There was a silver and two bronze medals for players with Bath connections on the final day of judo competition at Glasgow 2014.
Gemma Gibbons repeated her famous London 2012 achievement by winning silver in the women's under-78kg section.
She was beaten by Wales' Natalie Powell moments before her husband, Scottish flag-bearer Euan Burton, brought the house down at the SECC with a memorable under-100kg gold medal triumph.
Gibbons said: "I wasn't the better player so that means I'm walking away with a silver medal. It's not what I wanted and it's not what I came for so I'm not happy.
"I'll go back and I've got lots to work on before the World Championships coming up in four weeks. I have to look back at what I did wrong and try to improve those points.
"There were no specific injuries holding me back – I just wasn't good enough. I've got lots of injuries at the moment and my fitness is not there yet but I knew that coming into the tournament.
"I knew I still wanted gold and wouldn't be happy with anything less."
Gibbons' fellow University of Bath graduate, Andy Burns, and current Team Bath judoka Gary Hall were the bronze medallists in the men's under-90kg class.
Both suffered defeats in the quarter-finals after winning their round of 16 matches, with Hall losing to eventual gold medallist Zak Piontek of South Africa.
They recovered to progress from the repechage and then won their respective bronze medal matches on Saturday evening. Hall overcame Ryan Dill-Russell of New Zealand, while Burns beat Australia's Mark Anthony.
Hall said: "It feels great to win bronze as there was a lot of hard work involved in preparation for this.
"My dad started off a judo club and the whole family has trained there. He's very proud of me for sure."
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