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The Olympics has reached its conclusion and here is the latest list of every medal that Team GB has won in Paris.

Team GB Olympic medals

Gold

Laura Collett, Tom McEwen & Ros Canter

Equestrian

Team Eventing

Tom Pidcock

Cycling

Men's Cross-Country Mountain Bike

Nathan Hales

Shooting

Men's Trap Shooting

Matt Richards, James Guy, Tom Dean and Duncan Scott

Swimming

Men's 4x200m Freestyle Relay

Alex Yee

Triathlon

Men's Triathlon

Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgina Brayshaw

Rowing

Women's Quadruple Sculls

Emily Craig and Imogen Grant

Rowing

Women's Lightweight Double Sculls

Bryony Page

Trampolining

Women's individual

Ben Maher, Harry Charles and Scott Brash

Equestrian

Team Jumping

Sholto Carnegie, Rory Gibbs, Morgan Bolding, Jacob Dawson, Charles Elwes, Tom Digby, James Rudkin and Tom Ford

Rowing

Men's Eight

Katy Marchant, Sophie Capewell and Emma Finucane

Cycling

Women's team sprint

Keely Hodgkinson

Athletics

Women's 800m

Eleanor Aldridge

Sailing

Women's Kite

Toby Roberts

Sport Climbing

Men's Boulder & Lead

Silver

Anna Henderson

Cycling

Women's Road Race Time Trial

Adam Peaty

Swimming

Men's 100m Breaststroke

Tom Daley & Noah Williams

Diving

Men's Synchronised 10m platform

Adam Burgess

Canoeing

Men's C-1 Canoe Slalom

Matt Richards

Swimming

Men's 200m Freestyle

Kieran Reilly

Cycling

Men's BMX Freestyle

Helen Glover, Esme Booth, Sam Redgrave & Rebecca Shorten

Rowing

Women’s Four

Oliver Wynne-Griffiths & Tom George

Rowing

Men's Pair

Ben Proud

Swimming

Men's 50m Freestyle

Duncan Scott

Swimming

Men's 200m Individual Medley

Amber Rutter

Shooting

Women's Skeet

Tommy Fleetwood

Golf

Men's Individual

Alex Yee, Georgia Taylor-Brown, Sam Dickinson, Beth Potter

Triathlon

Mixed Relay

Joe Clarke

Canoeing

Canoe Slalom (Mixed Kayak Cross)

Jack Carlin, Ed Lowe and Hamish Turnbull

Swimming

Men's Team Sprint

Josh Kerr

Athletics

Men's 1500m

Ethan Hayter, Charlie Tanfield, Ethan Vernon and Daniel Bigham

Cycling

Men's Team Pursuit

Matthew Hudson-Smith

Athletics

Men's 400m

Elinor Barker & Neah Evans

Cycling

Women's Madison

Katarina Johnson-Thompson

Athletics

Women's Heptathlon

Izzy Thorpe and Kate Shortman

Artistic Swimming

Women's Duet

Caden Cunningham

Taekwondo

+80kg

Bronze

Yasmin Harper & Scarlett Mew Jensen

Diving

Women's Synchronised 3m springboard

Kimberley Woods

Kayaking

Women's K-1 Canoe Slalom

Laura Collett

Equestrian

Individual Eventing

Beth Potter

Triathlon

Women's Triathlon

Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix & Lois Toulson

Diving

Women's Synchronised 10m Platform

Mathilda Hodgkins-Byrne & Rebecca Wilde

Rowing

Women’s Double Sculls

Oliver Wilkes, David Ambler, Matt Aldridge & Freddie Davidson

Rowing

Men’s Four

Jack Laugher & Anthony Harding

Diving

Men's Synchronised 3m springboard

Heidi Long, Rowan McKellar, Holly Dunford, Emily Ford, Lauren Irwin, Eve Stewart, Harriet Taylor and Annie Campbell-Ord

Rowing

Women's Eight

Emma Wilson

Sailing

Windsurfing

Carl Hester, Lottie Fry and Becky Moody

Equestrian

Team Dressage

Jake Jarman

Gymnastics

Men's Floor

Samuel Reardon, Laviai Nielsen, Alex Haydock-Wilson and Amber Anning

Athletics

4x400m Mixed Relay

Lottie Fry

Equestrian

Individual Dressage

Harry Hepworth

Gymnastics

Men's Vault

Alex Yee, Georgia Taylor-Brown, Sam Dickinson and Beth Potter

Triathlon

Mixed Relay

Kimberley Woods

Canoeing

Canoe Slalom (Women's Kayak Cross)

Sky Brown

Skateboarding

Women's Park

Lewis Richardson

Boxing

Men's 71kg

Elinor Barker, Josie Knight, Anna Morris and Jessica Roberts

Cycling

Women's Team Pursuit

Emma Finucane

Cycling

Women's Keirin

Jack Carlin

Cycling

Men's Individual Sprint

Jeremiah Azu, Louie Hinchliffe, Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake, Zharnel Hughes

Athletics

Men's 4x100m Relay

Noah Williams

Diving

Men's 10m Platform

Georgia Bell

Athletics

Women's 1500m

Alex Haydock-Wilson, Matthew Hudson-Smith, Lewis Davey and Charlie Dobson

Athletics

Men's 4x400m Relay

Victoria Ohuruogu, Laviai Nielsen, Nicole Yeargin and Amber Anning

Athletics

Women's 4x400m Relay

Emma Finucane

Cycling

Women's Sprint

Emily Campbell

Weightlifting

Women's +81kg

Olympics

Day One

Diving duo Yasmin Harper and Scarlett Mew Jensen claimed Team GB's first medal of the Games as they snatched bronze in the women's 3m synchronised competition, ousting Australia from third position with their very last dive.

Anna Henderson ensured Team GB recorded their most successful opening day at an OIympics since 1980 as she took silver in the women's road cycling time trial.

Day Two

Two more medals followed on day two as Kimberley Woods claimed a superb bronze in the women's kayak singles final before Adam Peaty narrowly missed out on gold in the men's 100m breaststroke, adding a silver medal to his illustrious collection.

There was more success to come from the Aquatics Centre as Tom Daley collected a fifth Olympic medal in the men's synchronised 10m platform alongside Noah Williams, with the British pairing finishing a superb second behind China.

Team GB finally claimed their first gold medal when Laura Collett steered the eventing team of Ros Canter and Tom McEwen to glory.

With one gold in the bag, another soon came calling courtesy of Tom Pidcock, with the cyclist recovering from a puncture to successfully defend his mountain bike title in the most extraordinary fashion.

Collett then followed up her team eventing gold with another strong performance to take bronze in the individual eventing.

Day Three

The evening of day three then saw two more silver medals with Adam Burgess finishing second in the men's C-1 canoe slalom before Matt Richards was narrowly pipped to gold by David Popovici in the men's 200m freestyle, with the 21-year-old claiming a silver medal.

Day Four

Day four delivered a gold medal in the shooting as Nathan Hales set a new Olympic record in the men's trap final.

The evening action saw more triumph for Team GB as British quartet Matt Richards, James Guy, Tom Dean and Duncan Scott secured more gold medals in the swimming pool with a dominant performance in the men's 4x200m freestyle relay.

Day Five

Team GB enjoyed a whirlwind start to day five at the Olympics with four medals before midday in Paris.

Beth Potter claimed the first winning bronze in the delayed women's triathlon, before favourite Alex Yee secured gold for Britain in the men's triathlon with a dramatic last gasp overtake over New Zealand's Hayden Wilde.

British duo Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix and Lois Toulson clinched another bronze in the pool for GB with a third-placed finish in the women's synchronised diving.

There was yet more late drama in store when British quartet Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgina Brayshaw won the women's quadruple sculls by the finest of margins, as Team GB won their sixth gold of the 2024 Olympics.

BMX freestyler Kieran Reilly then won silver after a fabulous final run at La Concorde urban park, falling just short of Argentina's Jose Torres Gil.

Day Six

Day six saw early success for Team GB on the River Seine in Paris, with three medals before midday in the rowing.

Mathilda Hodgkins-Byrne & Rebecca Wilde claimed bronze in the women's double sculls, before British quartet Oliver Wilkes, David Ambler, Matt Aldridge & Freddie Davidson did the same in the men's four.

Decorated Olympian Helen Glover then led her team of Esme Booth, Sam Redgrave & Rebecca Shorten to a second placed silver medal in the women's four, to round-off a successful morning for Team GB's rowing teams.

Day Seven

It was another magical morning on Friday as Team GB picked up a gold, silver and bronze medal in Paris.

Jack Laugher and Anthony Harding claimed bronze in the men's 3m synchronised springboard behind gold medallists China and an inspired Mexican pair in an extremely hard-fought competition.

Rowers Oliver Wynne-Griffiths & Tom George suffered Olympic heartbreak as they looked set for gold after leading the majority of the final before being pipped on the line and being forced to settle for silver.

No such heartache for Emily Craig and Imogen Grant, who claimed gold after holding off Romania and Greece in a fiercely contested women's lightweight double sculls final.

The success continued into the afternoon as 33-year-old Bryony Page claimed Great Britain's first trampoline Olympic gold to complete her set of a medal of every colour after winning silver in Rio and Bronze in Tokyo.

Great Britain then won Olympic team jumping gold for the first time since London 2012, thanks to a stunning performance from the trio of Ben Maher, Harry Charles and Scott Brash.

Ben Proud and Duncan Scott then capped a fantastic Friday for Team GB by collecting silver medals in the swimming.

Day Eight

It was more success for Team GB on Saturday morning as the women's eight claimed bronze and it was a magnificent gold for the men's eight on the final day of rowing at the Olympics in Paris.

Three more bronze medals followed in the afternoon as Emma Wilson finished third in the windsurfing final, Team GB finished third in the equestrian dressage team event and Jake Jarman claimed the nation's first artistic gymnastics medal in Paris this summer.

The 4x400m mixed relay team of Samuel Reardon, Laviai Nielsen, Alex Haydock-Wilson and Amber Anning then smashed the British record on Saturday night to claim a 13th bronze medal for Team GB.

Day Nine

Lottie Fry got Team GB up and running on day nine with bronze in the individual dressage, adding to the medal she won in the team dressage on Saturday.

Amber Rutter won a brilliant silver, though she was controversially denied gold in the women's skeet. Rutter appeared to have hit a clay in a shoot-off against Chile’s Francisca Crovetto Chadid, but the target didn't explode and Britain's shooter was denied the point by officials.

The gymnastics team delivered another medal shortly after as Harry Hepworth claimed a superb bronze in the men's vault.

Tommy Fleetwood came agonisingly close to winning gold but fell short of Scottie Scheffler, who carded a phenomenal 62 in the final round to claim victory by one stroke.

Day 10

Team GB started the week by claiming bronze in the triathlon mixed team relay after initially being announced as silver medalists, before Joe Clarke and Kimberley Woods won silver and bronze in kayak cross.

World records then tumbled in the women's team sprint cycling courtesy of the fabulous trio of Emma Finucane, Sophie Capewell and Katy Marchant, who delivered gold for Team GB in the most extraordinary fashion.

Then all eyes were on Keely Hodgkinson at the Stade de France and the 800m star duly delivered, taking the lead from the off and powering down the home straight to take victory.

Day 11

The medals continued to flow for Team GB on another successful day in Paris, with Britain landing a gold, two silvers and two bronze.

Teenage sensation Sky Brown added to her Olympic medal haul with bronze in the women's park skateboarding, despite suffering from a shoulder injury that hindered her preparations for Paris.

In the swimming pool, Jack Carlin, Ed Lowe and Hamish Turnbull were narrowly beaten to a gold medal by the Netherlands threesome of Harrie Lavreysen, Jeffrey Hoogland and Roy van den Berg in the men's team sprint.

Men's 1500m hope Josh Kerr also registered silver as the British star set a new national record in the final despite being edged out by American Cole Hocker.

Elsewhere, Lewis Richardson's hopes of reaching the gold medal match in the men's boxing 71kg category were controversially ended, after the Colchester-based fighter had to settle for bronze following a controversial split-decision defeat at the hands of Mexico's Marco Verde.

Meanwhile, Irish sensation Kellie Harrington successfully defended her Olympic title in Paris late on Tuesday evening, defeating number one seed Yang Wenlu of the People’s Republic of China.

Her victory means she becomes the first Irish woman in Olympic history to secure back to back gold medals.

Day 12

Team GB just missed out on gold in the Men's Team Pursuit cycling after they were edged out by Australia in a dramatic final and were forced to settle for silver in Paris.

In the Women's Team Pursuit, Elinor Barker, Josie Knight, Anna Morris and Jessica Roberts trailed by 1.2 seconds in the bronze medal race against Italy, but somehow produced an incredible comeback to secure a spot on the podium.

Matthew Hudson-Smith was bidding to become the first British man in 100 years to win 400m Olympic gold, but USA's Quincy Hall produced a sensational finish to deny the 29-year-old in a dramatic finish on Thursday evening.

Day 13

In the inaugural women's kite sailing final, Eleanor Aldridge blew away the opposition to win Team GB's 12th gold of the Games.

There was a cycling bronze medal for Emma Funicane in the Women's keirin.

Day 14

Toby Roberts won Team GB's 14th gold in the Mens Boulder and Lead, while there was a silver medal for Katarina Johnson-Thompson (Heptathlon) along with silver medals in the Women's Madison and the Women's 4x100m relay.

Jack Carlin picked up a bronze in the Men's Individual Sprint, while the GB quartet finished third in the Men's 4x100m relay final.

Day 15

The medals kept on coming as Team GB picked up two silvers and four bronzes on a stunning Saturday in Paris.

Noah Williams defied the odds and pulled off a remarkable final dive to secure his second medal of the games and claim silver, while Caden Cunningham just missed out on becoming the first British man to win taekwondo gold as he was beaten in the final.

The bronze medals consisted of Georgia Bell running the 11th fastest ever 1500m time in women's history to finish third, while the men's and women's 4x400m relay teams both also secured a place on the podium.

Finally, Kate Shortman and Izzy Thorpe were delighted as they claimed Team GB's first ever Olympic medal in artistic swimming.

Day 16

Track cycling star Emma Finucane claimed bronze in the sprint to make it three medals in Paris, while Emily Campbell added weightlifting bronze to the sliver she claimed in Tokyo.

Team GB end the Olympics with 65 medals - 14 gold, 22 silver and 29 bronze.

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