France overcame Australia 74-70 after overtime to move a step closer to a quarter-final place in the women's Basketball competition at London 2012, but there was disappointment for Team GB.
France took control of the game in the third quarter, with a Celine Dumerc three-pointer sparking a 10-0 run that put them on top 43-34.

Their lead was 52-39 on Emilie Gomis's free throws, but the Opals began to rally.

Jenna O'Hea and Lauren Jackson had threes as they brought it back to 52-51.

Australia finally regained the lead with four minutes left to go through Samantha Richards but they could not hold it.

Sandrine Gruda's lay-up made it 64-61 and Australia lost both Jackson and Liz Cambage who fouled out.

France appeared to have it won when Belinda Snell missed a three and Gomis broke clear, but she missed a wide-open lay-up, and Snell made her pay with a half-court shot.

However, France held their nerve to edge overtime.

Gomis led France with 22 points, while Dumerc contributed 13. Suzy Batkovic scored 17 for Australia.

Meanwhile, Great Britain women's coach Tom Maher believes his team's lack of experience cost them a first-ever Olympic win as they let slip a late lead against Canada.

Britain had been up 61-57 with six minutes left in the game but then seemed to fall apart, allowing Canada to romp home on a 16-4 charge to win 73-65.

Britain were the architects of their own downfall, turning the ball over several times with careless passes.

'I think it was composure,' said Maher, who is coaching at his fifth Olympic Games. 'We threw the ball away.'

Elsewhere, China continued their impressive start in Group A as they cruised to a 83-58 victory over Croatia, while Turkey beat the Czech Republic, Russia beat Brazil and The USA ran up a 90-38 victory over Angola.
 
Robeisy Ramirez Carrazana produced a typically classy performance as Cuba marked their return to the Olympic Boxing ring intent on making up for their intense disappointment in Beijing.
For the first time since 1972, the Cuban boxing team left the Games in the Chinese capital with no gold medals to their name, but the display by 18-year-old Ramirez Carrazana suggests their famed production line is showing no sign of slowing.

The 2010 world youth champion picked apart Japan's Katsuaki Susa 19-7 to move into the last 16.

Ramirez Carrazana was just one of a number of impressive Fly Weights in action in what could well prove to be the most competitive division of the Games.

Frenchman Nordine Oubaali looked powerful in outclassing Afghanistan's sole boxing representative Ajmal Faisal 22-9, while Thailand's Chatchai Butdee - who is next up for the Cuban - impressed beating Turkey's Selcuk Eker 24-10.

Mongolia's former world silver medallist Tugstsogt Nyambayar was another potential medal contender at Fly Weight as he dispatched Azerbaijan's Elvin Mamishzada, himself a former world quarter-finalist, 18-11.

At Light Heavyweight, Ecuador's Carlos Gongora survived a torrid last three minutes to beat Azerbaijan's Vatan Huseynli 9-8.

Earlier, Ihab Almatbouli made history as Jordan's first Olympic boxer and marked the occasion by marching into the last 16 of the 81kg division with a powerful 19-7 win over Nigeria's Lukmon Lawal.

Australia's world number two Damien Hooper pulled out a fantastic last round to beat USA's Marcus Browne 13-11. Trailing by a point heading into the last, Hooper poured in the punches and forced Browne to take a standing count.