race. The duo had strong hopes of being able to potentially snatch a bronze or even a silver medal heading into the medal race but could only place eighth to consolidate their fifth position overall. Australian duo Mathew Belcher and Will Ryan dominated the event from the start and cruised to a gold medal which never looked in doubt after cruising to victory.
Team GB hockey keeper Maddie Hinch urges her side to regroup immediately ahead of ‘massive’ third-place playoff with Argentina or India after Holland loss, insisting ‘we would be incredibly proud’ to claim bronze at Olympics
Maddie Hinch has urged Great Britain to keep believing and focus on the ‘massive’ prize of an Olympic hockey medal after their reign as champions was emphatically ended. Team GB women were crushed 5-1 by semi-final opponents Holland as the Dutch avenged their 2016 Olympic final defeat when goalkeeper Hinch’s heroics during a penalty shoot-out ensured gold medal glory. Five years on, though, and Britain will contest the bronze medal match against Argentina or India when they return to the Oi Hockey Stadium on Friday.