Forty-three different Team England athletes were among the medallists at Paris 2024, with six of them winning gold.

Keely Hodgkinson, who won silver at the most recent Commonwealth Games, went one better in the French capital with her stunning women’s 800m success, while plenty of her teammates from Birmingham 2022 continued to shine on the international stage.

Alex Yee added to his two Commonwealth golds with his memorable success in the men’s triathlon, overtaking Hayden Wilde towards the closing stages of a dramatic race, while the 26-year-old also won mixed relay bronze alongside Georgia Taylor-Brown, Sam Dickinson and Beth Potter.

In the pool, Tom Dean, who won a remarkable seven medals in Birmingham, landed gold in the 4x200m freestyle alongside James Guy, a Team England legend who won his first Commonwealth gold at Glasgow 2014 and has collected 13 medals at the competition in all.

Team England cyclists Sophie Capewell and Katy Marchant were successful in the women’s team sprint in Paris, alongside Emma Finucane, to add Olympic gold to their Commonwealth Games medal hauls.

Among the Team England stars to earn silvers were Katarina Johnson-Thompson, who collected a women’s heptathlon Olympic medal at the fourth attempt, Tom Daley, who signed off his career in style alongside Noah Williams in the men’s 10m synchro, and Matt Hudson-Smith, who shone in the men’s 400m.

Emily Campbell, Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix and Lewis Richardson, who claimed Team GB’s sole boxing medal, were among Team England’s Olympic bronze medallists, as was Jake Jarman, the gymnast who became a household name when he won four golds as part of Team England at Birmingham 2022 and took floor bronze in Paris.

The full list of Team England medallists at Paris 2024 is as follows:

Gold
  • Keely Hodgkinson (athletics - women’s 800m)
  • Alex Yee (men’s triathlon)
  • Katy Marchant (track cycling – women’s sprint)
  • Sophie Capewell (track cycling – women’s sprint)
  • Tom Dean (swimming – men’s 4x200m freestyle)
  • James Guy (swimming – men’s 4x200m freestyle)
Silver
  • Dina Asher-Smith (athletics – women’s 4x100m)
  • Daryll Neita (athletics – women’s 4x100m)
  • Imani-Lara Lansiquot (athletics – women’s 4x100m)
  • Bianca Williams (athletics – women’s 4x100m)
  • Katarina Johnson-Thompson (athletics – women’s heptathlon)
  • Matt Hudson-Smith (athletics – men’s 400m)
  • Tom Daley (diving – men’s 10m synchro)
  • Noah Williams (diving – men’s 10m synchro)
  • Ben Proud (swimming – men’s 50m freestyle)
  • Adam Peaty (swimming – men’s 100m breaststroke)
  • Dan Bigham (track cycling – men’s team pursuit)
  • Ethan Hayter (track cycling – men’s team pursuit)
  • Ethan Vernon (track cycling – men’s team pursuit)
  • Ollie Wood (track cycling – men’s team pursuit)
  • Charlie Tanfield (track cycling – men’s team pursuit)
  • Hamish Turnbull (track cycling – men’s team sprint)
  • Anna Henderson (road cycling – women’s time trial)
  • Amber Rutter (shooting – women’s skeet)
Bronze
  • Emily Campbell (weightlifting – women’s +81kg)
  • Anthony Harding (diving – men’s 3m synchro)
  • Jack Laugher (diving – men’s 3m synchro)
  • Yasmin Harper (diving – women’s 3m synchro)
  • Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix (diving – women’s 10m synchro)
  • Lois Toulson (diving – women’s 10m synchro)
  • Noah Williams (diving – men’s 10m platform)
  • Lewis Richardson (boxing – men’s 71kg)
  • Georgia Taylor-Brown (triathlon – mixed relay)
  • Alex Yee (triathlon – mixed relay)
  • Sam Dickinson (triathlon - mixed relay)
  • Jake Jarman (gymnastics – men’s floor)
  • Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake (athletics – men’s 4x100m)
  • Zharnel Hughes (athletics – men’s 4x100m)
  • Richard Kilty (athletics – men’s 4x100m)
  • Toby Harries (athletics – men’s 4x400m)
  • Matt Hudson-Smith (athletics – men’s 4x400m)
  • Victoria Ohuruogu (athletics – women’s 4x400m)
  • Jodie Williams (athletics – women’s 4x400m)
  • Lina Nielsen (athletics – women’s 4x400m)
  • Amber Anning x2 (athletics – women’s 4x400m and mixed 4x400m)
  • Josie Knight (track cycling – women’s team pursuit)