What's happening and when at the Paris Olympics?
The Paris Olympics are well under way so what better way to plan ahead than with our day-by-day guide - all times BST.
Team GB has named a squad of 327 athletes and UK Sport has set a target of 50 to 70 medals at the Games.
There will be live coverage of Paris 2024 across the BBC on TV, radio and online.
The Games officially opened at a unique and spectacular opening ceremony along the River Seine on Friday, 26 July and will close on Sunday, 11 August.
Team GB’s Adam Peaty will challenge for a third consecutive men's 100m breaststroke Olympic title in Sunday’s final at 20:44 BST. This time, he has described himself as "the person with the bow and arrow and not the one being fired at" after a foot injury and time away from the sport to focus on his mental health. He was third at the World Championships in February. His key rivals are likely to be China's Qin Haiyang and American Nic Fink.
Meanwhile, French swimming superstar Leon Marchand should line up in the final of the men's 400m individual medley at 19:30. Marchand is one of the biggest names on the hosts' Olympic team and is expected to end a 12-year French gold-medal drought in the pool. When he was younger, Marchand wrote to American great Michael Phelps’ former coach Bob Bowman to ask if he would be his coach. Bowman said yes and Marchand now has five world titles at the age of 22.
Team GB's Evie Richards, the 2021 world champion, features in the women’s cross-country mountain bike event from 13:10. Richards is coming back from a concussion suffered in Brazil two months ago, so does not start the race as one of the favourites, but is still ranked inside the world's top 15. Switzerland's Alessandra Keller is the world number one. Watch out for young Dutch star Puck Pieterse and France's Pauline Ferrand-Prevot.
Chelsie Giles is the headline act in GB’s judo squad for Paris 2024. The 27-year-old won bronze in Tokyo then added European gold and world silver a year later. Giles is in the -52kg class, which is packed with talent such as Japan's Uta Abe, who has proved a hard obstacle for Giles to overcome in the past and has been sweeping up medals lately. GB have won 20 Olympic medals in judo but never a gold, meaning there is history on the line. Women's medal contests begin at 16:49.
It is impossible to look past South Korea in most archery events - and that includes the women's team event, which they have won every time since it was introduced to the Olympics in 1988. Not only were none of the current GB team born then, but their coach was four years old. However, this GB team are made of strong stuff. Penny Healey and Bryony Pitman have each been ranked world number one in the past year, so this could be a real opportunity for them to shine. The event begins at 08:30 with the gold-medal match at 16:11.
Brit watch
Andy Murray will get his final event before retiring under way. He won Olympic gold in London and Rio but is not playing singles at Paris 2024. He is in the doubles though with Dan Evans at Roland Garros. They are due on the Suzanne Lenglen court at about 17:00 and face Japanese duo Kei Nishikori and Taro Daniel.
Helen Glover, an Olympic rowing champion in 2012 and 2016, is back for her fourth Olympics. This time she is in the women’s four alongside returning Olympian Rebecca Shorten and debutants Esme Booth and Sam Redgrave (no relation to Sir Steve). They only got together at the start of the year but were unbeaten at a string of major events in the first half of 2024. Sunday’s rowing begins at 08:00, with the women’s four heats from 11:30.
At the women’s rugby sevens, Team GB face Ireland in the opening group game at 14:30. GB have finished fourth at the past two Olympics, whereas this is the Irish women’s Olympic debut. Ireland go on to play South Africa at 18:00, while GB play Australia at 18:30.
Kimberley Woods will line up for GB in canoe slalom's K1 event (starts 14:30, final at 16:45). Woods had a "heartbreaking" Tokyo Games, finishing 10th, but believes she has grown mentally and physically in the years since. She is a contender in both this event and the kayak cross, which is making its Olympic debut later in the Games.
Eventing heads into its second day, the cross-country, from 09:30. This involves a gallop of nine to 10 minutes through the park at Versailles, twice crossing the centuries-old Grand Canal in what might be one of the Paris Olympics' signature views.
In women’s hockey, Team GB begin their campaign against Spain at 12:15. GB beat Spain in a quarter-final shootout in Tokyo before going on to win bronze. Later on Sunday, at 19:15, the GB men play their second group game against South Africa.
World watch
In gymnastics, it is the women's turn to head through qualifying. Britain are again in the first subdivision at 08:30. The United States and China are in subdivision two from 10:40. Team GB's women took team bronze in Tokyo three years ago. The US, who are the defending world champions, are led once again by Simone Biles – now competing in her third Olympic Games aged 27, with a coincidental total of 27 world and Olympic titles already won.
Men's water polo begins on Sunday and is part one of the day’s Franco-Hungarian action. Water polo is often described as the national sport of Hungary, who won 2023's world title and have nine Olympic gold medals in this event, although none since 2008. What better way to start than against the hosts? France have a tradition of winning the Olympic men's water polo title whenever it's held in Paris – which unfortunately for them has only happened once, a century ago. France play Hungary at 18:30.
Expert knowledge
In women's street skateboarding, where teenagers are often contenders, France will be represented by 14-year-old Lucie Schoonheere. Nobody in the top 10 of this event's world rankings heading into the Olympics is aged older than 19. Japan's Coco Yoshizawa, also 14, is the world number one. The final begins at 16:00.
No sport has provided France with more Olympic medals than fencing – 123 of them at the start of Paris 2024, 30 more than cycling in second place. This brings us to part two of the day's Franco-Hungarian action. If the Hungarians are the strong favourites against France in water polo, the men's epee might give France more of a chance. Hungary’s Gergely Siklosi and Mate Koch are the world number one and two respectively, but when Siklosi lost the Olympic final in 2021, who beat him? France's Romain Cannone. Cannone and veteran team-mate Yannick Borel are both in the world top five and on the team for Paris 2024. Japan and Italy will also be hoping to have a say. Expect the medal events in men's epee and women's foil from about 19:50.
-BBC