UKRED SPORTS TAPE TRADING


ATHLETICS AND OLYMPICS 

*** FOR OLYMPICS 2004 TO 2016, SEE DEDICATED PAGE ***

OLYMPICS - ATHENS - 2004

OLYMPICS - BEIJING - 2008

OLYMPICS - LONDON - 2012

OLYMPICS - RIO DE JANEIRO - 2016

OLYMPICS - TOKYO - 2020


*** FOR COMMONWEALTH GAMES 2010 TO 2018, SEE DEDICATED PAGE ***

COMMONWEALTH GAMES - DELHI - 2010

COMMONWEALTH GAMES - GLASGOW - 2014

COMMONWEALTH GAMES - GOLD COAST - 2018

COMMONWEALTH GAMES - BIRMINGHAM - 2022


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DOCUMENTARIES

2012
Faster, Higher, Stronger - A look at 4 Olympic sports (100 metres, 1500 metres, Gymnastics and Swimming) and how they have evolved since the first Olympic Games in the 1800's. The shows include interviews with key athletes of each sport + archive TV action (10, 4 episodes of 1 Hour each, 2 Discs, BBC, PAL)

Victoria Pendleton: Cycling's Golden Girl - Documentary chronicling the career of British Track Cyclist Victoria Pendleton and focusing specifically on the 4 years since her Gold Medal win in the 2008 Olympics (10, 1 hour, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Olympics' Most Amazing Moments - A countdown of the Top 50 Olympic Moments featuring broadcast clips and comments from celebrities (10, 2 hours, 1 Disc, BBC - Bacon/Jackson, PAL)

Britain's Greatest Gold Medallists - A countdown of Great Britain's 20 greatest Gold Medalists including interviews and TV footage. The winners include Mary Peters, Kelly Holmes, Daley Thompson, Sebastian Coe and Steve Redgrave (10, 45 minutes, 1 Disc, ITV, PAL)

Jessica Ennis : Golden Girl - A documentary following Jessica's build up to the Olympic Games in London. Includes interviews and commentary from both Jessica and her coach Toni Minichiello (10, 30 minutes - On the same disc as British Olympic Dreams, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

British Olympic Dreams - A follow-up review of some of the athletes featured in the series in the run-up to the Olympics. Athletes featured include Mo Farah, rower Katharine Grainger and weightlifter Zoe Smith (10, 30 minutes - On the same disc as Jessica Ennis : Golden Girl, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

2013
Keeping up with the Brownlees - Documentary following the lives of Tri-Athlete's Alistair and Johnny Brownlee. The programme looks at their up-bringing and follows their day-to-day lives. Includes interviews with both brothers (10, 47 minutes, 1 Disc, BT Sport, PAL)

2015
Paula Radcliffe : The Marathon & Me - Athlete Paula Radcliffe looks back at her career on the eve of her final appearance at the London Marathon. Includes interviews and archive clips (10, 40 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

2016
The Brownlees : An Olympic Story - In the run up to the 2016 Olympic Games, Tom Fordyce investigates what it is about their relationship that makes the Brownlee brothers, Jonny and Alistair, so unique. Includes interviews with the brothers and archive race action (10, 30 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Kelly Holmes : My Marathon Story - Paula Radcliffe talks to Double Olympic champion Kelly Holmes about her life in athletics, her personal issues with depression and self-harming, the 2004 Athens Olympics, the current problems in athletics and why she is racing the Marathon more than 10 years after retiring from full-time athletics (10, 30 minutes, BBC, PAL)

Bradley Wiggins : The Road to Rio - A look at the life and career of Sir Bradley Wiggins as he prepares for the 2016 Rio Olympics (10, 44 minutes, SKY, PAL)

Mo Farah : Race of his Life - A look at the life and career of Great Britain's greatest middle-distance runner as he prepares for the 2016 Rio Olympics (10, 1 hour, 1 Disc, PAL)

Jessica Ennis-Hill : A coach's story - A fly-on-the-wall documentary following British Heptathlete Jessica Ennis-Hill in the months before her trip to Rio to defend her Olympic title. The programme follows her through her qualification meeting and her training and includes interviews with Jessica and her coach, Tony Minichiello (10, On the same disc as the Clare Blading meets..., 1 hour, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Clare Balding Meets Jessica Ennis-Hill - Clare Balding interviews British Heptathlete Jessica Ennis-Hill on the eve of the 2016 Olympics in Rio, where she will be defending her Olympic title (10, On the same disc as A coach's story, 30 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Faster, Higher, Stronger : Katarina's Olympic dream - Prior to her participation in the Rio Olympics, former athlete Darren Campbell follows British Heptathlete Katarina Johnson-Thompson as she bids to qualify for the Olympics (10, 30 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Roger Bannister : Everest on the Track - The BBC look back at the story of the first ever 4 minute mile, set on the 6th may 1954. Includes interviews with Sir Roger Bannister and archive interviews with Chris Brasher and Chris Chataway as well as archive footage of the race (10, 1 hour, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

2017
Brendan Foster : A Life in Athletics - A look back at the career of British middle distance runner and Television presenter Brendan Foster, who retired in 2017 after 37 years as one of the country's most popular sports commentators. The former European 5,000m gold medalist and Commonwealth 10,000m champion began his commentary career in 1980 and had gone on to cover nine Olympic Games for the BBC (10, 44 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

The Heroes of Super Saturday : Jess, Mo and Greg - American former Olympian Michael Johnson looks back at the night at the 2012 Olympics when Great Britain won 3 Gold medals, and finds out what happened to the 3 winners, Jessica Ennis-Hill, Mo Farah and Greg Rutherford, in the years since that night (10, 51 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

I am Bolt - Documentary following Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt as he prepares to defend his Olympic titles at the 2016 Rio Olympics. The documentary looks back at the his life and career and reveals behind-the-scenes looks at his preparation for the races (9, 1 hour 29 minutes, 1 Disc, PAL)

Britain's Cycling Superheroes : The Price of Success ? - The story of the controversial success of Great Britain's Track and Road Cycling programmes, led by Dave Brailsford and Shane Sutton. Despite unprecedented success, the Track riders revolted against alleged abused, while the Road riders suffered from allegations of doping as they started to dominate the premier road race, the Tour de France. Includes interviews with Brailsford, Sutton and team riders + archive action (9, 1 hour, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

2020
How Dina and Kat Struck World Gold - A look back at the 2019 World Athletic Championships in Qatar when British athletes Dina Asher-Smith and Katarina Johnson-Thompson both won Gold medals in the 200 metres and the Heptathlon respectively. Includes event action and interviews with the athletes (9, 1 hour, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Britain's Greatest Olympic moments - The BBC counts down the top 25 moments from Britain's summer Olympics history since Tokyo 1964. The number 1 moment is the 2012 "Super Saturday" when Team GB won 3 Gold medals in 2 hours. Includes archive action and interviews (9, 3 hours 15 minutes, 2 Discs, BBC - Balding/Logan, PAL)

Jonathan Edwards : One Giant Leap - BBC Athletics correspondent Phil Jones talks to former triple-jumper Jonathan Edwards about his career and specifically the 1995 World Championships where he set the triple-jump World Record on 2 consecutive  jumps. The record still stands 25 years later. Includes archive footage (9, 30 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Olympic Secrets : Rebecca Adlington - Mark Foster reminisces with British swimmer Rebecca Adlington about her 2012 and 2016 Olympic experiences (9, 45 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Olympic Secrets : Chris Hoy - Jill Douglas and Sir Chris Hoy look back on his 6 Olympic Gold Medals, won over 3 different games (9, 44 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Olympic Secrets : Tom Daley - Leon Taylor sits down with Tom Daley as they look back on his Olympic career to date, from his initial games in 2008 as a 14 year old, to his Pairs Bronze medal in Rio in 2016 (9, 44 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Olympic Secrets : 2012 Team GB Mens Gymnastics Team - Matt Baker looks back at the 2012 Mens Team Gymnastic tournament with 4 members of Britain's Bronze medal winning team : Max Whitlock, Sam Oldham, Kristian Thomas and Daniel Purvis (9, 44 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Olympic Secrets : 2016 Team GB Womens Hockey Team - Sam Quek looks back at the 2016 Womens Hockey tournament with 4 of her team-mates, Helen Richardson-Walsh, Kate Richardson-Walsh, Hollie Pearne-Webb and Maddie Hinch, as they review their history-making run to the Gold Medal (9, 1 hour 8 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

2021
Helen Glover : The Mother of all Comebacks - Documentary following Great Britain's Olympic rower Helen Glover as she attempts to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics, 4 years after retiring following the 2016 Rio Olympics. The programme provides a personal insight into what it takes to balance new motherhood with elite sporting performance, as filmed by Helen and her husband (9, 43 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

Gold Rush : Our Race to Olympic Glory - A documentary detailing how Great Britain recovered from a terrible performance at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, winning only 1 gold medal, to finishing 3rd in the medal table with 29 Gold Medals at the 2012 Olympics. Includes interviews with athletes, national leaders and sports strategists + archive action (9, 3 episodes of 1 hour each, 2 Discs, BBC, PAL)

2022
The Real Mo Farah - British Olympian Sir Mo Farah reveals the shocking truth about his childhood, the journey he made from Somaliland to the UK as a young boy, and the subsequent years that led to him winning two gold medals at the London 2012 Olympics (9, 1 hour, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

2023
Mo Farah's Last Mile - Before his final competitive race, the 2023 Great North Run, Brendan Foster interviews British Olympian Mo Farah. Mo discusses his life and career in athletics, from his schooldays as a cross-country runner, through his Olympic trials and triumphs, to his controversial association with former coach Alberto Salazar (9, On the same disc as the 2023 Great North Run, 28 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

--oOo--

EVENTS

Team GB's Golden Greats - (8, 1 hour 8 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)
Disc 1
1991
World Championships - Mens 4 x 400 metre relay Final - Roger Black, John Regis, Dererk Redmond and Kriss Akabusi shock the world by beating the Americans and claiming Gold. Includes the medal ceremony (11 minutes, BBC - Coleman)

1992
Barcelona Olympics - Mens 100 metres Final - Lindford Christie finally gets his Gold medal with a focused and determined run. Includes the medal ceremony (15 minutes, BBC - Coleman)

Barcelona Olympics - Womens 400 metres hurdles Final - Sally Gunnell holds off American Sally Farmer-Patrick on the home straight to secure the win. Includes the medal ceremony (9 minutes, BBC - Coleman)

1993
World Championships - Mens 100 metres Final - Lindford Christie confirms his #1 position with a personal best Gold medal run. Includes the medal ceremony (14 minutes, BBC - Coleman)

World Championships - Womens 400 metres hurdles Final - Sally Gunnell confirms her #1 position winning Gold in a world record time. Includes the medal ceremony (6 minutes, BBC - Coleman)

World Championships - Mens 110 metres hurdles Final - Colin Jackson puts it all together in a blistering Gold medal run, winning in a new world record time. Includes the medal ceremony (11 minutes, BBC - Coleman)

1995
World Championships - Mens Triple Jump Final - Jonathan Edwards has a fantastic event, winning Gold and breaking the world record twice while almost jumping out of the pit. Does not include the medal ceremony (12 minutes, BBC - Coleman)

--oOo--

2005 
NCAA Indoor Track and Field Finals - Mens 400 metres Final - Florida's Kerron Clement breaks the World Indoor Record previously held by Michael Johnson with a 44.57 second run (9, Full race - 4 minutes, 1 Disc, ESPN - Stone/Rawson, PAL)

World Championships - Womens 10,000 metre Final - Ethiopia win Gold, Silver and Bronze with an awesome last lap. Paula Radcliffe finishes 9th. On the same disc as the Mens 200 metres Final (9, 42 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Dickenson/Cram, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 200 metres Final - USA fill the top 4 positions with Justin Gatlin winning the Sprint double, Wallace Spearmon finishing 2nd, John Capel claiming 3rd and Tyson Gay finishing 4th. On the same disc as the Womens 10,000 metre Final (9, 18 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram, PAL)

2009
World Championships - Women's Heptathlon 800 metres - Great Britain's Jessica Ennis claimed GB's first ever World Championship Gold medal in the Heptathlon with a 6731 points win. Ennis won 3 of the first 4 events on the 1st day to build a big lead then held on over the 2nd day to reach the final event, the 800 metres, knowing a finish less than 12 seconds behind Germany's Jennifer Oeser would give her Gold. Ennis claimed Gold with a win in the 800 metres. Coverage is the 800 metres run only + Post race analysis + the medal ceremony + an interview with Jessica (10, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Dickenson, PAL)

World Championships - Men's 100 metres Final - The battle between the 2 best sprinters in the World ended up with Usain Bolt dominating Tyson Gay and winning Gold in a new World Record time. Bolt finished in 9:58, shaving 11/100ths of a second off his own record. Coverage includes the race + the medal ceremony + next-day analysis (10, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Dickenson, PAL)

World Championships - Men's 200 metres Final - Jamiacan Usain Bolt stunned the World with a new World Record, winning the race in 19.19 seconds. Despite feeling tired, Bolt ran a fantastic bend and at the line finished 5 metres ahead of silver medalist Alonso Edward. Coverage includes the race + the medal ceremony + next-day analysis (10, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Dickenson, PAL)

2013
London Anniversary Games - Full coverage of the Anniversary games at London's Queen Elizabeth Stadium to celebrate 1 year since the start of the 2012 Olympics. Days 1 and 2 showcased able-bodied athletes and Day 3 showcased the Para-Athletes. Hi-Lites include Usain Bolt in the 100 metres, Mo Farah in the 3,000 metres, a world-record run in the T34 100 metres from Alan Oliveira and David Weir winning the T54 mile (10, 8 hours of coverage over 3 days, 4 discs, BBC/Channel 4, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 10,000 Metres Final - Britain's Mo Farah continued his great form with a hard fought win in Moscow. Farah used a 57 second last lap to hold off current World Champion Ethiopian Ibrahim Jeilan and take the win. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (10, On the same disc as the 2013 5,000 metres Final, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Foster, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 5,000 Metres Final - Britain's Mo Farah made history as only the 2nd ever runner to hold the "Double-Double" at the same time. With the win, Farah became the Olympic and World 5,000 and 10,000 metres champion, beating Ethiopia's Hagos Gebrhiwet and Kenya's Isaiah Kiplangat Koech in a sprint finish. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (10, On the same disc as the 2013 10,000 metres Final, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Foster, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 100 Metres Final - In the rain in Moscow, Jamaican Usain Bolt reclaimed his position as the best in the World with a dominating win in 9.77 seconds. After a slow start, Bolt came through to beat American Justin Gatlin into Silver and Jamaican Nesta Carter into Bronze. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (10, On the same disc as the 2013 Mens 200 metres and Mens 4 x 100 metres Finals, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 200 Metres Semi-Final - Great Britain's Adam Gemili became only the second British man to run under 20 seconds for the 200m in qualifying for the World Championships final. Gemili ran a strong race and dipped on the line to win the heat in 19.98 seconds over Jamaican Nickel Ashmeade (10, On the same disc as the 2013 Mens 100 metres and Mens 4 x 100 metres Finals, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 200 Metres Final - Jamaican Usain Bolt completed his 2nd "Double-Double" as he reclaimed the World Title in an easier-than-expected race in Moscow. Bolt won in 19.66 seconds with compatriot Warren Weir claiming silver and American Curtis Mitchell taking the Bronze (10, On the same disc as the 2013 Mens 100 metres and Mens 4 x 100 metres Finals, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 4 x 100 Metres Relay Final - Jamaican Usain Bolt equalled the record for most World Championship medals, claiming his 10th as the Jamaican's dominated the final event of the Championships. The race was tight until Bolt received the baton on the last leg and he pulled away to win in 37.36 seconds, beating the USA into 2nd and Great Britain into 3rd. After the race, Great Britain were disqualified for a change-over infringement and Canada claimed the Bronze (10, On the same disc as the 2013 Mens 100 metres and Mens 200 metres Finals, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram, PAL)

World Championships - Womens 400 Metres Final - On a record setting night in Moscow, Britain's Christine Ohuruogu claimed Gold by four thousandths of a second in a sensational finish. Race favourite and defending champion Amantle Montsho from Botswana led throughout the race but Ohuruogu chased her down over the final 80 metres and dipped on the line to win. Coverage includes the medal ceremony and a next day interview with Christine (10, On the same disc as the Womens 100 metres hurdles Final and the Womens 4 x 100 metre Relay Final, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram, PAL)

World Championships - Womens 100 Metres Hurdles Final - In a sensational finish, American Brianna Rollins stormed back from a poor start to beat Australian defending champion Sally Pearson in a time of 12.44 seconds. Great Britain's Tiffany Porter claimed the Bronze in a personal best time of 12.55 seconds. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (10, On the same disc as the Womens 400 metres Final and the Womens 4 x 100 metre Relay Final, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter, PAL)

World Championships - Womens 4 x 100 Metres Relay Final - Jamaica claimed the World title in an easier-than-expected race, with Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce running a lightning final leg to win. France claimed the Silver and the USA claimed the Bronze, recovering from a terrible final change-over to win a medal. Several hours after the race, France were disqualified and the Great Britain team of Dina Asher Smith, Ashleigh Nelson, Annabel Lewis and Hayley Jones were upgraded from 4th to Bronze, and the USA upgraded to Silver (10, On the same disc as the Womens 400 metres Final and the Womens 100 metres hurdles Final, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter, PAL)

ITU World Triathlon Grand Final - In the final race of the season, Spain's Javier Gomez out-sprinted Great Britain's Jonny Brownlee to claim his 3rd World Title. Jonny's older brother Alistair, who was leading after the 40km cycling section, dropped back into the pack with an ankle injury, leaving Gomez and Jonny to fight it out for the title over the 10km run, where Gomez pipped Jonny on the line to win by 1 second (10, 1 Disc, BBC - Chilton/Trew, PAL)

2015
World Championships - Womens Heptathlon - Great Britain's Jessica Ennis-Hill unexpectedly won her 2nd World Championship with a strong, all-around performance in Beijing. Ennis-Hill won Gold with a score of 6,669 points, beating Canada's Brianne Theisen-Eaton into Silver with a score of 6,554. Coverage includes the full 100 metres hurdles, 200 metres and 800 metres + the best throws and jumps of the remaining events. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter/Cram, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 5,000 Metres Final - Britain's Mo Farah retained his World 5,000 metre title in a tight race in Beijing. Mo was the only athlete in the race to have run the 10,000 metre final previously but his opponents couldn't take advantage of any fatigue Mo may have had, and he pulled away in the final 100 metres to win in 13 mins, 15.38 seconds. With the win, Mo became the first man in history to pull off a distance 'triple-double'. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, On the same disc as the Mens 10,000 Metres Final, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Foster, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 10,000 Metres Final - Britain's Mo Farah retained his World 10,000 metre title with an impressive run in Beijing. Mo saw off the determined team effort of his three Kenyan challengers before producing a last lap of 54.15 seconds to pull away from Geoffrey Kamworor and Paul Tanui in the home straight and win in a time of 27:01.13. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (10, On the same disc as the 2015 Mens 5,000 metres Final, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Foster, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 100 Metres Final - The hugely-hyped final between American Justin Gatlin (unbreaten in 28 races) and Jamaican Usain Bolt (reigning Olympic and World Champion) lived up to the hype as Bolt overcame the form book to retain his World Title. Bolt won Gold in a time of 9.79 seconds, beating Gatlin into Silver with a time of 9.80 seconds. American Trayvon Bromell and Canadian Andre de Grasse shared Bronze with a time of 9.92 seconds. Coverage includes Bolt's semi-final and the Final but does not include the medal ceremony (10, On the same disc as the 2015 Mens 200 metres and Mens 4 x 100 metres Finals, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 200 Metres Final - In a re-match of the 100 metres final, a more relaxed Usain Bolt dominated the race from start to finish to retain his World Championship. Bolt won in a time of 19.55 seconds, beating Justin Gatlin into Silver with a time of 19.74 and South African Anaso Jobodwana into Bronze with a time of 19.87. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, On the same disc as the 2015 Mens 100 metres and Mens 4 x 100 metres Finals, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

World Championships - Mens 4 x 100 Metres Final - The Jamaican team retained their World Title in dominating fashion, with Usain Bolt winning his 3rd Gold of the Championships and his 11th Gold overall. Jamaica were slightly trailing coming into the final changeover but the race-leading Americans botched their final handover and the Jamaicans cruised home to the Gold in a time of 37.36 seconds. China claimed the Silver with Canada taking the Bronze. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

World Championships - Mens Long Jump - Great Britain's Greg Rutherford completed his set of Major medals with a jump of 8.41 metres to win Gold. With the win he became only the 5th Britain to hold all the major honours at the same time (Daley Thompson, Linford Christie, Sally Gunnell and Jonathan Edwards). Coverage is all of Greg's jumps + the last 2 jumpers of the final round. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 32 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Backley, PAL)

2016
ITU Mens World Triathlon Grand Final - In the final race of the season in Cozumel, Mexico, Spain's Mario Mola won his 1st World Title, beating 2nd place finisher Great Britain's Jonny Brownlee by 4 points. Jonny needed to win the race and have Mola finish 5th or worse to claim the title and he looked en-route to the title with a big lead on the final running lap of the race. But Jonny suddenly started to suffer from heat-stroke and less than 700 metres from the finish, he ran out of steam. Brother Alistair, following in 3rd place, carried his brother to the end of the race and threw him over the line to make him finish in 2nd place. But Mola came though in 5th place to win the title. South Africa's Henri Schoeman won the race, his 1st ITU race win (10, 1 hour 28 minutes hi-lites, 1 Disc, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson, PAL)

2017
World Championships - London
Disc 1
Mens 10,000 Metres Final - Britain's Mo Farah retained his World 10,000 metre title with a hard-fought win at the London Stadium. His rivals decided to gang up on Mo and run a very fast race, but Mo matched every move and finished off the race in style, hitting the front with 800 metres to go and powered home for the Gold. The Silver went to Uganda's Joshua Cheptegei and the Bronze to Kenya's Paul Tanui. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (10, 48 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Foster, PAL)

Mens 5,000 Metres Final - In his final major championship track race, Britain's Mo Farah took 2nd place and the Silver behind Ethiopia's Muktar Edris. In a tactical race, the trio of Ethiopian runners worked hard to put Mo in a bad position with 600 metres to go and Mo couldn't recover in time to chase down the winner. American Paul Chelimo took the Bronze. With the Silver, Mo ended his major championship career with 10 Gold medals and 2 Silver medals. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (10, 38 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Foster, PAL)

Disc 2
Mens 100 Metres Round 1, Heat 6 - In his final major championship before retirement, Jamaican Usain Bolt opened the defense of his World title with a rusty-looking qualification run. Bolt won the heat in 10.07 seconds (10, 6 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram, PAL)

Mens 100 Metres Semi-Final, Heat 3 - Jamaican Usain Bolt booked his place in the Final with a 2nd place finish in the Semi-Final, behind American Christian Coleman (9.97 seconds). Bolt ran in a time of 9.98 seconds (10, 9 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

Mens 100 Metres Final - In his final individual major championship race before retirement, Jamaican Usain Bolt sensationally finished in bronze medal position with a time of 9.95, behind Gold medalist American Justin Gatlin (9.92 seconds) and Silver medalist American Christian Coleman (9.94 seconds). Gatlin's win was his 1st ever over Bolt in a major championship. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 24 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

Mens 4 x 100 Metres Relay Heat - Jamaica qualified for the final by winning their heat in a time of 37.95 seconds. The team was anchored by Usain Bolt in a rare appearance in the qualifying rounds (10, 9 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram, PAL)

Mens 4 x 100 Metres Relay Final - In a sensational race, the Great Britain team of CJ Ujah, Adam Gemili, Danny Talbot and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake stunned the world, holding off a fancied USA team in the final 5 metres to win Gold. The GB team won in a National record time of 37.47 seconds with the USA team finishing in 37.52 seconds. The Bronze went to Japan. The Jamaican team, featuring Usain Bolt in his final major championship track race, failed to finish as Bolt pulled up with cramp in the final 100 metres. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 35 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

Disc 3
Mens 400 Metres Hurdles Final - On a rainy night in London, Norwegian Karsten Warholm won Norway's 1st World Championship Track Gold medal in 30 years with a breath-taking run, beating Yasmani Copello of Turkey into Silver and favourite Kerron Clement of the USA into Bronze. Warholm's winning time was 48.35 seconds. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 12 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter/Jackson, PAL)

Mens 4 x 100 Metres Relay Final - In a sensational race, the Great Britain team of CJ Ujah, Adam Gemili, Danny Talbot and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake stunned the world, holding off a fancied USA team in the final 5 metres to win Gold. The GB team won in a National record time of 37.47 seconds with the USA team finishing in 37.52 seconds. The Bronze went to Japan. The Jamaican team, featuring Usain Bolt in his final major championship track race, failed to finish as Bolt pulled up with cramp in the final 100 metres. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 35 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

Mens 4 x 400 Metres Relay Final - In the final race of the World Championships, Trinidad and Tobago won a shock Gold, beating the USA in a sprint finish. The Great Britain team of Matthew Hudson-Smith, Rabah Yousif, Dwayne Cowan and Martyn Rooney ran a strong race to win Bronze in a "Season Best" time of 2 minutes 59 seconds. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 13 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Cotter, PAL)

Disc 4
Womens 3,000 Metres Steeplechase Final - In a dramatic race, USA won Gold and Silver, beating the favoured Kenya and Bahrain athletes in a strong final 2 laps. The race started with 1 of the Kenyans almost missing out the water jump, then falling after a trip. After sprinting to get back into the lead group with the other Africans, the American duo of Emma Coburn and Courtney Frerichs put the squeeze on and, one by one, the African competitors fell away and Coburn claimed Gold with Frerichs Silver. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (10, 14 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Radcliffe, PAL)

Womens 100 Metres Hurdles Final - In a sensational race, Australian Sally Pearson won the Gold to cap an injury-plagued season with a win in the same Stadium she won the Olympic Gold 5 years before. Pearson ran an almost perfect race to win in a time of 12.59 seconds, beating Dawn Harper-Nelson of America into Silver and Pamela Dutkiewicz of Germany into Bronze. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 8 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter/Jackson, PAL)

Womens 200 Metres Final - The Netherlands Dafne Schippers retained her 200m title, holding off a strong challenge on the line to take Gold. Schippers won in 22.05 seconds, just beating Marie-Josee Ta Lou of the Ivory Coast into Silver and Shaunee Miller-Uibo of the USA into Bronze. Great Britain's Dina Asher-Smith ran a remarkable race to finish 4th in 22.20 seconds, a season's best. Asher-Smith was only 6 months removed from suffering a broken foot that left her unable to walk. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 16 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter/Jackson, PAL)

Womens 4 x 100 Metres Relay Final - The USA team of Aaliyah Brown, Allyson Felix, Morolake Akinosun and Tori Bowie dominated the field as they won gold in a world-leading time of 41.82 seconds. The Great Britain team of Asha Philip, Desiree Henry, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita ran a great race to claim Silver with a time of 42.12 seconds, beating the reigning champions Jamaica into Bronze. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 15 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter/Jackson, PAL)

Womens 4 x 400 Metres Relay Final - The USA team of Quanera Hayes, Allyson Felix, Shakima Wimbley and Phyllis Francis lived up to their pre-race billing as favourites as they dominated the race to win Gold in a time of 3 minutes 19 seconds. Great Britain led the chasing pack and used a strong final lap to win Silver in 3 minutes 25 seconds, just ahead of Poland in Bronze. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (10, 15 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter/Cram, PAL)

2018
ITU World Series Triathlon : Nottingham Mixed Relay - USA took Gold in the inaugural Mixed Relay Series event in Nottingham, beating Great Britain into Silver with France taking the Bronze. The USA hit the front on the 3rd leg, wrestling the lead away from France, and Great Britain over-took France on the 4th leg to finish 29 seconds behind the USA and 12 seconds ahead of France. The USA team featured Kirsten Kasper, Eli Hemming, Katie Zaferes and Matthew McElroy. The British team consisted of Non Stanford, Tom Bishop, Vicky Holland and Jonathan Brownlee. The France team featured Cassandre Beaugrand, Pierre Le Corre, Mathilde Gautier and Léo Bergere (10, 1 hour 28 minutes - Re-Broadcast but complete, 1 Disc, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson, PAL)

ITU World Triathlon Series : Womens Grand Final - In the final race of the season on the Gold Coast in Australia, Great Britain's Vicky Holland won her first ever World Title, beating 2nd place finisher USA's Katie Zaferes by 52 points. Zaferes led the points table coming into the final race, with Holland in 2nd place so both athletes knew the winner took the title. Zaferes, Holland and Australian Ashley Gentile dominated the race and when Zaferes and Gentile pulled away in the running section, the title seemed destined for the USA. But Holland fought back from a 5 second deficit to overtake Zaferes on the final lap and, despite finishing 2nd to Gentile, still won the title (10, 2 Discs, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson/Jenkins, PAL)

2019
World Taekwondo Finals - Full coverage of the Womens -57kg Final (Jade Jones v Ah-Reum Lee) and the +73kg Final (Bianca Walkden v Shuyin Zheng). Both bouts include the medal ceremonies (10, Copied from the Internet, 54 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC, PAL)

ITU World Series Triathlon : Nottingham Mixed Relay - Great Britain won their 1st ever Mixed Relay Series event in their home event in Nottingham, beating Switzerland into Silver with France taking the Bronze. With a fast-flowing River Trent meaning the swim part of the Triathlon was cancelled, the triathlon turned in to a Duathlon, with the competitors each running, cycling, then running again. Great Britain led after every transition and finished 42 seconds ahead of the Swiss for a comfortable win. The Great Britain team featured Georgia Taylor-Brown, Ben Djikstra, Sophie Caldwell and Alex Gee, who on the final cycling lap mischievously stuck his tongue out at the TV cameras (10, 2 hours, 1 Disc, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson, PAL)

2021
Triathlon World Series : Leeds - Olympic qualification was on the line for British Triathlete's in Leeds, in the last World Series event before the Olympic Games in Tokyo. The Netherlands Maya Kingma won the Womens race, beating Britain's Jess Learmonth into 2nd place and Britain's Sophie Coldwell into third. In the Mens race, Britain's Alex Yee won his first World Series race, beating Morgan Pearson of the USA into 2nd and Belgium's Marten van Riel into 3rd. Britain's Jonny Brownlee finished 9th while brother Alistair was disqualified, ending his chances of qualifying for the Olympic games and defending his title (8, 2 Discs, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson, PAL)

2022
Triathlon World Series : Leeds - France's Cassandre Beaugrand won the race, beating Britain's Georgia Taylor-Brown and Sophie Coldwell into 2nd and 3rd respectively. In the Mens race, New Zealand's Hayden Wilde won his first ever World Series event but it came at the expense of Britain's Alex Yee and Johnny Brownlee, who both crashed out of the race in the cycling section after Wilde caused a crash. Disc 1 is the Mens race (1 hour 41 mins). Disc 2 is the Womens race (1 hour 33 mins) (9, 2 Discs, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson, PAL)

2023
The Great North Run - Mens Race - Coverage of the Mens Race only. British Olympian Mo Farah featured in his final competitive race before retirement (9, On the same disc as Mo Farah's Last Mile, 2023 1 hour 31 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Radcliffe, PAL)

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