England have beaten New Zealand 4-2 on penalties in PROPER hockey to win bronze after the match finished 3-3 in normal time
Australia have beaten India 4-0 to win gold - their fifth victory in five Commonwealth Games hockey tournaments. There has NEVER been a Commonwealth Games men's hockey final without either Australia or New Zealand in it.
Glasgow 2014: England men beat New Zealand to win hockey bronze
BBC News
3 August
Jackson scored the winner having converted two penalty corners during normal time
England's men beat New Zealand on penalties in a thrilling match to win Commonwealth Games hockey bronze.
After falling behind in the first half, England twice took the lead before being pegged back to 3-3.
New Zealand's Blair Hilton and Simon Child failed to beat England keeper George Pinner with penalties, and Ashley Jackson converted the winner.
Australia beat India 4-0 to win gold - their fifth victory in five Commonwealth Games hockey tournaments.
England's men, who
lost to Australia in the semi-finals, claimed their first medal since hockey made its Games debut in Kuala Lumpur in 1998.
The bronze medal also ends a run of fourth-place finishes at the last Commonwealth Games, the Olympic Games and the recent World Cup.
"Four years ago, we lost to New Zealand on flick penalties so it's the other way around now," said England captain Barry Middleton.
"We're trying to turn the tide on the English losing on penalties. We've started to do it and the girls have started as well. We've got the ability and skill."
Coach Bobby Crutchley added: "It was a very tough game for both teams. I'm happy the guys got rewarded with a bronze medal this time because we have finished fourth too many times."
Childs had given New Zealand the lead with a strong run and finish and England looked rattled when first Iain Lewers and then Jackson were sin-binned.
The match turned on a dramatic four minutes before the break, when Alastair Brogdon and Jackson gave England the lead before Andy Hayward levelled at 2-2 with a penalty corner.
Jackson's penalty corner prowess put England within sight of victory in the second half, but New Zealand's star man Childs responded to force the shootout.
BBC Sport - Glasgow 2014: England men beat New Zealand to win hockey bronze
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Goodbye Glasgow 2014. Roll on Gold Coast City 2018:
Glasgow 2014: City set for end of Commonwealth Games
BBC Sport
3 August 2014
Kylie Minogue (top left) and Scottish acts Lulu (bottom right) and Deacon Blue (bottom left) will perform at the closing ceremony at Hampden Park tonight. Kylie's performance will represent the Commonwealth Games' transfer to her native Australia, where it will be held at Gold Coast City near Brisbane in Queensland in 2018
Kylie Minogue, Lulu, Deacon Blue and more than 2,000 performers will bring the curtain down on the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow later.
A crowd of 40,000 people will watch the 90-minute closing ceremony begin at 21:00 BST inside Hampden Stadium, with millions more watching on TV.
Organisers say the theme of the show is "All Back To Ours", with a narrative of a "typical night out in Glasgow".
It follows a successful Games for Team Scotland, who have topped 50 medals.
Ceremony artistic director David Zolkwer said the show would reflect a spontaneous "we don't want this moment to end" feel.
He said: "It's going to be an emotional show - a celebration of a job well done, bitter sweet, proud, inclusive, utterly and uniquely Glaswegian but still typically outward looking, generous in spirit and profoundly human. Above all it'll be a great party."
During the ceremony, Glasgow will officially pass on the host city mantle to Australia's Gold Coast for 2018.
Hampden, which hosted the athletics during the Games, will be transformed with more than 160 tonnes of staging, 3,000 props and 454 flags.
Glasgow singer Lulu will be one of the main performers.
During a 50-year career, the Scot has racked up hits with "To Sir with Love", from the film of the same name, the title song to the James Bond film, "The Man with the Golden Gun", the Eurovision Song Contest winning "Boom Bang-a-Bang" and her most famous song, "Shout".
Scottish band Deacon Blue, formed in Glasgow in the 1980s, will also take to the stage.
Boxers Josh Taylor and Charlie Flynn added two more golds to Scotland's tally on the penultimate day of the Games
Australia's hot and sunny Gold Coast is hosting the 2018 Commonwealth Games
The closing ceremony will see one of Scotland's most successful bands, with 12 UK top 40 singles and two number one albums, perform to their biggest ever global audience.
Others to feature include Dougie MacLean, who wrote Caledonia, and Glasgow synthpop band Prides.
Organisers also said there would be some surprise acts, but would not confirm if the show will include The Proclaimers, whose I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles) has become a Games anthem at the Scottish national stadium.
But perhaps the biggest name to perform on the night will be Australian singer and actress Kylie Minogue.
The 46-year-old released her 12th studio album this year and will soon embark on a 33-date UK tour.
Her performance will represent the Games' transfer to her native Australia.
Bowler Alex 'Tattie' Marshall will be the flag bearer for Team Scotland
Glaswegian humour: Glasgow's famous traffic cone-wearing Duke of Wellington statue has special light-up head gear for the closing ceremony
The Opening Ceremony occurred at Celtic Park, but the Closing Ceremony tonight will take place at Hampden Park (above), Scotland's national football stadium, where the athletics events were held
Thousands of ordinary people are also expected to take part, fitting in with a major theme of the opening ceremony on 23 July of giving ordinary people a role in the Games.
Many of those taking part will be Clydesiders, some of the 15,000 volunteers who were drafted in to help athletes and spectators throughout the Games.
And carrying the flag for Team Scotland will be bowler Alex 'Tattie' Marshall, who won golds in the men's pairs and fours at Glasgow 2014, adding to his pairs golds at the 2002 and 2006 Games.
Closing ceremony parties are also being held at the Glasgow Green and Kelvingrove Bandstand live sites.
There will be music and entertainment, before the ceremony at Hampden is shown on the big screens.
The closing ceremony will mark the end of an almost seven-year journey for Glasgow that began on 9 November 2007 when the city was awarded the Games.
When the dust settles on Monday, the focus will begin to turn to what legacy the sporting extravaganza has left behind and whether it was worth the time, effort and huge amount of public money spent.
BBC News - Glasgow 2014: City set for end of Commonwealth Games
The only thing funny is english patriotism over sports you don't have any participation in, and you yourself have no athletic skills.
We must have some athletic skills. We're top of the medals table. Just as London 2012 showed, the English are better than the Canadians at sports that aren't play on snow and ice.