UKRED SPORTS TAPE TRADING


OLYMPICS - TOKYO - 2020

The games were originally scheduled to take place from 24 July to 9 August 2020, but in March 2020 it was decided to postpone the event to 2021 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. 
The events were largely held behind closed doors with no public spectators permitted due to the declaration by the Japanese government of a state of emergency.

Disc 1
Football - Womens Group E - Great Britain (2) v (0) Chile - Great Britain started their Olympic campaign with a hard-fought win over Chile at an empty stadium in Sapporo, Japan. 2 goals, 1 in each half, from Manchester City striker Ellen White did the damage. Great Britain dominated the stats, using 59% possession to accumulate 22 shots on goal (9, 1 Disc, BBC - Pearce/S.Smith, PAL)

Disc 2
Football - Womens Group E - Great Britain (1) v (0) Japan - Great Britain booked their place in the knockout round with a tough win against the hosts at an empty Sapporo Dome. Manchester City striker Ellen White scored the winner in the 74th minute (9, 1 Disc, BBC - Pearce/S.Smith, PAL)

Disc 3
Football - Womens Group G - Sweden (3) v (0) USA -  In the tournament opener for both teams, Sweden scored a huge upset, beating the World Champions. The loss was the USA's first in 44 games. The Sweden goals came from Stina Blackstenius (2) and substitute Lina Hurtig. USA featured Rose Lavelle, Sam Mewis, Alex Morgan, Tobin Heath, Lindsey Horan and substitute Megan Rapinoe (9, No half-time, 1 Disc, BBC - Nugent/Sobral, PAL)

Discs 4 and 5
Football - Womens Quarter Final - Great Britain (3) v (4) Australia - In a shootout at the Kashima Stadium, Australia came-back from almost-elimination to book a place in the Semi-Final. The game ebbed-and-flowed, with England fighting back from a 1-0 deficit to lead 2-1 entering the final minute of the game. But the Matilda's scored to force extra-time, where 2 more goals gave them a lead they defended to the end. The Australia goals came from Alanna Kennedy, Mary Fowler and Sam Kerr (2). The Great Britain goals came from a hat-trick from Ellen White (9, No half-time, 2 Discs, BBC - Pearce/S.Smith, PAL)

Disc 6
Football - Womens Bronze Medal match - Australia (3) v (4) USA - At Tokyo's Kashima Stadium, USA won Bronze in a shootout with Australia. Both teams were evenly matched but the USA took their chances when they came. USA held a 4-1 lead 6 minutes into the 2nd half, but Australia fought back with 2 unanswered goals to make a game of it, but ultimately the World Champions were good enough to see out the game and take the win. The USA goals came from Megan Rapinoe (2) and Carli Lloyd (2). The Australia goals came from Sam Kerr, Caitlin Foord and Emily Gielnik. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (9, Next day re-broadcast with some edits in the 1st half, 1 Disc, BBC - McCrea/Kitromilides, PAL)

Disc 7
Mens Basketball Group A - USA (76) v (83) France - In a mild upset, #7 seed France upset the tournament favourites and ended the American's 25-game win streak at the Olympics. The USA led for much of the match, but as the game entered the final 3.5 minutes, they lost their shooting touch, failing to convert a basket in open play. France out-scored USA 16-2 the rest of the way, including the go-ahead score with a minute to play, and held on for the win. France featured Evan Fournier (28 points), Rudy Gobert (14 points) and Nando de Colo (13 points). USA featured Jrue Holiday (18 points), Bam Adebayo (12 points) and Damian Lillard (11 points). Kevin Durant (10 points) was a non-factor after getting into early foul trouble (9, 1st quarter JIP 4:26, 1 Disc, BBC - Sobral, PAL)

Disc 8
Mens Basketball Final - USA (87) v (82) France -  The USA avenged their Group stage loss to France with a hard-fought win in Saitama, and won their 4th straight Gold medal. Defense was the key as the USA forced 9 steals and 18 turnovers. The USA held off a 4th quarter rally by France, where the Europeans pulled to within 3 points, but 3 straight unanswered buckets pushed the USA back into an unassailable lead that they defended to the end. The star on Offense for the USA was Kevin Durant (29 points), who won his 3rd Gold medal, and he was supported by Jayson Tatum (19 points), Damain Lillard (11 points) and Jrue Holiday (11 points). France also featured Rudy Gobert (16 points, 8 rebounds), Evan Fournier (16 points) and Timothe Luwawu-Cabarrot (11 points). Coverage does not include the medal ceremony or Half-Time (9, 3rd quarter JIP 9:26 with baseball commentary upto 8:39, 1 Disc, BBC - ?/Sobral, PAL)

Disc 9
Cycling - Mens Mountain Bike Cross Country - 21-year old Tom Pidcock sensationally won Gold, coming through from the 4th row of the starting grid to upset the favourites. Pidcock moved into the lead midway through the race and never relinquished it as he beat Swiss world number one Mathias Flueckiger into Silver and David Valero of Spain into Bronze. Coverage includes the medal ceremony + post-race interview with Tom Pidcock (9, 1 hour 34 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - ?/Gilmore, PAL)

Disc 10
Cycling - Mens BMX - In a hard-fought Final, Netherlands rider Niek Kimmann held off Great Britain's Kye Whyte to win Gold. Whyte's Silver medal was Great Britain's first ever in the event. Carlos Alberto Ramirez Yepes of Colombia claimed the Bronze medal. Coverage includes the semi-final, final and the medal ceremony (9, 15 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Leigh/Reade, PAL)

Cycling - Womens BMX - In a sensational, high-speed final, Great Britain's Bethany Shriever won Gold, holding off Colombian Mariana Pajon on the line to take the title. Merel Smulders of the Netherlands claimed the Bronze. After she crossed the finish line, due to the effort she put in in the race, Shriever collapsed as the lactic acid in her legs stopped her from being able to stand. Coverage includes the semi-final, final and the medal ceremony (9, 20 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Leigh/Reade, PAL)

Disc 11
Cycling - Womens BMX Freestyle Final - Great Britain's Charlotte Worthington won Gold, upsetting the favourite with a sensational and record-making 2nd run at the Ariake Sports Park. American Hannah Roberts laid down a first run score of 96.10 and seemed assured of Gold, but Worthington unleashed a 360 backflip on her 2nd run, a trick never seen in competition before, and won the Gold with a score of 97.50. Roberts won Silver with Switzerland's Nikita Ducarroz winning bronze. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (9, 1 hour 10 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Leigh/Taylor, PAL)

Disc 12
Track Cycling - Womens Team Pursuit - Germany ended Great Britain's dominance in the competition with a World Record time in the Final that saw them take Gold over the British. Great Britain, who had won the Gold for the last 2 Olympic games, finished an astonishing 6 seconds behind the Germans. The German team featured Franziska Brausse, Lisa Brennauer, Lisa Klein, and Mieke Kroeger. The Great Britain team featured Katie Archibald, Laura Kenny, Neah Evans, and Josie Knight. Coverage includes the Quarter Final featuring Great Britain, the Semi-Final featuring Great Britain and Final but not the Medal Ceremony (9, 21 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Brotherton/Boardman, PAL)

Track Cycling - Mens Team Pursuit - Great Britain's reign as Olympic champions ended in controversial fashion as they were knocked out at the Semi-Final stage by Denmark. The Danes were by far the quicker team and were set to lap the British team when Danish rider Frederik Madsen rode into the back of the last British rider, Charlie Tanfield, causing a big crash. After a lengthy judges ruling, the Danes were advanced to the Final and Great Britain ended up in the 7/8 race, beating the Swiss to end their tournament. The Great Britain team featured Ethan Hayter, Ed Clancy (for the Quarter Final only), his replacement Charlie Tanfield, Ethan Vernon and Oliver Wood. Coverage includes the Quarter Final, Semi-Final and 7/8 ride-off but not the Medal Ceremony (9, 21 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Brotherton/Boardman, PAL)

Track Cycling - Womens Madison Final - The Great Britain team of Katy Archibald and Laura Kenny executed a perfect game-plan to win the inaugural Olympic Madison. Between them they won 10 of the 12 sprints on offer and gained a lap - earning an extra 20 points - alongside Denmark and the Russian Olympic Committee, who won silver and bronze respectively. Great Britain's dominance was such that they finished with more than double the Danes' points (78 to 35) while ROC finished with 26 points. With the win, Laura Kenny became the first British woman to win Gold at 3 Olympic Games and she also became GB's most successful female athlete ever with her 5th gold and 6th Olympic medal. Coverage includes the Medal Ceremony (9, 50 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Brotherton/Boardman, PAL)

Disc 13
Track Cycling - Mens Omnium - Great Britain's Matt Walls won GB's first Track Cycling Gold medal of the games with a dominant performance at the Izu Velodrome. Over the 4 events (Scratch race, Tempo race, Elimination race and Points race) he accrued a total of 153 points, 24 more than Silver medallist Campbell Stewart of New Zealand, and 29 more than Bronze medallist while Elia Viviani from Italy. Coverage includes the Scratch race, the Tempo race, the Elimination race and the Points race + the Medal Ceremony (9, 1 hour 8 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Brotherton/Boardman, PAL)

Disc 14
Track Cycling - Mens Keirin - Great Britain's Jason Kenny claimed a sensational Gold medal, extending Team GB's win streak in the event to 4 straight Olympic Games. Kenny had a rough start to the tournament, finishing 4th in his heat, but fought back to make the final where he won in dramatic fashion, sprinting for home from the moment the Derny left the track. He beat Silver medallist Azizulhasni Awang of Malaysia by 0.7 seconds while Harrie Lavreysen of the Netherlands took Bronze. With the win Jason Kenny became the first Briton to win 7 Olympic gold medals and became Great Britain's decorated Olympian. Coverage includes Heat 1, Repechages Heat 2, Quarter Final Heat 1, Semi-Final Heat 1 and the Final + the Medal Ceremony (9, 37 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Brotherton/Boardman, PAL)

Disc 15
Diving - Mens Synchronised 10M Platform - For the first time in 21 years, China lost their grip on the Gold medal as Great Britain overcame the odds to win the title. The Great Britain pairing of Tom Daley and Matty Lee were the model of consistency while others around them faltered, and won the title with a flawless forward four-and-a-half somersault dive that was judged at 101.01. The Chinese pair of Cao Yuan and Chen Aisen claimed Silver and the Russian pair of Aleksandr Bondar and Viktor Minibaev took Bronze. Coverage starts with the 3rd pair of round 1. The rest of the Final is complete. Coverage also includes the medal ceremony and a post-event interview with Tom and Matty (9, 1 hour 15 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Downes/Taylor, PAL)

Disc 16
Rowing - Mens Coxless Four - In a sensational final, Australia ended Great Britain's 21 year hold on the Gold Medal, beating Romania into Silver and Italy into Bronze. With 100 metres to go, Australia held a 3/4 length lead over a charging Great Britain team, but the GB team suddenly started veering to the left, almost crashing into the Italians, and as a result the GB team slipped to 4th place and out of the medals. The Great Britain team featured Oliver Cook, Matthew Rossiter, Rory Gibbs and Sholto Carnegie. Coverage includes Heat 2, Semi-Final, Final, Post-Race interview but not the medal ceremony (9, 26 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Herbert/Cracknell, PAL)

Rowing - Womens Pair - For the first time since 1998 a new champion was crowned in the Womens Pair in Tokyo, as New Zealand won Gold, beating Russia into Silver and Canada into Bronze. The Great Britain pair of Helen Glover and Polly Swann finished 4th, dashing Helen's chances of recapturing her title, but it was a remarkable return for Glover as she unretired in January 2021 and only had 1 tournament to race in before the Olympics. Coverage includes Heat 2 featuring Team GB, the Semi-Final featuring Team GB, the Final and post-race interview with Helen and Polly but no medal ceremony (9, 36 minutes, BBC - Herbert/cracknell, PAL)

Disc 17
Womens Triathlon - On a wet and windy day at the Odaiba Marine Park in Tokyo, Bermuda's Flora Duffy claimed a historic first Gold medal for her nation, beating Great Britain's Georgia Taylor-Brown into Silver and American Katie Zaferes into Bronze. Duffy took control on the run stage to win Gold, while Taylor-Brown overcame a puncture and a 15 second deficit on the leaders to fight-back and win Silver. Coverage includes the full race + the medal ceremony + post-race interviews (9, 1 Disc, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson, PAL)

Disc 18
Mens Triathlon - At the Odaiba Marine Park in Tokyo, in searing heat and humidity, Norway's Kristian Blummenfelt won his first Olympic title. The Norwegian made a break for Gold as the run stage reached the end, and pulled away from Great Britain's Alex Yee to win in 1:45:04. New Zealand's Hayden Wilde took bronze, while Great Britain's Jonny Brownlee finished 5th in his final Olympic-distance Triathlon. Coverage includes the full race + the medal ceremony + post-race interviews (9, 1 Disc, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson, PAL)

Disc 19
Mixed Relay Triathlon - In the inaugural running of the event at the Olympics, Great Britain won Gold, beating USA into Silver and France into Bronze. Great Britain featured Jessica Learmonth, Jonny Brownlee, Georgia Taylor-Brown and Alex Yee and they dominated the race from start to finish, finishing in a time of 1:23:41, 14 seconds ahead of the USA. The race was the final triathlon for Jonny Brownlee and finally rewarded him with a Gold after a Bronze and Silver at the previous 2 Olympics. Coverage includes the full race + the medal ceremony + post-race interviews (9, 1 Disc, BBC - Chilton/Emmerson, PAL)

Disc 20
Swimming - Mens 100M Breaststroke - Great Britain won their first Gold medal of Tokyo 2021 as Adam Peaty successfully defended his title, easily holding off the field down the stretch. He won in a time of 57:37, with the Netherlands Arno Kamminga winning Silver and Italian Nicolò Martinenghi claiming Bronze. Coverage includes Peaty's heat, Peaty's Semi-Final, the Final and the Medal Ceremony (9, 37 minutes, 1 disc, BBC - Jameson/Moorhouse, PAL)

Swimming - Mens 200M Freestyle Final - In a sensational race, Great Britain claimed a one-two, with Tom Dean winning Gold 0.04 seconds ahead of team-mate Duncan Scott. Dean won in a time of 1:44:22, a new Britiah record, while Scott finished ahead of Brazilian Fernando Scheffer in Bronze. It was the first time since 1908 that two male British swimmers have finished on the Olympic podium together. Coverage includes the Medal Ceremony (9, 24 minutes, 1 disc, BBC - Jameson/Moorhouse, PAL)

Swimming - Mens 400M Freestyle Final - In a sensational upset, 18 year old Ahmed Hafnaoui of Tunisia won his first ever Olympic medal with a storming race at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre. Hafnaoui was the slowest qualifier for the final race but won Olympic gold with a time of 3:43.36, beating Jack McLoughlin of Australia into Silver and American Kieran Smith into Bronze. Coverage includes the Medal Ceremony (9, 14 minutes, 1 disc, BBC - Jameson/Moorhouse, PAL)

Disc 21
Swimming - Mens 4x200M Freestyle Relay Final - The Great Britain quartet of 200m champion Tom Dean, silver medallist Duncan Scott, James Guy and Matthew Richards lived up to their favourites tag, winning Gold in a time of 6 minutes, 58.58, just 0.03 seconds short of the world record. Russia claimed Silver and Australia took the Bronze. Coverage includes the Medal Ceremony (9, 26 minutes, 1 disc, BBC - Jameson/Moorhouse, PAL)

Swimming - Mixed 4x100M Medley Relay - In the inaugural running of the race at the Olympics, highly-favoured Great Britain won Gold in a World Record time of 3:37:58. The Great Britain team of Kathleen Dawson, Adam Peaty, James Guy and Anna Hopkin all swam excellent legs and finished 3 seconds ahead of China in Silver and Australia in Bronze. Coverage includes Heat 1 featuring Team GB, the Final + the Medal Ceremony (9, 42 minutes, 1 disc, BBC - Jameson/Moorhouse, PAL)

Swimming - Mens 4x100M Medley Relay Final - In the final swimming event of the tournament, the USA won Gold, setting a new World Record with a time of 3:26.78. Great Britain, featuring Duncan Scott, Adam Peaty, Luke Greenbank and James Guy finished 0.73 seconds behind USA in Silver, with Italy taking the Bronze. Coverage includes the Final + the Medal Ceremony (9, 20 minutes, 1 disc, BBC - Jameson/Moorhouse, PAL)

Disc 22
Boxing - Mens Flyweight Final - Galal Yafai v Carlo Paalam - Great Britain's Galal Yafai claimed GB's first male Olympic flyweight Gold in 65 years with a points win over Carlo Paalam from the Phillipines. Yafai dominated from the start and knocked Paalam to the canvas in the 1st round to give himself a lead he defended to the end. Coverage includes the Medal Ceremony (9, 28 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - McIntosh/Woodhall, PAL)

Boxing - Womens Middleweight Final - Lauren Price v Li Qian - World #1 Lauren Price won Gold with a unanimous points win over World #3 Li Qian from China, becoming just the second British woman to win boxing gold. Price used quick hands and feet to stun the taller Chinese boxer and kept her at bay throughout to easily take the win. Coverage includes the Medal Ceremony (9, 32 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - McIntosh/Woodhall, PAL)

Disc 23
Equestrian - Team Jumping Final - The Swedish team of Peder Fredricson, Malin Baryard-Johnsson and Henrik von Eckermann took Gold after a jump-off against the USA at the Equestrian Park in Tokyo. Both teams were level after the Final so the competition went to a timed jump-off, and even though both teams were faultless in their runs, Sweden completed their run in 122.90 as opposed to the Americans' 124.20 and took the Gold. The USA team featured Laura Kraut, McLain Ward and Jessica Springsteen, daughter of Musician Bruce Springsteen. The Belgium team of Pieter Devos, Jerome Guery and Gregory Wathelet claimed the Bronze. Coverage does not include the Medal Ceremony (9, 1 hour 21 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Nick Luck or Ian Stark/Austin, PAL)

Disc 24
Gymnastics - Mens Pommel Horse - Great Britain's Max Whitlock retained his Olympic title with a focused and technical routine at the Olympic Gymnastic Centre in Tokyo. Whitlock went first in the event and immediately put the pressure on his rivals with a near-perfect routine that earned him a score of 15.583. Despite their best attempts, no one could do better and Whitlock won Gold. The Silver medal went to Lee Chih-kai of Chinese Taipei with Japan's Kazuma Kaya taking Bronze. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (9, 56 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Heap/Still/Baker, PAL)

Disc 25
Gymnastics - Womens Trampoline Final - In a high-quality final, China’s Zhu Xueying took Gold, beating compatriot Liu Lingling into Silver medal position, while Great Britain's Bryony Page won a sensational Bronze medal. Page had battled serious ankle injuries to qualify for the Games, and she put in a brilliant routine to get on the podium. Coverage includes the Medal Ceremony (9, 35 minutes, 1 disc, BBC - Heap/Still, PAL)

Gymnastics - Womens Floor Final - In a high-quality floor final at the Olympic Gymnastic Centre in Tokyo, American Jade Carey won an emotional Gold medal, beating Italian Vanessa Ferrari into silver and Japan's Mai Murakami and the Russian Olympic Committee's Angelina Melnikova into a shared bronze. The Gold was Carey's first and came with her father, who was also her coach, at the side of the mat as she performed. The Final also featured Great Britain's 16-year old twins Jessica and Jennifer Gadirova, who finished 6th and 7th respectively. Coverage is missing the 1st Gymnast's routine but the rest of the Final is complete. Coverage also includes the medal ceremony + an interview with the 2 Team GB gymnasts (9, 41 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Heap/Still/Baker, PAL)

Disc 26
Sailing - Mens 49er Final - In a sensational race at the Enoshima Yacht Harbour, Great Britain's Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell won the men's 49er Gold medal by just 2 seconds, beating New Zealand into Silver and Germany into Bronze. The GB sailors knew they needed to beat the Kiwis but 1 clear spot to take Gold, and as the finishing line neared they were 2nd to Germany with New Zealand third. But Fletcher and Bithell raced a brilliant final leg to pip the Germans at the line by 2 seconds and fulfill their requirements as New Zealand finished 3rd. Coverage includes the Medal Ceremony + an interview with Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell (9, 34 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Myant/Robertson, PAL)

Disc 27
Athletics - Womens 100M Final - Jamaica claimed an unprecedented clean-sweep of the medals, as Elaine Thompson-Herah became the second-fastest woman in history and retained her Olympic title. Thompson-Herah won in 10.61 seconds, a new Olympic record and just 0.12secs short of the world record. She beat compatriots Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and Shericka Jackson into Silver and Bronze respectively. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (9, 20 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

Athletics - Mens 100M Final - In a shock result at the Olympic Stadium, Italy's Lamont Marcell Jacobs won Gold in 9.80 seconds, beating American Fred Kerley into Silver and Canadian Andre de Grasse into Bronze. Great Britain's Zharnel Hughes was disqualified for a false start. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (9, 24 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

Athletics - Womens 4x100M Relay - Hot favourites Jamaica won 4x100M Relay Gold, winning in 41.02 seconds, beating the USA into Silver and Great Britain into Bronze. Jamaica featured Elaine Thompson-Herah, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, Shericka Jackson and Briana Williams. Great Britain featured Asha Philip, Imani-Lara Lansiquot, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita. Coverage includes the Round 1 Heat 1 race featuring Team GB + the Final + the medal ceremony (9, 21 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

Disc 28
Athletics - Mixed 4x400M Relay Final - In the inaugural running of the event at the Olympic Games, Poland won Gold in a time of 3:09.87. The Polish team of Karol Zalewski, Natalia Kaczmarek, Justyna Swiety-Ersetic and Kajetan Duszynski took control off the final bend and held on to take the win. The Dominican Republic won Silver, beating the USA into Bronze. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (9, 10 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter/Cram, PAL)

Athletics - Mens 400M Hurdles Final - In a stunning race at the Olympic Stadium, Norway's Karsten Warholm won Gold in a World Record time of 45.94 seconds, taking more than seven tenths off his old record. American Rai Benjamin hounded Warholm all the way around but Warholm was just too good in the final 50 metres. Brazil's Alison dos Santos took Bronze. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (9, 14 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Jackson, PAL)

Athletics - Womens 800M Final - The new-guard took control in the 800M Final, as 19-year old Athing Mu of the USA took Gold in 1:55.21, and 19-year old Keely Hodgkinson of Great Britain won Silver in a National record time of 1:55.88. American Raevyn Rogers stormed through in the final 10 metres to take the Bronze. Coverage also includes a short clip of the medal ceremony (9, 14 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cotter/Radcliffe, PAL)

Athletics - Womens 1500M Final - Defending champion Faith Kipyegon of Kenya retained her Olympic title with a fast finish at the Olympic Stadium. Great Britain's Laura Muir finally won a medal at a major outdoor event, taking Silver in a British record time of 3:54.50 by out-pacing world champion Sifan Hassan on the final lap, who ended up with the Bronze. Coverage includes the medal ceremony (9, 24 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Cram/Radcliffe, PAL)

Disc 29
Athletics - Womens Pole Vault Final - In a see-saw competition in the Olympic Stadium, American Katie Nageotte took Gold, beating Anzhelika Sidorova of the Russian Olympic Committee into Silver and Great Britain's Holly Bradshaw into Bronze. With many of the athletes stumbling out in the early rounds, the competition came down to Nageotte, Sidorova and Bradshaw and Nageotte went from 3rd to 1st with a first-attempt success at 4.90M to take Gold. Holly Bradshaw's Bronze was her first Olympic medal at the 3rd time of asking. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (9, 1 hour 3 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Brackley/Cram/Cotter, PAL)

Disc 30
Weightlifting - Womens +87Kg Final - In a record-breaking competition at the Tokyo International Forum, China's Li Wenwen won Gold with an Olympic record in the Clean and Jerk lift (180Kg). Great Britain's Emily Campbell took Silver, lifting a personal best in the Clean and Jerk, while American Sarah Robles took Bronze. Coverage includes the Clean and Jerk event only + the medal ceremony (9, 51 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Harker/Breeze, PAL)

Disc 31
Mens Sport Climbing Final - In the inaugural staging of the event at the Olympic games, Alberto Gines Lopez of Spain won Gold in a fantastic final round. The final climber in the Lead Final, Austrian Jakob Schubert, shook up the standings with an amazing climb and handed the Gold to Lopez. American Nathaniel Coleman won Silver and Schubert took Bronze. Coverage includes the Speed Climbing, the Bouldering and the Lead but does not include the medal ceremony (9, 1 hour 2 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Leigh/Langley PAL)

Disc 32
Womens Sport Climbing Final - In the inaugural staging of the event at the Olympic games, Six-time world champion Slovenian Janja Garnbret claimed Gold with a great all-around display. Garnbret placed 5th in the Speed Climbing and won the Bouldering and Lead rounds to easily win Gold. Japan claimed both Silver and Bronze through Miho Nonaka and Akiyo Noguchi respectively. Speed specialist Aleksandra Miroslaw of Poland won the Speed Climbing in a world-record time of 6.84. Coverage includes the Speed climbing Qualification hi-lites, the Speed Climbing Final, the Bouldering and the Lead but does not include the medal ceremony (9, 1 hour 20 minutes, 1 Disc, BBC - Leigh/Langley PAL)

Discs 33 and 34
Mens Rugby Sevens - Due to COVD-19 restrictions, the tournament was played in an empty Tokyo Stadium, and Fiji coped the better, successfully defending their Rio 2016 Gold medal with a final win over New Zealand. Coverage does not include the medal ceremony (9, 2 Discs, BBC - Nugent/Johnson/Vickerman, PAL)
Disc 33
Pool B - Great Britain v Canada
Pool B - Great Britain v Japan
Pool B - Great Britain v Fiji
Quarter Final - Great Britain v USA
Disc 34
Quarter Final - Argentina v South Africa
Semi-Final - Great Britain v New Zealand
Bronze Medal - Great Britain v Argentina
Final - Fiji v New Zealand

Tokyo 2020 : Today at the Games - A daily review of the games, with a slant towards Team GB (9, 16 episodes of 1 hour 30 minutes each + 1 episode of 1 hour 10 minutes that is a review of the games - 1 episode per disc, 17 Discs, BBC - Balding/Scott, PAL)

Make a free website with Yola