Team GB has a total of 327 athletes at the Paris 2024 Olympics across 26 sports - but can they bring home the gold?

Performance experts UK Sport have tipped Britain's competitors to win between 50 and 70 medals in the games - so how are they getting on?

:: The latest Olympic medal table

Here's a look at all the nation's medallists so far.

Gold medals

Tom McEwen, Ros Canter, and Laura Collett - Equestrian (team eventing)

The trio won Team GB their first gold medal of the summer on 29 July, fending off pressure from France to take the top spot in the equestrian team eventing.

Rosalind Canter, Tom McEwen and Laura Collett with their gold medals.
Pic:PA
Image: Rosalind Canter, Tom McEwen and Laura Collett with their gold medals. Pic:PA

A total of 15.8 penalties were incurred on the cross-country stage, making it tight at the top, but a clear round from McEwen, with one fence down from both Canter and Collett, was good enough to seal gold.

McEwen and Collett had been in the team that won gold in the same event at Tokyo 2020, along with Oliver Townend.

Tom Pidcock - Mountain biking (men's cross-country)

Tom Pidcock with his gold medal following the Men's Cross-country mountain bike at Elancourt Hill.
Pic: PA
Image: Pic: PA

The cyclist won gold hours after the equestrian team - and he did it in sensational fashion.

The 25-year-old fell nine places and 36 seconds behind leader, Frenchman Victor Koretzky, after his front tyre suffered a puncture, but produced a masterclass to claw his way back to the front.

In the final lap, Koretzky briefly retook first place, only for Pidcock to produce a daring overtake in the final moments before racing away to cross the line in first.

Nathan Hales - Shooting (men's trap)

Chatham-born Hales didn't only win Team GB's third gold at Paris - he also set a new Olympic record.

The 28-year-old hit 48 of 50 targets in the trap final, compared with his nearest competitor's 44.

Hales pumped his fist in the air and held his shotgun aloft as he was embraced by his coach.

Image: Nathan Hales after winning gold. Pic: PA

The left-hander was making his Olympic debut, but is a three-time World Championship medallist.

The athlete, who is married to former GB Olympian and fellow shooter Charlotte Kerwood, showed few signs of nerves as he beat second placed Ying Qi of China and third placed Guatemalan Jean Pierre Brol Cardenas.

James Guy, Tom Dean, Matt Richards, and Duncan Scott - Swimming (men's 4x200m freestyle)

The quartet retained their title to give Team GB their first Olympic gold of the Paris Games in the pool.

Image: (L-R) James Guy, Tom Dean, Matthew Richards and Duncan Scott. Pic: PA

A time of six minutes and 59.43 seconds was 1.35 seconds ahead of runners-up the United States while bronze medallists Australia were a further 1.2 seconds back.

Alex Yee - Men's triathlon

The 26-year-old Londoner produced a stunning finish to become Britain's second Olympic triathlon champion.

He went into the delayed race as the favourite but looked to have been beaten into silver by his big rival Hayden Wilde from New Zealand, who had a 14-second lead going into the final lap of the 10km run.

Image: Yee crosses the line to win gold. Pic: PA

But Yee had extra fuel in the tank and surged past Wilde in the final stages to cross the finish line first on the Pont Alexandre III.

Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgie Brayshaw - Rowing (women's quadruple sculls)

Great Britain’s Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgie Brayshaw celebrate winning a gold medal following the Women's Quadruple Sculls Final.
Pic: PA
Image: Lauren Henry, Hannah Scott, Lola Anderson and Georgie Brayshaw. Pic: PA

The GB team made a cautious start before moving past Ukraine into second spot behind the Dutch.

The 2023 world champions looked like they were down and out with 250m to go but they dug deep to shock the Netherlands in the lead and finish first by a whisker.

Silver medals

Anna Henderson - Cycling (women's time trial)

The Briton survived the slippery and treacherous roads of a rainy Paris, which caused several riders to crash, to deliver Olympic silver.

She got the power down to clock a time of 41 minutes 10.7 seconds over the 32.4km course, one minute and 31 seconds down on Australian Grace Brown's gold medal-winning ride.

The 25-year-old, who has twice broken her collarbone this season, said she "knew it was a good day" from about five minutes in - and she was certainly right.

Adam Peaty - Swimming (men's 100m breaststroke)

The Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020 champion came excruciatingly close to his third successive gold in three Olympic Games, finishing just 0.02 seconds behind Italy's Nicolo Martinenghi.

But the 29-year-old, who came back to swimming after taking a mental health break from the sport, said he was proud of his performance, which saw him share silver with American Nic Fink after the pair both came in at 59.05 seconds.

Image: Great Britain's Adam Peaty with his silver medal. Pic: PA

"I'm not crying because I came second, I'm crying because it took so much to get here," he told the BBC.

Tom Daley and Noah Williams - Diving (men's synchronised 10m platform)

Daley claimed the fifth Olympic medal of his extraordinary diving career, having already won three bronzes and a silver.

He did it alongside partner Williams, who earned his first ever Olympic medal.

After placing joint-second with Canada in the opening rounds, a strong third dive extended Daley and Williams' lead and they consistently finished second in the remaining rounds.

30-year-old Daley considered retiring before this summer, having taken a two-year break from diving. Luckily, his son Robbie talked him into coming back for more.

Adam Burgess - Canoe slalom (men's singles)

The British paddler had plenty of time to think before his go, being the ninth of 12 to compete.

But he set down a brilliant run of 96.84 to launch him into a gold medal position until the final challenger, French world silver medallist Nicolas Gestin, laid down a blazing 91.36 to claim gold.

Image: Adam Burgess with his silver medal. Pic: PA

It was a huge improvement on his agonising fourth finish three summers ago in Tokyo and earned Burgess his first ever Olympic medal.

"I had this image in my head of hugging Craig (Morris), my coach, at the finish line, and we're all ugly crying at the bottom," he said after the race.

"That's exactly how it panned out."

Matt Richards - Swimming (men's 200m freestyle)

The 21-year-old defied being in an outside lane to claim Olympic silver - but he missed out on gold by an agonising two-hundredths of a second.

The odds were against the Olympic debutant from lane one after he qualified seventh fastest in the semi-finals, but his impressive performance could only be topped by Romanian sensation David Popovici.

Richards revealed he thought he'd just about snatched gold when the race finished.

"I thought I had got it," the swimmer told the BBC. "It felt as if I had touched it first. The time says differently. It is not a sport that is up for debate, it is black and white.

"I can't be too disappointed with that."

Bronze medals

Yasmin Harper and Scarlett Mew Jensen - Diving (women's synchronised 3m springboard)

Not only did Harper and Mew Jensen win their first Olympic medals and Team GB's first of the games - they became Team GB's first female diving medallists in 64 years.

The pair capitalised on a poor mistake by the Australian divers to move from fourth to third with an impressive final dive.

They will always have their place in British history for that - but also for being the first Britons to collect medals on the opening day of an Olympics in 20 years.

Kimberley Woods - Canoe slalom (women's kayak)

The 28-year-old, who three summers ago in Tokyo was visibly distraught after incurring 56 seconds worth of penalties for a bottom finish in her maiden Olympic final, put the past behind her when she came third in Paris.

She had an agonising wait for confirmation after her performance, as there was just one competitor left who could knock her off the podium: defending champion Ricarda Funk, the fastest finisher from the afternoon's semis.

Luckily for Woods, the German made a mistake at the bottom of the course and finished 11th in 149.08, ensuring the Team GB star's 98.94 was good enough for her first Olympic medal.

Laura Collett - Equestrian (individual eventing)

Collett collected her individual bronze medal on Lordships Graffalo just hours after winning gold in team eventing.

It was a close call between her and GB teammate Tom McEwen in the individual competition, with just 2.7 penalties separating them in third and fourth place.

Image: Laura Collett aboard her horse, London 52, celebrating winning a bronze medal. Pic: PA

The 34-year-old said she was thrilled with the individual accolade, after missing out on one in Tokyo.

"Not many people get to go to one Olympic games and try to win a medal, I was lucky enough to go to two, so I'm relieved I managed to pull it off," she said.

Beth Potter - Women's triathlon

GB's world champion claimed bronze in the women's triathlon behind home favourite Cassandre Beaugrand, after days of uncertainty due to the water quality in the River Seine.

The 32-year-old, who won the test event around the streets of Paris last year, was one of the favourites for Olympic gold but ultimately couldn't match the pace of winner Beaugrand or Switzerland's Julie Derron in second.

Image: Potter after finishing third. Pic: PA

She still held onto an impressive third finish, fending off France's Emma Lombardi who was trailing just behind her.

Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix and Lois Toulson - Diving (women's synchronised 10m platform)

The duo earned themselves a hard-fought bronze medal which was at times in doubt.

It was a promising start as they jumped into second at the end of round two, but could only post 60.3 in the third round, causing them to tumble into fifth.

Image: Lois Toulson and Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix celebrate. Pic: Reuters

They battled back in the final rounds, scoring an impressive 77.76 on their final dive, coming in behind diving powerhouses China and North Korea.

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