Tom Daley wins silver in front of his children to complete set of Olympic medals

by Admin
Tom Daley wins silver in front of his children to complete set of Olympic medals

Tom Daley and Noah Williams secure Team GB’s fifth medal of the Games – Shutterstock/Ryan Browne

A fifth Olympics, a fifth medal and, most importantly for Tom Daley, comeback complete in front of his two children.

After a gold and three previous bronze medals across Daley’s now 16-year Olympic diving career, this was also the first piece of silver in the collection.

Given where he was 18 months ago – new life in Los Angeles and having not dived seriously since Olympic gold in Tokyo – it also rates as perhaps the greatest achievement of the lot.

Noah Williams, after all, is now the fifth different person with whom Daley has won a major championship medal, albeit the first in which he has had to form a virtually remote partnership.

The broad smiles and poolside hug with their coach Jane Figueiredo also suggested that, in the absence of any mistake by the Chinese pairing Junjie Lian and Hao Yang, they always knew that second was probably the realistic limit of their expectations.

Still basing himself in LA with husband Dustin Lance Black and their children Robbie and Phoenix, Daley and Williams have only come together shortly before and during big competitions over the past seven month. And yet you would barely have known it.

Diving with unerring consistency and synergy, they put together a series of dives that tracked almost identically to what Daley managed with Matty Lee in taking gold in the same event three years ago.

The problem was that the Chinese were even more relentless, both in their synchronisation and execution of six dives that barely raised a splash.

With Daley drying himself off before every dive with his rainbow shammy – he has talked about using his global platform to provide inspiration to people in countries where being gay is illegal – they began with the three technically more straightforward dives.

It was quickly clear that this would again be a race between Team GB and the Chinese but, with Lian and Hang diving immediately after Daley and Williams, the British pair were playing catch-up from the first round. In Tokyo, the Chinese had made a decisive mistake in the fourth round – losing more than 20 points with one catastrophic misjudgement – to ultimately lose by just 1.21 points.

There would be no such mistakes here and, with Daley and Williams finishing on a score of 463.44, the best on their comeback and only just behind the 471.81 that Daley and Lee achieved in Tokyo, the second British diving medal of these Games was rarely in doubt.

Daley, who is not competing in the individual events, will now move onto the Eurosport sofa where he will be working as a pundit for their nightly shows. He will be 34 by the time of the next Olympics but has already hinted at continuing for an unprecedented sixth Games in his now home city of LA when a mixed team event could be added to the programme.


Daley and Williams win silver – as it happened


11:38 AM BST

‘An amazing accomplishment’


11:35 AM BST

Another medal for Team GB

Tom Daley speaking to the BBC:

It’s just so special. This time last year deciding to come back, never mind not knowing if I would make the synchro team. Doing it in front of my son who asked me to come back is so special I now have one of every colour. I’ve completed the set.

On diving in front of his sons:

He’s (Robbie) six years old and I hope he will remember some of it. He will be able to touch some of Eiffel Tower.

On diving partner Noah Williams:

I’ve never seen Noah cry in my whole life, I know how much today mean’s him. It is very sad Dave is not hear, but I know Dave and my dad would both be so proud to see us here today.

On his comeback from retirement:

As an athlete, you know to train smarter. You have to prioritise things in your life, not just diving. I was getting emotional just getting prepared for this. My husband has really been there, he’s taken the kids allowing me to travel when I have needed to. A happy athlete is a successful one.

On whether this was his last Olympics:

I don’t know. We will enjoy today and see what the future holds. Right now, I will just go and enjoy time with my little ones.

Daley now has five Olympic medals in total – Clive Rose/Getty Images


11:33 AM BST

Silver for Daley


11:32 AM BST

On the podium

Top three on the podium – Sebastien Bozon/Getty Images


11:31 AM BST

Support from family and friends

Tom Daley’s mum Debbie alongside Matty Lee, who won gold with Tom in Tokyo – Mike Egerton/PA


11:28 AM BST

‘They did us proud’

Scarlett Mew Jensen, who won a bronze medal in dramatic circumstances in the women’s 3m synchro alongside Yasmin Harper on Saturday, has been speaking to the BBC after Daley and Williams secured silver:

That was incredible, the boys did so well and did us proud. For Noah [Williams] to step up like that has been incredible. To come in late like that. He’s done amazing.

If it is the end, he [Daley] has gone out with a bang. The next one is in LA, his home place. He has shown that he is just insanely talented and he can take as long as he wants out and come back and deliver that. It’s just inspirational and it’s incredible to be a part of the team that he is on.


11:23 AM BST

An emotional Jane Figueiredo, the duo’s coach, speaking to the BBC

Excited, fearless, just over the moon for both of them. There has been a lot going on behind the scenes for both of them, to come and achieve a silver medal is absolutely brilliant. China was just too good. We hung in there, but it was brilliant.

I am their coach, so I think they should be better. The games or any of the events, you have to be consistently and emotionally detached. You have to be focused, just execute the skill and everything is outside of that. They just executed today.

For Tom and I, it is like old turkey. We’ve been on this rodeo. It is Noah’s first medal, he lost his beautiful, wonderful coach a few years ago. David Jenkins set him up, I took him the rest of the way. Noah was exceptional today.

It is an emotional thing, it’s not just Xs and Os, it’s three of us with a whole team around us with an amazing London aquatics venue.


11:21 AM BST

Silver for GB

Tom Daley and Noah Williams step onto the second step of the podium with their families and friends cheering them on. They have received great support from the crowd this morning. This is Daley’s fifth Olympics medal, Williams’ first.


11:19 AM BST

Medal time

The three teams on the podium; China, Great Britain and Canada, have made their way out for the medal ceremony. Tom Daley and Noah Williams will be getting their hands on their silver medals in just a few moments.


11:18 AM BST

Show some love for your coach

Jane Figueiredo has been by Tom Daley’s side for so much of his success as his coach and she will be so proud of Daley, who has now won five Olympic medals.

Support from his coach – Mike Egerton/PA


11:14 AM BST

‘Truly deserved’

Safe to say Commonwealth silver medallist diver Tonia Couch absolutely loved that in the BBC studios and has been paying tribute to the GB duo:

Tom Daley is actually a robot. He knows what he’s doing. The pressure on Noah must have been horrendous, I feel so proud of Noah and he should be so, so proud of himself. I don’t think I would’ve been able to deal with it. He was so cool. It was truly deserved today.

They did the practice beforehand, they’ve done about two months together, but the real thing here is the friendship. They get on together so well and that is the thing with this partnership. Consistency is key with the diving, as we saw yesterday with the Australians, every dive counts. The fact they held it together [is impressive].

They kept the Chinese on their toes, China were further in front but they kept them on their toes. Noah’s coach passed away in 2021 and I think that medal was for him today. Every single diver on their last dive held it together, the pressure was on those guys and they nailed it.


11:11 AM BST

Sensational from China

Bravo, bravo – Sebastien Bozon/Getty Images


11:08 AM BST

Final standings

  1. Junjie Lian and Hao Yang (China) 490.35

  2. Tom Daley and Noah Williams (Great Britain) 463.44

  3. Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens (Canada) 422.13

  4. Randal Willars Valdez and Kevin Berlin Reyes (Mexico) 418.65

  5. Kirill Boliukh and Oleksii Sereda (Ukraine) 412.65

  6. Cassiel Rousseau and Dominic Bedggood (Australia) 394.74

  7. Timo Barthel and Jaden Siloh Eikermann Gregorchuk (Germany) 364.41

  8. Gary Hunt and Lois Szymczak (France) 314.58


11:05 AM BST

Five Olympics, five medals

Tom Daley has now won his fifth medal at the Olympics; one gold, this silver and three bronzes. Him and Noah Williams really could not have done any more as the Chinese duo were almost perfect.

Silver for Daley and Williams – Clive Rose/Getty Images


11:02 AM BST

China take gold, GB silver

It has been a clinic from this duo. They have delivered a masterclass in synchronised diving, despite Daley and Williams being incredible in their own right. Lian and Yang score 103.23 to finish on 490.35. That is quite something. Chapeau! China take gold, GB silver, Canada bronze.

Daley and Williams deliver Team GB’s fifth medal of the Games; three silvers, too bronzes.


11:00 AM BST

Brilliant from Team GB

Daley and Williams have been fantastic throughout this final and they deliver another top dive. I am not sure they could do any more. They would have snapped your hand off before the final for that performance. A 93.24 takes GB to 463.44. Over to you Lian and Yang…

Daley and Williams have been fantastic – Clive Rose/Getty Images


10:58 AM BST

GB’s final dive

Mexico come close to overtaking Canada on the last dive but they just fall short, much to the delight of Zsombor-Murray and Wiens. Canada are guaranteed at least a bronze.

Here come Daley and Williams for their last dive. They need just a score of 53 to take silver but they will want to put the pressure on the Chinese duo. Their final dive is a Forward 4½ Somersaults in the tuck position, which is a 3.7 in difficulty, their hardest dive in this final.


10:53 AM BST

Final Canadian dive

Zsombor-Murray and Wiens sit in the bronze medal position going into this final round and they deliver a solid dive which may be enough to secure that bronze. It is a 79.68 which takes them to 422.13. That should be enough for bronze.

Bronze coming for Canada? – Mike Egerton/PA


10:50 AM BST

China still out in front with one round left

Another dive in the 90’s from Lian and Yang as their fifth dive is awarded a 91.80. They lead by 17 points with one dive left but, as we know from the Australian women just the other day, anything can happen with that final dive which gave GB their first medal of these Games.

Standings after round five:

  1. Junjie Lian and Hao Yang (China) 387.12

  2. Tom Daley and Noah Williams (Great Britain) 370.02

  3. Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens (Canada) 342.25

“Daley took a big chest-raising breath before that fifth dive, first time here he has reminded me of the nervous-looking boy he was when we first saw him in 2008. No mistake though, and silver looking good here provided there is no disaster on the final dive.

“Gold a distant dream, China now so far ahead they could recreate the old Peter Kay John Smith’s advert and still win. Actually, that should clearly be the bonus seventh dive in these competitions. A final bonus point awarded for team with the funniest dive.”


10:47 AM BST

Impressive again from GB

That has really consolidated Daley and Williams’ position in second place. They register a score of 87.72 to move to 370.20, more than 25 points clear of Canada. Once again, over to China.

Great shot from under the water just after the GB duo hit the water – Quinn Rooney/Getty Images


10:46 AM BST

Four rounds done, two to go

Into the fifth round we go. Not the best dive from the Canadian duo, who only get 75.48 for their fifth dive to move to 342.45.

Daley and Williams have opted for the Reverse 3½ Somersaults dive in the tuck position. Here they come…


10:40 AM BST

China respond

Pressure, what pressure? Lian and Yang deliver yet another clinical display of diving with a 95.88 to go to 295.32, around 13 points clear of GB.

Standings after round four:

  1. Junjie Lian and Hao Yang (China) 295.32

  2. Tom Daley and Noah Williams (Great Britain) 282.48

  3. Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens (Canada) 266.97

The Mexicans sit in fourth, over 10 points behind Canada.

Chinese duo impressive at the top – Mike Egerton/PA


10:37 AM BST

Stunning from GB

Another terrific dive from Daley and Williams, who register a sensational score of 93.96. What a dive! They now have over 15 points over the Canadian duo. Pressure onto China.

“Real delight from the GB coaches after that fourth dive, exultant hugs and high fives for a job well done. Stats guru Wilson tells me Daley now tracing ahead of his 2021 total.

“In person you can hear when a dive has gone well as well as see it. The “s” of the combined splashing sound should be in perfect unison and there have been a couple of occasions, both from the unfortunate French pair currently coming last, where there has been a clear gap between splashes one and two.

“Daley and Williams doing well on this front, although their synchronised shammy-dropping needs improvement, Daley’s rainbow hitting the ground nearly a full second before Williams’ pale blue.”

Daley and Williams going well – Lee Jin-man/AP


10:35 AM BST

Canada keep pressure on GB

Three more dives left for each team. The Canadian pair of Zsombor-Murray and Wiens land an 83.25 dive to move to 266.97. Over to Daley and Williams, who have opted for the Back 3½ Somersaults in the pike position.


10:30 AM BST

China strengthen their lead

Lian and Yang have made a very impressive start to this final as they secure an 85.44 to be on 199.44 after the third round. Their advantage over Team GB in second is just over 10 points. Standings after round three:

  1. Junjie Lian and Hao Yang (China) 199.44

  2. Tom Daley and Noah Williams (Great Britain) 188.52

  3. Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens (Canada) 183.72


10:28 AM BST

Great dive from GB

That is a clinical dive from Daley and Williams, who deliver a great third dive of 83.52. GB are just under five points clear of Canada after that dive. Over to the Chinese…

GB in a good position after three dives – Mike Egerton/PA


10:27 AM BST

GB up next

Daley and Williams have opted for the Inward 3½ Somersaults for their third dive. Canada, who were level with GB after round two, registered a score of 78.72, which is good but not amazing. The Australian pair are around seven points behind Canada. Here come Daley and Williams…


10:20 AM BST

China flying

They won the World Championships convincingly earlier this year and they are in control already. A 57.60 score with their second round score gives them a nine-point lead. Here are the standings after round two:

  1. Junjie Lian and Hao Yang (China) 114.00

  2. Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens (Canada) 105.00

  3. Tom Daley and Noah Williams (Great Britain) 105.00

“Already beginning to feel like this is a race for silver between GB and Canada, China disappearing over the horizon. Diving stats oracle Jeremy Wilson alongside me tells me that Daley is a couple of points behind where he was at the equivalent stage at Tokyo in 2021, and the only reason GB won on that occasion was a massive mistake from the Chinese team on their fourth dive, when Daley and Lee scored 20 more points. So there is hope, but it might require disaster for another team.”


10:18 AM BST

Good second dive for GB

Daley and Williams have tied the Canadian duo with exactly the same score of 51.60 so the two nations are on exactly the same score after two rounds.


10:16 AM BST

Canada going well

Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens registered 53.40 with their first dive and their second dive is 51.60. They have made a strong start to this final. They lead with Tom Daley and Noah Williams to come next with a Back 1½ Somersaults ½ Twist.

“Added drama here in the penalty shoot-out like dynamic in which Daley and Williams’ main rivals from China must dive after them each round. Much delight from the healthy British contingent as Daley and Williams take the lead after their first dive. It looked near-faultless to my (and let’s be clear here, non-expert) eyes but China’s response is appreciably more synchronised and superb marks follow.

“There is a potential gamble in the ordering of the British team’s final three dives. Daley and Williams’ fourth is rated at 3.6 on the difficulty scale, followed up by a 3.4 then concluding with a 3.7. China also finish with a 3.7 but work up to it incrementally, placing their 3.4 going before the 3.6. Potentially this might put pressure on the Chinese, as the higher difficulty dives bring the potential of higher scores, so if Daley and Williams nail their 3.6 they might take the lead. They’ll need to overtake Canada first, though.”

Canada starting well – Leah Mills/Reuters


10:11 AM BST

China out in front

That is a sensational start from the World Champions from China as Junjie Lian and Hao Yang go top with 56.40. The French duo of Gary Hunt and Lois Szymczak are last on 48.00. Here are the top three after the first round:

  1. Junjie Lian and Hao Yang (China) 56.40

  2. Tom Daley and Noah Williams (Great Britain) 53.40

  3. Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens (Canada) 53.40

“Chinese showing why they are favourites and world champions with virtually flawless first dive – the competition begins with the less complex dives and then moves on to the more technical ones, where Tom Daley’s greater flair is hoped to make a bigger impact.”

China leading – Lee Jin-man/AP


10:08 AM BST

Strong start for GB

Daley and Williams receive an amazing reception before they dive. Their opening dive will be an Inward 1½ Somersaults. Williams had a slightly shaky moment before they went but that is a clinical dive from the duo which will settle any nerves. They register a score of 53.40 to go top for the moment with the Chinese duo next, who are arguably the favourites for gold.


10:07 AM BST

Australia up first

We are under way with the duo of Cassiel Rousseau and Dominic Bedggood. They register a score of 51.00 with their first dive. The Canadian duo up next of Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens usurp the Australians with a score of 53.40.

It is a shaky start from the Ukraine duo of Kirill Boliukh and Oleksii Sereda, who register a 48.60. The Mexican pair Randal Willars Valdez and Kevin Berlin Reyes go third with 50.40. Timo Barthel and Jaden Siloh Eikermann Gregorchuk of Germany register a score of 49.80.

Here come Tom Daley and Noah Williams…


10:01 AM BST

China favourites

“Tom Daley and Noah Williams will dive sixth this month – they will be doing the same sequence of dives as when Tom Daley won gold with Matty Lee three years ago. Past form since Daley’s comeback in World Cup and World Championship events puts them second favourites behind the Chinese divers Junjie Lian and Hao Yang but the consensus in the diving world is that Daley is the one diver who the Chinese fear.

“Gentle warning from the Paris organisers: no flags to be laid over the ‘Paris 24’ logos. Plenty of union flags on show here, Tom Daley wanting his entire family to be present for his fifth Olympics. A highly unusual aspect of his comeback is that he has remained based in Los Angeles and so he and Noah Williams have largely only practiced together during and immediately before competitions over the past nine months.”


09:59 AM BST

The eight duos

  1. Cassiel Rousseau and Dominic Bedggood (Australia)

  2. Nathan Zsombor-Murray and Rylan Wiens (Canada)

  3. Kirill Boliukh and Oleksii Sereda (Ukraine)

  4. Randal Willars Valdez and Kevin Berlin Reyes (Mexico)

  5. Timo Barthel and Jaden Siloh Eikermann Gregorchuk (Germany)

  6. Tom Daley and Noah Williams (Great Britain)

  7. Junjie Lian and Hao Yang (China)

  8. Gary Hunt and Lois Szymczak (France)

All eight teams have been presented to the crowd, with Daley and Williams receiving a great reception. We are ready for action.

“All fun and games here at the Aquatic Centre with a big screen karaoke singalong of Freed From Desire by Gala, although it was preceded by a stern announcement reminding spectators not to cover any Paris 2024 hoarding logos with their national flags. Good to have a clear demarcation around the fun.

“Ten minutes to go and at least half of the seats I can see are still empty. Surely the Parisian public are not turning their back on le diving? Hopefully the inclusion of hometown heroes will swell the crowd. Who doesn’t want to get behind Lois Szymczak and the very un-Frenchly named Gary Hunt?”


09:55 AM BST

Lee injured

One man who knows Tom Daley and Noah Williams well is Matty Lee, who misses these Games after surgery on his spine back in March. Lee won gold with Daley in Tokyo in this event and won Commonwealth gold and World Aquatics Championships silver with Williams. He is there to cheer the duo on.

Gold for Daley and Lee in Tokyo – Adam Davy/PA


09:52 AM BST

Daley’s accolades

  • Olympic champion (Tokyo 2020 alongside Matty Lee)

  • Four-time World Champion

  • Two-time junior World champion

  • Five-time European champion

  • Four-time Commenwealth champion

Daley will become the first British diver to compete at five Games, as Jeremy Wilson outlines.


09:51 AM BST

Relaxed Daley

Break out the knitting and the feigned knowledge about double pikes, it’s the men’s synchronised 10m platform diving final! You can pretend you’re interested in the fortunes of Canadian pair Rylan Wiens and Nathan Zsombor-Murray if you like but we all know the real focus of British interest this morning is the team of Noah Williams and Tom Daley.

Interesting to witness the field going through their warm-ups and seeing how few of their practice dives are off the high platform they will be competing on, most choosing to limber up on the lower platform board, and plenty putting in time on the springboards too.

Daley looking relaxed, apart from some tinkering with proactive tape around his wrists and ankles. He has a fetching rainbow towel as his copilot this morning, and Williams of course, with whom he won World Championship silver in their first competition earlier this year.


09:46 AM BST

Can Daley secure back-to-back golds?

Good morning and welcome to coverage of the Men’s Synchronised 10m Platform where Tom Daley is aiming to win back-to-back gold medals for Team GB. Daley had the honour of being Great Britain’s flag-bearer at the Opening Ceremony on Friday night along with Helen Glover. At Tokyo 2020, Daley won his first Olympic gold alongside Matty Lee, who misses the Games after surgery on a spinal injury in March, and is looking for gold again with Noah Williams. In their first competition in February, they won a world championship silver so can they go one medal better today? Lee has in fact partnered with Williams in recent years, winning Commonwealth gold and World Aquatics Championships silver together in 2022.

Daley had the honour of being a flag-bearer – Naomi Baker/Getty Images

This is Daley’s fifth appearance at the Olympics, having made his debut aged 14 in Beijing in 2008, and he has four medals in the bag including that gold with Lee in Tokyo. His list of accolades is pretty impressive. Having become a world champion aged 15 in 2009, he has gone on to become an Olympic champion, four-time World Champion, two-time junior World champion, five-time European champion and four-time Commonwealth champion. Although Daley has huge Olympic experience, Williams does not. He has just one Olympic event under his belt in the Men’s 10m Platform, finishing 27th so he will be leaning on Daley’s experience to guide him through.

They are up against the formidable Chinese duo of Yang Hao and Lian Junjie, who claimed gold in this event at the World Aquatics Championships in Doha back in February, beating Daley and Williams by nearly 50 points. French hopes rest on their pair of Gary Hunt and Lois Szymczak. Hunt was born in London and raised in Leeds, before moving to France in 2010 and securing French citizenship in 2020. This is his Olympic debut aged 40, the first diver to make his Olympic debut aged 40 or older since Stockholm 1912.

Stay with us for all the coverage as Daley and Williams go for gold, with the action commencing at 10.00 (BST).

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