Gold medals: 22
Lauren Price
How she did it: Price became the first Welsh fighter to win an Olympic boxing gold medal as she defeated China’s Li Qian to take a 5-0 points victory.
Jason Kenny
How he did it: Kenny was the lead-off rider and sensed a hesitation in his opponents behind as the durney left the track, launching a solo sprint to win the gold medal.
Joseph Choong
How he did it: In a tight finish, Choong battled back past Egypt’s Ahmed Elgendy in the final event, taking the lead with 800m to go to secure a double for Team GB following Kate French’s win in the women’s event.
Galal Yafai
How he did it: Yafai put in a stunning performance to dominate the final against Carlo Paalam of the Philippines. Yafai, 28, gained a 4-1 points decision at the Kokugikan Arena.
Kate French
How she did it: French entered the final event of the modern pentathlon in fifth, but stormed away from the field with a dominant run to win gold.
Katie Archibald and Laura Kenny
How they did it: The British pair dominated the race, winning 10 of the 12 sprints on offer to finish on 78 points, as Kenny became the first British woman to win gold at three Olympic Games.
Matt Walls
How they did it: Walls finished on a total of 153 points and earned Team GB’s first track cycling gold medal at the Tokyo Games.
Ben Maher
Equestrian – Individual Showjumping
How they did it: Maher won gold for Great Britain in the individual jumping final, winning the jump-off with a time of 37.85.
Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre
How they did it: Mills became Great Britain’s most successful female Olympic sailor as she and Eilidh McIntyre won 470 gold after finishing fifth in the medal race, but their earlier performances meant it was enough to hold off silver medallists Poland and France in bronze.
Giles Scott
How they did it: Scott became a double gold medallist after retaining his men’s Finn title after finishing fourth in the final race to take GB’s gold medal tally to 13. GB have now won six successive Olympic titles in sailing’s Finn class and Scott now effectively be forever the reigning Olympic Finn champion with the class being somewhat dropped for Paris 2024 and beyond.
Dylan Fletcher and Stuart Bithell
How they did it: Fletcher and Bithell claimed gold after narrowly holding off Germany in a dramatic finish to win GB’s first ever medal in this class.
Oliver Townend, Tom McEwen and Laura Collett
How they did it: The trio scooped GB’s first eventing team gold since Munich 1972 with a score of 86.30. All three riders qualified for the individual jumping final by posting scores inside the top five overall, with McEwen going on to win silver.
Max Whitlock
How he did it: The reigning champion from Rio led from the front, competing first and setting a score of 15.583 that ensured he would become the first Olympic pommel champion to defend the title since 1980.
Charlotte Worthington
Cycling – women’s freestyle BMX
How she did it: Worthington recovered from a fall on her first run to win a thrilling gold in the women’s BMX park freestyle Olympic final, delivering an action-packed score of 97.50 to snatch gold on her second run.
Kathleen Dawson, Anna Hopkin, James Guy and Adam Peaty
Swimming – 4x100m mixed medley relay
How they did it: The quartet claimed Great Britain’s fourth swimming gold at an Olympics – the first time the nation has won that many at a single Games for 113 years – as they finished clear of China in the first-ever mixed medley relay.
Jonny Brownlee, Jessica Learmonth, Georgia Taylor-Brown and Alex Yee
How they did it: Great Britain finished 14 seconds ahead of the United States in the inaugural mixed relay. The win saw Jonny Brownlee secure his first Olympic gold, after he won silver and bronze medals at the past two Games.
Bethany Shriever
How she did it: Shriever was victorious on her Olympic debut after needing crowd funding to be able to go to Japan. She held off two-time champion Mariana Pajon to win.
Tom Dean, James Guy, Matt Richards and Duncan Scott
Swimming – men’s 4×200m freestyle relay
How they did it: The GB quartet – who also deployed Calum Jarvis in the heats – produced a stunning display to finish a comfortable 3.23secs ahead of the Russian Olympic Committee and just 0.03secs short of the world record.
Tom Dean became the first British male swimmer to win two golds at the same Olympic Games since 1908.
Tom Dean
Swimming – men’s 200m freestyle
How he did it: Dean set a British record of one minute 44.22 seconds to finish 0.04secs ahead of team-mate Duncan Scott. It was the first time since 1908 that two male British swimmers have finished on the Olympic podium together.
Tom Pidcock
How he did it: Pidcock led from midway through the race, finishing ahead of Swiss world number one Mathias Fluckiger. The 21-year-old from Leeds broke a collarbone in training two months ago, but recovered to secure Great Britain’s first mountain biking gold.
Tom Daley and Matty Lee
Diving – men’s synchronised 10 metre platform
How they did it: Daley, who made his Olympic debut at the age of 13, won gold in his fourth Games alongside debutant Lee.
Adam Peaty
Swimming – men’s 100m breaststroke
How he did it: Peaty became the first British swimmer to defend an Olympic title, finishing in a time of 57.37 seconds, 0.06secs clear of nearest rival Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands.
Silver medals: 21
Matt Walls and Ethan Hayter
How they did it: British cyclist Matt Walls’ superb Olympic debut continued as he won a second Tokyo medal with silver in the men’s madison alongside Ethan Hayter. The British pair held the gold medal spot after 10 sprints but then faded before securing silver with a late surge.
CJ Ujah, Zharnel Hughes, Richard Kilty and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake
How they did it: The Team GB quartet put in a superb run and led going into the final straight, but anchor leg Mitchell-Blake was beaten on the line by Italy’s Filippo Tortu.
Laura Muir
How she did it: Muir shattered the British record, overtaking world champion Sifan Hassan on the back straight to claim silver.
Ben Whittaker
Boxing – Men’s light heavyweight
How they did it: Whittaker won Great Britain’s second boxing silver of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games after defeat by Cuba’s Arlen Lopez.
Keely Hodgkinson
How they did it: 19 year-old Hodgkinson won silver with a new British record after finishing behind Athing Mu of the USA.
Pat McCormack
How they did it: McCormack won a silver medal after losing a hard-fought men’s welterweight contest to Cuba’s Roniel Iglesias on points.
Ryan Owens, Jack Carlin and Jason Kenny
How they did it: Team GB took silver in the men’s team sprint pursuit, while the Netherlands claimed gold with a new Olympic record.
Katie Archibald, Laura Kenny, Josie Knight and Neah Evans
Cycling – Women’s team pursuit
How they did it: Team GB won silver in the women’s team pursuit final after Germany broke the world record to win gold.
John Gimson and Anna Burnet
How they did it: Gimson and Burnet secured silver in the mixed Nacra 17 class behind the Italian duo of Ruggero Tita and Caterina Banti, after finishing fifth in Tuesday’s medal race.
Emily Campbell
How she did it: Lying fourth after the snatch, Campbell lifted 161kg in the clean and jerk to secure a spot on the podium and become Britain’s first ever female Olympic weightlifting medallist.
Tom McEwen
How he did it: McEwen was third after the eventing stage and then rode Toledo de Kerser into the silver medal position.
Luke Greenbank, Adam Peaty, James Guy, Duncan Scott and James Wilby
How they did it: Great Britain won a record eighth swimming medal in Tokyo – the quartet of Scott, Adam Peaty, Luke Greenbank and James Guy finishing 0.73 seconds behind gold-medal winners USA. Wilby swam in the heats in place of the rested Peaty.
Kye Whyte
How he did it: Whyte earned a historic first medal for Great Britain in BMX racing, winning silver by finishing just behind the Netherlands’ Niek Kimmann.
Duncan Scott
How he did it: Scott won his third Tokyo medal after finishing behind China’s gold medal winner Wang Shun.
Mallory Franklin
How she did it: Franklin won silver in the first-ever Olympic women’s canoe slalom C1 event after finishing second behind Australia’s Jessica Fox.
Tom Barras, Jack Beaumont, Angus Groom and Harry Leask
Rowing – men’s quadruple sculls
How they did it: The British crew held off late charges from Australia and Poland to win Great Britain’s first gold in the event.
Duncan Scott
Swimming – men’s 200m freestyle
How he did it: Scott won his third medal of the Tokyo Olympics and Great Britain’s sixth in the pool with silver after finishing behind winner Wang Shun of China.
Georgia Taylor-Brown
Triathlon – women’s individual
How she did it: Taylor-Brown sustained a puncture in the bike ride, but fought back to win a place on the podium behind Bermuda’s Flora Duffy. The 27-year-old had suffered a leg injury that had left her on crutches just 12 weeks earlier.
Lauren Williams
How she did it: Williams, a reserve in Rio five years ago, lost to Croatia’s Matea Jelic in a tight gold-medal bout.
Alex Yee
How he did it: Yee, making his Olympic debut, led for much of the 10km run before being overtaken by Kristian Blummenfelt of Norway.
Bradly Sinden
How he did it: Sinden lost out to Uzbekistan’s Ulugbek Rashitov in a see-saw gold-medal bout.
Bronze medals: 22
Josh Kerr
How he did it: Kerr, who only went through the first round heats as a fastest loser, ran the race of his life – a huge personal best of 3:29.05 – to win bronze, just four hundredths off a silver.
Tom Daley
How he did it: Daley won bronze in the men’s 10m platform diving following an enthralling final. The 27-year-old was in a three-way tussle for gold with Chinese pair Cao Yuan and Yang Jian.
Asha Philip, Imani-Lara Lansiquot, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita
How they did it: The GB team overcame a scratchy first baton exchange between Philip and Lansiquot to finish third, 0.2 seconds clear of Switzerland.
Jack Carlin
How they did it: After losing to eventual gold medal winner Harrie Lavreysen in the semi-finals, Carlin defeated Denis Dmitriev of the Russian Olympic Committee in the bronze medal contest.
Team GB
How they did it: The 2016 champions beat India in a thrilling bronze-medal match. GB led 2-0 early on, but India struck back to take a 3-2 lead in the third quarter only for GB to level and then win it through Grace Balsdon.
Holly Bradshaw
Athletics – Women’s pole vault
How they did it: Bradshaw claimed Britain’s second track and field medal in Tokyo and finally landed her first major championship podium finish with pole vault bronze.
Liam Heath
How they did it: Heath claimed bronze in a photo finish after making a “hesitant start” to the defence of his Olympic men’s kayak single 200m. The 36-year-old clocked 35.202 seconds to edge out Hungary’s Kolos Csizmadia for third place.
Frazer Clarke
Boxing – Men’s super heavyweight
How they did it: Clarke was stopped by Uzbekistan’s Bakhodir Jalolo in the third round and ends his Olympic campaign with a bronze medal.
Sky Brown
How they did it: At 13 years and 23 days, Brown claimed bronze and made history as Great Britain’s youngest-ever summer Olympic medal winner.
Jack Laugher
How they did it: Laugher claimed an Olympic bronze medal in the final of the men’s 3m springboard and finished with 518.00 points as China’s Xie (558.75) and compatriot Wang Zongyuan (534.90) took the top two spots.
Declan Brooks
How he did it: Brooks’ second run of 90.8 was an improvement on his opening effort of 89.4, moving him up into the medal positions. Brooks almost missed out on the Games after knocking himself out during the World Championships in June.
Karriss Artingstall
Boxing – Women’s featherweight
How she did it: Artingstall guaranteed herself a medal with a quarter-final split-decision win against Australia’s Skye Nicolson. She was unable to progress to the gold-medal match, losing to Japan’s Irie Sena.
Emma Wilson
Sailing – Women’s Windsurfer RS:X
How she did it: Wilson was guaranteed a medal going into the medal event after winning four of her previous races. She was second in the final behind France’s Charlene Picon, who took silver, while a sixth place finished was enough to win China’s Lu Yunxiu gold.
Bryony Page
How she did it: Page claimed bronze in the women’s trampoline final to add to her silver medal in Rio after finishing behind China’s Zhu Xueying, who picked up gold, and Chinese compatriot Liu Lingling, who took silver.
Luke Greenbank
Swimming – Men’s 200m backstroke
How he did it: Greenbank finished behind the Russian Olympic Committee’s world champion Evgeny Rylov, who took gold with a new Olympic record, while the USA’s Ryan Murphy claimed silver.
Josh Bugajski, Jacob Dawson, Tom George, Mohamed Sbihi, Charles Elwes, Oliver Wynne-Griffith, James Rudkin, Tom Ford and cox Harry Fieldman
How they did it: The British eight were pipped to silver by Germany as New Zealand took gold.
Matthew Coward-Holley
How he did it: Coward-Holley finished third and only missed out by a shot on a gold medal play-off.
Charlotte Dujardin
Equestrian – individual dressage
How she did it: Dujardin became Great Britain’s most-decorated female Olympian with six medals, edging out German Dorothee Schneider with a mark of 88.543% in the final run.
Charlotte Dujardin, Charlotte Fry and Carl Hester
How they did it: The Great Britain trio scored 7,723.0, finishing behind the United States and Germany as Dujardin drew level with rower Dame Katherine Grainger and tennis player Kathleen McKane Godfree on five Olympic medals.
Jennifer Gadirova, Jessica Gadirova, Alice Kinsella and Amelie Morgan
Gymnastics – women’s artistic team all-around
How they did it: Great Britain’s team were seventh after the first two pieces of apparatus, but a score of 14.033 from Amelie Morgan in the team’s final floor display ensured a podium finish for a team that featured the 16-year-old Gadirova twins.
Bianca Walkden
How she did it: Walden lost in the final second of her semi-final but bounced back to beat Poland’s Aleksandra Kowalczuk 7-3 in the bronze-medal match.
Chelsie Giles
How she did it: Giles won Great Britain’s first medal of the Tokyo Olympics, beating Switzerland’s Fabienne Kocher in her bronze-medal match.