Tokyo 2020 Olympics tennis football rugby sevens and more live
GOAL! Team GB 0-1 Australia (Kennedy) Team GB had made most of the early running but failed to take the lead â" and now Australia are ahead with their first shot on target. Itâs Alanna Kennedy who heads home from a corner!
Another home gold for Japan! It goes to judoka Sone Akira, who dominated her +78kg final against Cubaâs Idalys Ortiz.
Olympics (@Olympics)What a performance from SONE Akira for #JPN
She wins #gold in the womenâs +78 kg #judo#StrongerTogether | #Tokyo2020 | @judo pic.twitter.com/Bg7kKiMuCA
July 30, 2021Djokovic had a host of break points in Zverevâs next service game, but couldnât convert â" and Zverev digs deep to hold and leads 1-6, 6-3, 2-0.
In the mixed doubles semi-final, Australiaâs Ash Barty and John Peers have won the first set 7-5 against the ROCâs Andrey Rublev and Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.
An extraordinary war of words has broken out after the menâs 200m backstroke final. The ROCâs Evgeny Rylov won gold, with the USAâs Ryan Murphy second. After the race, Murphy said: âIt is a huge mental drain to go through the year knowing that Iâm swimming in a race thatâs probably not clean, and that is what it is.â
At a tense press conference an hour later, Murphy insisted he was not accusing Rylov of anything, but added: âI donât know if it was 100% clean and thatâs because of things that have happened in the past.â Britainâs Luke Greenbank, who came third, was supportive of Murphyâs view. Barney Ronay reports:
Zverev strikes back! He breaks to take the second set 6-3, and breaks Djokovic again to start the decider! Is Novakâs âgolden slamâ bid under threat?
Canada and Brazil are still deadlocked at 0-0 in their quarter-final, although Vanessa Gilles has just hit the bar with a header for Canada. Team GB have struck the woodwork twice early on against Australia, where itâs also goalless.
Stuart Jenkinson suggests the shot put for the quickest way to win a medal:
âItâs basically only a few seconds per effort, so one good effort to qualify and then a really good first shot (put?) in the final. Sit back and let everyone else try to get close, spend six seconds in total actually taking part.â
Sean Ingle was at the Olympic Stadium to see the athletics action begin with an explosive set of womenâs 100m heats, on what looks a very fast track.
âSix women crashed through the 11-second barrier. Another 22 set personal bests. And 10 national records fell. Sprint heats are usually about loosening limbs and conserving energy. This was a sustained assault on the senses â" and the record books.â
Hereâs Bryan Armen Graham with a nugget of tennis info. Sounds like a root-and-branch review of US tennis is urgently required:
With Austin Krajicek and Tennys Sandgrenâs loss to Marcus Daniell and Michael Venus in the menâs doubles bronze medal match, US tennis players have failed to win a gold medal at an Olympics for the first time since 1920 (although tennis was not on the programme between 1924 and 1988).
Team GB and Australia have kicked off their quarter-final in Kashima. Follow it live with Emma Kemp here:
Zverev is making a much better go of things in the second set, where itâs on serve at 4-3 to the German. Djokovic won the first set 6-1.
Meanwhile, my colleague and golfing guru Dave Tindall informs me that Xander Schauffele has moved into the clubhouse lead on -11. Play has been suspended due to these pesky storms over Tokyo, with Hideki Matsuyama (-8) and Paul Casey (-7) yet to finish their second rounds.
One of my alternative heroes of the Games â" this guy eats, sleeps, breathes volleyball. Sadly, he couldnât inspire Argentina to victory over the ROC earlier today.
Olympics (@Olympics)Everyone needs a hype teammate like Facundo Conte. ð¦ð· pic.twitter.com/VpmAXywJnD
July 30, 2021Hereâs a quick Team GB boxing update from overnight:
Caroline Dubois is through to the quarter-finals in the womenâs lightweight boxing after a points win over Rashida Ellis of the USA, while two medals have been guaranteed in the menâs events.
Pat McCormack will pick up at least a welterweight bronze after a victory over Bobo-Usmon Baturov, and Ben Whittaker will do likewise after his light-heavyweight win over Brazilâs Keno Machado.
In his jubilant post-fight interview, Whittaker also stated his ambition to become âthe mayor of Wolverhamptonâ, with the promise of a grill and a chain for every citizen. He would get my vote.
The womenâs rugby sevens quarter-finals are due to take place this morning, with New Zealand beating ROC 36-0. It sounds like a storm is brewing above Tokyo Stadium, however, so the remaining games may be delayed. Fiji v Australia is next, then Team GB v USA and France v China.
Craig McEwan has a very good question. âI was wondering about the time in competition needed to win a medal. Does anyone know (or care?!) which events need most and least time to win a medal?â
Off the top of my head, Iâm thinking 100m sprinters and gymnasts in single-apparatus competitions would be among the quickest. The gold-winning golfer will be out on the course for maybe 20 hours, but there are probably athletes working longer shifts.
Iâll confess to having no real idea how long sailing takes, for example. Let me know your suggestions via the usual methods.
This is a great stat from Tom Waterhouse:
âTeam GB may not be top of the medal table, but itâs worth pointing out that they have won medals in a remarkable 13 different disciplines â" more than any other country. Of the teams above them in the table, China and the US have won in 12, Japan and the ROC in 10, and Australia in only five.â
Archery gold for South Korea! A dramatic finish in the womenâs individual final, with An San fighting back to force a tie-break round against ROCâs Elena Osipova. An shoots first and hits the bullseye for 10 points, with Osipova unable to match it.
Victory means An has won three golds at these Games after helping her nation to womenâs and mixed teamâs events. South Korea have won five golds in Tokyo, and four of them have come in archery.
The second menâs tennis semi-final is following the script so far, with Novak Djokovic winning the first set 6-1 against Alexander Zverev. ROCâs Karen Khachanov awaits in the final.
The womenâs football quarter-finals take place today, and the tireless Emma Kemp is on hand for coverage of Team GB v Australia. Canada v Brazil is goalless with 30 minutes played.
You might recall that the USAâs womenâs water polo lost a match the other day. Theyâve put that right against ROC today, winning 18-5, with Maggie Steffens earning a piece of Olympic history in the process.
#Tokyo2020 (@Tokyo2020)Maggie Steffensðºð¸ of @TeamUSA now owns the all-time scoring record in women's #Olympics #Waterpolo
4â£9â£goals and still counting! #Tokyo2020 pic.twitter.com/bk3bDnfeOY
July 30, 2021Team GBâs BMX bandits, Bethany Shriever of Leytonstone and Kye White of Peckham, have been speaking to Hazel Irvine on the BBC.
Shriever: âIt feels amazing, everything was perfect for racing today. Itâs our first Games and weâve absolutely loved it. I could barely walk afterwards, I left it all on the track. Itâs been a long, hard journey, Iâve had to rely a lot on my family, and the team for supporting me to become a full-time athlete.â
White: âItâs a crazy achievement. The track is simple but technical at the same time â" I didnât like it at first! My brothers were not selected, but theyâve taught me a lot, helped me get here and earn my medal.â
âCan we all take a moment to marvel at the Everest-like achievements of Beth Shriever and Kye Whyte,â says peterg2806 in the Readersâ Village below the line. âBMXing has had zero funding since Rio â" theyâve literally funded this through crowdfunding and Shriever working as a part time teaching assistant. Absolutely stupendous!â
More gold for China in the badminton mixed doubles, with Huang Dongping and Wang Yilyu defeating compatriots Huang Yaqiong and Zheng Siwei. Chinaâs gold medal tally is now 18 and theyâre pulling away at the top of the medal table.
#Tokyo2020 (@Tokyo2020)ð¸ #UnitedByEmotion pic.twitter.com/d8ozjf9ckv
July 30, 2021Hereâs a quick roundup of some Team GB efforts so far today, with Bryony Page taking bronze on the trampoline. Chinaâs Zhu Xueying and Liu Lingling took gold and silver.
KitblissNZ â½ð' (@KitblissNZ)@niallmcveigh Daniell and Venus have won the Men's Doubles tennis bronze for NZ!
July 30, 2021They have indeed! Theyâre the first New Zealanders to win an Olympic tennis medal since Anthony Wilding, who represented Australasia way back in 1912.
Hereâs a report from the womenâs basketball, where the USA pulled off a dominant win over Japan â" their 51st straight Olympic victory. Iâm going to stick my neck out and back the Americans for gold.
Here are the big stories so far from Tokyo:
The womenâs individual archery final is under way, with ROCâs Elena Osipova up against South Koreaâs An San, the winner of two team golds in Tokyo already. Osipova defeated GBâs Bryony Pitman 6-0 on her way to the final. In the bronze medal match, Italyâs Lucilla Boari beat the USAâs Mackenzie Brown 7-1.
The two Australian track and field athletes and one coach caught up in a Covid scare after American pole vaulter Sam Kendricks tested positive will have to remain in isolation for the remainder of the Games.
The pair, believed to be vaulters Kurtis Marschall and Nina Kennedy, will still be able to compete in their events as long as they continue to return negative tests. While not competing, they will remain away from the athletesâ village and in âisolation centresâ set up by the AOC, Australiaâs chef de mission said on Friday.
âWe made the decision to continue to isolate the three people from the track and field team as a precautionary measure,â Ian Chesterman said. âWhile they tested negative today, we want to make sure they continue to test negative and we want to make sure that we continue to look after our team.â
Australiaâs team doctor, David Hughes, said he rated the risk of infection as âlow to moderateâ after the trio had met Kendricks in the open air and while wearing masks.
The menâs pole vault competition opens on Saturday with the womenâs starting on Monday.
A diplomatic incident is developing after Iranâs Javad Foroughi won a shooting gold medal. Foroughi is a member of Iranâs Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, labelled a terrorist organisation by the US in 2019.
The menâs golf has been ticking along overnight as they approach the halfway mark at the Kasumigaseki country club â" and itâs been a big day for the pair representing Ireland, Shane Lowry and Rory McIlroy. Lowry shot six-under-par, McIlroy five-under to leave both on -7, three shots off the leader, Mexicoâs Carlos Ortiz.
Mito Pereira, Alex Noren and Xander Schauffele are tied for second (-8); Schauffele is still out on the course. Home favourite Hideki Matsuyama is also seven-under and has five holes to play; Team GBâs Paul Casey is currently on six-under-par.
âIf anyone else was wondering, according to Wikipedia Tennys Sandgren was named after his Swedish great-grandfather,â tweets LillaMW.
Speaking of Sandgren, heâs going for bronze in the menâs doubles tennys â" but alongside fellow American, Austin Krajicek, he is 7-6, 3-1 down to NZ pair Michael Venus and Marcus Daniell.
Franceâs Boris Neveu can only finish sixth, so itâs down to the world No 1, Jiri Prskavec. The Czech shrugs off an early mistake to lead at the first split and storms down the rest of the way. Itâs gold for Prskavec (Czech Republic), silver for Grigar (Slovakia) and bronze for Aigner (Germany). Team GBâs Bradley Forbes-Cryans has to settle for sixth.
Slovakiaâs Jakub Grigar finishes three seconds ahead of Aigner and takes up the gold medal position, ending Forbes-Cryansâ medal hopes as he does so. Next up is USAâs Michael Smolen, who can only finish fourth. Grigar is guaranteed a medal with two left to go ...
Bradley Forbes-Cryans is off â" but a decent start stalls as he goes wide at Gate 5! Heâs still ahead of the leader, Germanyâs Hannes Aigner, at the first split â" but a two-second penalty leaves him three seconds behind Aigner and in the bronze medal position with Austriaâs Felix Oschmautz second. Four more contenders to go, and heâll struggle to hold on for a medal.
The Russian Olympic Committee will almost certainly have another medal to celebrate in tennis, where Karen Khachanov is one game from victory over Spainâs Pablo Carreño Busta. He leads 6-3, 5-2. The second semi-final will feature Novak Djokovic and Sacha Zverev.
Gold! Vitalina Batsarashkina has won the womenâs 25m pistol event in shooting. Itâs her second gold of the Games (she also won the 10m pistol) and the ROCâs 10th at Tokyo 2020.
#Tokyo2020 (@Tokyo2020)30 July- #Shooting - Women's 25m Pistol
ð¥Vitalina Batsarashkina #ROC
ð¥KIM Minjungð°ð·
ð¥XIAO Jiaruixuanð¨ð³#UnitedByEmotion | #StrongerTogether | #Olympics | #Tokyo2020
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