Summary

  • Peacock retains T44 100m title

  • Swimmer Ellie Robinson, 15, wins S6 50m butterfly

  • Cyclist Cundy wins gold in men's C4 1km time trial

  • 100m finals - Hermitage wins T37, Hahn T38 & Clegg T11 100m

  • Silvers for Jawad & Slater; Bronzes for Cox, Rodgers & Rolfe

  • Watch the Paralympics at channel4.com

  1. Peacock struts his stuffpublished at 00:34 BST 10 September 2016

    So, just the seven casual gold medals today for Great Britain. No biggie.

    Watch Jonnie Peacock's golden moment

    That puts ParalympicsGB on 12 golds overall, behind China's 18, and 27 medals of all colours.

    GB took 34 golds at London 2012 - with eight days of competition remaining, that tally is in jeopardy.

    How many will it be tomorrow? Check out our day-by-day guide to get the lowdown on what to look out for.

    We'll be back tomorrow to do it all again. Join us.

  2. silver medal

    Silver medal - Stephanie Slaterpublished at 00:27 BST 10 September 2016

    Women's 100m butterfly S8

    Did you blink just then? You may have missed another British medal.

    Stephanie Slater has topped off a magnificent day by taking silver in the 100m butterfly S8 final.

    She pushed American favourite Jess Long down into third, with Ukrainian Kateryna Istomina taking gold with a Paralympic record of 1min 9.04secs.

    Stephanie SlaterImage source, PA
  3. Postpublished at 00:24 BST 10 September 2016

  4. paralympic table tennis

    Magic mouthpublished at 00:20 BST 10 September 2016

    Table tennis

    Ibrahim Hamadtou playing table tennis with his mouthImage source, Rex Features

    There are so many magnificent images from the Paralympics, and this one is up among the best of them.

    Egypt's Ibrahim Hamadtou lost both of his arms in a train accident at the age of 10 - but the married father of three has not let that stop him from becoming a international table tennis player.

    Hamadtou plays by holding the bat in his mouth and swinging his head - he typically faces opponents who use their hands.

    Yesterday, he lost his first group game in the class six men's singles to Britain's David Wetherill, who has a bone development disorder.

  5. Postpublished at 00:19 BST 10 September 2016

    Jonnie Peacock just nicked it on the line...

    Actually, it was a victory margin of 0.21secs. Gargantuan. Dominant.

  6. Experience counts for everything - Peacockpublished at 00:17 BST 10 September 2016

    Jonnie Peacock, speaking to Channel 4 after his T44 100m gold medal victory, "It's times like this where you look back on your experience and it's so easy to get distracted. I just got to 40 metres then I kept pushing and that's when I pulled away. 

    "I don't think the pressure was on me. Jarryd (Wallce, USA) has been running really well and I wasn't the favourite in that race. I think and the pressure was all on Jarryd but my experience came through tonight."

  7. Postpublished at 00:16 BST 10 September 2016

    Jonnie Peacock has joked that he would make an engagement ring for Sally Brown, a T46 sprinter, out of bone removed from his ankle.

    Firstly, urgh.

    Secondly, cooooool.

  8. Proud.published at 00:13 BST 10 September 2016

  9. Get Inspiredpublished at 00:13 BST 10 September 2016

    Great Britain are now on 12 gold medals in Rio.

    Have any of those glistening performances inspired you to give it a go yourself?

    Head over to our Get Inspired page for ideas of where to start - clubs and sports.

    Click here to take a look.

  10. Postpublished at 00:10 BST 10 September 2016

    I've had the pleasure of meeting Jonnie Peacock a couple of times - he's everything he's cracked up to be.

    Friendly, pleasant and the complete antithesis of a superstar athlete.

    And it's all being summed up right now as he peels off his numbers to hand to youngsters in the crowd.

    Jonnie PeacockImage source, Reuters
  11. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 00:08 BST 10 September 2016

  12. Peacock delivers againpublished at 00:07 BST 10 September 2016

    Elizabeth Hudson
    BBC Sport's Paralympics reporter in Rio

    It wasn't quite the tension that the T44 100m final had in London - and perhaps the crowd were more engrossed by the amputee high jump ongoing at the far end of the stadium - but it was the same outcome for Jonnie Peacock.

    Peacock bossed the race from the start and after challenging briefly, baseball cap-clad American Jarryd Wallace faded badly

    The Briton has always been proud of his record of delivering on the big stage - and he has just done it again.

    Silver medallist Liam Malone (22) and German bronze medallist Felix Streng (21) can be proud of their performances too.

  13. Postpublished at 00:05 BST 10 September 2016

    There's one gold postbox already in Jonnie Peacock's home village of Doddington, Cambridgeshire.

    I'm not sure they have a second postbox - they might have to paint a phonebox. Or the village sign.

  14. Postpublished at 00:03 BST 10 September 2016

    Tanni Grey-Thompson
    11-time Paralympic champion on BBC Radio 5 live

    I've never seen him run like that. He was just so determined. Simply excellent from Jonnie! 

    Jonnie Peacock celebratesImage source, PA
  15. gold-medal

    Gold medal - Jonnie Peacockpublished at 00:00 BST 10 September 2016

    Men's T44 100m final

    Jonnie Peacock has had them on all toast and he's even eaten the crusts.

    It wasn't the greatest start from the Briton but my word, he blew them away after that.

    The 23-year-old is a two-time T44 100m gold medallist and he's an absolute superstar.

    Peacock finished in 10.81secs - New Zealand's Liam Malone takes silver in 11.02secs and USA's Jarryd Wallace takes bronze in 11.03secs.

    Jonnie Peacock celebratesImage source, PA
  16. Postpublished at 00:00 BST 10 September 2016

    Men's T44 100m final

    They go down on the blocks. Silence in the Olympic Stadium.

    Bang! Go!

    Jonnie PeacockImage source, PA
  17. Postpublished at 23:59 BST 9 September 2016

    Men's T44 100m final (23:58 BST)

    Jonnie Peacock is just 23 remember. So young. He looks cool and calm.

    Jarryd Wallace looks like he's going to run in shades and a cap. Interesting.

    Liam Malone is introduced and he raises his arms in the air without cracking a smile. He's backing himself and some.

  18. Postpublished at 23:57 BST 9 September 2016

    New Zealand's Liam Malone looks in confident mood.

    Jonnie Peacock and Jarryd Wallace bump fists - camaraderie.

  19. Some inspiration for Jonnie?published at 23:56 BST 9 September 2016

  20. Postpublished at 23:55 BST 9 September 2016

    Men's T44 100m final (23:58 BST)

    Jonnie Peacock is a prize fighter. Or a prize Peacock, if you will.

    He performs on the biggest of stages.

    Give us a performance to remember, Jonnie.