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Will Bayley struggles to control emotions after progressing to gold medal match

Reigning Paralympic champion Will Bayley booted an advertising board with joy after progressing to the gold medal match of the class seven table tennis with a nail-biting win in Tokyo.

Kent-born Bailey was forced to save a match point as he survived a stunning comeback from China’s Liao Keli in an enthralling semi-final, where the momentum shifted throughout.

He was in a commanding position at 2-0 and eventually prevailed 3-2, edging the deciding game 12-10 before deliriously kicking his way out of the arena, for which he indifferently accepted a yellow card.

The 33-year-old, who worked his way back from a serious knee injury suffered on Strictly Come Dancing in 2019 to be at the Games, will face another Chinese player, Yan Shuo, in Sunday’s final – his third in succession at the Paralympics – hoping for a repeat of his triumph in Rio.

“It was pure relief and surprise as well because there were thoughts going through my mind at some points in that match that I had thrown it away,” Bayley said of his animated response to victory.

“I showed some real guts at the end and I played some really big points because Keli didn’t stop.”

Elsewhere in Japan on Saturday, Bayley’s team-mates Paul Karabardak and Jack Hunter-Spivey, and powerlifter Micky Yule each won bronze, while GB’s wheelchair rugby team are guaranteed a first Paralympic medal after reaching the final.

Karabardak lost his class six semi-final to American Ian Seidenfeld 3-0 but still collected his first Paralympic medal at the fourth time of asking, before Hunter-Spivey was beaten in the last four of the class five competition.

Afghanistan veteran Yule, who lost his left leg after stepping on an improvised explosive device while serving with the Royal Engineers in 2010, managed 182kg on his final lift in the men’s -72 kg category.

In the rugby at Yoyogi National Stadium, Jim Roberts scored 20 tries and Aaron Phipps 17 as Britain defeated hosts Japan 55-49 to reach Sunday’s gold medal showdown with the United States.

There was also a bronze for wheelchair fencer Dimitri Coutya – his third of the Games – in the men’s foil individual category B event.

ParalympicsGB are on track for medal in the equestrian team test.

Sir Lee Pearson, Natasha Baker and Sophie Wells sit third overnight with a total score of 154.254 and in the best position of the teams with one athlete still left to ride.

Grade II rider Pearson, on his homebred horse Breezer, scored 77.636 before Grade III star Baker added 76.618 on Keystone Dawn Chorus. Wells rides Don Cara on Sunday with gold medal hopes still alive.

GB thrashed Australia 75-38 in women’s wheelchair basketball to reach the quarter-finals, while the men’s team recorded a thrilling 64-63 win over defending champions the United States ahead of completing the pool stage against Iran on Sunday.

Opening ceremony flagbearer John Stubbs, who at 56 is GB’s oldest squad member, exited the men’s individual compound open archery event.

He suffered a dramatic last-16 shoot-off defeat to Slovakia’s Marian Marecak, while team-mate Nathan MacQueen was also eliminated.

Defending champion Gordon Reid and beaten Rio finalist Alfie Hewett progressed in the men’s singles tennis, while there were also safe passages for Lucy Shuker and Jordanne Whiley in the women’s draw.

Andy Lapthorne was another victor but fellow quads player Antony Cotterill was eliminated.

On the first day of triathlon, Fran Brown and Alison Peasgood narrowly missed out on podium places, finishing fourth in the women’s PTS2 and PTVI respectively in times of 1:19:42 and 1:11:47.

Peasgood was just two seconds off bronze.

Michael Taylor was eighth in the men’s PTS4 at Odaiba Marine Park and Dave Ellis did not finish in the men’s PTVI.