Derbyshire 307 (Hosein 83*, A Hughes 55, Shreck 4-78) and 286 for 8 (Madsen 134*, Hosein 58) lead Leicestershire 247 (Cosgrove 95*, Davis 4-68) by 346 runsScorecard Wayne Madsens 23rd first-class century for Derbyshire has given his team an excellent chance of ending their county championship drought in the Division Two match against Leicestershire at Derby.Derbyshire were in trouble at 57 for 5, a lead of only 117, but Madsen and wicketkeeper Harvey Hosein, 58, added 143 in 42 overs to put the home side on course for a first four day win of the season.Leicestershire skipper Mark Cosgrove had made an unbeaten 95 and Clint McKay claimed his 50th championship wicket of the summer but Madsens unbeaten 134 guided Derbyshire to 286 for 8 at the close, a lead of 346.Cosgrove had two aims when play started, to get to three figures and to restrict Derbyshires lead, but Leicestershire added only 19 runs in an hour for the last two wickets.Tom Milnes found some away swing to take the outside edge of Richard Joness bat and although Charlie Shreck stayed with Cosgrove for nearly nine overs, Tony Palladino had him caught at third slip off his first ball of the day.Cosgrove deserved a hundred for the way he had battled with a damaged hand to keep his side in the game but his bowlers hit back strongly either side of lunch to regain the initiative.Ben Slater had already survived a confident appeal for a catch behind before he clipped Clint McKay low to midwicket and Derbyshire captain Billy Godleman quickly followed when he played on to a ball that kept a little low.Signs of uneven bounce were both good and bad news for Leicestershire but their hopes of chasing a modest target in the fourth innings rose when Alex Hughes was run out by a direct hit after Madsen called him through for a sharp single.When Neil Broom was lbw for three to one that nipped back from Neil Dexter fourth ball after lunch, Derbyshire were 32 for 4 and in danger of letting the game slip away but although Tom Wood fell to Shreck nine overs later, it was the signal for the game to take another twist.Perhaps the run-out of Hughes had provided Madsen with added motivation or maybe it was because he was batting against Leicestershire who must be fed up of bowling at him.He has now scored four centuries against them and this latest one was his fifth of the season and his fourth in the last nine championship matches. Hosein completed his second fifty of the match and Tom Milnes and Tony Palladino helped take the lead well past 300 but the day belonged to Madsen. Vans Shoes Wholesale Store . The 25-year-old Japanese star has officially been posted by his club team, the Rakuten Golden Eagles. Vans Shoes Discount . -- The proud fathers huddled near the Dallas Stars dressing room, smiling, laughing and telling stories while wearing replica green sweaters of their sons team. http://www.vanssalestore.com/ . The 27-year-old Scrivens will be joining his third NHL club since signing with the Toronto Maple Leafs as a free agent in 2010. The move also reunites with him with head coach Dallas Eakins from their time together with the American Hockey Leagues Toronto Marlies. Cheap Vans SK8 . Dusautoir, the former World Player of the Year, sustained a torn bicep playing for Toulouse in the Heineken Cup on Saturday. The flanker, who has played 65 times for France, is expected to be out for up to four months. Cheap Vans Shoes . Thats not a comment on the suspension that banished the Portland Winterhawks general manager and coach from his Western Hockey League teams bench for most of the 2012-13 season. Great Britains Alistair Brownlee has become the first triathlete to retain an Olympic title as he led brother Jonny to a family gold and silver in Rio.The brothers, who finished first and third in London, did not put a foot wrong in front of packed crowds on Copacabana.It came down to a race between them and Alistair made his break on the third lap of the run, pulling away to claim a dominant victory Jonny comfortably held on for silver, making the brothers the first to finish one and two at an Olympics since Italians Piero and Raimondo DInzeo in equestrian in 1960.The final gap to Jonny was six seconds, with Henri Schoeman taking bronze for South Africa.Team GB sailors?Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark have brought their 470 partnership to a dream end by wrapping up Olympic gold.Four years on from taking silver on the home waters of Weymouth and Portland, the duo arrived in Brazil determined to go one better.It was a challenge Mills and Clark met with aplomb, producing an opening series as impressive as it was consistent to see them head into the womens 470 medal race all but assured of gold.The British duo merely had to complete the double-point medal race without disqualification and duly did so, easing home in eighth in the delayed finale to rubber-stamp glory.Marcus Ellis and Chris Langridge won Great Britains first Olympic badminton medal since 2004 -- and its first ever in the mens doubles.The pair triumphed 21-18, 19-21, 21-10 in the mens doubles bronze medal match against Chinas Biao Chai and Hong Wei at Riocentro.Ellis and Langridge won a tense opening game before the Chinese drew level when Ellis served into the net, but the British combbination stormed away with the decider and secured a podium place.ddddddddddddThe last Britons to collect an Olympic badminton medal were Nathan Robertson and Gail Emms in the Athens Games mixed doubles.Elsewhere in Kayaking, Liam Heath and Jon Schofield have claimed a silver medal for Team GB, an upgrade of the bronze medal the pair won at London 2012.The pair started impressively and maintained their pace to cross the line in 32.368 seconds.As soon as we saw it on the board, Jon absolutely went mental.?Heath said upon returning to dry land.Great Britains men angrily defended their medal prospects in the 4x100 metres relay after only sneaking into the final.Running from the inside, the quartet of Richard Kilty, Harry Aikines-Aryeetey, James Ellington and Chijindu Ujah came home third in their semifinal in 38.06 seconds.The time ranked them seventh of the eight qualifiers for the final and Ellington said they would be praying and keeping their fingers crossed for a better lane. Those prayers, though, were not answered.?It would have been 37.7secs in a better lane, said Ellington. Its (38.06s) probably the fastest time ever from lane one, so we werent playing it safe. This is the Olympics, so weve got to lay it down in the heats and the finals.Britains womens quartet of Asha Philip, Desiree Henry, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita advanced to the final in rather more comfortable fashion than the men, finishing second to Jamaica in 41.93.They will also have hopes of a medal, having broken the British record last month. ' ' '