Saturday 13 August 2016 04:37, UK
Team GB took their gold medal tally to seven on Friday as Sir Bradley Wiggins became Britain's most decorated Olympic athlete.
The 2012 Tour de France champion was joined by Owain Doull, Steven Burke and Ed Clancy in the four-man team event, but they had a tough time in getting to grips with Australia in the final before pulling clear in the final kilometre.
"It's just more relief really, than anything," Wiggins said. "I can wake up now [on] Monday and not have to have this."
The gold was Britain's third of the day, with the other two both coming in quick succession in the rowing.
There was also success for Ireland as Gary and Paul O'Donovan scooped their nation's first medal of the Rio Olympics, clinching silver in the lightweight men's double sculls.
Bryony Page took a superb and unexpected silver medal in the women's trampoline, becoming the first Briton to win a medal in the discipline at Olympic or World level.
Dujardin posted the second best score of Friday's Grand Prix individual event and will go into Monday's freestyle competition looking to defend her title from London 2012.
Andy Murray is one win away from the men's singles final after again being taken to three sets in his quarter-final, this time by America's Steve Johnson.
The athletics programme began on Friday and there were positive performances from defending champion Jessica Ennis-Hill and Katarina Johnson-Thompson in the heptathlon.
London 2012 long jump champion Greg Rutherford overcame a scare to qualify in 10th for the final.
Another Team GB silver is guaranteed at Guanabara Bay with windsurfer Nick Dempsey certain of second place in his competition with one race left, which takes place on Sunday. He cannot move up or down from that position.
But Britain's men crashed out of the hockey tournament as a 1-1 draw with Spain saw them fail to make it back into the top-four in their group.