At the end of the Games, here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Paralympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
211 China
102 Great Britain
99 USA
79 Australia
74 Ukraine
63 Russia
59 Germany
58 Spain
52 France
50 Canada
47 Brazil
31 South Korea
30 South Africa, Poland
27 Czech Rep., Japan
24 Greece
22 Netherlands
21 Tunisia
20 Mexico
18 Italy
15 Algeria
14 Iran, Cuba
13 Belarus, Thailand
12 New Zealand, Sweden, Edypt
11 Hong Kong, Switzerland
10 Azerbaijan
9 Kenya, Nigeria, Denmark
7 Morocco, Portugal, Norway
6 Austria, Slovakia, Finland, Hungary, Israel, Argentina
5 Ireland
4 Croatia, Cyprus, Singapore, Venezuela, Jordan
3 Latvia, Angola, Slovenia
2 Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Turkey, Lithuania, Serbia, Bulgaria, Iraq, Colombia, Lebanon
1 Mongolia, Bosnia, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Romania, UAE, Belgium, Estonia, Jamaica, Laos, Malaysia, Namibia, Puerto Rico, Syria
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (89 Gold - 70 Silver - 52 Bronze)
2 - Great Britain (42 - 29 - 31)
3 - USA (36 - 35 - 28)
4 - Ukraine (24 - 18 - 32)
5 - Australia (23 - 29 - 27)
6 - South Africa (21 - 3 - 6)
7 - Canada (19 - 10 - 21)
8 - Russia (18 - 23 - 22)
9 - Brazil (16 - 14 - 17)
10 - Spain (15 - 21 - 22)
11 - Germany (14 - 25 - 20)
12 - France (12 - 21 - 19)
13 - South Korea (10 - 8 - 13)
14 - Mexico (10 - 3 - 7)
15 - Tunisia (9 - 9 - 3)
16 - Czech Rep. (6 - 3 - 18)
17 - Japan (5 - 14 - 8)
18 - Poland (5 - 12 - 13)
19 - Netherlands (5 - 10 - 7)
20 - Greece (5 - 9 - 10)
21 - Belarus (5 - 7 - 1)
22 - Iran (5 - 6 - 3)
23 - Cuba (5 - 3 - 6)
24 - New Zealand, Sweden (5 - 3 - 4)
25 - Hong Kong (5 - 3 - 3)
26 - Kenya (5 - 3 - 1)
27 - Italy (4 - 7 - 7)
28 - Egypt (4 - 4 - 4)
29 - Nigeria (4 - 4 - 1)
30 - Algeria (4 - 3 - 8)
31 - Morocco (4 - 1 - 2)
32 - Austria (4 - 1 - 1)
33 - Switzerland (3 - 2 - 6)
34 - Denmark (3 - 2 - 4)
35 - Ireland (3 - 1 - 1)
36 - Croatia (3 - 1 - 0)
37 - Azerbaijan (2 - 3 - 5)
38 - Slovakia (2 - 3 - 1)
39 - Finland (2 - 2 - 2)
40 - Thailand (1 - 5 - 7)
41 - Portugal (1 - 4 - 2)
42 - Norway (1 - 3 - 3)
43 - Cyprus (1 - 2 - 1)
44 - Latvia (1 - 2 - 0)
45 - Singapore, Venezuela (1 - 1 - 2)
46 - Saudi Arabia (1 - 1 - 0)
47 - Hungary (1 - 0 - 5)
48 - Taiwan, Turkey (1 - 0 - 1)
49 - Mongolia (1 - 0 - 0)
50 - Israel (0 - 5 - 1)
51 - Angola (0 - 3 - 0)
52 - Jordan (0 - 2 - 2)
53 - Lithuania, Serbia (0 - 2 - 0)
54 - Argentina (0 - 1 - 5)
55 - Slovenia (0 - 1 - 2)
56 - Bulgaria, Iraq, Colombia (0 - 1 - 1)
57 - Bosnia, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Romania, UAE (0 - 1 - 0)
58 - Lebanon (0 - 0 - 2)
59 - Belgium, Estonia, Jamaica, Laos, Malaysia, Namibia, Puerto Rico, Syria (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 473 Golds - 471 Silvers - 487 Bronzes (1431 total)
...
Wednesday, 17 September 2008
Sunday, 24 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table In Proportion Of Athletes Attending
The Olympics medals table is not proportionate to the number of contenders each country sends to participate. I have produced the table below which details the ratio of athletes sent to the Beijing 2008 Olympics divided by the number of medals won. For example, both Panama and Togo only sent three athletes each, but both countries won one medal, so they top the table by ratio. South Africa are at the bottom as they sent 136 athletes but only won one medal.
Panama, Togo : 3.00 athletes for every one medal won (3 athletes sent, 1 medal won)
Ethiopia : 3.14 (22 athletes sent, 7 medals won)
Zimbabwe : 3.25 (13, 4)
Afghanistan : 4.00 (4, 1)
Armenia : 4.17 (25, 6)
Indonesia : 4.80 (24, 5)
USA : 5.42 (596, 110)
Azerbaijan : 5.57 (39, 7)
Georgia : 5.83 (35, 6)
Cuba : 6.21 (149, 24)
China : 6.39 (639, 100)
Russia : 6.49 (467, 72)
Tajikistan : 6.50 (13, 2)
Great Britain : 6.62 (311, 47)
Mongolia : 7.25 (29, 4)
Sudan : 8.00 (8, 1)
France : 8.08 (323, 40)
Turkey, Norway : 8.50 (T: 68, 8; N: 85, 10)
South Korea : 8.61 (267, 31)
Kenya : 8.79 (123, 14)
Ukraine, Australia : 9.41 (U: 254, 27; A: 433, 46)
Bahamas, Slovakia : 9.50 (B: 19, 2; S: 57, 6)
Belarus : 9.53 (181, 19)
Uzbekistan : 9.67 (58, 6)
Kazakhstan : 10.15 (132, 13)
Jamaica : 10.45 (115, 11)
Kyrgyzstan, North Korea : 10.50 (K: 21, 2; N: 63, 6)
Germany : 11.29 (463, 41)
Mauritius, Moldova, Denmark : 12.00 (M,M: 12, 1; D: 84, 7)
Italy : 12.29 (344, 28)
Slovenia : 12.40 (62, 5)
Dominican Rep. : 12.50 (25, 2)
Thailand, Romania : 12.75 (T: 51, 4; R: 102, 8)
Switzerland, Japan : 14.00 (S: 84, 6; J: 350, 25)
Lithuania : 14.20 (71, 5)
Bulgaria : 14.40 (72, 5)
Finland : 14.50 (58, 4)
Bahrain, Trinidad & Tobago : 15.00 (B: 15, 1; T: 30, 2)
Netherlands : 15.31 (245, 16)
Spain : 15.89 (286, 18)
Latvia : 16.67 (50, 3)
Hungary : 17.10 (171, 10)
Ireland : 18.00 (54, 3)
Canada : 18.44 (332, 18)
Brazil : 18.47 (277, 15)
India : 19.00 (57, 3)
Sweden : 19.40 (97, 5)
Chinese Taipei : 20.00 (80, 4)
New Zealand : 20.22 (182, 9)
Nigeria : 20.75 (83, 4)
Vietnam, Croatia : 21.00 (V: 21, 1; C: 105, 5)
Czech Rep. : 22.33 (134, 6)
Argentina : 22.83 (137, 6)
Estonia : 23.50 (47, 2)
Austria : 24.00 (72, 3)
Ecuador, Singapore : 25.00 (E,S: 25, 1)
Poland : 26.80 (268, 10)
Chile : 27.00 (27, 1)
Iran : 27.50 (55, 2)
Mexico : 28.33 (85, 3)
Morocco : 28.50 (57, 2)
Iceland : 29.00 (29, 1)
Serbia : 30.67 (92, 3)
Algeria : 31.00 (62, 2)
Tunisia, Colombia : 32.00 (T: 32, 1; C: 64, 2)
Cameroon, Malaysia : 33.00 (C,M: 33, 1)
Portugal : 38.50 (77, 2)
Greece : 39.75 (159, 4)
Israel : 43.00 (43, 1)
Belgium : 48.00 (96, 2)
Egypt : 103.00 (103, 1)
Venezuela : 109.00 (109, 1)
South Africa : 136.00 athletes for every one medal won (136 athletes sent, 1 medal won)
The following countries participated (number of athletes in brackets) but failed to win any medals:
Albania (11)
American Samoa (5)
Andorra (5)
Angola (32)
Antigua & Barbuda (5)
Aruba (2)
Bangladesh (5)
Barbados (6)
Belize (3)
Benin (5)
Bermuda (6)
Bhutan (2)
Bolivia (6)
Bosnia & Herzegovina (5)
Botswana (12)
British Virgin Islands (2)
Burkina Faso (2)
Burundi (3)
Cambodia (4)
Cape Verde (3)
Cayman Islands (4)
Central African Republic (3)
Chad (2)
Comoros Islands (3)
Dem. Rep. Congo (5)
Congo (3)
Cook Islands (4)
Costa Rica (4)
Cote D'Ivoir (20)
Cyprus (17)
Djibouti (2)
Dominica (1)
El Salvador (11)
Equatorial Guinea (3)
Eritrea (9)
Fed. States Micronesia (15)
FYR Macedonia (7)
Gabon (4)
Gambia (3)
Ghana (9)
Grenada (1)
Guam (5)
Guatemala (12)
Guinea (5)
Guinea-Bissau (3)
Guyana (5)
Haiti (10)
Honduras (25)
Hong Kong China (34)
Iraq (4)
Jordan (7)
Kiribati (2)
Kuwait (6)
Laos (4)
Lebanon (5)
Lesotho (4)
Liberia (3)
Libya (7)
Liechtenstein (2)
Luxembourg (12)
Madagascar (4)
Malawi (4)
Maldives (4)
Mali (17)
Malta (6)
Marshall Islands (5)
Mauritania (2)
Monaco (5)
Montenegro (31)
Mozambique (5)
Myanmar (6)
Namibia (9)
Nauru (1)
Nepal (8)
Netherlands Antilles (3)
Nicaragua (6)
Niger (5)
Oman (5)
Pakistan (21)
Palau (6)
Palestine (4)
Papua New Guinea (7)
Paraguay (7)
Peru (12)
Philippines (15)
Puerto Rico (22)
Qatar (22)
Rwanda (4)
St. Kitts & Nevis (4)
Saint Lucia (6)
St. Vincent & The Grenadines (2)
Sao Tome e Principe (3)
Samoa (6)
San Marino (4)
Saudi Arabia (16)
Senegal (12)
Seychelles (8)
Sierra Leone (3)
Solomon Islands (3)
Somalia (2)
Sri Lanka (8)
Suriname (4)
Swaziland (5)
Syria (8)
Tanzania (1)
Timor-Leste (2)
Tonga (3)
Turkmenistan (10)
Tuvalu (3)
Uganda (15)
United Arab Emirates (8)
Uruguay (12)
Vanuatu (3)
Virgin Islands (5)
Yemen (5)
Zambia (8)
...
Panama, Togo : 3.00 athletes for every one medal won (3 athletes sent, 1 medal won)
Ethiopia : 3.14 (22 athletes sent, 7 medals won)
Zimbabwe : 3.25 (13, 4)
Afghanistan : 4.00 (4, 1)
Armenia : 4.17 (25, 6)
Indonesia : 4.80 (24, 5)
USA : 5.42 (596, 110)
Azerbaijan : 5.57 (39, 7)
Georgia : 5.83 (35, 6)
Cuba : 6.21 (149, 24)
China : 6.39 (639, 100)
Russia : 6.49 (467, 72)
Tajikistan : 6.50 (13, 2)
Great Britain : 6.62 (311, 47)
Mongolia : 7.25 (29, 4)
Sudan : 8.00 (8, 1)
France : 8.08 (323, 40)
Turkey, Norway : 8.50 (T: 68, 8; N: 85, 10)
South Korea : 8.61 (267, 31)
Kenya : 8.79 (123, 14)
Ukraine, Australia : 9.41 (U: 254, 27; A: 433, 46)
Bahamas, Slovakia : 9.50 (B: 19, 2; S: 57, 6)
Belarus : 9.53 (181, 19)
Uzbekistan : 9.67 (58, 6)
Kazakhstan : 10.15 (132, 13)
Jamaica : 10.45 (115, 11)
Kyrgyzstan, North Korea : 10.50 (K: 21, 2; N: 63, 6)
Germany : 11.29 (463, 41)
Mauritius, Moldova, Denmark : 12.00 (M,M: 12, 1; D: 84, 7)
Italy : 12.29 (344, 28)
Slovenia : 12.40 (62, 5)
Dominican Rep. : 12.50 (25, 2)
Thailand, Romania : 12.75 (T: 51, 4; R: 102, 8)
Switzerland, Japan : 14.00 (S: 84, 6; J: 350, 25)
Lithuania : 14.20 (71, 5)
Bulgaria : 14.40 (72, 5)
Finland : 14.50 (58, 4)
Bahrain, Trinidad & Tobago : 15.00 (B: 15, 1; T: 30, 2)
Netherlands : 15.31 (245, 16)
Spain : 15.89 (286, 18)
Latvia : 16.67 (50, 3)
Hungary : 17.10 (171, 10)
Ireland : 18.00 (54, 3)
Canada : 18.44 (332, 18)
Brazil : 18.47 (277, 15)
India : 19.00 (57, 3)
Sweden : 19.40 (97, 5)
Chinese Taipei : 20.00 (80, 4)
New Zealand : 20.22 (182, 9)
Nigeria : 20.75 (83, 4)
Vietnam, Croatia : 21.00 (V: 21, 1; C: 105, 5)
Czech Rep. : 22.33 (134, 6)
Argentina : 22.83 (137, 6)
Estonia : 23.50 (47, 2)
Austria : 24.00 (72, 3)
Ecuador, Singapore : 25.00 (E,S: 25, 1)
Poland : 26.80 (268, 10)
Chile : 27.00 (27, 1)
Iran : 27.50 (55, 2)
Mexico : 28.33 (85, 3)
Morocco : 28.50 (57, 2)
Iceland : 29.00 (29, 1)
Serbia : 30.67 (92, 3)
Algeria : 31.00 (62, 2)
Tunisia, Colombia : 32.00 (T: 32, 1; C: 64, 2)
Cameroon, Malaysia : 33.00 (C,M: 33, 1)
Portugal : 38.50 (77, 2)
Greece : 39.75 (159, 4)
Israel : 43.00 (43, 1)
Belgium : 48.00 (96, 2)
Egypt : 103.00 (103, 1)
Venezuela : 109.00 (109, 1)
South Africa : 136.00 athletes for every one medal won (136 athletes sent, 1 medal won)
The following countries participated (number of athletes in brackets) but failed to win any medals:
Albania (11)
American Samoa (5)
Andorra (5)
Angola (32)
Antigua & Barbuda (5)
Aruba (2)
Bangladesh (5)
Barbados (6)
Belize (3)
Benin (5)
Bermuda (6)
Bhutan (2)
Bolivia (6)
Bosnia & Herzegovina (5)
Botswana (12)
British Virgin Islands (2)
Burkina Faso (2)
Burundi (3)
Cambodia (4)
Cape Verde (3)
Cayman Islands (4)
Central African Republic (3)
Chad (2)
Comoros Islands (3)
Dem. Rep. Congo (5)
Congo (3)
Cook Islands (4)
Costa Rica (4)
Cote D'Ivoir (20)
Cyprus (17)
Djibouti (2)
Dominica (1)
El Salvador (11)
Equatorial Guinea (3)
Eritrea (9)
Fed. States Micronesia (15)
FYR Macedonia (7)
Gabon (4)
Gambia (3)
Ghana (9)
Grenada (1)
Guam (5)
Guatemala (12)
Guinea (5)
Guinea-Bissau (3)
Guyana (5)
Haiti (10)
Honduras (25)
Hong Kong China (34)
Iraq (4)
Jordan (7)
Kiribati (2)
Kuwait (6)
Laos (4)
Lebanon (5)
Lesotho (4)
Liberia (3)
Libya (7)
Liechtenstein (2)
Luxembourg (12)
Madagascar (4)
Malawi (4)
Maldives (4)
Mali (17)
Malta (6)
Marshall Islands (5)
Mauritania (2)
Monaco (5)
Montenegro (31)
Mozambique (5)
Myanmar (6)
Namibia (9)
Nauru (1)
Nepal (8)
Netherlands Antilles (3)
Nicaragua (6)
Niger (5)
Oman (5)
Pakistan (21)
Palau (6)
Palestine (4)
Papua New Guinea (7)
Paraguay (7)
Peru (12)
Philippines (15)
Puerto Rico (22)
Qatar (22)
Rwanda (4)
St. Kitts & Nevis (4)
Saint Lucia (6)
St. Vincent & The Grenadines (2)
Sao Tome e Principe (3)
Samoa (6)
San Marino (4)
Saudi Arabia (16)
Senegal (12)
Seychelles (8)
Sierra Leone (3)
Solomon Islands (3)
Somalia (2)
Sri Lanka (8)
Suriname (4)
Swaziland (5)
Syria (8)
Tanzania (1)
Timor-Leste (2)
Tonga (3)
Turkmenistan (10)
Tuvalu (3)
Uganda (15)
United Arab Emirates (8)
Uruguay (12)
Vanuatu (3)
Virgin Islands (5)
Yemen (5)
Zambia (8)
...
Final Olympics Medal Table - Day 16, August 24th
At the end of Day 16 (August 24th), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
110 USA
100 China
72 Russia
47 UK
46 Australia
41 Germany
40 France
31 South Korea
28 Italy
27 Ukraine
25 Japan
24 Cuba
19 Belarus
18 Canada, Spain
16 Netherlands
15 Brazil
14 Kenya
13 Kazakhstan
11 Jamaica
10 Hungary, Norway, Poland
9 New Zealand
8 Romania, Turkey
7 Azerbaijan, Denmark, Ethiopia
6 Argentina, Armenia, Czech Rep., Georgia, North Korea, Slovakia, Switzerland, Uzbekistan
5 Bulgaria, Croatia, Indonesia, Lithuania, Slovenia, Sweden
4 Taiwan, Finland, Greece, Mongolia, Nigeria, Thailand, Zimbabwe
3 Austria, Ireland, India, Latvia, Mexico, Serbia
2 Algeria, Bahamas, Belgium, Colombia, Dominican Rep., Estonia, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Morocco, Portugal, Tajikistan, Trinidad & Tobago
1 Afghanistan, Bahrain, Cameroon, Chile, Ecuador, Egypt, Iceland, Israel, Malaysia, Mauritius, Moldova, Panama, Singapore, South Africa, Sudan, Togo, Tunisia, Venezuela, Vietnam
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (51 Gold - 21 Silver - 28 Bronze)
2 - USA (36 - 38 - 36)
3 - Russia (23 - 21 - 28)
4 - UK (19 - 13 - 15)
5 - Germany (16 - 10 - 15)
6 - Australia (14 - 15 - 17)
7 - South Korea (13 - 10 - 8)
8 - Japan (9 - 6 - 10)
9 - Italy (8 - 10 - 10)
10 - France (7 - 16 - 17)
11 - Ukraine (7 - 5 - 15)
12 - Netherlands (7 - 5 - 15)
13 - Jamaica (6 - 3 - 2)
14 - Spain (5 - 10 - 3)
15 - Kenya (5 - 5 - 4)
16 - Belarus (4 - 5 - 10)
17 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
18 - Ethiopia (4 - 1 - 2)
19 - Canada (3 - 9 - 6)
20 - Poland (3 - 6 - 1)
21 - Hungary, Norway (3 - 5 - 2)
22 - Brazil (3 - 4 - 8)
23 - Czech Rep. (3 - 3 - 0)
24 - Slovakia (3 - 2 - 1)
25 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
26 - Georgia (3 - 0 - 3)
27 - Cuba (2 - 11 - 11)
28 - Kazakhstan (2 - 4 - 7)
29 - Denmark (2 - 2 - 3)
30 - Mongolia, Thailand (2 - 2 - 0)
31 - North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
32 - Argentina, Switzerland (2 - 0 - 4)
33 - Mexico (2 - 0 - 1)
34 - Turkey (1 - 4 - 3)
35 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
36 - Azerbaijan (1 - 2 - 4)
37 - Uzbekistan (1 - 2 - 3)
38 - Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
39 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
40 - Finland (1 - 1 - 2)
41 - Latvia (1 - 1 - 1)
42 - Belgium, Dominican Rep., Estonia, Portugal (1 - 1 - 0)
43 - India (1 - 0 - 2)
44 - Iran (1 - 0 - 1)
45 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
46 - Sweden (0 - 4 - 1)
47 - Croatia, Lithuania (0 - 2 - 3)
48 - Greece (0 - 2 - 2)
49 - Trinidad & Tobago (0 - 2 - 0)
50 - Nigeria (0 - 1 - 3)
51 - Austria, Ireland, Serbia (0 - 1 - 2)
52 - Algeria, Bahamas, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Morocco, Tajikistan (0 - 0 - 1)
53 - Chile Ecuador, Iceland, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa, Sudan, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
54 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 6)
55 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 4)
56 - Afghanistan, Egypt, Israel, Mauritius, Moldova, Tgoo, Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 302 Golds - 303 Silvers - 353 Bronzes (958 total)
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
110 USA
100 China
72 Russia
47 UK
46 Australia
41 Germany
40 France
31 South Korea
28 Italy
27 Ukraine
25 Japan
24 Cuba
19 Belarus
18 Canada, Spain
16 Netherlands
15 Brazil
14 Kenya
13 Kazakhstan
11 Jamaica
10 Hungary, Norway, Poland
9 New Zealand
8 Romania, Turkey
7 Azerbaijan, Denmark, Ethiopia
6 Argentina, Armenia, Czech Rep., Georgia, North Korea, Slovakia, Switzerland, Uzbekistan
5 Bulgaria, Croatia, Indonesia, Lithuania, Slovenia, Sweden
4 Taiwan, Finland, Greece, Mongolia, Nigeria, Thailand, Zimbabwe
3 Austria, Ireland, India, Latvia, Mexico, Serbia
2 Algeria, Bahamas, Belgium, Colombia, Dominican Rep., Estonia, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Morocco, Portugal, Tajikistan, Trinidad & Tobago
1 Afghanistan, Bahrain, Cameroon, Chile, Ecuador, Egypt, Iceland, Israel, Malaysia, Mauritius, Moldova, Panama, Singapore, South Africa, Sudan, Togo, Tunisia, Venezuela, Vietnam
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (51 Gold - 21 Silver - 28 Bronze)
2 - USA (36 - 38 - 36)
3 - Russia (23 - 21 - 28)
4 - UK (19 - 13 - 15)
5 - Germany (16 - 10 - 15)
6 - Australia (14 - 15 - 17)
7 - South Korea (13 - 10 - 8)
8 - Japan (9 - 6 - 10)
9 - Italy (8 - 10 - 10)
10 - France (7 - 16 - 17)
11 - Ukraine (7 - 5 - 15)
12 - Netherlands (7 - 5 - 15)
13 - Jamaica (6 - 3 - 2)
14 - Spain (5 - 10 - 3)
15 - Kenya (5 - 5 - 4)
16 - Belarus (4 - 5 - 10)
17 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
18 - Ethiopia (4 - 1 - 2)
19 - Canada (3 - 9 - 6)
20 - Poland (3 - 6 - 1)
21 - Hungary, Norway (3 - 5 - 2)
22 - Brazil (3 - 4 - 8)
23 - Czech Rep. (3 - 3 - 0)
24 - Slovakia (3 - 2 - 1)
25 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
26 - Georgia (3 - 0 - 3)
27 - Cuba (2 - 11 - 11)
28 - Kazakhstan (2 - 4 - 7)
29 - Denmark (2 - 2 - 3)
30 - Mongolia, Thailand (2 - 2 - 0)
31 - North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
32 - Argentina, Switzerland (2 - 0 - 4)
33 - Mexico (2 - 0 - 1)
34 - Turkey (1 - 4 - 3)
35 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
36 - Azerbaijan (1 - 2 - 4)
37 - Uzbekistan (1 - 2 - 3)
38 - Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
39 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
40 - Finland (1 - 1 - 2)
41 - Latvia (1 - 1 - 1)
42 - Belgium, Dominican Rep., Estonia, Portugal (1 - 1 - 0)
43 - India (1 - 0 - 2)
44 - Iran (1 - 0 - 1)
45 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
46 - Sweden (0 - 4 - 1)
47 - Croatia, Lithuania (0 - 2 - 3)
48 - Greece (0 - 2 - 2)
49 - Trinidad & Tobago (0 - 2 - 0)
50 - Nigeria (0 - 1 - 3)
51 - Austria, Ireland, Serbia (0 - 1 - 2)
52 - Algeria, Bahamas, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Morocco, Tajikistan (0 - 0 - 1)
53 - Chile Ecuador, Iceland, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa, Sudan, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
54 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 6)
55 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 4)
56 - Afghanistan, Egypt, Israel, Mauritius, Moldova, Tgoo, Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 302 Golds - 303 Silvers - 353 Bronzes (958 total)
...
Labels:
athletes,
beijing olympics 2008,
bronze medals,
china,
gold medals,
medal table,
medals,
silver medals
Saturday, 23 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 15, August 23rd
At the end of Day 15 (August 23rd), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
If the above is not the current date, please click here to view the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
107 USA
96 China
69 Russia
47 UK
46 Australia
41 Germany
38 France
31 South Korea
27 Ukraine
25 Japan, Italy
22 Cuba
18 Belarus, Canada
16 Netherlands, Spain
14 Brazil
13 Kenya
12 Kazakhstan
11 Jamaica
10 Poland, Norway
9 New Zealand, Hungary
8 Romania, Turkey
7 Denmark, Azerbaijan
6 Ethiopia, Czech Rep., Slovakia, Georgia, North Korea, Switzerland, Uzbekistan, Armenia
5 Argentina, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Sweden, Croatia, Lithuania
4 Thailand, Zimbabwe, Finland, Greece, Nigeria, Taiwan
3 Mexico, Latvia, India, Austria
2 Belgium, Dominican Rep., Mongolia, Estonia, Portugal, Iran, Trinidad & Tobago, Algeria, Bahamas, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan, Ireland
1 Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia, Chile, Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Sudan, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Egypt, Israel, Morocco, Moldova, Mauritius, Togo, Venezuela
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (49 Gold - 19 Silver - 28 Bronze)
2 - USA (34 - 37 - 36)
3 - Russia (21 - 21 - 27)
4 - UK (19 - 13 - 15)
5 - Germany (16 - 10 - 15)
6 - Australia (14 - 15 - 17)
7 - South Korea (13 - 10 - 8)
8 - Japan (9 - 6 - 10)
9 - Italy (7 - 10 - 10)
10 - Ukraine (7 - 5 - 15)
11 - Netherlands (7 - 5 - 4)
12 - France (6 - 15 - 17)
13 - Jamaica (6 - 3 - 2)
14 - Spain (5 - 9 - 2)
15 - Belarus (4 - 5 - 9)
16 - Kenya (4 - 5 - 4)
17 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
18 - Ethiopia (4 - 1 - 1)
19 - Canada (3 - 9 - 6)
20 - Poland (3 - 6 - 1)
21 - Norway (3 - 5 - 2)
22 - Brazil (3 - 3 - 8)
23 - Czech Rep. (3 - 3 - 0)
24 - Slovakia (3 - 2 - 1)
25 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
26 - Georgia (3 - 0 - 3)
27 - Cuba (2 - 9 - 11)
28 - Hungary (2 - 5 - 2)
29 - Denmark (2 - 2 - 3)
30 - Thailand (2 - 2 - 0)
31 - North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
32 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 4)
33 - Argentina (2 - 0 - 3)
34 - Mexico (2 - 0 - 1)
35 - Kazakhstan (1 - 4 - 7)
36 - Turkey (1 - 4 - 3)
37 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
38 - Azerbaijan (1 - 2 - 4)
39 - Uzbekistan (1 - 2 - 3)
40 - Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
41 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
42 - Finland (1 - 1 - 2)
43 - Latvia (1 - 1 - 1)
44 - Belgium, Dominican Rep., Estonia, Mongolia, Portugal (1 - 1 - 0)
45 - India (1 - 0 - 2)
46 - Iran (1 - 0 - 1)
47 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
48 - Sweden (0 - 4 - 1)
49 - Croatia, Lithuania (0 - 2 - 3)
50 - Greece (0 - 2 - 2)
51 - Trinidad & Tobago (0 - 2 - 0)
52 - Nigeria (0 - 1 - 3)
53 - Austria (0 - 1 - 2)
54 - Algeria, Bahamas, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan (0 - 1 - 1)
55 - Chile, Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Sudan, Vietnam
56 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 6)
57 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 4)
58 - Ireland (0 - 0 - 2)
59 - Afghanistan, Egypt, Israel, Morocco, Moldova, Mauritius, Togo, Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 290 Golds - 291 Silvers - 347 Bronzes (total)
...
If the above is not the current date, please click here to view the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
107 USA
96 China
69 Russia
47 UK
46 Australia
41 Germany
38 France
31 South Korea
27 Ukraine
25 Japan, Italy
22 Cuba
18 Belarus, Canada
16 Netherlands, Spain
14 Brazil
13 Kenya
12 Kazakhstan
11 Jamaica
10 Poland, Norway
9 New Zealand, Hungary
8 Romania, Turkey
7 Denmark, Azerbaijan
6 Ethiopia, Czech Rep., Slovakia, Georgia, North Korea, Switzerland, Uzbekistan, Armenia
5 Argentina, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Sweden, Croatia, Lithuania
4 Thailand, Zimbabwe, Finland, Greece, Nigeria, Taiwan
3 Mexico, Latvia, India, Austria
2 Belgium, Dominican Rep., Mongolia, Estonia, Portugal, Iran, Trinidad & Tobago, Algeria, Bahamas, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan, Ireland
1 Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia, Chile, Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Sudan, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Egypt, Israel, Morocco, Moldova, Mauritius, Togo, Venezuela
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (49 Gold - 19 Silver - 28 Bronze)
2 - USA (34 - 37 - 36)
3 - Russia (21 - 21 - 27)
4 - UK (19 - 13 - 15)
5 - Germany (16 - 10 - 15)
6 - Australia (14 - 15 - 17)
7 - South Korea (13 - 10 - 8)
8 - Japan (9 - 6 - 10)
9 - Italy (7 - 10 - 10)
10 - Ukraine (7 - 5 - 15)
11 - Netherlands (7 - 5 - 4)
12 - France (6 - 15 - 17)
13 - Jamaica (6 - 3 - 2)
14 - Spain (5 - 9 - 2)
15 - Belarus (4 - 5 - 9)
16 - Kenya (4 - 5 - 4)
17 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
18 - Ethiopia (4 - 1 - 1)
19 - Canada (3 - 9 - 6)
20 - Poland (3 - 6 - 1)
21 - Norway (3 - 5 - 2)
22 - Brazil (3 - 3 - 8)
23 - Czech Rep. (3 - 3 - 0)
24 - Slovakia (3 - 2 - 1)
25 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
26 - Georgia (3 - 0 - 3)
27 - Cuba (2 - 9 - 11)
28 - Hungary (2 - 5 - 2)
29 - Denmark (2 - 2 - 3)
30 - Thailand (2 - 2 - 0)
31 - North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
32 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 4)
33 - Argentina (2 - 0 - 3)
34 - Mexico (2 - 0 - 1)
35 - Kazakhstan (1 - 4 - 7)
36 - Turkey (1 - 4 - 3)
37 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
38 - Azerbaijan (1 - 2 - 4)
39 - Uzbekistan (1 - 2 - 3)
40 - Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
41 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
42 - Finland (1 - 1 - 2)
43 - Latvia (1 - 1 - 1)
44 - Belgium, Dominican Rep., Estonia, Mongolia, Portugal (1 - 1 - 0)
45 - India (1 - 0 - 2)
46 - Iran (1 - 0 - 1)
47 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
48 - Sweden (0 - 4 - 1)
49 - Croatia, Lithuania (0 - 2 - 3)
50 - Greece (0 - 2 - 2)
51 - Trinidad & Tobago (0 - 2 - 0)
52 - Nigeria (0 - 1 - 3)
53 - Austria (0 - 1 - 2)
54 - Algeria, Bahamas, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan (0 - 1 - 1)
55 - Chile, Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Sudan, Vietnam
56 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 6)
57 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 4)
58 - Ireland (0 - 0 - 2)
59 - Afghanistan, Egypt, Israel, Morocco, Moldova, Mauritius, Togo, Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 290 Golds - 291 Silvers - 347 Bronzes (total)
...
Labels:
athletes,
beijing olympics 2008,
bronze medals,
china,
gold medals,
medal table,
medals,
silver medals
Friday, 22 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 14, August 22nd
At the end of Day 14 (August 22nd), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
If the above is not the current date, please click here to view the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
102 USA
91 China
56 Russia
43 UK
41 Australia
36 Germany
33 France
27 South Korea
25 Japan, Italy
19 Ukraine
18 Cuba
17 Canada
16 Netherlands, Belarus
12 Spain
10 Jamaica, Kazakhstan, Brazil
9 New Zealand
8 Romania, Poland, Kenya, Hungary, Turkey
7 Denmark, Norway, Azerbaijan
6 Czech Rep., Slovakia, Georgia, North Korea, Uzbekistan
5 Switzerland, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Argentina, Sweden, Lithuania, Armenia
4 Zimbabwe, Taiwan
3 Ethiopia, Finland, India, Austria, Croatia, Greece
2 Estonia, Mongolia, Portugal, Thailand, Iran, Latvia, Mexico, Trinidad & Tobago, Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan, Ireland, Nigeria
1 Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia, Belgium, Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Bahamas, Egypt, Israel, Morocco, Mauritius, Togo, Venezuela
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (48 Gold - 18 Silver - 26 Bronze)
2 - USA (31 - 36 - 35)
3 - UK (18 - 13 - 12)
4 - Russia (17 - 17 - 22)
5 - Germany (14 - 9 - 13)
6 - Australia (11 - 14 - 16)
7 - South Korea (11 - 10 - 6)
8 - Japan (9 - 6 - 10)
9 - Italy (7 - 8 - 10)
10 - Netherlands (7 - 5 - 4)
11 - Jamaica (6 - 3 - 1)
12 - France (5 - 13 - 15)
13 - Ukraine (5 - 4 - 10)
14 - Spain (4 - 6 - 2)
15 - Belarus (4 - 4 - 8)
16 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
17 - Canada (3 - 8 - 6)
18 - Poland (3 - 4 - 1)
19 - Czech Rep. (3 - 3 - 0)
20 - Slovakia (3 - 2 - 1)
21 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
22 - Georgia (3 - 0 - 3)
23 - Cuba (2 - 6 - 10)
24 - Kenya (2 - 4 - 2)
25 - Denmark (2 - 2 - 3)
26 - North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
27 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
28 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
29 - Hungary (1 - 5 - 2)
30 - Kazakhstan (1 - 4 - 5)
31 - Turkey (1 - 4 - 3)
32 - Norway (1 - 4 - 2)
33 - Brazil (1 - 3 - 6)
34 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
35 - Azerbaijan (1 - 2 - 4)
36 - Uzbekistan (1 - 2 - 3)
37 - Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
38 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
39 - Finland (1 - 1 - 0)
40 - Estonia, Mobgolia, Portugal, Thailand (1 - 1 - 0)
41 - Argentina (1 - 0 - 4)
42 - India (1 - 0 - 2)
43 - Iran, Latvia, Mexico (1 - 0 - 1)
44 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
45 - Sweden (0 - 4 - 1)
46 - Lithuania (0 - 2 - 3)
47 - Trinidad & Tobago (0 - 2 - 0)
48 - Austria, Croatia, Greece (0 - 1 - 2)
49 - Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan (0 - 1 - 1)
50 - Belgium, Chile, Domincan Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
51 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
52 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 4)
53 - Ireland, Nigeria (0 - 0 - 2)
54 - Afghanistan, Bahamas, Egypt, Israel, Morocco, Mauritius, Togo, Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 243 Golds - 244 Silvers - 279 Bronzes (764 total)
...
If the above is not the current date, please click here to view the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
102 USA
91 China
56 Russia
43 UK
41 Australia
36 Germany
33 France
27 South Korea
25 Japan, Italy
19 Ukraine
18 Cuba
17 Canada
16 Netherlands, Belarus
12 Spain
10 Jamaica, Kazakhstan, Brazil
9 New Zealand
8 Romania, Poland, Kenya, Hungary, Turkey
7 Denmark, Norway, Azerbaijan
6 Czech Rep., Slovakia, Georgia, North Korea, Uzbekistan
5 Switzerland, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Argentina, Sweden, Lithuania, Armenia
4 Zimbabwe, Taiwan
3 Ethiopia, Finland, India, Austria, Croatia, Greece
2 Estonia, Mongolia, Portugal, Thailand, Iran, Latvia, Mexico, Trinidad & Tobago, Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan, Ireland, Nigeria
1 Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia, Belgium, Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Bahamas, Egypt, Israel, Morocco, Mauritius, Togo, Venezuela
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (48 Gold - 18 Silver - 26 Bronze)
2 - USA (31 - 36 - 35)
3 - UK (18 - 13 - 12)
4 - Russia (17 - 17 - 22)
5 - Germany (14 - 9 - 13)
6 - Australia (11 - 14 - 16)
7 - South Korea (11 - 10 - 6)
8 - Japan (9 - 6 - 10)
9 - Italy (7 - 8 - 10)
10 - Netherlands (7 - 5 - 4)
11 - Jamaica (6 - 3 - 1)
12 - France (5 - 13 - 15)
13 - Ukraine (5 - 4 - 10)
14 - Spain (4 - 6 - 2)
15 - Belarus (4 - 4 - 8)
16 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
17 - Canada (3 - 8 - 6)
18 - Poland (3 - 4 - 1)
19 - Czech Rep. (3 - 3 - 0)
20 - Slovakia (3 - 2 - 1)
21 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
22 - Georgia (3 - 0 - 3)
23 - Cuba (2 - 6 - 10)
24 - Kenya (2 - 4 - 2)
25 - Denmark (2 - 2 - 3)
26 - North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
27 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
28 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
29 - Hungary (1 - 5 - 2)
30 - Kazakhstan (1 - 4 - 5)
31 - Turkey (1 - 4 - 3)
32 - Norway (1 - 4 - 2)
33 - Brazil (1 - 3 - 6)
34 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
35 - Azerbaijan (1 - 2 - 4)
36 - Uzbekistan (1 - 2 - 3)
37 - Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
38 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
39 - Finland (1 - 1 - 0)
40 - Estonia, Mobgolia, Portugal, Thailand (1 - 1 - 0)
41 - Argentina (1 - 0 - 4)
42 - India (1 - 0 - 2)
43 - Iran, Latvia, Mexico (1 - 0 - 1)
44 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
45 - Sweden (0 - 4 - 1)
46 - Lithuania (0 - 2 - 3)
47 - Trinidad & Tobago (0 - 2 - 0)
48 - Austria, Croatia, Greece (0 - 1 - 2)
49 - Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan (0 - 1 - 1)
50 - Belgium, Chile, Domincan Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
51 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
52 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 4)
53 - Ireland, Nigeria (0 - 0 - 2)
54 - Afghanistan, Bahamas, Egypt, Israel, Morocco, Mauritius, Togo, Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 243 Golds - 244 Silvers - 279 Bronzes (764 total)
...
Labels:
athletes,
beijing olympics 2008,
bronze medals,
china,
gold medals,
medal table,
medals,
silver medals
Thursday, 21 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 13, August 21st
At the end of Day 13 (August 21st), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
If the above is not the current date, please click here to view the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
93 USA
83 China
51 Russia
40 UK
38 Australia
31 Germany
30 France
26 South Korea
24 Japan
21 Italy
19 Ukraine
15 Netherlands
14 Canada, Cuba
13 Belarus
11 Spain
10 Kazakhstan
9 Jamaica, New Zealand
8 Romania, Poland, Kenya
7 Brazil
6 Czech Rep., Georgia, Denmark, North Korea, Norway, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan
5 Slovakia, Switzerland, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Hungary, Lithuania, Armenia
4 Zimbabwe, Sweden, Taiwan
3 Ethiopia, Finland, Argentina, Austria, Croatia, Greece
2 Estonia, Mongolia, Portugal, Thailand, India, Mexico, Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan
1 Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia, Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Bahamas, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Latvia, Morocco, Togo, Venezuela
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (46 Gold - 15 Silver - 22 Bronze)
2 - USA (28 - 34 - 31)
3 - UK (17 - 12 - 11)
4 - Russia (16 - 16 - 19)
5 - Australia (11 - 13 - 14)
6 - Germany (11 - 8 - 12)
7 - South Korea (10 - 10 - 6)
8 - Japan (9 - 6 - 9)
9 - Italy (6 - 7 - 8)
10 - Netherlands (6 - 5 - 4)
11 - Ukraine (5 - 5 - 9)
12 - Jamaica (5 - 3 - 1)
13 - France (4 - 12 - 14)
14 - Spain (4 - 5 - 2)
15 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
16 - Poland (3 - 4 - 1)
17 - Czech Rep. (3 - 3 - 0)
18 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
19 - Slovakia (3 - 1 - 1)
20 - Georgia (3 - 0 - 3)
21 - Canada (2 - 7 - 5)
22 - Cuba (2 - 6 - 6)
23 - Kenya (2 - 4 - 2)
24 - Belarus (2 - 3 - 8)
25 - Denmark (2 - 1 - 3)
26 - North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
27 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
28 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
29 - Kazakhstan (1 - 4 - 5)
30 - Norway, Turkey (1 - 3 - 2)
31 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
32 - Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan (1 - 2 - 3)
33 - Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
34 - Brazil (1 - 1 - 5)
35 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
36 - Finland (1 - 1 - 1)
37 - Estonia, Mongolia, Portugal, Thailand (1 - 1 - 0)
38 - Argentina (1 - 0 - 2)
39 - India, Mexico (1 - 0 - 1)
40 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
41 - Hungary (0 - 4 - 1)
42 - Sweden (0 - 3 - 1)
43 - Lithuania (0 - 2 - 3)
44 - Austria, Croatia, Greece (0 - 1 - 2)
45 - Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan (0 - 1 - 1)
46 - Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
47 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
48 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 4)
49 - Afghanistan, Bahamas, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Latvia, Morocco, Togo , Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 235 Golds - 236 Silvers - 272 Bronzes (743 total)
...
If the above is not the current date, please click here to view the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
93 USA
83 China
51 Russia
40 UK
38 Australia
31 Germany
30 France
26 South Korea
24 Japan
21 Italy
19 Ukraine
15 Netherlands
14 Canada, Cuba
13 Belarus
11 Spain
10 Kazakhstan
9 Jamaica, New Zealand
8 Romania, Poland, Kenya
7 Brazil
6 Czech Rep., Georgia, Denmark, North Korea, Norway, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan
5 Slovakia, Switzerland, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Hungary, Lithuania, Armenia
4 Zimbabwe, Sweden, Taiwan
3 Ethiopia, Finland, Argentina, Austria, Croatia, Greece
2 Estonia, Mongolia, Portugal, Thailand, India, Mexico, Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan
1 Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia, Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Bahamas, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Latvia, Morocco, Togo, Venezuela
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (46 Gold - 15 Silver - 22 Bronze)
2 - USA (28 - 34 - 31)
3 - UK (17 - 12 - 11)
4 - Russia (16 - 16 - 19)
5 - Australia (11 - 13 - 14)
6 - Germany (11 - 8 - 12)
7 - South Korea (10 - 10 - 6)
8 - Japan (9 - 6 - 9)
9 - Italy (6 - 7 - 8)
10 - Netherlands (6 - 5 - 4)
11 - Ukraine (5 - 5 - 9)
12 - Jamaica (5 - 3 - 1)
13 - France (4 - 12 - 14)
14 - Spain (4 - 5 - 2)
15 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
16 - Poland (3 - 4 - 1)
17 - Czech Rep. (3 - 3 - 0)
18 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
19 - Slovakia (3 - 1 - 1)
20 - Georgia (3 - 0 - 3)
21 - Canada (2 - 7 - 5)
22 - Cuba (2 - 6 - 6)
23 - Kenya (2 - 4 - 2)
24 - Belarus (2 - 3 - 8)
25 - Denmark (2 - 1 - 3)
26 - North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
27 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
28 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
29 - Kazakhstan (1 - 4 - 5)
30 - Norway, Turkey (1 - 3 - 2)
31 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
32 - Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan (1 - 2 - 3)
33 - Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
34 - Brazil (1 - 1 - 5)
35 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
36 - Finland (1 - 1 - 1)
37 - Estonia, Mongolia, Portugal, Thailand (1 - 1 - 0)
38 - Argentina (1 - 0 - 2)
39 - India, Mexico (1 - 0 - 1)
40 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
41 - Hungary (0 - 4 - 1)
42 - Sweden (0 - 3 - 1)
43 - Lithuania (0 - 2 - 3)
44 - Austria, Croatia, Greece (0 - 1 - 2)
45 - Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Tajikistan (0 - 1 - 1)
46 - Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
47 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
48 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 4)
49 - Afghanistan, Bahamas, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Latvia, Morocco, Togo , Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 235 Golds - 236 Silvers - 272 Bronzes (743 total)
...
Labels:
athletes,
beijing olympics 2008,
bronze medals,
china,
gold medals,
medal table,
medals,
silver medals
Wednesday, 20 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 12, August 20th
At the end of Day 12 (August 20th), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
If the above is not the current date, please click here to view the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
80 USA
79 China
45 Russia
36 UK, Australia
30 France
28 Germany
24 South Korea
23 Japan
20 Italy
18 Ukraine
13 Netherlands, Canada, Belarus
12 Cuba
10 Spain
9 New Zealand
8 Romania, Poland, Kenya, Kazakhstan
6 Jamaica, Denmark, North Korea, Brazil
5 Czech Rep., Switzerland, Azerbaijan, Norway, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Hungary, Uzbekistan, Armenia
4 Slovakia, Georgia, Zimbabwe, Turkey
3 Ethiopia, Finland, Sweden, Austria, Greece, Lithuania, Taiwan
2 Estonia, Mongolia, Thailand, Argentina, India, Mexico, Algeria, colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia
1 Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia, Netherlands Antilles, Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Latvia, Morocco, Tajikistan, Togo, Venezuela
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (45 Gold - 14 Silver - 20 Bronze)
2 - USA (26 - 26 - 28)
3 - UK (16 - 16 - 10)
4 - Russia (13 - 14 - 18)
5 - Australia (11 - 12 - 13)
6 - Germany (11 - 8 - 9)
7 - South Korea (8 - 10 - 6)
8 - Japan (8 - 6 - 9)
9 - Itay (6 - 7 - 7)
10 - Ukraine (5 - 5 - 8)
11 - France (4 - 12 - 14)
12 - Netherlands (4 - 5 - 4)
13 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
14 - Spain (3 - 5 - 2)
15 - Poland (3 - 4 - 1)
16 - Jamaica (3 - 3 - 0)
17 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
18 - Slovakia (3 - 1 - 0)
19 - Canada (2 - 6 - 5)
20 - Kenya (2 - 4 - 2)
21 - Belarus (2 - 3 - 8)
22 - Czech Rep. (2 - 3 - 0)
23 - Denmark, North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
24 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
25 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
26 - Georgia (2 - 0 - 2)
27 - Cuba (1 - 6 - 6)
28 - Kazakhstan (1 - 3 - 4)
29 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
30 - Azerbaijan, Norway, Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
31 - Turkey (1 - 2 - 1)
32 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
33 - Finland (1 - 1 - 1)
34 - Estonia, Mongolia, Thailand (1 - 1 - 0)
35 - Brazil (1 - 0 - 5)
36 - Argentina, India, Mexico (1 - 0 - 1)
37 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
38 - Hungary (0 - 4 - 1)
39 - Sweden (0 - 3 - 0)
40 - Uzbekistan (0 - 2 - 3)
41 - Austria, Greece, Lithuania (0 - 1 - 2)
42 - Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia (0 - 1 - 1)
43 - Netherlands Antilles, Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
44 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
45 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 3)
46 - Afghanistan, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Latvia, Morocco, Tajikistan, Togo, Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 215 Golds - 216 Silvers - 247 Bronzes (678 total)
...
If the above is not the current date, please click here to view the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
80 USA
79 China
45 Russia
36 UK, Australia
30 France
28 Germany
24 South Korea
23 Japan
20 Italy
18 Ukraine
13 Netherlands, Canada, Belarus
12 Cuba
10 Spain
9 New Zealand
8 Romania, Poland, Kenya, Kazakhstan
6 Jamaica, Denmark, North Korea, Brazil
5 Czech Rep., Switzerland, Azerbaijan, Norway, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Indonesia, Hungary, Uzbekistan, Armenia
4 Slovakia, Georgia, Zimbabwe, Turkey
3 Ethiopia, Finland, Sweden, Austria, Greece, Lithuania, Taiwan
2 Estonia, Mongolia, Thailand, Argentina, India, Mexico, Algeria, colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia
1 Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia, Netherlands Antilles, Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Latvia, Morocco, Tajikistan, Togo, Venezuela
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (45 Gold - 14 Silver - 20 Bronze)
2 - USA (26 - 26 - 28)
3 - UK (16 - 16 - 10)
4 - Russia (13 - 14 - 18)
5 - Australia (11 - 12 - 13)
6 - Germany (11 - 8 - 9)
7 - South Korea (8 - 10 - 6)
8 - Japan (8 - 6 - 9)
9 - Itay (6 - 7 - 7)
10 - Ukraine (5 - 5 - 8)
11 - France (4 - 12 - 14)
12 - Netherlands (4 - 5 - 4)
13 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
14 - Spain (3 - 5 - 2)
15 - Poland (3 - 4 - 1)
16 - Jamaica (3 - 3 - 0)
17 - New Zealand (3 - 1 - 5)
18 - Slovakia (3 - 1 - 0)
19 - Canada (2 - 6 - 5)
20 - Kenya (2 - 4 - 2)
21 - Belarus (2 - 3 - 8)
22 - Czech Rep. (2 - 3 - 0)
23 - Denmark, North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
24 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
25 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
26 - Georgia (2 - 0 - 2)
27 - Cuba (1 - 6 - 6)
28 - Kazakhstan (1 - 3 - 4)
29 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
30 - Azerbaijan, Norway, Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
31 - Turkey (1 - 2 - 1)
32 - Bulgaria, Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
33 - Finland (1 - 1 - 1)
34 - Estonia, Mongolia, Thailand (1 - 1 - 0)
35 - Brazil (1 - 0 - 5)
36 - Argentina, India, Mexico (1 - 0 - 1)
37 - Bahrain, Cameroon, Panama, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
38 - Hungary (0 - 4 - 1)
39 - Sweden (0 - 3 - 0)
40 - Uzbekistan (0 - 2 - 3)
41 - Austria, Greece, Lithuania (0 - 1 - 2)
42 - Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia (0 - 1 - 1)
43 - Netherlands Antilles, Chile, Dominican Rep., Ecuador, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
44 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
45 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 3)
46 - Afghanistan, Egypt, Iran, Israel, Latvia, Morocco, Tajikistan, Togo, Venezuela (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 215 Golds - 216 Silvers - 247 Bronzes (678 total)
...
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Tuesday, 19 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 11
At the end of Day 11 (August 19th), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
79 USA
76 China
42 Russia
35 Australia
33 UK
29 France
28 Germany
24 South Korea
22 Japan
19 Italy
17 Ukraine
14 Canada
13 Netherlands
11 Cuba, Belarus
9 Spain
8 Romania, Poland, Kazakhstan
7 Kenya, New Zealand
6 Denmark, North Korea, Brazil
5 Czech Rep., Jamaica, Switzerland, Azerbaijan, Norway, Slovenia, Indonesia, Hungary, Slovenia
4 Slovakia, Zimbabwe, Bulgaria, Uzbekistan
3 Ethiopia, Georgia, Finland, Sweden, Turkey, Austria, Greece, Lithuania
2 Estonia, Mongolia, Argentina, Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Taiwan
1 Cameroon, India, Panama, Thailand, Tunisia, Chile, Ecuador, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Egypt, Iran, Latvia, Morocco, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (43 Gold - 14 Silver - 19 Bronze)
2 - USA (26 - 26 - 27)
3 - UK (16 - 9 - 8)
4 - Australia (11 - 12 - 12)
5 - Germany (11 - 8 - 9)
6 - Russia (10 - 14 - 18)
7 - South Korea (8 - 10 - 6)
8 - Japan (8 - 6 - 8)
9 - Italy (6 - 6 - 7)
10 - Ukraine (5 - 4 - 8)
11 - France (4 - 11 - 14)
12 - Netherlands (4 - 5 - 4)
13 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
14 - Spain (3 - 4 - 2)
15 - Poland (3 - 4 - 1)
16 - Slovakia (3 - 1 - 0)
17 - Canada (2 - 6 - 6)
18 - Kenya (2 - 3 - 2)
19 - Jamaica, Czech Rep. (2 - 3 - 0)
20 - New Zealand (2 - 1 - 4)
21 - Denmark, North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
22 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
23 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
24 - Georgia (2 - 0 - 1)
25 - Cuba (1 - 5 - 5)
26 - Belarus (1 - 3 - 7)
27 - Kazakhstan (1 - 3 - 4)
28 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
29 - Azerbaijan, Norway, Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
30 - Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
31 - Bulgaria (1 - 1 - 2)
32 - Finland (1 - 1 - 1)
33 - Brazil (1 - 0 - 5)
34 - Argentina (1 - 0 - 1)
35 - Cameroon, India, Panama, Thailand, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
36 - Hungary (0 - 4 - 1)
37 - Sweden (0 - 3 - 0)
38 - Turkey (0 - 2 - 1)
39 - Uzbekistan (0 - 1 - 3)
40 - Austria, Greece, Lithuania (0 - 1 - 2)
41 - Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia (0 - 1 - 1)
42 - Chile, Ecuador, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
43 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
44 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 2)
45 - Egypt, Iran, Latvia, Morocco, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 204 Golds - 205 Silvers - 231 Bronzes (640 total)
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
79 USA
76 China
42 Russia
35 Australia
33 UK
29 France
28 Germany
24 South Korea
22 Japan
19 Italy
17 Ukraine
14 Canada
13 Netherlands
11 Cuba, Belarus
9 Spain
8 Romania, Poland, Kazakhstan
7 Kenya, New Zealand
6 Denmark, North Korea, Brazil
5 Czech Rep., Jamaica, Switzerland, Azerbaijan, Norway, Slovenia, Indonesia, Hungary, Slovenia
4 Slovakia, Zimbabwe, Bulgaria, Uzbekistan
3 Ethiopia, Georgia, Finland, Sweden, Turkey, Austria, Greece, Lithuania
2 Estonia, Mongolia, Argentina, Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Taiwan
1 Cameroon, India, Panama, Thailand, Tunisia, Chile, Ecuador, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Egypt, Iran, Latvia, Morocco, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (43 Gold - 14 Silver - 19 Bronze)
2 - USA (26 - 26 - 27)
3 - UK (16 - 9 - 8)
4 - Australia (11 - 12 - 12)
5 - Germany (11 - 8 - 9)
6 - Russia (10 - 14 - 18)
7 - South Korea (8 - 10 - 6)
8 - Japan (8 - 6 - 8)
9 - Italy (6 - 6 - 7)
10 - Ukraine (5 - 4 - 8)
11 - France (4 - 11 - 14)
12 - Netherlands (4 - 5 - 4)
13 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
14 - Spain (3 - 4 - 2)
15 - Poland (3 - 4 - 1)
16 - Slovakia (3 - 1 - 0)
17 - Canada (2 - 6 - 6)
18 - Kenya (2 - 3 - 2)
19 - Jamaica, Czech Rep. (2 - 3 - 0)
20 - New Zealand (2 - 1 - 4)
21 - Denmark, North Korea (2 - 1 - 3)
22 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
23 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
24 - Georgia (2 - 0 - 1)
25 - Cuba (1 - 5 - 5)
26 - Belarus (1 - 3 - 7)
27 - Kazakhstan (1 - 3 - 4)
28 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
29 - Azerbaijan, Norway, Slovenia (1 - 2 - 2)
30 - Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
31 - Bulgaria (1 - 1 - 2)
32 - Finland (1 - 1 - 1)
33 - Brazil (1 - 0 - 5)
34 - Argentina (1 - 0 - 1)
35 - Cameroon, India, Panama, Thailand, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
36 - Hungary (0 - 4 - 1)
37 - Sweden (0 - 3 - 0)
38 - Turkey (0 - 2 - 1)
39 - Uzbekistan (0 - 1 - 3)
40 - Austria, Greece, Lithuania (0 - 1 - 2)
41 - Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia (0 - 1 - 1)
42 - Chile, Ecuador, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
43 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
44 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 2)
45 - Egypt, Iran, Latvia, Morocco, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 204 Golds - 205 Silvers - 231 Bronzes (640 total)
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
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Monday, 18 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 10
At the end of Day 10 (August 18th), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
71 USA
67 China
36 Russia
33 Australia
28 France
27 UK
23 Germany, South Korea
20 Japan
18 Italy
16 Ukraine
12 Netherlands
11 Cuba, Belarus
9 Canada
8 Romania, Spain, Kazakhstan
7 Poland, Kenya
6 Denmark, North Korea, New Zealand, Brazil
5 Czech Rep., Switzerland, Azerbaijan, Indonesia, Hungary, Armenia
4 Slovakia, Jamaica, Zimbabwe, Norway, Slovenia
3 Ethiopia, Georgia, Bulgaria, Finland, Sweden, turkey, Austria, Greece, Uzbekistan
2 Mongolia, Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Taiwan
1 Cameroon, India, Panama, Thailand, Tunisia, Chile, Ecuador, Estonia, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Argentina, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Morocco, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (39 Gold - 14 - Silver - 14 Bronze)
2 - USA (21 - 24 - 26)
3 - UK (12 - 7 - 8)
4 - Australia (11 - 10 - 12)
5 - Germany (9 - 7 - 7)
6 - Russia (8 - 13 - 15)
7 - South Korea (8 - 9 - 6)
8 - Japan (8 - 5 - 7)
9 - Italy (6 - 6 - 6)
10 - Ukraine (5 - 3 - 8)
11 - France (4 - 11 - 13)
12 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
13 - Netherlands (3 - 5 - 4)
14 - Spain (3 - 3 - 2)
15 - Poland (3 - 3 - 1)
16 - Slovakia (3 - 1 - 0)
17 - Canada (2 - 3 - 4)
18 - Kenya (2 - 3 - 2)
19 - Czech Rep. (2 - 3 - 0)
20 - Jamaica (2 - 2 - 0)
21 - Denmark, North Korea, New Zealand (2 - 1 - 3)
22 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
23 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
24 - Georgia (2 - 0 - 1)
25 - Cuba (1 - 5 - 5)
26 - Belarus (1 - 3 - 7)
27 - Kazakhstan (1 - 3 - 4)
28 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
29 - Azerbaijan, Norway (1 - 2 - 2)
30 - Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
31 - Slovenia (1 - 1 - 2)
32 - Bulgaria, Finland (1 - 1 - 1)
33 - Mongolia (1 - 1 - 0)
34 - Brazil (1 - 0 - 5)
35 - Cameroon, India, Panama, Thailand, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
36 - Hungary (0 - 4 - 1)
37 - Sweden (0 - 3 - 0)
38 - Turkey (0 - 2 - 1)
39 - Austria, Greece, Uzbekistan (0 - 1 - 2)
40 - Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia (0 - 1 - 1)
41 - Chile, Ecuador, Estonia, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
42 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
43 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 2)
44 - Argentina, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Morocco, Tajikistan, Togo (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 185 Golds - 186 Silvers - 210 Bronzes (581 total)
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
71 USA
67 China
36 Russia
33 Australia
28 France
27 UK
23 Germany, South Korea
20 Japan
18 Italy
16 Ukraine
12 Netherlands
11 Cuba, Belarus
9 Canada
8 Romania, Spain, Kazakhstan
7 Poland, Kenya
6 Denmark, North Korea, New Zealand, Brazil
5 Czech Rep., Switzerland, Azerbaijan, Indonesia, Hungary, Armenia
4 Slovakia, Jamaica, Zimbabwe, Norway, Slovenia
3 Ethiopia, Georgia, Bulgaria, Finland, Sweden, turkey, Austria, Greece, Uzbekistan
2 Mongolia, Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Taiwan
1 Cameroon, India, Panama, Thailand, Tunisia, Chile, Ecuador, Estonia, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Argentina, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Morocco, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - China (39 Gold - 14 - Silver - 14 Bronze)
2 - USA (21 - 24 - 26)
3 - UK (12 - 7 - 8)
4 - Australia (11 - 10 - 12)
5 - Germany (9 - 7 - 7)
6 - Russia (8 - 13 - 15)
7 - South Korea (8 - 9 - 6)
8 - Japan (8 - 5 - 7)
9 - Italy (6 - 6 - 6)
10 - Ukraine (5 - 3 - 8)
11 - France (4 - 11 - 13)
12 - Romania (4 - 1 - 3)
13 - Netherlands (3 - 5 - 4)
14 - Spain (3 - 3 - 2)
15 - Poland (3 - 3 - 1)
16 - Slovakia (3 - 1 - 0)
17 - Canada (2 - 3 - 4)
18 - Kenya (2 - 3 - 2)
19 - Czech Rep. (2 - 3 - 0)
20 - Jamaica (2 - 2 - 0)
21 - Denmark, North Korea, New Zealand (2 - 1 - 3)
22 - Ethiopia (2 - 1 - 0)
23 - Switzerland (2 - 0 - 3)
24 - Georgia (2 - 0 - 1)
25 - Cuba (1 - 5 - 5)
26 - Belarus (1 - 3 - 7)
27 - Kazakhstan (1 - 3 - 4)
28 - Zimbabwe (1 - 3 - 0)
29 - Azerbaijan, Norway (1 - 2 - 2)
30 - Indonesia (1 - 1 - 3)
31 - Slovenia (1 - 1 - 2)
32 - Bulgaria, Finland (1 - 1 - 1)
33 - Mongolia (1 - 1 - 0)
34 - Brazil (1 - 0 - 5)
35 - Cameroon, India, Panama, Thailand, Tunisia (1 - 0 - 0)
36 - Hungary (0 - 4 - 1)
37 - Sweden (0 - 3 - 0)
38 - Turkey (0 - 2 - 1)
39 - Austria, Greece, Uzbekistan (0 - 1 - 2)
40 - Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia (0 - 1 - 1)
41 - Chile, Ecuador, Estonia, Malaysia, Portugal, South Africa, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam (0 - 1 - 0)
42 - Armenia (0 - 0 - 5)
43 - Taiwan (0 - 0 - 2)
44 - Argentina, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Morocco, Tajikistan, Togo (0 - 0 - 1)
Totals: 185 Golds - 186 Silvers - 210 Bronzes (581 total)
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
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Sunday, 17 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 9
At the end of Day 9 (August 17th), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
65 - USA
61 - China
31 - Russia
29 - Australia
25 - UK, France
22 - South Korea
21 - Germany
20 - Japan
18 - Italy
14 - Ukraine
10 - Netherlands, Belarus
8 - Romania, Cuba, Kazakhstan
7 - Canada
6 - Spain, Poland, North Korea
5 - Czech Rep., New Zealand, Switzerland, Azerbaijan, Indonesia, Brazil, Hungary, Armenia
4 - Slovakia, Jamaica, Zimbabwe, Norway, Slovenia, Denmark
3 - Ethiopia, Georgia, Bulgaria, Finland, Sweden, Kenya, Turkey, Austria, Greece
2 - Mongolia, Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Uzbekistan, Taiwan
1 - Cameroon, India, Thailand, Tunisia, Chile, Ecuador, Estonia, Malaysia, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Argentina, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (35 Gold - 13 Silver - 13 Bronze) China
2 - (19 - 21 - 25) USA
3 - (11 - 6 - 8) UK
4 - (9 - 6 - 6) Germany
5 - (8 - 10 - 11) Australia
6 - (8 - 9 - 5) South Korea
7 - (8 - 5 - 7) Japan
8 - (7 - 12 - 12) Russia
9 - (6 - 6 - 6) Italy
10 - (5 - 3 - 6) Ukraine
11 - (4 - 9 - 12) France
12 - (4 - 1 - 3) Romania
13 - (3 - 2 - 1) Spain
14 - (3 - 1 - 0) Slovakia
15 - (2 - 4 - 4) Netherlands
16 - (2 - 3 - 1) Poland
17 - (2 - 3 - 0) Czech Rep.
18 - (2 - 2 - 0) Jamaica
19 - (2 - 1 - 4) Canada
20 - (2 - 1 - 3) North Korea
21 - (2 - 1 - 2) New Zealand
22 - (2 - 1 - 0) Ethiopia
23 - (2 - 0 - 3) Switzerland
24 - (2 - 0 - 1) Georgia
25 - (1 - 3 - 4) Cuba, Kazakhstan
26 - (1 - 3 - 0) Zimbabwe
27 - (1 - 2 - 2) Azerbaijan
28 - (1 - 2 - 1) Norway
29 - (1 - 1 - 3) Indonesia
30 - (1 - 1 - 2) Slovenia
31 - (1 - 1 - 1) Bulgaria, Finland
32 - (1 - 1 - 0) Mongolia
33 - (1 - 0 - 4) Brazil
34 - (1 - 0 - 3) Denmark
35 - (1 - 0 - 0) Cameroon, India, Thailand, Tunisia
36 - (0 - 4 - 1) Hungary
37 - (0 - 3 - 7) Belarus
38 - (0 - 3 - 0) Sweden
39 - (0 - 2 - 1) Kenya, Turkey
40 - (0 - 1 - 2) Austria, Greece
41 - (0 - 1 - 1) Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Uzbekistan
42 - (0 - 1 - 0) Chile, Ecuador, Estonia, Malaysia, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam
43 - (0 - 0 - 5) Armenia
44 - (0 - 0 - 2) Taiwan
45 - (0 - 0 - 1) Argentina, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Totals: 166 Golds - 167 Silvers - 191 Bronzes (524 total)
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
65 - USA
61 - China
31 - Russia
29 - Australia
25 - UK, France
22 - South Korea
21 - Germany
20 - Japan
18 - Italy
14 - Ukraine
10 - Netherlands, Belarus
8 - Romania, Cuba, Kazakhstan
7 - Canada
6 - Spain, Poland, North Korea
5 - Czech Rep., New Zealand, Switzerland, Azerbaijan, Indonesia, Brazil, Hungary, Armenia
4 - Slovakia, Jamaica, Zimbabwe, Norway, Slovenia, Denmark
3 - Ethiopia, Georgia, Bulgaria, Finland, Sweden, Kenya, Turkey, Austria, Greece
2 - Mongolia, Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Uzbekistan, Taiwan
1 - Cameroon, India, Thailand, Tunisia, Chile, Ecuador, Estonia, Malaysia, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Argentina, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (35 Gold - 13 Silver - 13 Bronze) China
2 - (19 - 21 - 25) USA
3 - (11 - 6 - 8) UK
4 - (9 - 6 - 6) Germany
5 - (8 - 10 - 11) Australia
6 - (8 - 9 - 5) South Korea
7 - (8 - 5 - 7) Japan
8 - (7 - 12 - 12) Russia
9 - (6 - 6 - 6) Italy
10 - (5 - 3 - 6) Ukraine
11 - (4 - 9 - 12) France
12 - (4 - 1 - 3) Romania
13 - (3 - 2 - 1) Spain
14 - (3 - 1 - 0) Slovakia
15 - (2 - 4 - 4) Netherlands
16 - (2 - 3 - 1) Poland
17 - (2 - 3 - 0) Czech Rep.
18 - (2 - 2 - 0) Jamaica
19 - (2 - 1 - 4) Canada
20 - (2 - 1 - 3) North Korea
21 - (2 - 1 - 2) New Zealand
22 - (2 - 1 - 0) Ethiopia
23 - (2 - 0 - 3) Switzerland
24 - (2 - 0 - 1) Georgia
25 - (1 - 3 - 4) Cuba, Kazakhstan
26 - (1 - 3 - 0) Zimbabwe
27 - (1 - 2 - 2) Azerbaijan
28 - (1 - 2 - 1) Norway
29 - (1 - 1 - 3) Indonesia
30 - (1 - 1 - 2) Slovenia
31 - (1 - 1 - 1) Bulgaria, Finland
32 - (1 - 1 - 0) Mongolia
33 - (1 - 0 - 4) Brazil
34 - (1 - 0 - 3) Denmark
35 - (1 - 0 - 0) Cameroon, India, Thailand, Tunisia
36 - (0 - 4 - 1) Hungary
37 - (0 - 3 - 7) Belarus
38 - (0 - 3 - 0) Sweden
39 - (0 - 2 - 1) Kenya, Turkey
40 - (0 - 1 - 2) Austria, Greece
41 - (0 - 1 - 1) Algeria, Colombia, Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Uzbekistan
42 - (0 - 1 - 0) Chile, Ecuador, Estonia, Malaysia, Singapore, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam
43 - (0 - 0 - 5) Armenia
44 - (0 - 0 - 2) Taiwan
45 - (0 - 0 - 1) Argentina, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Totals: 166 Golds - 167 Silvers - 191 Bronzes (524 total)
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
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Saturday, 16 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 8
At the end of Day 8 (August 16th), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
54 USA
47 China
25 Australia
22 France
21 Russia
20 South Korea
18 Germany
17 UK, Japan, Italy
12 Ukraine
8 Cuba, Belarus
7 Netherlands
6 Kazakhstan
5 Czech Rep., Nwe Zealand, Romania, Switzerland, Azerbaijan, North Korea, Brazil, Hungary, Armenia
4 Slovakia, Zimbabwe, Norway, Indonesia
3 Spain, Georgia, Canada, Sweden, Turkey, Austria, Indonesia
2 Mongolia, Poland, Bulgaria, Finland, Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Slovenia, Serbia, Uzbekistan, Denmark, Taiwan
1 Ethiopia, India, Jamaica, Thailand, Ecuador, Estonia, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Argentina, Croatia, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (27 Gold - 13 Silver - 7 Bronze) China
2 - (16-16-22) USA
3 - (8-5-5-) Germany
4 - (7-9-4) South Korea
5 - (7-8-10) Australia
6 - (7-5-5) Japan
7 - (7-3-7) UK
8 - (6-5-6) Italy
9 - (5-8-8) Russia
10 - (5-2-5) Ukraine
11 - (3-9-10) France
12 - (3-1-0) Slovakia
13 - (2-3-0) Czech Rep.
14 - (2-1-2) New Zealand, Romania
15 - (2-0-3) Switzerland
16 - (2-0-1) Spain, Georgia
17 - (1-3-4) Cuba
18 - (1-3-0) Zimbabwe
19 - (1-2-4) Netherlands
20 - (1-2-2) Azerbaijan
21 - (1-2-1) Norway
22 - (1-1-3) North Korea
23 - (1-1-1) Canada
24 - (1-1-0) Mongolia, Poland
25 - (1-0-4) Brazil
26 - (1-0-3) Indonesia
27 - (1-0-1) Bulgaria, Finland
28 - (1-0-0) Ethiopia, India, Jamaica, Thailand
29 - (0-4-1) Hungary
30 - (0-3-3) Kazakhstan
31 - (0-3-0) Sweden
32 - (0-2-6) Belarus
33 - (0-2-1) Turkey
34 - (0-1-2) Austria
35 - (0-1-1) Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Slovenia, Serbia, Uzbekistan
36 - (0-1-0) Ecuador, Estonia, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam
37 - (0-0-5) Armenia
38 - (0-0-3) Indonesia
39 - (0-0-2) Denmark, Taiwan
40 - (0-0-1) Argentina, Croatia, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Totals: 130 Golds - 130 Silvers - 156 Bronzes (416 total)
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
54 USA
47 China
25 Australia
22 France
21 Russia
20 South Korea
18 Germany
17 UK, Japan, Italy
12 Ukraine
8 Cuba, Belarus
7 Netherlands
6 Kazakhstan
5 Czech Rep., Nwe Zealand, Romania, Switzerland, Azerbaijan, North Korea, Brazil, Hungary, Armenia
4 Slovakia, Zimbabwe, Norway, Indonesia
3 Spain, Georgia, Canada, Sweden, Turkey, Austria, Indonesia
2 Mongolia, Poland, Bulgaria, Finland, Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Slovenia, Serbia, Uzbekistan, Denmark, Taiwan
1 Ethiopia, India, Jamaica, Thailand, Ecuador, Estonia, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam, Argentina, Croatia, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (27 Gold - 13 Silver - 7 Bronze) China
2 - (16-16-22) USA
3 - (8-5-5-) Germany
4 - (7-9-4) South Korea
5 - (7-8-10) Australia
6 - (7-5-5) Japan
7 - (7-3-7) UK
8 - (6-5-6) Italy
9 - (5-8-8) Russia
10 - (5-2-5) Ukraine
11 - (3-9-10) France
12 - (3-1-0) Slovakia
13 - (2-3-0) Czech Rep.
14 - (2-1-2) New Zealand, Romania
15 - (2-0-3) Switzerland
16 - (2-0-1) Spain, Georgia
17 - (1-3-4) Cuba
18 - (1-3-0) Zimbabwe
19 - (1-2-4) Netherlands
20 - (1-2-2) Azerbaijan
21 - (1-2-1) Norway
22 - (1-1-3) North Korea
23 - (1-1-1) Canada
24 - (1-1-0) Mongolia, Poland
25 - (1-0-4) Brazil
26 - (1-0-3) Indonesia
27 - (1-0-1) Bulgaria, Finland
28 - (1-0-0) Ethiopia, India, Jamaica, Thailand
29 - (0-4-1) Hungary
30 - (0-3-3) Kazakhstan
31 - (0-3-0) Sweden
32 - (0-2-6) Belarus
33 - (0-2-1) Turkey
34 - (0-1-2) Austria
35 - (0-1-1) Algeria, Colombia, Kyrgyzstan, Slovenia, Serbia, Uzbekistan
36 - (0-1-0) Ecuador, Estonia, Trinidad & Tobago, Vietnam
37 - (0-0-5) Armenia
38 - (0-0-3) Indonesia
39 - (0-0-2) Denmark, Taiwan
40 - (0-0-1) Argentina, Croatia, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Totals: 130 Golds - 130 Silvers - 156 Bronzes (416 total)
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
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Becky Adlington beats world record, gets Gold for Team GB
Rebecca Adlington made British sporting history in Beijing this morning as she won her second Olympic gold medal, smashing the 800 metres freestyle world record by more than 2sec in the process.
When Adlington won the 400m freestyle earlier in the week, it ended a 48-year wait for an Olympic gold medal for a British woman swimmer. Now she has achieved something no British swimmer has managed in 100 years of Games history, and won two Olympic swimming golds. This time, by swimming the 16 lengths of the Water Cube pool in just 8min 14.10sec, the 19-year-old from Mansfield bettered a performance that has been on the record books for her entire lifetime. American Janet Evans's 8:16.22 had stood, seemingly unbreakable, since 1989. 'I can't believe that I went that quick,' a clearly delighted Adlington said. 'It's so nice that when you work so hard for so long that it all pays off.'
Adlington's delight was made greater because her parents, Kay and Steve, had VIP seats in the Water Cube to witness their daughter's latest success, after having been involved in an internet ticket scam, losing £1,100, that meant that they missed her first gold medal swim. 'My mum and dad are finally here to see me,' Adlington said. 'I am so happy. I can't believe it.' Adlington destroyed the field in the Olympic final, finishing more than 6sec clear of the Italian silver medal-winner, Alessia Filippi. Norway's Lotte Friis took bronze nearly 3sec further back. Adlington's best friend immediately launched a campaign for further honours for her room mate: 'To the Queen, if you are watching this,' Patten told national television, 'that's two gold medals, and Dame Rebecca Adlington.' Patten was referring to the honour bestode upon runner Kelly Holmes after she won two Olympic golds at the Athens Games four years ago.
In the longest race in the pool for women, Adlington's stroke was long and strong as she averaged close to 30sec per length. For the first 200 metres, she had the Romanian, Camelia Potec, for company.But that early pace would prove too much for Potec, who eventually finished exhausted and out of the medals in fourth.Once Adlington's relentless swimming broke her away from the Romanian, she then set about attacking Evans's world record, a target which her coach, Bill Furniss, had told her was possible after she had set an Olympic record of 8:18.06 in Thursday's heat. 'I was just expecting a battle,' Adlington said, 'but as soon as I was on my own, I just went for the time.'
When Adlington won the 400m freestyle earlier in the week, it ended a 48-year wait for an Olympic gold medal for a British woman swimmer. Now she has achieved something no British swimmer has managed in 100 years of Games history, and won two Olympic swimming golds. This time, by swimming the 16 lengths of the Water Cube pool in just 8min 14.10sec, the 19-year-old from Mansfield bettered a performance that has been on the record books for her entire lifetime. American Janet Evans's 8:16.22 had stood, seemingly unbreakable, since 1989. 'I can't believe that I went that quick,' a clearly delighted Adlington said. 'It's so nice that when you work so hard for so long that it all pays off.'
Adlington's delight was made greater because her parents, Kay and Steve, had VIP seats in the Water Cube to witness their daughter's latest success, after having been involved in an internet ticket scam, losing £1,100, that meant that they missed her first gold medal swim. 'My mum and dad are finally here to see me,' Adlington said. 'I am so happy. I can't believe it.' Adlington destroyed the field in the Olympic final, finishing more than 6sec clear of the Italian silver medal-winner, Alessia Filippi. Norway's Lotte Friis took bronze nearly 3sec further back. Adlington's best friend immediately launched a campaign for further honours for her room mate: 'To the Queen, if you are watching this,' Patten told national television, 'that's two gold medals, and Dame Rebecca Adlington.' Patten was referring to the honour bestode upon runner Kelly Holmes after she won two Olympic golds at the Athens Games four years ago.
In the longest race in the pool for women, Adlington's stroke was long and strong as she averaged close to 30sec per length. For the first 200 metres, she had the Romanian, Camelia Potec, for company.But that early pace would prove too much for Potec, who eventually finished exhausted and out of the medals in fourth.Once Adlington's relentless swimming broke her away from the Romanian, she then set about attacking Evans's world record, a target which her coach, Bill Furniss, had told her was possible after she had set an Olympic record of 8:18.06 in Thursday's heat. 'I was just expecting a battle,' Adlington said, 'but as soon as I was on my own, I just went for the time.'
Friday, 15 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 7
At the end of Day 7 (August 15th) here is the updated total medals table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
45 USA
41 China
20 Australia
19 Russia
18 South Korea, France
14 Germany, Italy
13 Japan
8 UK, Cuba
7 Ukraine, Netherlands
5 North Korea, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Armenia
4 Slovakia, Czech Rep., Azerbaijan, Romania, Switzerland, Belarus, Brazil
3 Georgia, Zimbabwe, Sweden, Austria
2 Mongolia, Spain, finland, Poland, Algeria, Kyrgyzstan, Norway, Slovenia, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Indonesia, Taiwan
1 India, Thailand, Colombia, Vietnam, Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (26 Gold - 9 Silver - 6 Bronze) China
2 - (14-13-18) USA
3 - (8-2-4) Germany
4 - (6-9-3) South Korea
5 - (6-4-4) Italy
6 - (6-4-3) Japan
7 - (5-7-8) Australia
8 - (3-8-8) Russia
9 - (3-8-7) France
10 - (3-2-3) UK
11 - (3-1-0) Slovakia
12 - (3-0-4) Ukraine
13 - (2-2-0) Czech Rep.
14 - (2-0-1) Georgia
15 - (1-3-4) Cuba
16 - (1-2-4) Netherlands
17 - (1-2-1) Azerbaijan
18 - (1-1-3) North Korea
19 - (1-1-2) Romania
20 - (1-1-0) Mongolia, Poland
21 - (1-0-3) Switzerland
22 - (1-0-1) Spain, Finland
23 - (1-0-0) India, Thailand
24 - (0-4-1) Hungary
25 - (0-3-2) Kazakhstan
26 - (0-3-0) Zimbabwe
27 - (0-2-1) Sweden
28 - (0-1-3) Belarus
29 - (0-1-2) Austria
30 - (0-1-1) Algeria, Kyrgyzstan, Norway, Slovenia, Turkey, Uzbekistan
31 - (0-1-0) Colombia, Vietnam
32 - (0-0-5) Armenia
33 - (0-0-4) Brazil
34 - (0-0-2) Indonesia, Taiwan
35 - (0-0-1) Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
45 USA
41 China
20 Australia
19 Russia
18 South Korea, France
14 Germany, Italy
13 Japan
8 UK, Cuba
7 Ukraine, Netherlands
5 North Korea, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Armenia
4 Slovakia, Czech Rep., Azerbaijan, Romania, Switzerland, Belarus, Brazil
3 Georgia, Zimbabwe, Sweden, Austria
2 Mongolia, Spain, finland, Poland, Algeria, Kyrgyzstan, Norway, Slovenia, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Indonesia, Taiwan
1 India, Thailand, Colombia, Vietnam, Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (26 Gold - 9 Silver - 6 Bronze) China
2 - (14-13-18) USA
3 - (8-2-4) Germany
4 - (6-9-3) South Korea
5 - (6-4-4) Italy
6 - (6-4-3) Japan
7 - (5-7-8) Australia
8 - (3-8-8) Russia
9 - (3-8-7) France
10 - (3-2-3) UK
11 - (3-1-0) Slovakia
12 - (3-0-4) Ukraine
13 - (2-2-0) Czech Rep.
14 - (2-0-1) Georgia
15 - (1-3-4) Cuba
16 - (1-2-4) Netherlands
17 - (1-2-1) Azerbaijan
18 - (1-1-3) North Korea
19 - (1-1-2) Romania
20 - (1-1-0) Mongolia, Poland
21 - (1-0-3) Switzerland
22 - (1-0-1) Spain, Finland
23 - (1-0-0) India, Thailand
24 - (0-4-1) Hungary
25 - (0-3-2) Kazakhstan
26 - (0-3-0) Zimbabwe
27 - (0-2-1) Sweden
28 - (0-1-3) Belarus
29 - (0-1-2) Austria
30 - (0-1-1) Algeria, Kyrgyzstan, Norway, Slovenia, Turkey, Uzbekistan
31 - (0-1-0) Colombia, Vietnam
32 - (0-0-5) Armenia
33 - (0-0-4) Brazil
34 - (0-0-2) Indonesia, Taiwan
35 - (0-0-1) Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
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Thursday, 14 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 6
At the end of Day 6 (August 14th) here is the updated total medals table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
35 China
34 USA
16 South Korea, Australia
15 France
14 Russia
13 Italy
11 Germany, Japan
7 UK, North Korea
6 Cuba, Netherlands
5 Ukraine
4 Azerbaijan, Romania, Switzerland, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Brazil
3 Czech Rep., Georgia, Zimbabwe, Sweden
2 Mongolia, Slovakia, Spain, Finland, Algeria, Austria, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, Belarus, Indonesia, Taiwan
1 India, Thailand, Colombia, Norway, Slovenia, Vietnam, Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo, Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (22 Gold - 8 Silver - 5 Bronze) China
2 - (10-9-15) USA
3 - (6-7-3) South Korea
4 - (6-4-3) Italy
5 - (6-2-3) Germany
6 - (5-4-7) Australia
7 - (5-3-3) Japan
8 - (3-8-3) Russia
9 - (2-7-6) France
10 - (2-2-3) UK
11 - (2-1-0) Czech Rep.
12 - (2-0-1) Georgia
13 - (1-3-2) Cuba
14 - (1-2-4) North Korea
15 - (1-2-1) Azerbaijan
16 - (1-1-4) Netherlands
17 - (1-1-2) Romania
18 - (1-1-0) Mongolia, Slovakia
19 - (1-0-4) Ukraine
20 - (1-0-3) Switzerland
21 - (1-0-1) Spain, Finland
22 - (1-0-0) India, Thailand
23 - (0-3-1) Hungary
24 - (0-3-0) Zimbabwe
25 - (0-2-2) Kazakhstan
26 - (0-2-1) Sweden
27 - (0-1-1) Algeria, Austria, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey
28 - (0-1-0) Colombia, Norway, Slovenia, Vietnam
29 - (0-0-4) Armenia, Brazil
30 - (0-0-2) Belarus, Indonesia, Taiwan
31 - (0-0-1) Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
35 China
34 USA
16 South Korea, Australia
15 France
14 Russia
13 Italy
11 Germany, Japan
7 UK, North Korea
6 Cuba, Netherlands
5 Ukraine
4 Azerbaijan, Romania, Switzerland, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Brazil
3 Czech Rep., Georgia, Zimbabwe, Sweden
2 Mongolia, Slovakia, Spain, Finland, Algeria, Austria, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, Belarus, Indonesia, Taiwan
1 India, Thailand, Colombia, Norway, Slovenia, Vietnam, Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo, Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (22 Gold - 8 Silver - 5 Bronze) China
2 - (10-9-15) USA
3 - (6-7-3) South Korea
4 - (6-4-3) Italy
5 - (6-2-3) Germany
6 - (5-4-7) Australia
7 - (5-3-3) Japan
8 - (3-8-3) Russia
9 - (2-7-6) France
10 - (2-2-3) UK
11 - (2-1-0) Czech Rep.
12 - (2-0-1) Georgia
13 - (1-3-2) Cuba
14 - (1-2-4) North Korea
15 - (1-2-1) Azerbaijan
16 - (1-1-4) Netherlands
17 - (1-1-2) Romania
18 - (1-1-0) Mongolia, Slovakia
19 - (1-0-4) Ukraine
20 - (1-0-3) Switzerland
21 - (1-0-1) Spain, Finland
22 - (1-0-0) India, Thailand
23 - (0-3-1) Hungary
24 - (0-3-0) Zimbabwe
25 - (0-2-2) Kazakhstan
26 - (0-2-1) Sweden
27 - (0-1-1) Algeria, Austria, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey
28 - (0-1-0) Colombia, Norway, Slovenia, Vietnam
29 - (0-0-4) Armenia, Brazil
30 - (0-0-2) Belarus, Indonesia, Taiwan
31 - (0-0-1) Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Egypt, Lithuania, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
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Wednesday, 13 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 5
At the end of Day 5 (August 13th) here is the updated total medals table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
29 USA
27 China
13 South Korea
12 Australia, Russia
11 Italy, France
9 Germany, Japan
7 UK, North Korea
5 Netherlands
4 Romania, Switzerland, Ukraine
3 Georgia, Azerbaijan, Zimbabwe, Cuba, Hungary, Armenia, Cuba
2 Czech Rep., Slovakia, Spain, Finland, Sweden, Algeria, Austria, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Belarus, Indonesia, Taiwan
1 India, Thailand, Colombia, Mongolia, Norway, Slovenia, Turkey, Vietnam, Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Egypt, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo, Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (17 Gold - 5 Silver - 5 Bronze) China
2 - (10-8-11) USA
3 - (6-6-1) South Korea
4 - (6-1-2) Germany
5 - (4-4-3) Italy
6 - (4-2-6) Australia
7 - (4-2-3) Japan
8 - (2-7-3) Russia
9 - (2-2-3) UK
10 - (2-0-1) Georgia
11 - (2-0-0) Czech Republic
12 - (1-7-3) France
13 - (1-2-4) North Korea
14 - (1-2-0) Azerbaijan
15 - (1-1-3) Netherlands
16 - (1-1-2) Romania
17 - (1-1-0) Slovakia
18 - (1-0-3) Switzerland
19 - (1-0-1) Spain, Finland
20 - (1-0-0) India, Thailand
21 - (0-3-0) Zimbabwe
22 - (0-2-1) Cuba, Hungary
23 - (0-2-0) Sweden
24 - (0-1-1) Algeria, Austria, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
25 - (0-1-0) Colombia, Mongolia, Norway, Slovenia, Turkey, Vietnam
26 - (0-0-4) Ukraine
27 - (0-0-3) Brazil
28 - (0-0-2) Belarus, Indonesia, Taiwan
29 - (0-0-1) Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Egypt, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
29 USA
27 China
13 South Korea
12 Australia, Russia
11 Italy, France
9 Germany, Japan
7 UK, North Korea
5 Netherlands
4 Romania, Switzerland, Ukraine
3 Georgia, Azerbaijan, Zimbabwe, Cuba, Hungary, Armenia, Cuba
2 Czech Rep., Slovakia, Spain, Finland, Sweden, Algeria, Austria, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Belarus, Indonesia, Taiwan
1 India, Thailand, Colombia, Mongolia, Norway, Slovenia, Turkey, Vietnam, Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Egypt, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo, Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (17 Gold - 5 Silver - 5 Bronze) China
2 - (10-8-11) USA
3 - (6-6-1) South Korea
4 - (6-1-2) Germany
5 - (4-4-3) Italy
6 - (4-2-6) Australia
7 - (4-2-3) Japan
8 - (2-7-3) Russia
9 - (2-2-3) UK
10 - (2-0-1) Georgia
11 - (2-0-0) Czech Republic
12 - (1-7-3) France
13 - (1-2-4) North Korea
14 - (1-2-0) Azerbaijan
15 - (1-1-3) Netherlands
16 - (1-1-2) Romania
17 - (1-1-0) Slovakia
18 - (1-0-3) Switzerland
19 - (1-0-1) Spain, Finland
20 - (1-0-0) India, Thailand
21 - (0-3-0) Zimbabwe
22 - (0-2-1) Cuba, Hungary
23 - (0-2-0) Sweden
24 - (0-1-1) Algeria, Austria, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
25 - (0-1-0) Colombia, Mongolia, Norway, Slovenia, Turkey, Vietnam
26 - (0-0-4) Ukraine
27 - (0-0-3) Brazil
28 - (0-0-2) Belarus, Indonesia, Taiwan
29 - (0-0-1) Argentina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Egypt, Mexico, Tajikistan, Togo, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
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Michael Phelps Becomes Greatest Olympian
BEIJING (AP) - A daily double. Michael Phelps swam into history as the winningest Olympic athlete ever with his 10th and 11th career gold medals - and five world records in five events at the Beijing Games.
A day after etching his name alongside Mark Spitz and Carl Lewis with gold No. 9, Phelps set a standard all his own when won the 200-meter butterfly in 1 minute, 52.03 seconds, this morning. An hour later, he swam the leadoff of a runaway victory by the U.S. 800 freestyle relay team, which shattered the world mark by more than 4 seconds. In his individual event, Phelps had a problem with his goggles. But that didn't keep him from touching first and becoming the first repeat gold medalist in Olympic history. No such worries in the relay. Seemingly impervious to fatigue, the gangly American set a blistering pace of 1:43.31 - the fastest split in Olympic history - that got the Americans rolling toward a winning time of 6:58.56, the first team ever to break the 7-minute barrier.
"Come on! Come on!" he screamed at teammates Ryan Lochte, Ricky Berens and Peter Vanderkaay. The previous record of 7:03.24 was set by the Americans at last year's FINA World Championships. Russia took the silver, more than five seconds behind the Americans, who mainly had to make sure they didn't jump in the water too soon. Australia captured the bronze.
"Safe start! Safe start!" Phelps yelled at Berens before he dove in.
After a six-gold performance at the 2004 Athens Games, Phelps needed only five days in Beijing to surpass Spitz, Lewis, Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina and Finnish runner Paavo Nurmi as the winningest Olympian ever.
Phelps is now all alone at the top of the career golds list, with three more chances to stretch his lead before he leaves China. And with 13 career medals, he also passed swimmer Jenny Thompson as the most decorated American athlete in Olympic history. In his signature stroke, Phelps was second at the first flip, then pushed it into another gear, his long arms gobbling up huge chunks of water as he literally sailed along atop the surface, breaking his mark of 1:52.09 from the 2007 World Championships. Phelps barely smiled as he looked at the board, breathing heavily and hanging on the lane rope. Hungary's Laszlo Cseh really pushed it at the end, but settled for silver in 1:52.70. Japan's Takeshi Matsuda took bronze (1:52.97). Phelps rubbed his eyes and said climbing from the pool, "I can't see anything." A pair of leaky goggles kept him from even seeing the wall as he touched.
"My goggles kept filling up with water during the race," Phelps said. "I wanted a world record, I wanted 1:51 or better, but in the circumstances, not too bad I guess." Still, he had two more golds and two more records before lunchtime, leaving him just three wins away from beating Spitz's record of seven gold medals in a single games. He's also keeping pace with Spitz on the record front. Spitz set world standards in all of his wins at Munich; Phelps is now 5 for 5 in China. Everyone wanted to get a look at history, including the U.S. men's basketball team. Kobe Bryant, LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony were among those cheering on Phelps from poolside seats. James posed for pictures with Phelps' mom, Debbie.
In the semifinals of the 100 free, Australia's Eamon Sullivan and France's Alain Bernard played takeaway with the record Sullivan set two days earlier. In the first heat, France's Alain Bernard won the first heat in 47.20 to knock down Eamon Sullivan's mark of 47.24 set on Australia's leadoff leg of the memorable 400 free relay. That record lasted all of two minutes as Sullivan won the next heat in 47.05.
"Records don't mean much," Sullivan said. "They don't win medals at the end of the day, unfortunately. But it gives me confidence that I can swim my own race under pressure." American Jason Lezak, who chased down Bernard in the relay, advanced to the final with the sixth-best time, 47.98. The other U.S. swimmer, Garrett Weber-Gale, failed to advance.
Then it was Federica Pelligrini's turn in the women's 200 free. She broke the mark she set a day earlier in the semifinals, winning gold in 1:54.82 to become the first Italian female to capture a swimming gold medal. The old record was 1:55.45. Sara Isakovic of Slovenia claimed the silver in 1:54.97, and China's Pang Jiaying thrilled the home fans by passing Katie Hoff on the final lap to take bronze in 1:55.05. But Hoff's disappointing day wasn't done. Australia's Stephanie Rice completed her individual medley sweep with another world record in the 200 IM, her time of 2:08.45 erasing the mark of 2:08.92 set at the Australian trials in March.
Zimbabwe's Kirsty Coventry took the silver in 2:08.59, also below the previous world record. American Natalie Coughlin captured the bronze in 2:10.34, beating Hoff by 34-hundredths of a second. "It's a big surprise for me," said Coughlin, who only began swimming the IM a few months ago. "Any medal in an event that is not on your (regular) program is great." The glamorous Rice, wearing big green earrings that matched her country's colors, added to her victory in the 400 IM.
Then there's Hoff, who looked to be one of the big stories of the game when she qualified in five individual events - the same number as Phelps. The 19-year-old, who says Phelps is like a big brother, has yet to match his success in the water. In her first two races, Hoff settled for a bronze and a silver, which look pretty good after Wednesday. Now, she's got only one more event - the 800 free - to win an individual gold. "I would have liked to medal, but I got my first personal best of the meet and I think that's a good effort," Hoff said after the 200 free. "I can't be upset with that, and I'm just moving on to the next heat."
An inspiring Olympic story came to an end in the semifinals of the 200 breaststroke. Eric Shanteau, diagnosed with testicular cancer just before the U.S. Olympic trials and put off surgery until after the Games, failed to advance to the final of the 200 breaststroke. He finished sixth in his semifinal heat and 10 th overall, 13-hundredths out of the last finals spot. Japan's Kosuke Kitajima, trying for his second straight sweep of the breaststroke events, cruised along as the top qualifier at 2:08.61. He already won the 100 with a world record after taking both golds in Athens four years ago.
A day after etching his name alongside Mark Spitz and Carl Lewis with gold No. 9, Phelps set a standard all his own when won the 200-meter butterfly in 1 minute, 52.03 seconds, this morning. An hour later, he swam the leadoff of a runaway victory by the U.S. 800 freestyle relay team, which shattered the world mark by more than 4 seconds. In his individual event, Phelps had a problem with his goggles. But that didn't keep him from touching first and becoming the first repeat gold medalist in Olympic history. No such worries in the relay. Seemingly impervious to fatigue, the gangly American set a blistering pace of 1:43.31 - the fastest split in Olympic history - that got the Americans rolling toward a winning time of 6:58.56, the first team ever to break the 7-minute barrier.
"Come on! Come on!" he screamed at teammates Ryan Lochte, Ricky Berens and Peter Vanderkaay. The previous record of 7:03.24 was set by the Americans at last year's FINA World Championships. Russia took the silver, more than five seconds behind the Americans, who mainly had to make sure they didn't jump in the water too soon. Australia captured the bronze.
"Safe start! Safe start!" Phelps yelled at Berens before he dove in.
After a six-gold performance at the 2004 Athens Games, Phelps needed only five days in Beijing to surpass Spitz, Lewis, Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina and Finnish runner Paavo Nurmi as the winningest Olympian ever.
Phelps is now all alone at the top of the career golds list, with three more chances to stretch his lead before he leaves China. And with 13 career medals, he also passed swimmer Jenny Thompson as the most decorated American athlete in Olympic history. In his signature stroke, Phelps was second at the first flip, then pushed it into another gear, his long arms gobbling up huge chunks of water as he literally sailed along atop the surface, breaking his mark of 1:52.09 from the 2007 World Championships. Phelps barely smiled as he looked at the board, breathing heavily and hanging on the lane rope. Hungary's Laszlo Cseh really pushed it at the end, but settled for silver in 1:52.70. Japan's Takeshi Matsuda took bronze (1:52.97). Phelps rubbed his eyes and said climbing from the pool, "I can't see anything." A pair of leaky goggles kept him from even seeing the wall as he touched.
"My goggles kept filling up with water during the race," Phelps said. "I wanted a world record, I wanted 1:51 or better, but in the circumstances, not too bad I guess." Still, he had two more golds and two more records before lunchtime, leaving him just three wins away from beating Spitz's record of seven gold medals in a single games. He's also keeping pace with Spitz on the record front. Spitz set world standards in all of his wins at Munich; Phelps is now 5 for 5 in China. Everyone wanted to get a look at history, including the U.S. men's basketball team. Kobe Bryant, LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony were among those cheering on Phelps from poolside seats. James posed for pictures with Phelps' mom, Debbie.
In the semifinals of the 100 free, Australia's Eamon Sullivan and France's Alain Bernard played takeaway with the record Sullivan set two days earlier. In the first heat, France's Alain Bernard won the first heat in 47.20 to knock down Eamon Sullivan's mark of 47.24 set on Australia's leadoff leg of the memorable 400 free relay. That record lasted all of two minutes as Sullivan won the next heat in 47.05.
"Records don't mean much," Sullivan said. "They don't win medals at the end of the day, unfortunately. But it gives me confidence that I can swim my own race under pressure." American Jason Lezak, who chased down Bernard in the relay, advanced to the final with the sixth-best time, 47.98. The other U.S. swimmer, Garrett Weber-Gale, failed to advance.
Then it was Federica Pelligrini's turn in the women's 200 free. She broke the mark she set a day earlier in the semifinals, winning gold in 1:54.82 to become the first Italian female to capture a swimming gold medal. The old record was 1:55.45. Sara Isakovic of Slovenia claimed the silver in 1:54.97, and China's Pang Jiaying thrilled the home fans by passing Katie Hoff on the final lap to take bronze in 1:55.05. But Hoff's disappointing day wasn't done. Australia's Stephanie Rice completed her individual medley sweep with another world record in the 200 IM, her time of 2:08.45 erasing the mark of 2:08.92 set at the Australian trials in March.
Zimbabwe's Kirsty Coventry took the silver in 2:08.59, also below the previous world record. American Natalie Coughlin captured the bronze in 2:10.34, beating Hoff by 34-hundredths of a second. "It's a big surprise for me," said Coughlin, who only began swimming the IM a few months ago. "Any medal in an event that is not on your (regular) program is great." The glamorous Rice, wearing big green earrings that matched her country's colors, added to her victory in the 400 IM.
Then there's Hoff, who looked to be one of the big stories of the game when she qualified in five individual events - the same number as Phelps. The 19-year-old, who says Phelps is like a big brother, has yet to match his success in the water. In her first two races, Hoff settled for a bronze and a silver, which look pretty good after Wednesday. Now, she's got only one more event - the 800 free - to win an individual gold. "I would have liked to medal, but I got my first personal best of the meet and I think that's a good effort," Hoff said after the 200 free. "I can't be upset with that, and I'm just moving on to the next heat."
An inspiring Olympic story came to an end in the semifinals of the 200 breaststroke. Eric Shanteau, diagnosed with testicular cancer just before the U.S. Olympic trials and put off surgery until after the Games, failed to advance to the final of the 200 breaststroke. He finished sixth in his semifinal heat and 10 th overall, 13-hundredths out of the last finals spot. Japan's Kosuke Kitajima, trying for his second straight sweep of the breaststroke events, cruised along as the top qualifier at 2:08.61. He already won the 100 with a world record after taking both golds in Athens four years ago.
Tuesday, 12 August 2008
Olympics Medals Table - Day 4
At the end of Day 4 (August 12th) here is the updated total medals table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
22 USA
20 China
12 South Korea
10 Australia
9 Italy, Russia, France
7 North Korea
6 UK, Germany, Japan
4 Netherlands
3 Azerbaijan, Brazil
2 Czech Rep., Slovakia, Spain, Finland, Romania, Zimbabwe, Austria, Cuba, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Indonesia, Taiwan
1 India, Thailand, Colombia, Hungary, Norway, Sweden, Turkey, Vietnam, Algeria, Argentina, Belarus, Croatia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Togo, Ukraine, Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (13 Gold - 3 Silver - 4 Bronze) China
2 - (7-7-8) USA
3 - (5-6-1) South Korea
4 - (4-1-1) Germany
5 - (3-4-2) Italy
6 - (3-2-5) Australia
7 - (3-1-2) Japan
8 - (2-4-3) Russia
9 - (2-1-3) UK
10 - (2-0-0) Czech Rep.
11 - (1-2-4) North Korea
12 - (1-2-0) Azerbaijan
13 - (1-1-2) Netherlands
14 - (1-1-0) Slovakia
15 - (1-0-1) Spain, Finland, Romania
16 - (1-0-0) India, Thailand
17 - (0-7-2) France
18 - (0-2-0) Zimbabwe
19 - (0-1-1) Austria, Cuba, Kazakhstan
20 - (0-1-0) Colombia, Hungary, Norway, Sweden, Turkey, Vietnam
21 - (0-0-3) Brazil
22 - (0-0-2) Armenia, Indonesia, Taiwan
23 - (0-0-1) Algeria, Argentina, Belarus, Croatia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Togo, Ukraine, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
22 USA
20 China
12 South Korea
10 Australia
9 Italy, Russia, France
7 North Korea
6 UK, Germany, Japan
4 Netherlands
3 Azerbaijan, Brazil
2 Czech Rep., Slovakia, Spain, Finland, Romania, Zimbabwe, Austria, Cuba, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Indonesia, Taiwan
1 India, Thailand, Colombia, Hungary, Norway, Sweden, Turkey, Vietnam, Algeria, Argentina, Belarus, Croatia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Togo, Ukraine, Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (13 Gold - 3 Silver - 4 Bronze) China
2 - (7-7-8) USA
3 - (5-6-1) South Korea
4 - (4-1-1) Germany
5 - (3-4-2) Italy
6 - (3-2-5) Australia
7 - (3-1-2) Japan
8 - (2-4-3) Russia
9 - (2-1-3) UK
10 - (2-0-0) Czech Rep.
11 - (1-2-4) North Korea
12 - (1-2-0) Azerbaijan
13 - (1-1-2) Netherlands
14 - (1-1-0) Slovakia
15 - (1-0-1) Spain, Finland, Romania
16 - (1-0-0) India, Thailand
17 - (0-7-2) France
18 - (0-2-0) Zimbabwe
19 - (0-1-1) Austria, Cuba, Kazakhstan
20 - (0-1-0) Colombia, Hungary, Norway, Sweden, Turkey, Vietnam
21 - (0-0-3) Brazil
22 - (0-0-2) Armenia, Indonesia, Taiwan
23 - (0-0-1) Algeria, Argentina, Belarus, Croatia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Togo, Ukraine, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
...
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Monday, 11 August 2008
Olympics Medal Table - Day 3
At the end of Day 3 (August 11th), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
14 China
12 USA
8 South Korea; Italy
6 Russia
5 Australia; France
4 Japan; North Korea
3 UK; Netherlands
2 Czech Rep.; Spain; Finland; Germany; Cuba; Brazil; Indonesia
1 Azerbaijan; India; Romania; Thailand; Austria; Colombia; Hungary; Norway; Slovakia; Sweden; Turkey; Vietnam; Zimbabwe; Algeria; Argentina; Belarus; Croatia; Georgia; Switzerland; Tajikistan; Taiwan; Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (9 Gold. 3 Silver, 2 Bronze) China
2 - (4G, 4S) South Korea
3 - (3G, 4S, 5B) USA
4 - (3G, 3S, 3B) Italy
5 - (2G, 3B) Australia
6 - (2G, 2B) Japan
7 - (2G, 1B) UK
8 - (2G) Czech Rep.
9 - (1G, 1S, 1B) Netherlands
10 - (1G, 1B) Spain, Finland
11 - (1G) Azerbaijan, India, Romania, Thailand
12 - (4S, 2B) Russia
13 - (3S, 2B) France
14 - (1S, 3B) North Korea
15 - (1S, 1B) Cuba, Germany
16 - (1S) Austria, Colombia, Hungary, Norway, Slovakia, Sweden, Turkey, Vietnam, Zimbabwe
17 - (2B) Brazil, Indonesia
18 - (1B) Algeria, Argentina, Belarus, Croatia, Geogria, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Taiwan, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
14 China
12 USA
8 South Korea; Italy
6 Russia
5 Australia; France
4 Japan; North Korea
3 UK; Netherlands
2 Czech Rep.; Spain; Finland; Germany; Cuba; Brazil; Indonesia
1 Azerbaijan; India; Romania; Thailand; Austria; Colombia; Hungary; Norway; Slovakia; Sweden; Turkey; Vietnam; Zimbabwe; Algeria; Argentina; Belarus; Croatia; Georgia; Switzerland; Tajikistan; Taiwan; Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (9 Gold. 3 Silver, 2 Bronze) China
2 - (4G, 4S) South Korea
3 - (3G, 4S, 5B) USA
4 - (3G, 3S, 3B) Italy
5 - (2G, 3B) Australia
6 - (2G, 2B) Japan
7 - (2G, 1B) UK
8 - (2G) Czech Rep.
9 - (1G, 1S, 1B) Netherlands
10 - (1G, 1B) Spain, Finland
11 - (1G) Azerbaijan, India, Romania, Thailand
12 - (4S, 2B) Russia
13 - (3S, 2B) France
14 - (1S, 3B) North Korea
15 - (1S, 1B) Cuba, Germany
16 - (1S) Austria, Colombia, Hungary, Norway, Slovakia, Sweden, Turkey, Vietnam, Zimbabwe
17 - (2B) Brazil, Indonesia
18 - (1B) Algeria, Argentina, Belarus, Croatia, Geogria, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Taiwan, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
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Sunday, 10 August 2008
Olympics Medal Table - Day 2
At the end of Day 2 (August 10th), here is the updated total medal table for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
8 - USA; China
5 - South Korea
4 - Italy; Russia
3 - Japan; France; North Korea
2 - Czech Rep.; Australia; Spain; Netherlands; Cuba
1 - UK; Romania; Thailand; Austria; Hungary; Sweden; Turkey; Vietnam; Zimbabwe; Algeria; Argentina; Belarus; Croatia; Georgia; Germany; Indonesia; Switzerland; Taiwan; Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (6 Gold, 2 Silver) China
2 - (3G, 2S) South Korea
3 - (2G, 2S) USA
4 - (2G) Czech Republic
5 - (1G, 2S, 1B) Italy
6 - (1G, 2B) Japan
7 - (1G, 1B) Australia, Spain, Netherlands
8 - (1G) UK, Romania, Thailand
9 - (3S, 1B) Russia
10 - (2S, 1B) France
11 - (1S, 2B) North Korea
12 - (1S, 1B) Cuba
13 - (1S) Austria, Hungary, Sweden, Turkey, Vietnam, Zimbabwe
14 - (1B) Algeria, Argentina, Belarus, Croatia, Georgia, Germany, Indonesia, Switzerland, Taiwan, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
8 - USA; China
5 - South Korea
4 - Italy; Russia
3 - Japan; France; North Korea
2 - Czech Rep.; Australia; Spain; Netherlands; Cuba
1 - UK; Romania; Thailand; Austria; Hungary; Sweden; Turkey; Vietnam; Zimbabwe; Algeria; Argentina; Belarus; Croatia; Georgia; Germany; Indonesia; Switzerland; Taiwan; Uzbekistan
Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (6 Gold, 2 Silver) China
2 - (3G, 2S) South Korea
3 - (2G, 2S) USA
4 - (2G) Czech Republic
5 - (1G, 2S, 1B) Italy
6 - (1G, 2B) Japan
7 - (1G, 1B) Australia, Spain, Netherlands
8 - (1G) UK, Romania, Thailand
9 - (3S, 1B) Russia
10 - (2S, 1B) France
11 - (1S, 2B) North Korea
12 - (1S, 1B) Cuba
13 - (1S) Austria, Hungary, Sweden, Turkey, Vietnam, Zimbabwe
14 - (1B) Algeria, Argentina, Belarus, Croatia, Georgia, Germany, Indonesia, Switzerland, Taiwan, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
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Saturday, 9 August 2008
Olympics Medal Table: Day 1
Beijing Olympics 2008 - Medals Table sorted by total number of medals won:
3 - USA
2 - China; South Korea
1 - Czech Republic; Spain; Romania; Austria; Cuba; Italy; Russia; Turkey; Argentina; Croatia; Japan; Netherlands; North Korea; Switzerland; Taiwan; Uzbekistan.
Beijing Olympics 2008 - Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (1 Gold) China
2 - (1G, 1S, 1B) USA
3 - (1G, 1S) South Korea
4 - (1G) Czech Rep., Spain, Romania
5 - (1S) Austria, Cuba, Russia, Italy, Turkey
6 - (1B) Argentina, Croatia, Japan, Netherlands, North Korea, Switzerland, Taiwan, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
3 - USA
2 - China; South Korea
1 - Czech Republic; Spain; Romania; Austria; Cuba; Italy; Russia; Turkey; Argentina; Croatia; Japan; Netherlands; North Korea; Switzerland; Taiwan; Uzbekistan.
Beijing Olympics 2008 - Medals Table sorted by number of Gold, Silver, then Bronze medals won:
1 - (1 Gold) China
2 - (1G, 1S, 1B) USA
3 - (1G, 1S) South Korea
4 - (1G) Czech Rep., Spain, Romania
5 - (1S) Austria, Cuba, Russia, Italy, Turkey
6 - (1B) Argentina, Croatia, Japan, Netherlands, North Korea, Switzerland, Taiwan, Uzbekistan
Click here for the latest medal table update.
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Friday, 8 August 2008
China Hopes For 'Greatest' Games
The 2008 Olympics begin officially in Beijing on Friday with more than 200 countries taking part in the opening ceremony at the Bird's Nest stadium. A three-hour spectacular is promised, starting at 1300 BST, with basketball star Yao Ming to carry the hosts' flag.
"Of course we hope that these will be a great Games, even the greatest," said organisers' spokesman Sun Weide. But concerns over pollution which have dogged the Games remain, and organisers are hoping rain may improve conditions. Seventeen of the 28 sports feature action on Saturday, with the Games running until 24 August. The Games are expected to attract a record TV audience of four billion - over 100 million more than for the 2004 Athens Olympics.
A capacity crowd of around 90,000 will watch the opening ceremony in the famous stadium in the heart of Olympic Green. Some details of the ceremony, which has been directed by Chinese film director Zhang Yimou, have been released but organisers say there are set to be several surprises.
International Olympic Committee chairman Jacques Rogge on Thursday praised China's "extraordinary" efforts to reduce pollution. But he said, if it was bad, endurance events which last more than an hour could be shifted or postponed. The haze looks set to remain for the opening ceremony, although organisers forecast that pollution will stay just within healthy levels for the day. Guo Hu, the director of the Beijing Meteorological Observatory, said on Friday: "If the visibility is not good it does not mean the air quality is not good.
"We believe that the weather for the opening ceremony will be cloudy. From noon until early evening we may have some brief rain." IOC medical commissioner Arne Ljungqvist said of the pollution threat: "We have to be ready for such an unlikely situation to happen." The first such event is the 250km men's cycling road race, which starts in the heart of Beijing at 0400 BST (11am in China) and is due to last more than six hours.
That road race gold is one of seven available on Saturday, with judo player Craig Fallon aiming to win Great Britain's first medal of the Games. China's Du Li could win the first gold for the host country when she defends her title in the women's 10m air rifle. And American swimming star Michael Phelps also begins his quest to win an unprecedented eight Olympic golds in a single Games as he competes in the heats of the 400m individual medley. In all, nearly 11,000 athletes from around the world will compete for around 1,000 medals in 302 events.
The host nation are fielding their biggest ever Olympic team with 639 athletes competing in all 28 sports at the Olympics for the first time, in a bid to top the medals table ahead of the United States. Other events taking place on Saturday's opening day include beach volleyball, men's gymnastics, rowing and equestrian. The equestrian competition in Hong Kong is one of several taking place outside Beijing, with Qingdao hosting the sailing competition and Tianjin, Shanghai, Shenyang and Qinhuangdao co-hosting the football tournament. China has come under close scrutiny since Beijing was chosen in 2001 to host the Olympics. Demonstrations dogged the Olympic torch relay during its journey around the world. China's treatment of Tibet has been the subject of much of the controversy, and campaigners such as Amnesty International claim that journalists in China are still detained and websites blocked. Beijing has always promised to make improvements in human rights, media freedoms and the provision of health and education.
Following the withdrawal of boxer Frankie Gavin who failed to make the weight for the 60 kg lightweight division, British medal hopes rest with the likes of triple jumper Phillips Idowu, BMX rider Shanaze Reade and sailor Ben Ainslie, as well as 14-year-old diver Tom Daley among others.
There has been a security crackdown across Beijing in advance of the high-profile event, with thousands of armed police deployed and areas of the city centre locked down. Many of the city's 17m residents stayed at home after the Beijing authorities declared a public holiday to mark the auspicious start at 8pm (1300 BST) on 08/08/08 - the number eight is very lucky in China. Beijing airport is set to shut down just ahead of the start of the ceremony to be attended by world leaders such as Chinese President Hu Jintao and US counterpart George W Bush.
"Of course we hope that these will be a great Games, even the greatest," said organisers' spokesman Sun Weide. But concerns over pollution which have dogged the Games remain, and organisers are hoping rain may improve conditions. Seventeen of the 28 sports feature action on Saturday, with the Games running until 24 August. The Games are expected to attract a record TV audience of four billion - over 100 million more than for the 2004 Athens Olympics.
A capacity crowd of around 90,000 will watch the opening ceremony in the famous stadium in the heart of Olympic Green. Some details of the ceremony, which has been directed by Chinese film director Zhang Yimou, have been released but organisers say there are set to be several surprises.
International Olympic Committee chairman Jacques Rogge on Thursday praised China's "extraordinary" efforts to reduce pollution. But he said, if it was bad, endurance events which last more than an hour could be shifted or postponed. The haze looks set to remain for the opening ceremony, although organisers forecast that pollution will stay just within healthy levels for the day. Guo Hu, the director of the Beijing Meteorological Observatory, said on Friday: "If the visibility is not good it does not mean the air quality is not good.
"We believe that the weather for the opening ceremony will be cloudy. From noon until early evening we may have some brief rain." IOC medical commissioner Arne Ljungqvist said of the pollution threat: "We have to be ready for such an unlikely situation to happen." The first such event is the 250km men's cycling road race, which starts in the heart of Beijing at 0400 BST (11am in China) and is due to last more than six hours.
That road race gold is one of seven available on Saturday, with judo player Craig Fallon aiming to win Great Britain's first medal of the Games. China's Du Li could win the first gold for the host country when she defends her title in the women's 10m air rifle. And American swimming star Michael Phelps also begins his quest to win an unprecedented eight Olympic golds in a single Games as he competes in the heats of the 400m individual medley. In all, nearly 11,000 athletes from around the world will compete for around 1,000 medals in 302 events.
The host nation are fielding their biggest ever Olympic team with 639 athletes competing in all 28 sports at the Olympics for the first time, in a bid to top the medals table ahead of the United States. Other events taking place on Saturday's opening day include beach volleyball, men's gymnastics, rowing and equestrian. The equestrian competition in Hong Kong is one of several taking place outside Beijing, with Qingdao hosting the sailing competition and Tianjin, Shanghai, Shenyang and Qinhuangdao co-hosting the football tournament. China has come under close scrutiny since Beijing was chosen in 2001 to host the Olympics. Demonstrations dogged the Olympic torch relay during its journey around the world. China's treatment of Tibet has been the subject of much of the controversy, and campaigners such as Amnesty International claim that journalists in China are still detained and websites blocked. Beijing has always promised to make improvements in human rights, media freedoms and the provision of health and education.
Following the withdrawal of boxer Frankie Gavin who failed to make the weight for the 60 kg lightweight division, British medal hopes rest with the likes of triple jumper Phillips Idowu, BMX rider Shanaze Reade and sailor Ben Ainslie, as well as 14-year-old diver Tom Daley among others.
There has been a security crackdown across Beijing in advance of the high-profile event, with thousands of armed police deployed and areas of the city centre locked down. Many of the city's 17m residents stayed at home after the Beijing authorities declared a public holiday to mark the auspicious start at 8pm (1300 BST) on 08/08/08 - the number eight is very lucky in China. Beijing airport is set to shut down just ahead of the start of the ceremony to be attended by world leaders such as Chinese President Hu Jintao and US counterpart George W Bush.
Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony Nears
The Chinese capital, Beijing, is preparing to open the 2008 Olympic Games with a lavish ceremony. The event will involve about 10,000 performers, and will be watched on TV by an estimated four billion people. The lead-up to the Games has been overshadowed by issues such as China's human rights record, internet access, and air pollution in Beijing.
US President George W Bush expressed "deep concerns" over human rights before flying to Beijing. Mr Bush, who was in Thailand on the eve of the opening ceremony, voiced "firm opposition" to China's detention of dissidents - while stressing that he wanted the focus during the Games to be on sport. China rejected the US president's criticisms as "interference" in its internal affairs, and insisted it "put its people first". Meanwhile, 40 Olympian athletes wrote to President Hu Jintao expressing their concerns over Beijing's handling of anti-Chinese unrest in Tibet.
But after a succession of controversial issues in the build-up to the Games, the focus is now shifting to the opening ceremony. Having taken seven years of planning, and a record-breaking $40bn in costs, nothing has been left to chance in China's bid to show the world what it can do, our correspondent adds. An estimated global audience of four billion people will watch the opening ceremony. It will be staged at Beijing's national stadium - known as the Bird's Nest because of its steel latticed construction - and some 10,000 performers will take part.
Jacques Rogge, the head of the International Olympic Committee, who has repeatedly defended the decision to let China host the Olympics, said he hoped the Games would help the world to understand China, and China to understand the world. Mr Rogge also praised China's "extraordinary" efforts to cut pollution ahead of the Games, saying there was no danger to athletes' health. A day before the Games, a BBC reading suggested Beijing's air quality was far below World Health Organization (WHO) standards.
It put levels of particulate matter (PM10) at 191 micrograms per cubic metre. This exceeds the WHO target for developing countries of 150 micrograms/cubic metre. Mr Rogge said if the pollution was bad, events which lasted more than an hour could be shifted or postponed.There were celebrations on Thursday as the Olympic torch made its final stops on a journey that has seen it pass through six continents in six months.
Patriotic crowds lining a mist-shrouded Great Wall cheered as the torch - which has been a magnet for protesters critical of China's rights record on its six-continent tour - passed by. Human-rights group have condemned curbs on journalists covering the Games. In a statement issued on Friday, the New York-based group Human Rights Watch said: "As the 2008 Olympic Games open in Beijing, foreign journalists in China face a host of severe restrictions, ranging from harassment to a censored internet."
US President George W Bush expressed "deep concerns" over human rights before flying to Beijing. Mr Bush, who was in Thailand on the eve of the opening ceremony, voiced "firm opposition" to China's detention of dissidents - while stressing that he wanted the focus during the Games to be on sport. China rejected the US president's criticisms as "interference" in its internal affairs, and insisted it "put its people first". Meanwhile, 40 Olympian athletes wrote to President Hu Jintao expressing their concerns over Beijing's handling of anti-Chinese unrest in Tibet.
But after a succession of controversial issues in the build-up to the Games, the focus is now shifting to the opening ceremony. Having taken seven years of planning, and a record-breaking $40bn in costs, nothing has been left to chance in China's bid to show the world what it can do, our correspondent adds. An estimated global audience of four billion people will watch the opening ceremony. It will be staged at Beijing's national stadium - known as the Bird's Nest because of its steel latticed construction - and some 10,000 performers will take part.
Jacques Rogge, the head of the International Olympic Committee, who has repeatedly defended the decision to let China host the Olympics, said he hoped the Games would help the world to understand China, and China to understand the world. Mr Rogge also praised China's "extraordinary" efforts to cut pollution ahead of the Games, saying there was no danger to athletes' health. A day before the Games, a BBC reading suggested Beijing's air quality was far below World Health Organization (WHO) standards.
It put levels of particulate matter (PM10) at 191 micrograms per cubic metre. This exceeds the WHO target for developing countries of 150 micrograms/cubic metre. Mr Rogge said if the pollution was bad, events which lasted more than an hour could be shifted or postponed.There were celebrations on Thursday as the Olympic torch made its final stops on a journey that has seen it pass through six continents in six months.
Patriotic crowds lining a mist-shrouded Great Wall cheered as the torch - which has been a magnet for protesters critical of China's rights record on its six-continent tour - passed by. Human-rights group have condemned curbs on journalists covering the Games. In a statement issued on Friday, the New York-based group Human Rights Watch said: "As the 2008 Olympic Games open in Beijing, foreign journalists in China face a host of severe restrictions, ranging from harassment to a censored internet."
Monday, 4 August 2008
Top 100 Olympic Athletes Of All Time
LONDON - The Times, July 30th
94=
Daley Thompson (Great Britain) 30pts
born 1958 Notting Hill, London
Gold decathlon 1980; decathlon 1984
Fourth decathlon 1988. Seventh 4x100m 1984
One of the sport's great all-rounders, Thompson became the first athlete to hold Olympic, Commonwealth, European and World titles at the same time when he won in Los Angeles, setting a world record of 8847 points that stood for eight years. Controversially whistled the national anthem on the podium and swore when receiving the BBC Sports Personality of the Year prize in 1982. Awarded MBE in 1982 and CBE in 2000.
Bobby Joe Morrow (United States) 30pts
born 1935 Harlingen, Texas
Gold 100m 1956; 200m 1956; 4x100m 1956
The first man to achieve the sprint double since Jesse Owens in 1936. He led a clean sweep of Americans in the 200m, equalling the Olympic record of 20.6, and anchored the relay squad to victory in a world record 39.5. Retired in 1958 and became a farmer.
Cornelius Leahy (Great Britian) 30pts
born 1876 Cregane, Limerick, Ireland; died 1921 Manhattan, New York, US
Gold high jump 1906
Silver triple jump 1906; high jump 1908
Con Leahy was an Irishman forced to compete under the British flag despite being entered for the Games by the Gaelic Athletic Association. He took part in a protest in Athens when Peter O'Connor, a fellow Irish athlete, scaled a flagpole and waved the Irish colours. Leahy's brother, Patrick, won silver and bronze medals at the 1900 Olympics.
Alberto Juantorena (Cuba) 30pts
born 1950 Santiago de Cuba
Gold 400m 1976; 800m 1976
Fourth 400m 1980. Seventh 4x400m 1976
The first man from a non-English speaking country to win both the 400m and 800m and the first to do the double since Paul Pilgrim (US) in 1906. In 1976, Juantorena was favourite for the 400m and powered to victory in 44.26 but an unknown quantity in the two-lap race. He duly won with his nine-foot stride taking him to a world record of 1:43.50.
Deon Hemmings (Jamaica) 30pts
born 1968 St Ann
Gold 400m hurdles 1996
Silver 400m hurdles 2000; 4x400m 2000
Fourth 4x400m 1996. Seventh 400m hurdles 1992
The first Jamaican to win gold in 20 years and the first woman representing the Caribbean island to become an Olympic champion. Returned four years later to take silver behind Irina Privalova (Russia) and still holds the Olympic record with her 1996 winning time of 52.82.
Maurice Greene (US) 30pts
born 1974 Kansas City, Kansas
Gold 100m 2000; 4x100m 2000
Silver 4x100m 2004
Bronze 100m 2004
Failed to make the US team in 1996 but joined John Smith's powerful sprint squad in Los Angeles and arrived in Sydney as world champion and world record-holder (9.79). He collected two gold medals. In Athens, he added a bronze but was unable to pass Mark Lewis-Francis on the anchor leg of the sprint relay as Great Britain took a surprise victory.
Glenn Davis (United States) 30pts
born 1934 Wellsburg, West Virginia
Gold 400m hurdles 1956; 400m hurdles 1960; 4x400m 1960
Winning back-to-back titles, Davis was the leading intermediate hurdler of his generation. After his track career, Davis played American Football for the Detroit Lions with ten catches and 132 yards in his two NFL seasons. He is now the owner of Jeep's Olympic Driving School in Ohio.
Steve Backley (Great Britain) 30pts
born 1969 Sidcup, Kent
Silver javelin 1996; javelin 2000
Bronze javelin 1992
Fourth javelin 2004
Despite winning four consecutive European titles (1990-2002), Backley was always the bridesmaid at the Games, finishing behind Jan Zelezny (Czech Republic) on three occasions. He is, however, the only British athlete to win medals at three different Games and he broke the world record three times. This year he appeared on Dancing on Ice with partner Susie Lipanova. MBE in 1995 and OBE in 2003.
83=
Miruts Yifter (Ethiopia) 31pts
born 1938 Tigray
Gold 5,000m 1980; 10,000m 1980
Bronze 10,000m 1972
After a 10,000m bronze in Munich, Yifter missed his heat for the 5,000m and had to wait eight years to make amends after the African boycott of the 1976 Games. The 5ft 4in father-of-six made no mistake in Moscow, destroying both distance fields with stunning finishes. He clocked 26.8 for the final 200m in the longer race and earned himself the nickname "Yifter the Shifter."
Vilho Tuulos (Finland) 31pts
born 1895 Tampere; died 1967 Tampere
Gold triple jump 1920
Bronze triple jump 1924; triple jump 1928
Fourth long jump 1924
Tuulos recorded 14.50m in qualifying at the 1920 Games and with distances counting through to the final at that time, it was enough to earn gold for the Finn. In 1919, he had leapt 15.30m for the European record.
Robert Richards (United States) 31pts
born 1926 Champaign, Illinois
Gold pole vault 1952; pole vault 1956
Bronze pole vault 1948
The Rev Bob Richards was a theology professor from California, known as the "Vaulting Vicar," who became the only double pole vault champion in Olympic history. The 1956 competition saw the first use of fibreglass poles. In 1984, Richards ran for the US Presidency for the right-wing United States Populist Party.
Nina Ponomaryeva (Soviet Union) 31pts
born 1929 Sverdlovsk, Russia
Gold discus 1952; discus 1960
Bronze discus 1956
She won the Soviet Union's first Olympic gold medal when, under her maiden name of Romaschkova, she hurled the discus 51.42m in Helsinki for an Olympic record. She was on top of the podium again in Rome but had gained notoriety in 1956 when she was arrested in London for stealing five hats from an Oxford Street shop.
Micheline Ostermeyer (France) 31pts
born 1922 Rang-du-Fliers; died 2001 Bois-Guillaume
Gold shot 1948; discus 1948
Bronze high jump 1948
A great-niece of Victor Hugo, the author, and niece of Lucien Paroche, the composer, Ostermeyer excelled at both sport and music, attending the Conservatoire de Paris as a pianist. After winning the shot in London, she celebrated by performing Beethoven at the team's headquarters. After retiring from athletics in 1950, she toured as a concert pianist for 15 years.
Edwin Moses (United States) 31pts
born 1955 Dayton, Ohio
Gold 400m hurdles 1976; 400m hurdles 1984
Bronze 400m hurdles 1988
One of the legends of his discipline, Moses won 122 consecutive races between 1977 and 1987, setting four world records on the way. It brought him two Olympic titles which surely would have been three but for the American boycott of Moscow. He still holds 26 of the fastest 100 times at the distance.
Ralph Metcalfe (United States) 31pts
born 1910 Atlanta, Georgia; died 1978 Alsip, Illinois
Gold 4x100m 1936
Silver 100m 1932; 100m 1936
Bronze 200m 1932
After winning two medals in 1932 and holding the 100m world record at 10.2, Metcalfe was unable to match the power and grace of Jesse Owens in Berlin as he took the first step towards his domination of the Games. Metcalfe became a politician in 1949 and sat in the House of Representatives from 1971 until his death.
Douglas Lowe (Great Britain) 31pts
born 1902 Manchester; died 1981 Cranbrook, Kent
Gold 800m 1924; 800m 1928
Fourth 1,500m 1924. Fifth 4x400m 1928
In 1924, fellow Briton Henry Stallard was the favourite, but Lowe celebrated his 22nd birthday by sweeping to victory down the home straight. Four years later, Otto Peltzer (Germany) looked the man to beat, but injury saw him eliminated in the semi-finals. Once again, Lowe stepped up and took his second gold medal with a winning margin of some eight metres.
Maurizio Damilano (Italy) 31pts
born 1957 Scarnafigi
Gold 20k walk 1980
Bronze 20k walk 1984; 20k walk 1988
Fourth 20k walk 1992
By 1980, officials were getting tough with walkers lifting their feet and at Moscow seven athletes were disqualified, including three of the six leaders at the 15km mark. It allowed Damilano to secure a surprise victory and set an Olympic record. His twin brother, Giorgio, also finished 11th in the race.
Ato Bolden (Trinidad & Tobago) 31pts
born 1973 Port-of-Spain
Silver 100m 2000
Bronze 100m 1996; 200m 1996; 200m 2000
Seventh 4x100m 2004
A consistent sprinter who collected four medals at two Games and one of an elite who have run under both 10 and 20 seconds. In 1996, he took part in two races that saw world records fall with Donovan Bailey (Canada) clocking 9.84 in the 100m and Michael Johnson (US) winning in 19.32 in the 200m. Bolden said: "19.32. That's not a time. It sounds like my dad's birthday."
Thane Baker (United States) 31pts
born 1931 Elkhart, Kansas
Gold 4x100m 1956
Silver 200m 1952; 100m 1956
Bronze 200m 1956
Baker won both his 200m medals in Helsinki and Melbourne from the outside lane. In 1956, he was pipped for gold by team-mate Bobby Joe Morrow in the shorter sprint but they joined joined forces in the relay to shatter the world record with 39.5.
74=
Mamo Wolde (Ethiopia) 33pts
born 1932 DreDele; died 2002 Addis Ababa
Gold marathon 1968
Silver 10,000m 1968
Bronze marathon 1972
Fourth 10,000m 1964
He competed over 800m and 1,500m in 1956, but came to prominence in the longer races during the 1960s and won the marathon in the difficult conditions of Mexico at the age of 36. He was arrested for unspecified crimes in 1992 and spent nine years in prison without being charged before being convicted of murder in 2002. He was immediately released having served so much time already but lived just four more months.
Sara Simeoni (Italy) 33pts
born 1953 Rivoli Veronese
Gold high jump 1980
Silver high jump 1976; high jump 1984
Sixth high jump 1972
An elegant jumper, Simeoni held her nerve to take the title in 1980 with a 1.97m clearance. Four years later, she looked to be retaining her crown before being pipped by Ulrike Meyfarth (Germany), who had become the youngest track and field winner 12 years before in Munich.
Yuri Sedykh (Soviet Union) 33pts
born 1955 Nova Cherkassk, Russia
Gold hammer 1976; hammer 1980
Silver hammer 1988
Sedykh smashed the world record just before the 1984 Games but was unable to compete in Los Angeles because of the Soviet Union boycott. It could have brought him a third consecutive gold and a much higher ranking. Two of his three wives were also Olympic champions - Lyudmila Kondratyeva (1980 100m) and Natalya Lisovskaya (1988 shot).
Tatyana Samolenko (Soviet Union) 33pts
born 1961 Sekretarka, Ukraine
Gold 3,000m 1988
Silver 3,000m 1992
Bronze 1,500m 1988
Fourth 1,500m 1992
Samolenko's golden moment came in Seoul when she held off the powerful challenge of Romania's Paul Ivan and Britain's Yvonne Murray in a fast race. Her achievements, however, were soured in 1993 when she tested positive for steroids.
Steven Lewis (United States) 33pts
born 1969 Los Angeles, California
Gold 400m 1988; 4x400m 1988; 4x400m 1992
Silver 400m 1992
Harry "Butch" Reynolds, the world record-holder, was the clear favourite for the one-lap gold in Seoul, but Lewis had other ideas and timed his lunge for the line perfectly to snatch the title. The Seoul final was the first race in which seven runners went under 45 seconds.
Hicham El Guerrouj (Morocco) 33pts
born 1974 Berkane
Gold 1,500m 2004; 5,000m 2004
Silver 1,500m 2000
Known as the "King of the Mile," it seemed that El Guerrouj might never claim an Olympic crown after falling in the 1996 final and being outkicked by Noah Ngeny in Sydney. In Athens, he silenced the doubters in fine style by not only winning the 1,500m but becoming the first runner since Paavo Nurmi in 1924 to add the 5,000m at the same Games.
Mildred Didrikson (United States) 33pts
born 1911 Port Arthur, Texas; died 1956 Galveston, Texas
Gold 80m hurdles 1932; javelin 1932
Silver high jump 1932
Babe Didrikson qualified for all five individual women's events at the Los Angeles Games but could only compete in three where she won two golds and a silver. She also excelled at basketball and golf and gained her nickname after hitting five home runs in a baseball game. She recorded several songs and married George Zaharias, a professional wrestler, in 1938.
Olga Bryzhina (Soviet Union / Ukraine) 33pts
born 1963 Krasnokamsk, Ukraine
Gold 400m 1988; 4x400m 1988; 4x400m 1988
Silver 400m 1992
A gritty one-lap specialist who took the individual crown in Seoul and twice anchored her team to victory in the relay. In 1988, Viktor Bryzhina, her husband, also won a gold medal in the 4x100m relay.
Linford Christie (Great Britian) 33pts
born 1960 St Andrew's, Jamaica
Gold 100m 1992
Silver 100m 1988; 4x100m 1988
Fourth 200m 1988; 4x100m 1992
A late developer, Christie was upgraded to silver in Seoul after Ben Johnson was stripped of his gold for testing positive for prohibited drugs. Four years later, Christie went one better in Barcelona and became the oldest man to win the 100m at the Games. Always a controversial character, his career was ended by a two-year ban for nandrolone use in 1999.
71=
Edvin Wide (Sweden) 33.5pts
born 1896 Turku, Finland; died 1996 Stockholm
Silver 10,000m 1924
Bronze 3,000m team 1920; 5,000m 1924; 5,000m 1928; 10,000m 1928
Although born in Finland, he qualified to run for Sweden and spent most of his career battling with the Flying Finns, picking up five medals behind the great distance men from his homeland. He said he could pass away in peace after finishing his last Olympic race in 1928, but actually lasted another 72 years before dying at the age of 100.
Wilma Rudolph (United States) 33.5pts
born 1940 St Bethleham,Tennessee; died 1994 Brentwood, Tennessee
Gold 100m 1960; 200m 1960; 4x100m 1960
Bronze 4x100m 1956
Rudolph was the 20th of 22 children and had suffered polio, double pneumonia and scarlet fever as a child forcing her to wear a brace on her left leg. By 16, however, she had qualified for the US Olympic team. In Rome, she became the first American woman to win three gold medals at the same Games.
Annegret Richter (Germany) 33.5pts
born 1950 Dortmund
Gold 4x100m 1972; 100m 1976
Silver 200m 1976
Fifth 100m 1972; 4x100m 1976
Richter set a world record of 11.01 in the semi-finals at Montreal and just held off reigning champion Renate Stecher (East Germany) and fellow West German Inge Helten to win gold.
69=
Gyula Zsivotzky (Hungary) 34pts
born 1937 Budapest; died 2007 Budapest
Gold hammer 1968
Silver hammer 1960; hammer 1964
Fifth hammer 1972
A consistent performer and formidable opponent in an event that holds a special place in Hungarian hearts. He set an Olympic record of 73.36m to win in Mexico having set a world record of 73.76m the same year. His son, Attila, came sixth in the decathlon in 2004.
Matthew McGrath (United States) 34pts
born 1878 Nenagh, Ireland; died 1941
Gold hammer 1912
Silver hammer 1908; hammer 1924
Fifth hammer 1920
Born in Tipperary, McGrath became a policeman in the States and despite taking up the hammer at the age of 27 became one of the greats of the discipline, maintaining a place in the world's top-ten rankings until he was 50. His winning throw in Stockholm, 54.74m, was an Olympic record while the shortest of his six attempts was still 15 feet better than anyone else's best.
66=
Don Quarrie (Jamaica) 34.5pts
born 1951 Kingston
Gold 200m 1976
Silver 100m 1976; 4x100m 1984
Bronze 200m 1980
Fifth 4x400m 1976
Quarrie had finished behind Hasely Crawford in the 1976 100m but made no mistake in the 200m to end a long quest for an Olympic gold medal that had begun in 1968 at the age of 17. A Jamaican hero, Quarrie has been honoured by a statue in his home town and a reggae tune by Joe Gibbs and the Guerillas.
Irina Privalova (Russia) 34.5pts
born 1968 Malakhovka
Gold 400m hurdles 2000
Silver 4x100m 1992
Bronze 100m 1992; 4x400m 2000
Fourth 200m 1992; 4x100m 1996
After several successful years as a sprinter, Privalova's career was boosted in 1999 when she was given a transplant for her Achilles tendon using tissue taken from a dead soldier. She switched to hurdling in 2000 and capped an amazing debut season at the event by winning the Olympic title in Sydney.
Irina Press (Soviet Union) 34.5pts
born 1939 Kharhov, Ukraine
Gold 80m hurdles 1960; pentathlon 1964
Fourth 4x100m 1960; 80m hurdles 1964. Sixth shot 1964
The younger of the formidable Press sisters, Irina was a powerful all-rounder who set a world record of 5,246 points when winning the pentathlon ahead of Britain's Mary Rand in 1964.
64=
Galina Zybina (Soviet Union) 35pts
born 1931 Leningrad
Gold shot 1952
Silver shot 1956
Bronze shot 1964
Fourth javelin 1952. Seventh shot 1960
Zybina collected a full set of Olympic medals in one of the strength events despite seeing her mother and brother die of cold and starvation during World War II and barely surviving herself.
John Ljunggren (Sweden) 35pts
born 1919; died 2000
Gold 50k walk 1948
Silver 50k walk 1960
Bronze 50k walk 1956
Fourth 20k walk 1956. Seventh 20k walk 1960
The Swede had a long and successful Olympic career, which saw him still competing and winning a silver medal in Rome at the age of 41. Ljunggren's finest moment came in London when he led from gun to tape to record an easy victory by almost seven minutes.
59=
Derartu Tulu (Ethiopia) 36pts
born 1972 Bekoji
Gold 10,000m 1992; 10,000m 2000
Bronze 10,000m 2004
Fourth 10,000m 1996
Liz McColgan, the 1991 world champion from Great Britain, was favourite to win the 1992 10,000m title but she was unable to shake off the field with her front-runnning tactics and Tulu sprinted away to win. The former shepherd from the Arsi highlands heralded the emergence of African women in the distance events and her victory over another front-running British woman, Paula Radcliffe, eight years later confirmed her place as one of the event's leading performers.
Peter Snell (New Zealand) 36pts
born 1938 Opunache
Gold 800m 1960; 800m 1964; 1,500m 1964
Snell had a short but illustrious athletics career that saw him snatch gold as an unknown in Rome and complete the 800m/1,500m double as one of the world's greatest-ever middle-distance runners four years later. In Tokyo, he had not even raced over the longer distance before. Now a US citizen, he lives in Texas and became an age-group national champion at orienteering in his sixties.
Pietro Mennea (Italy) 36pts
born 1952 Barletta
Gold 200m 1980
Bronze 200m 1972; 4x400m 1980
Fourth 200m 1976; 4x100m 1984. Fifth 4x400m 1984. Sixth 4x100m 1976. Seventh 200m 1984. Eighth 4x100m 1972
Mennea broke the 200m world record with 19.72 in 1979 while running at altitude in Mexico City, but he did not have an Olympic gold medal after two visits to the Games. It proved third time lucky for the Italian who glided down the home straight in Moscow to beat Britain's Allan Wells, the 100m champion. Mennea served as a member of the European Parliament from 1999 to 2004.
Tatyana Kazankina (Soviet Union) 36pts
born 1951 Petrovsk, Russia
Gold 800m 1976; 1,500m 1976; 1,500m 1980
Kazankina was a formidable opponent over 1,500m who stepped down in 1976 to also win the 800m title. In 1980, just 12 days after winning in Moscow, she lowered the world record to 3:52.47 and became the first woman to run faster than Paavo Nurmi. However, her performances were thrown into doubt when she received an 18-month ban after her team manager refused to let her take a drugs test in 1984.
Nathaniel Cartmell (United States) 36pts
born 1883 Uniontown, Kentucky; died 1967 New York City
Gold 4x400m 1908
Silver 100m 1904; 200m 1904
Bronze 200m 1908
Fourth 100m 1908
Cartmell picked up two silver medals behind Archie Hahn in St Louis and completed his set of Olympic gongs four years later with a bronze in the 200m and gold in the relay. After London, Cartmell stayed in Europe and became a professional runner. He retired in 1910 and turned to coaching at several leading universities and at the US Military Academy.
56=
Jackson Scholz (United States) 37pts
born 1897 Buchanan, Michigan; died 1986 Delray Beach, Florida
Gold 4x100m 1920; 200m 1924
Silver 100m 1924
Fourth 100m 1920; 200m 1928
In 1928, he became the first athlete to reach a final at three different Games. Before that, he had won two gold medals but is now probably most famous for coming second behind Harold Abrahams in the Chariots of Fire 100m final of 1924. He later became a writer of pulp fiction and published 31 sports novels.
Mohamed Gammoudi (Tunisia) 37pts
born 1938 Sidi Ach
Gold 5,000m 1968
Silver 10,000m 1964; 5,000m 1972
Bronze 10,000m 1968
A pioneer of the African running revolution, Gammoudi's finest hour came in Mexico when he charged to the front of the 5,000m field with two laps to go and managed to hold off the dual Kenyan challenge of Kip Keino and Naftali Temu.
James Connolly (United States) 37pts
born 1868 Boston, Massachusetts; died 1957 New York City
Gold triple jump 1896
Silver high jump 1896; triple jump 1900
Bronze long jump 1896
The son of Irish immigrants, Connolly became the first Olympic champion of the modern era when winning the triple jump in 13.71m, taking two hops with his right foot which was legal at the time. He competed in Paris four years later and attended the 1904 Games in St Louis as a journalist. He became an authority on maritime writing and published more than 200 short stories and 25 novels.
55
Wyomia Tyus (United States) 37.5pts
born 1945 Griffin, Georgia
Gold 100m 1964; 100m 1968; 4x100m 1968
Silver 4x100m 1964
Sixth 200m 1968
Became the first woman athlete to retain the 100m title when winning in a world record time of 11.08 in 1968. She returned to the track as a profesional in the 1970s and coached at Beverly Hills High School, as well as being a founding member of the Women's Sports Foundation. Tyus appeared with her family on television show Family Feud, winning a $5,000 prize.
52=
Parry O'Brien (United States) 38pts
born 1932 Santa Monica, California; died 2007 Santa Clarita, California
Gold shot 1952; shot 1956
Silver shot 1960
Fourth shot 1964
O'Brien revolutionised the event by turning his back on the front of the circle at the start of his throw. This new technique helped him to win consecutive titles. In 1956, he recorded the five best puts on the competition. O'Brien died in the pool while swimming in a masters competition in California.
Herb McKenley (Jamaica) 38pts
born 1922 Pleasant Valley, Clarendon; died 2007 Mona
Gold 4x400m (1952)
Silver 400m (1948); 200m (1952); 400m (1952)
Fourth 200m (1948)
After collecting three silver medals, McKenley's final chance for gold came in the 4x400m relay at Helsinki. Running the second leg, Jamaica were well behind the US, but McKenley ran an inspired leg to put his team in the lead and on the way to gold and a world record. He later served as a coach to the Jamaica team from 1954 to 1973.
Kelly Holmes (Great Britain) 38pts
born 1970 Pembury, Kent
Gold 800m 2004; 1,500m 2004
Bronze 800m 2000
Fourth 800m 1996 Seventh 1,500m 2000
Holmes quit the track as a junior to become a physical training instructor in the Army, but returned in 1992 to carve out one of the most glorious careers in British athletics. Often among the minor medals and usually hampered by injury, Holmes finally had a spell of good health and made the most of it in Athens. In claiming the 800m/1,500m double she became, at 34, the oldest woman to win each race at the Games. The only British woman in these rankings.
49=
Alain Mimoun (France) 39pts
born 1921 El Talegh, Algeria
Gold marathon 1956
Silver 10,000m 1948; 5,000m (1952); 10,000m (1952)
Mimoun's path to Olympic gold had been blocked by Emil Zatopek to such an extent that he had been called the great man's shadow. However, the Algerian-born Frenchman's golden moment finally came in Melbourne when he won the marathon by more than one and a half minutes with Zatopek over four minutes behind in sixth place.
Gail Devers (United States) 39pts
born 1966 Seattle, Washington
Gold 100m 1992; 100m 1996; 4x100m 1996
Fourth 100m hurdles 1996. Fifth 100m hurdles 1992
Devers was an explosive sprint hurdler who never got her favourite event right at the Games, despite winning three world titles over barriers. She made up for it by winning back-to-back 100m crowns in Barcelona and Atlanta. It was all the more amazing since she had been diagnosed with Graves' disease in 1990 and given radiation treatment.
Valeri Borzov (Soviet Union) 39pts
born 1949 Sambir, Ukraine
Gold 100m (1972); 200m (1972)
Silver 4x100m (1972)
Bronze 100m (1976); 4x100m (1976)
Borzov eased to victory in the 100m at Munich, but Eddie Hart and Rey Robinson had missed their quarter-finals and the Americans vowed to make amends in the longer sprint. Borzov, a great technician, was having none of it and cruised to victory in 20.00 to become the first non-North American to do the sprint double. He married Lyudmila Turischeva, the gymnast, who won two more gold medals than her husband. Borzov became the first President of the Ukranian Olympic Committee and served on the IOC.
47=
Philip Edwards (Canada) 39.5pts
born 1907 Georgetown, Guyana; died 1971 Montreal
Bronze 4x400m (1928); 800m (1932); 1,500m (1932); 4x400m (1932); 800m (1936)
Fourth 800m (1928); 4x400m (1936). Fifth 1,500m (1936)
Called the "Man of Bronze" after his exploits on the track, Edwards was a versatile middle-distance runner who became his adopted nation's leading Olympian. He liked to set the pace and despite fading in the closing stages managed to hold on to secure three individual medals. The first black Canadian to win a Commonwealth Games gold medal, he qualified as a doctor and specialised in tropical diseases. He served as a captain in the Canadian Army during World War II.
Valerie Brisco-Hooks (United States) 39.5pts
born 1960 Greenwood, Mississippi
Gold 200m (1984); 400m (1984); 4x400m (1984)
Silver 4x400m (1988)
Fourth 400m (1988)
In 1982, Brisco-Hooks had finished with running after having a baby. She was coaxed back to the track and two years later became the first athlete to record a 200-400m double at the Games, collecting a third gold in the relay for good measure. In 1986, she made a guest appearance on The Cosby Show.
43=
Arthur Wint (Jamaica) 40pts
born 1920 Manchester, Jamaica; died 1992 Linstead
Gold 400m (1948); 4x400m (1952)
Silver 800m (1948); 800m (1952)
Fifth 400m (1952)
Wint served with the RAF during World War II and stayed on in England to study medicine. At the London Games, he missed out on gold in the 800m but made amends in the one-lap event, finishing strongly to edge out team-mate Herb McKenley. Four years later, they teamed up to win gold in the 4x400m relay in a world-record time. Wint served as Jamaica's High Commisioner to Great Britain from 1974 to 1978.
Marie-Jose Perec (France) 40pts
born 1968 Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe
Gold 400m (1992); 200m (1996); 400m (1996)
Fourth 4x100m (1992). Sixth 4x100m (1996)
Perec was the first athlete to win the 400m twice and achieved a rare 200/400m double in Atlanta, beating Michael Johnson to the same feat by 20 minutes. She looked set for a showdown with Cathy Freeman in 2000, but struggled with her fitness and left the Olympic village in a blaze of publicity just before the Games.
Charles Paddock (United States) 40pts
born 1900 Gainesville, Texas; died 1943 Sitka, Alaska
Gold 100m (1920); 4x100m (1920)
Silver 200m (1920); 200m (1924)
Fifth 100m (1924)
Paddock was a World War I veteran who delighted the crowds with a trademark leap at the finish line. It helped him take gold at the Antwerp Games. He competed in the 100m final four years later with actor Dennis Christopher playing him in the film Chariots of Fire. Paddock died in a plane crash.
Volmari Iso-Hollo (Finland) 40pts
born 1907 Ylojarvi; died 1969 Heinola
Gold 3,000m steeplechase; 3,000m steeplechase (1936)
Silver 10,000m (1932)
Bronze 10,000m (1936)
One of the last of the Flying Finns, Iso-Hollo won a bizarre steeplechase in 1932, running a distance of some 3,460m after an official failed to change the lap markers. It had probably cost Iso-Hollo a world record, which he later achieved in 1933 and then again when winning the Olympic steeplechase again in 1936 in 9:03.8.
42
Frankie Fredericks (Namibia) 41pts
born 1967 Windhoek
Silver 100m 1992; 200m 1992; 100m 1996; 200m 1996
Fourth 200m 2004
Fredericks was one of the great sprinters of modern times, running under ten seconds for the 100m on 27 occasions. However, a gold medal alluded him despite running 19.68 behind Michael Johnson in the 1996 200m.
38=
Jesse Owens (United States) 42pts
born 1913 Lawrence County, Alabama; died 1980 Tucson, Arizona
Gold 100m (1936); 200m (1936); long jump (1936); 4x100m (1936)
Owens was the brightest light to shine at the Nazi Games in 1936 as he completed the grand slam of sprinting and jumping, a feat not equalled until 1984 by Carl Lewis. Reports that he was snubbed by Hitler were probably false and Owens later stated that he was hurt more by the treatment of his own government. He was reduced to running in exhibitions and often against racehorses as he tried to eke out a living and was only awarded a Congresional Gold Medal posthumously in 1990.
Volodymyr Holubnychy (Soviet Union) 42pts
born 1936 Sumy, Ukraine
Gold 20k walk (1960); 20k walk (1968)
Silver 20k walk (1972)
Bronze 20k walk (1964)
Seventh 20k walk (1976)
Holubnychy competed at five Games holding off late challenges in Rome and Mexico City to earn his gold medals. The Ukranian was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour in 1960, the Order of the Badge of Honour in 1969 and the Medal for Labour Heroism in 1972.
Betty Cuthbert (Australia) 42pts
born 1938 Merrylands, New South Wales
Gold 100m (1956); 200m (1956); 4x100m (1956); 400m (1964)
Cuthbert was the inaugural winner of the women's 400m when it was introduced at the Tokyo Games, some eight years after she had won three gold medals in Melbourne. In Rome, she had been forced to withdraw after one race because of a hamstring pull. In 1969, she developed multiple sclerosis and has spent the rest of her life in a wheelchair.
Sebastian Coe (Great Britain) 42pts
born 1956 Chiswick, London
Gold 1,500m (1980); 1,500m (1984)
Silver 800m (1980); 800m (1984)
Coe is the highest-ranked Great Britain athlete in the list and one of the nation's greatest-ever runners. The 800m was probably his best event but he failed to beat great rival Steve Ovett in Moscow and the giant Brazilian Joaquim Cruz four years later. However, he made amends in fine style at both Games with stunning victories over the metric mile, the first man to repeat his victory after James Lightbody (1904 and 1906). He later became an MP and chief of staff for Conservative leader William Hague before, as Lord Coe, leading London's successful bid for the 2012 Games.
37
Florence Griffith-Joyner (United States) 43.5pts
born 1959 Los Angeles, California; died 1998 Mission Viejo, California
Gold 100m (1988); 200m (1988); 4x100m (1988)
Silver 200m (1984); 4x400m (1988)
Flo-Jo's performances in Seoul stunned the world as she picked up three gold medals and a silver, recording times thought beyond the range of a woman. Critics thought her rapid improvement from the silver of 1984 had been fuelled by drugs and she did little to convince them otherwise by retiring in 1989 just before mandatory random testing was introduced. She died in her sleep in 1998 at the age of just 38, the victim of a congenital brain abnormality.
35=
Raelene Boyle (Australia) 44pts
born 1951 Melbourne, Victoria
Silver 200m (1968); 100m (1972); 200m (1972)
Fourth 100m (1968); 100m (1976). Fifth 4x100m (1968); 4x100m (1976). Sixth 4x100m (1972); 4x400m (1972)
Despite racing against the mighty eastern Europeans, Boyle managed to win three silver medals at the Games to add to the seven golds she won at the Commonwealth Games. She has twice recovered from cancer and now campaigns to raise awareness. In 1998, she was named as one of 100 National Living Treasures by the National Trust of Australia.
Evelyn Ashford (United States) 44pts
born 1957 Shreveport, Louisiana
Gold 100m (1984); 4x100m (1984); 4x100m (1988); 4x100m (1992)
Silver 100m (1988)
Fifth 100m (1976); Seventh 4x100m (1976)
Ashford was one of the favourites for gold in 1980 but when the US team boycotted, it seemed like her chance had gone. But she returned four years later to win the sprint in Los Angeles and kept going for two more Games, adding four more medals to her collection. After splitting from her coach in 1985, she was largely self-trained for the rest of her illustrious career.
34
Malvin Whitfield (United States) 44.5pts
born 1924 Bay City, Texas
Gold 800m (1948); 800m (1952); 4x400m (1948)
Silver 4x400m (1952)
Bronze 400m (1948)
Sixth 400m (1952)
Whitfield was an Air Force sergeant when he won the 800m in London. He returned to repeat the victory in 1952 having spent time as a tail-gunner in the Korean War. He became the first black winner of the James E Sullivan Award and set up sports programmes around the world working for the US Information Agency.
30=
Jan Zelezny (Czech Republic) 45pts
born 1966 Mlada, Boleslav
Gold javelin (1992); javelin (1996); javelin (2000)
Silver javelin (1988)
Zelezny was surprisingly beaten in 1988 and found it difficult to defeat Steve Backley (Great Britain) in European competition. However, from 1992 to 2000 he was unbeatable at the Games, peaking at just the right time to become the first javelin thrower to win three titles and four medals at the event.
Melvin Sheppard (United States) 45pts
born 1883 Almonesson Lake, New Jersey; died 1942 New York
Gold 800m (1908); 1,500m (1908); 4x400m (1908); 4x400m (1912)
Silver 800m (1912)
Sheppard had been rejected by the New York police for having a weak heart. It did not stop him winning three gold medals in 1908 and another two medals four years later in Stockholm. In the 1912 800m final, the first four runners beat the previous world record with Sheppard clocking 1:52.0 behind Ted Meredith (US), who recorded 1:51.9.
Viktor Sanayev (Soviet Union) 45pts
born 1945 Sukhumi, Georgia
Gold triple jump (1968); triple jump (1972); triple jump (1976)
Silver triple jump (1980)
In 1976, Sanayev became only the fourth athlete to win three gold medals in the same event. He nearly made it four in 1980, but was edged out by team-mate Jaak Uudmae. In 1972, Sanayev set a world record of 17.44m, which lasted for three years.
Tamara Press (Soviet Union) 45pts
born 1937 Kharkiv, Ukraine
Gold shot (1960); shot (1964); discus (1964)
Silver discus (1960)
Along with sister Irina, Press symbolised the increasing power of the Soviet Union's athletes during the Cold War. Her stature and success brought accusations of malpractice and when sex-testing was introduced to athletics, both women disappeared. In retirement, she became a civil engineer.
29
Kipchoge Keino (Kenya) 46pts
born 1940 Kipsamo
Gold 1,500m (1968); 3,000m steeplechase (1972)
Silver 1,500m (1972); 5,000m (1968)
Fifth 5,000m (1964)
One of the first of the great African runners to emerge from Kenya. Keino destroyed Jim Ryun (US), the 1,500m favourite and world record-holder, in the rarified air of Mexico City, taking the title by 20 metres, the largest winning margin in the event. Four years later, he added a second gold medal in the steeplechase despite having little experience over the barriers. Now lives on a farm and runs a charitable organisation for orphans and has built the Kip Keino School in Eldoret. Chairman of the Kenyan Olympic Association.
27=
Heike Drechsler (East Germany / Germany) 47pts
1964 Gera, East Germany
Gold long jump (1992); long jump (2000)
Silver long jump (1988)
Bronze 100m (1988); 200m (1988)
A fine sprinter and one of the greatest long jumpers in history. Unlike many of her team-mates, she survived the transition from East Germany to a united team and her performances improved after the fall of the Berlin Wall. She jumped over seven metres on more than 400 occasions.
Fanny Blankers-Koen (Holland) 47pts
born 1918 Lage Vuursche; died 2004 Hoofddorp
Gold 100m (1948); 200m (1948); 80m hurdles (1948); 4x100m (1948)
Fifth 4x100m (1936). Sixth high jump (1936)
One of the greatest athletes in history, Blankers-Koen competed in 1936 but had to wait until the Austerity Games in London at the age of 30 and with two children to show the world her awesome power, grace and versatility. She won four of the nine events open to women at the 1948 Games and would proabably have won the long jump had she entered. In 1999, she was named the Female Athlete of the Century by the IAAF.
26
Gwen Torrence (United States), 47.5pts
born 1965 Decatur, Georgia
Gold 200m (1992); 4x100m (1992); 4x100m (1996)
Silver 4x400m (1992)
Bronze 100m (1996)
Fourth 100m (1992). Fifth 100m (1988). Sixth 200m (1988)
Torrence was not the most popular athlete on the blocks - she had fast feet but also a fast mouth, accusing several of her opponents of drug-taking. At times, she may have had a point, but little in the way of evidence and it did little to endear her to her fellow athletes, officials and the watching public. After the track, she became a hairdresser.
22=
Al Oerter (United States) 48pts
born 1936 Queens, New York; died 2007 Fort Myers, Florida
Gold discus (1956); discus (1960); discus (1964); discus (1968)
Oerter survived a near-fatal car crash in 1957 and a succession of serious injuries to become the first athlete to win the same Olympic event four times in a row. He set an Olympic record at each of his gold-winning performances and a personal best of 69.46m when returning to the sport at the age of 43. After athletics, Oerter became an abstract artist, often covering a discus in paint and flinging it on to canvas.
Alvin Kraenzlein (United States) 48pts
born 1876 Milwaukee, Wisconsin; died 1928 Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Gold 60m 1900; 110m hurdles 1900; 200m hurdles 1900; 1900 long jump
Kraenzlein won four gold medals in just three days in Paris and he is only athlete to win four individual titles at the same Games. He earned a denatl degree, but gave up a career in dentistry to become a track coach, working with the national teams of Germany and Cuba.
Michael Johnson (United States) 48pts
born 1967 Dallas, Texas
Gold 4x400m (1992); 200m (1996); 400m (1996); 400m (2000); 4x400m (2000)
After a disappointing time in Barcelona when he contracted food poisoning, Johnson turned on the burners in Atlanta four years later with two stunning performances. First, he set an Olympic record in the 400m with 43.49 to beat second-placed Roger Black (Great Britain) by ten metres and then shattered the 200m world record to record 19.32 with a final 100m timed at 9.20. He was renowned for his unique upright style and short stride pattern.
Archie Hahn (United States) 48pts
born 1880 Dodgeville, Wisconsin; died 1955 Charlottesville, Virginia
Gold 60m 1904; 100m 1904; 200m 1904; 100m 1906
Charles Archibald Hahn was dubbed "The Milwaukee Meteor" and lived up to his name in St Louis by winning three sprint gold medals and if relays had been included in the early Games could be even higher in the rankings. He retained his 100m title two years later at the 1906 Games. Hahn became a leading coach and his book How to Sprint is still considered one of the classic texts on the subject.
20=
John Walter Tewksbury (United States) 49pts
born 1876 Ashley, Pennsylvania; died 1968 Tunkhannock, Pennsylvania
Gold 200m 1900; 400m hurdles 1900
Silver 60m 1900; 100m 1900; 200m hurdles 1900
Tewksbury became the first winner of the 200m as he collected a mighty haul of five medals at the Paris Games. He also won the first 400m hurdles race at the Olympics, which had barriers made of telegraph poles with a water jump as the final obstacle. He became a dentist after retiring from sport.
Robert Korzeniowski (Poland) 49pts
born 1968 Lubaczow
Gold 50k walk 1996; 20k walk 2000; 50k walk 2000; 50k walk 2004
Eighth 20k walk 1996
Korzeniowski confirmed his status as one of walking's greatest exponents when he became the first athlete to complete the 20k/50k double in Sydney. Four years later and at the age of 36, he won his fourth gold by finishing more than four minutes ahead of the second-placed walker. Korzeniowski was inspired to take up sport by Bruce Lee, the film star, and initially wanted to be martial arts star.
21
Harry Hillman (United States) 50pts
born 1881 Brooklyn, New York; died 1945 New Hampshire
Gold 400m (1904); 200m hurdles (1904); 400m hurdles (1904)
Silver 400m hurdles (1908)
Fourth 400m (1906)
On the way to the 1906 Games in Athens, Hillman was injured by a freak wave that washed over the deck of his ship. In 1909, he teamed up with Lawson Robertson to set a record for the three-legged race that has never been beaten. The pair of Olympians recorded 11 seconds for the 100 yards.
20
Renate Stecher (East Germany) 50.5pts
born 1950 Suptitz, East Germany
Gold 100m (1972); 200m (1972); 4x100m (1976)
Silver 4x100m (1972); 100m (1976)
Bronze 200m (1976)
Stecher dominated sprinting for several years in the 1970s, but in 1997 documents were released that showed that she had been given steroids by the East Germans in the two years leading up to the Munich Games.
19
John Flanagan (United States) 52pts
born 1873 Kilbreedy, Ireland; died 1938 Kilmallack, Ireland
Gold hammer (1900); hammer (1904); hammer (1908)
Silver 56lb weight (1904)
Fourth discus (1904). Seventh discus (1900)
John Jesus Flanagan emigrated from Ireland in 1897 and became a policeman in New York City. A year after his third consecutive hammer title, Flanagan became the oldest athlete to break a world record when he hurled the hammer 56.18m at the age of 41. He returned to Ireland and coached Patrick O'Callaghan, who became the first non-American to win the hammer with victory in 1928.
18
Hannes Kolehmainen (Finland) 52.5pts
born 1889 Kuopio; died 1966 Helsinki
Gold 5,000m 1912; 10,000m 1912; cross-country individual 1912; marathon 1920
Silver cross-country team 1912
Kolehmainen was already 10,000m champion when he won an epic duel with Jean Bouin (France) in the 5,000m, setting a world record time of 14:36.6. The vegetarian bricklayer's running career was interrupted by World War I while Bouin and the third-placed George Hutson (Great Britain) were both killed in action. Kolehmainen returned after the war to win his fourth gold medal, this time in the marathon.
17
Elmer Niklander (Finland) 53pts
born 1890; died 1942
Gold discus 1920
Silver discus (both hands) 1912; shot 1920
Bronze shot put (both hands) 1912
Fourth shot 1912; discus 1912. Sixth shot 1924. Seventh discus 1924. Eighth 56lb weight 1920
Niklander was a versatile thrower who had his career disrupted by World War I. After training in his back yard and taking part in local fire station tournaments, he returned strongly after the war to take gold in the discus in Antwerp.
15=
Lasse Viren (Finland) 56pts
born 1949 Myrskyla
Gold 5,000m (1972); 10,000m (1972); 5,000m (1976); 10,000m (1976)
Fifth marathon (1976); 10,000m (1980)
Viren recalled the days of the Flying Finns when he dominated the distance events at two Olympic Games in the 1970s. The policeman's most dramatic victory was his first when he stumbled and fell in the 1972 10,000m final, but picked himself up to eventually win by six metres and break the world record. Viren later served in the Finnish Parliament, representing the National Coalition Party from 1999 to 2007.
Robert Garrett (United States) 56pts
born 1875 Baltimore, Maryland; died 1961 Baltimore, Maryland
Gold shot (1896); discus (1896)
Silver high jump (1896); long jump (1896)
Bronze shot (1900); standing triple jump (1900)
Garrett was a wealthy young man from Princeton University who paid for himself and three other athletes to attend the first Games in Athens. He became the first winner of the shot put and then the discus despite never having competed in the event before. Won a bronze in the shot four years later after recording a distance in the qualifying round and refusing to take part in the final because it was held on a Sunday.
14
Emil Zatopek (Czechoslovakia) 60pts
born 1922 Koprivnice; died 2000 Prague
Gold 10,000m (1948); 5,000m (1952); 10,000m (1952); marathon (1952)
Silver 5,000m (1948)
Sixth marathon (1956)
Legendary distance runner who dominated the sport in the post-war years, recording 18 world records. He won 38 consecutive races over 10,000m between 1948 and 1954 and in Helsinki took gold in all three distance events, taking part in the 5,000m to give him something to do between the other two. His wife, Dana, won gold in the javelin at the same Games.
13
James Lightbody (United States) 61.5pts
born 1882 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; died 1953 Charleston, South Carolina
Gold 800m (1904); 1,500m (1904); 3,000m steeplechase (1904); 1,500m (1906)
Silver 4-mile team race (1904); 800m (1906)
A dominant middle-distance runner in the early years of the 20th Century, Lightbody was never regarded as a potential winner of any of the races he entered at the Games. However, he won six medals in St Louis and Athens, setting a world record of 4:05.4 in the 1904 1,500m. Lightbody's luck ran out in London when he failed to make the final in all three of his events.
12
Irena Szewinska (Poland) 62pts
born 1946 Leningrad, Russia
Gold 200m (1968); 400m (1976); 4x100m (1964)
Silver 200m (1964); long jump (1964)
Bronze 100m (1968); 200m (1972)
In a long and distinguished track career, Szewinska became the first woman to hold world records at 100m, 200m and 400m at the same time. She already had Olympic medals in four different events when she switched to 400m in 1973, but became the first woman to break 50 seconds in only her second one-lap race. In the 1976 final, she won by ten metres in a world-record time of 49.28. She became a member of the International Olympic Committee and in 2005 was elected as the third woman on the IAAF Council.
11
Shirley Strickland (Australia) 62.5pts
born 1925 Perth, Western Australia; died 2004 Perth, Western Australia
Gold 80m hurdles (1952); 80m hurdles (1956); 4x100m (1956)
Silver 4x100m 1948
Bronze 100m (1948); 100m (1952); 80m hurdles (1948)
Fourth 200m (1948). Fifth 4x100m (1952)
In 1948, Strickland finished behind Fanny Blankers-Koen in the hurdles, but four years later as a 27-year-old teacher with a degree in physics, Strickland claimed the Dutchwoman's world record in 10.9 and the gold medal. By the Melbourne Games, she was a mother, but took her personal medal tally to seven with golds in the hurdles and relay. In 2001, she sold her collection of sporting memorabilia, including her Olympic medals, to raise money for her grandchildren's education and to support environmental causes.
10
Jackie Joyner-Kersee (United States) 63pts
born 1962 East St Louis, Illinois
Gold long jump (1988); heptathlon (1988); heptathlon (1992)
Silver heptathlon (1984)
Bronze long jump (1992); long jump (1996)
Fifth long jump (1984)
One of the sport's great all-rounders, Joyner-Kersee excelled at the long jump as well as the multi-events discipline. In Seoul, she was unbeatable at both, taking the long jump title five days after winning the heptathlon. Part of a distinguished track and field family, Joyner-Kersee's brother is Al Joyner, triple jump gold medallist, her sister-in-law Florence Griffith Joyner, and she married Bob Kersee, her coach.
9
Ralph Rose (United States) 64pts
born 1885 Healdsburg, California; died 1913
Gold shot (1904); shot (1908); shot both hands (1912)
Silver discus (1904); shot (1912)
Bronze hammer (1904)
Sixth 56lb weight (1904)
Rose has become part of Olympic folklore as the US flag-bearer at the opening ceremony of the 1908 Games in London who refused to dip the Stars and Stripes in front of the King of England. There is some doubt that this protest was even noticed by the crowd, but no doubt that Rose was a great thrower with six Olympic medals. He died of pneumonia at the age of 28.
8
Meyer Prinstein (United States) 65pts
born 1878 Szczuczyn, Poland; died 1925 New York
Gold triple jump (1900); long jump 1904; triple jump (1904); long jump (1906)
Silver long jump (1900)
Fifth 60m (1904); 400m (1904)
Prinstein was not allowed to compete in the 1900 long jump final, held on a Sunday, by his team officials even though he was Jewish and Alvin Kraenzlein, the eventual winner, was a Christian. Prinstein was so angry he was said to have punched Kraenzlein and then returned the next day to win the triple jump. Prinstein became a lawyer and businessman in Jamaica and was inducted into the Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 1982.
7
Merlene Ottey (Jamaica / Slovenia) 70pts
born 1960 Hanover, Jamaica
Silver 100m (1996); 200m (1996); 4x100m (2000)
Bronze 100m (1984); 200m (1980); 200m (1984); 200m (1992); 4x100m (1996)
Fourth 100m (2000); 200m (1988). Fifth 100m (1992). Sixth 4x100m (1980). Eighth 4x100m (1984)
Ottey has won more medals than any other female athlete, but the gold always alluded her despite competing at seven Olympics and twice winning world titles at 200m. She could yet get a ninth medal as she came fourth in the 100m in 2000 won by Marion Jones, who has been stripped of her gold. Ottey competed for Slovenia in 2004, reaching the semi-finals of the 100m at the age of 44, and missed qualification for Beijing by just 0.028 seconds.
6
Ville Ritola (Finland) 75pts
born 1896 Peraseinajoki; died 1982 Helsinki
Gold 10,000m (1924); 3,000m steeplechase (1924); 3,000m team race (1924); cross-country team (1924); 5,000m (1928)
Silver 5,000m (1924); 10,000m (1928); cross-country individual (1924)
Ritola was in superlative form in Paris, winning the 10,000m by half a lap and breaking his own world record by 12 seconds. He was almost as devastating in the steeplechase with a 75-metre winning margin. Ritola had emigrated to the United States as a 17-year-old and trained with the Finnish-American Athletic Club, winning a host of titles in the States. He returned to his homeland in 1971.
5
Eric Lemming (Sweden) 94pts
born 1880 Gothenburg; died 1930 Gothenburg
Gold javelin (1908); freestyle javelin (1906); freestyle javelin (1908); javelin (1912)
Bronze shot (1906); pentathlon (1906)
Fourth high jump (1900); pole vault (1900); hammer (1900); discus (1906); stone throw (1906); javelin both hands (1912); Eighth discus (1900); hammer (1908)
A real multi-event specialist who won Olympic medals at four different track and field events and competed in at least nine others. He even won a bronze medal as part of the Swedish tug-of-war team in 1906, which does not count in this list. Lemming, like all the other competitors, used the same technique in both styles of the javelin throw, leading to the freestyle version being dropped after 1908. Lemming was a policeman in Stockholm.
4
Martin Sheridan (United States) 104pts
born 1881 Treenduff, Ireland; died Manhattan, New York
Gold discus (1904); shot (1906); discus (1906); discus (1908); discus Greek-style (1908)
Silver standing high jump (1906); standing long jump (1906); stone throw (1906)
Bronze standing long jump (1908)
Fourth shot (1904); discus Greek-style (1906)
Sheridan left Ireland as a 16-year-old to become a New York policeman and one of the great throwers of the early Games. In 1904, he tied with team-mate Ralph Rose and for the only time in Olympic history a throw-off decided the gold medal. The statement "This flag dips to no earthly king" has been attributed to Sheridan following a protest at the 1908 opening ceremony in London by Rose, the US flag-bearer. Sheridan, like Rose, died of pneumonia as a young man.
3
Carl Lewis (United States) 105pts
born 1961 Birmingham, Alabama
Gold 100m (1984); 100m (1988); 200m (1984); long jump (1984); long jump (1988); long jump (1992); long jump (1996); 4x100m (1984); 4x100m (1992)
Silver 200m (1988)
Probably the greatest athlete of the modern era, Lewis emulated Jesse Owens with the 100m, 200m, long jump and 4x100m golden slam in Los Angeles in 1984. He never quite reached those heights again but added another five gold medals and a silver to his collection. Rumours about drug-taking, which have never been substantiated, have taken some of the gloss off his achievements in recent years. In 1999, he was voted Sportsman of the Century by the IOC and World Athlete of the Century by the IAAF.
2
Paavo Nurmi (Finland) 108pts
born 1897 Turku; died 1973 Helsinki
Gold 10,000m (1920); cross-country individual (1920); cross-country team (1920); 1,500m (1924); 3,000m team race (1924); 5,000m (1924); cross-country individual (1924); cross-country team (1924); 10,000m (1928)
Silver 5,000m (1920); 5,000m (1928); 3,000m steeplechase (1928)
The king of the Flying Finns, Nurmi dominated middle-distance and distance running during the 1920s, setting 29 world records from 1,500m to 20km. He won nine gold medals and three silvers, but it could have been even more if he had been allowed by Finnish officials to compete in all the events he wanted and had not been declared a professional before the 1932 Games. Nurmi became a successful businessman in Finland and carried the torch into the stadium at the 1952 Games in Helsinki.
1
Raymond Ewry (United States) 120pts
born 1873 Lafayette, Indiana; died 1937 Long Island, New York
Gold standing high jump (1900); standing long jump (1900); standing triple jump (1900); standing high jump (1904); standing long jump (1904); standing triple jump (1904); standing high jump (1906); standing long jump (1906); standing high jump (1908); standing long jump (1908)
Ewry won ten gold medals, but is almost unknown as his unprecedented achievements occurred in events long gone from the Olympic schedules. His records are even more amazing given that he contracted polio as a boy, spent time in a wheelchair and was thought to be paralysed for life. He began exercising, regained the use of his legs and became the greatest standing jumper in history. His clearance of 1.60m in the standing high jump of 1904 would have been good enough for a silver medal with a run-up in 1896. The standing events were scrapped after 1912, but Ewry's world record of 3.47m in the long jump lasted until the 1930s.
* Notes
Results for the 1906 Interim Games in Athens have been included although they are not considered to be official by the International Olympic Committee.
All athletes' points have been credited to the nation for which they were competing at the time.
The points for the Unified Team of 1992 are credited to the Soviet Union.
The Czech Republic competed as Czechoslovakia from 1920-1992. Germany competed as West Germany from 1952-1988. East Germany competed as a separate nation from 1956-1988.
Source: The Times
94=
Daley Thompson (Great Britain) 30pts
born 1958 Notting Hill, London
Gold decathlon 1980; decathlon 1984
Fourth decathlon 1988. Seventh 4x100m 1984
One of the sport's great all-rounders, Thompson became the first athlete to hold Olympic, Commonwealth, European and World titles at the same time when he won in Los Angeles, setting a world record of 8847 points that stood for eight years. Controversially whistled the national anthem on the podium and swore when receiving the BBC Sports Personality of the Year prize in 1982. Awarded MBE in 1982 and CBE in 2000.
Bobby Joe Morrow (United States) 30pts
born 1935 Harlingen, Texas
Gold 100m 1956; 200m 1956; 4x100m 1956
The first man to achieve the sprint double since Jesse Owens in 1936. He led a clean sweep of Americans in the 200m, equalling the Olympic record of 20.6, and anchored the relay squad to victory in a world record 39.5. Retired in 1958 and became a farmer.
Cornelius Leahy (Great Britian) 30pts
born 1876 Cregane, Limerick, Ireland; died 1921 Manhattan, New York, US
Gold high jump 1906
Silver triple jump 1906; high jump 1908
Con Leahy was an Irishman forced to compete under the British flag despite being entered for the Games by the Gaelic Athletic Association. He took part in a protest in Athens when Peter O'Connor, a fellow Irish athlete, scaled a flagpole and waved the Irish colours. Leahy's brother, Patrick, won silver and bronze medals at the 1900 Olympics.
Alberto Juantorena (Cuba) 30pts
born 1950 Santiago de Cuba
Gold 400m 1976; 800m 1976
Fourth 400m 1980. Seventh 4x400m 1976
The first man from a non-English speaking country to win both the 400m and 800m and the first to do the double since Paul Pilgrim (US) in 1906. In 1976, Juantorena was favourite for the 400m and powered to victory in 44.26 but an unknown quantity in the two-lap race. He duly won with his nine-foot stride taking him to a world record of 1:43.50.
Deon Hemmings (Jamaica) 30pts
born 1968 St Ann
Gold 400m hurdles 1996
Silver 400m hurdles 2000; 4x400m 2000
Fourth 4x400m 1996. Seventh 400m hurdles 1992
The first Jamaican to win gold in 20 years and the first woman representing the Caribbean island to become an Olympic champion. Returned four years later to take silver behind Irina Privalova (Russia) and still holds the Olympic record with her 1996 winning time of 52.82.
Maurice Greene (US) 30pts
born 1974 Kansas City, Kansas
Gold 100m 2000; 4x100m 2000
Silver 4x100m 2004
Bronze 100m 2004
Failed to make the US team in 1996 but joined John Smith's powerful sprint squad in Los Angeles and arrived in Sydney as world champion and world record-holder (9.79). He collected two gold medals. In Athens, he added a bronze but was unable to pass Mark Lewis-Francis on the anchor leg of the sprint relay as Great Britain took a surprise victory.
Glenn Davis (United States) 30pts
born 1934 Wellsburg, West Virginia
Gold 400m hurdles 1956; 400m hurdles 1960; 4x400m 1960
Winning back-to-back titles, Davis was the leading intermediate hurdler of his generation. After his track career, Davis played American Football for the Detroit Lions with ten catches and 132 yards in his two NFL seasons. He is now the owner of Jeep's Olympic Driving School in Ohio.
Steve Backley (Great Britain) 30pts
born 1969 Sidcup, Kent
Silver javelin 1996; javelin 2000
Bronze javelin 1992
Fourth javelin 2004
Despite winning four consecutive European titles (1990-2002), Backley was always the bridesmaid at the Games, finishing behind Jan Zelezny (Czech Republic) on three occasions. He is, however, the only British athlete to win medals at three different Games and he broke the world record three times. This year he appeared on Dancing on Ice with partner Susie Lipanova. MBE in 1995 and OBE in 2003.
83=
Miruts Yifter (Ethiopia) 31pts
born 1938 Tigray
Gold 5,000m 1980; 10,000m 1980
Bronze 10,000m 1972
After a 10,000m bronze in Munich, Yifter missed his heat for the 5,000m and had to wait eight years to make amends after the African boycott of the 1976 Games. The 5ft 4in father-of-six made no mistake in Moscow, destroying both distance fields with stunning finishes. He clocked 26.8 for the final 200m in the longer race and earned himself the nickname "Yifter the Shifter."
Vilho Tuulos (Finland) 31pts
born 1895 Tampere; died 1967 Tampere
Gold triple jump 1920
Bronze triple jump 1924; triple jump 1928
Fourth long jump 1924
Tuulos recorded 14.50m in qualifying at the 1920 Games and with distances counting through to the final at that time, it was enough to earn gold for the Finn. In 1919, he had leapt 15.30m for the European record.
Robert Richards (United States) 31pts
born 1926 Champaign, Illinois
Gold pole vault 1952; pole vault 1956
Bronze pole vault 1948
The Rev Bob Richards was a theology professor from California, known as the "Vaulting Vicar," who became the only double pole vault champion in Olympic history. The 1956 competition saw the first use of fibreglass poles. In 1984, Richards ran for the US Presidency for the right-wing United States Populist Party.
Nina Ponomaryeva (Soviet Union) 31pts
born 1929 Sverdlovsk, Russia
Gold discus 1952; discus 1960
Bronze discus 1956
She won the Soviet Union's first Olympic gold medal when, under her maiden name of Romaschkova, she hurled the discus 51.42m in Helsinki for an Olympic record. She was on top of the podium again in Rome but had gained notoriety in 1956 when she was arrested in London for stealing five hats from an Oxford Street shop.
Micheline Ostermeyer (France) 31pts
born 1922 Rang-du-Fliers; died 2001 Bois-Guillaume
Gold shot 1948; discus 1948
Bronze high jump 1948
A great-niece of Victor Hugo, the author, and niece of Lucien Paroche, the composer, Ostermeyer excelled at both sport and music, attending the Conservatoire de Paris as a pianist. After winning the shot in London, she celebrated by performing Beethoven at the team's headquarters. After retiring from athletics in 1950, she toured as a concert pianist for 15 years.
Edwin Moses (United States) 31pts
born 1955 Dayton, Ohio
Gold 400m hurdles 1976; 400m hurdles 1984
Bronze 400m hurdles 1988
One of the legends of his discipline, Moses won 122 consecutive races between 1977 and 1987, setting four world records on the way. It brought him two Olympic titles which surely would have been three but for the American boycott of Moscow. He still holds 26 of the fastest 100 times at the distance.
Ralph Metcalfe (United States) 31pts
born 1910 Atlanta, Georgia; died 1978 Alsip, Illinois
Gold 4x100m 1936
Silver 100m 1932; 100m 1936
Bronze 200m 1932
After winning two medals in 1932 and holding the 100m world record at 10.2, Metcalfe was unable to match the power and grace of Jesse Owens in Berlin as he took the first step towards his domination of the Games. Metcalfe became a politician in 1949 and sat in the House of Representatives from 1971 until his death.
Douglas Lowe (Great Britain) 31pts
born 1902 Manchester; died 1981 Cranbrook, Kent
Gold 800m 1924; 800m 1928
Fourth 1,500m 1924. Fifth 4x400m 1928
In 1924, fellow Briton Henry Stallard was the favourite, but Lowe celebrated his 22nd birthday by sweeping to victory down the home straight. Four years later, Otto Peltzer (Germany) looked the man to beat, but injury saw him eliminated in the semi-finals. Once again, Lowe stepped up and took his second gold medal with a winning margin of some eight metres.
Maurizio Damilano (Italy) 31pts
born 1957 Scarnafigi
Gold 20k walk 1980
Bronze 20k walk 1984; 20k walk 1988
Fourth 20k walk 1992
By 1980, officials were getting tough with walkers lifting their feet and at Moscow seven athletes were disqualified, including three of the six leaders at the 15km mark. It allowed Damilano to secure a surprise victory and set an Olympic record. His twin brother, Giorgio, also finished 11th in the race.
Ato Bolden (Trinidad & Tobago) 31pts
born 1973 Port-of-Spain
Silver 100m 2000
Bronze 100m 1996; 200m 1996; 200m 2000
Seventh 4x100m 2004
A consistent sprinter who collected four medals at two Games and one of an elite who have run under both 10 and 20 seconds. In 1996, he took part in two races that saw world records fall with Donovan Bailey (Canada) clocking 9.84 in the 100m and Michael Johnson (US) winning in 19.32 in the 200m. Bolden said: "19.32. That's not a time. It sounds like my dad's birthday."
Thane Baker (United States) 31pts
born 1931 Elkhart, Kansas
Gold 4x100m 1956
Silver 200m 1952; 100m 1956
Bronze 200m 1956
Baker won both his 200m medals in Helsinki and Melbourne from the outside lane. In 1956, he was pipped for gold by team-mate Bobby Joe Morrow in the shorter sprint but they joined joined forces in the relay to shatter the world record with 39.5.
74=
Mamo Wolde (Ethiopia) 33pts
born 1932 DreDele; died 2002 Addis Ababa
Gold marathon 1968
Silver 10,000m 1968
Bronze marathon 1972
Fourth 10,000m 1964
He competed over 800m and 1,500m in 1956, but came to prominence in the longer races during the 1960s and won the marathon in the difficult conditions of Mexico at the age of 36. He was arrested for unspecified crimes in 1992 and spent nine years in prison without being charged before being convicted of murder in 2002. He was immediately released having served so much time already but lived just four more months.
Sara Simeoni (Italy) 33pts
born 1953 Rivoli Veronese
Gold high jump 1980
Silver high jump 1976; high jump 1984
Sixth high jump 1972
An elegant jumper, Simeoni held her nerve to take the title in 1980 with a 1.97m clearance. Four years later, she looked to be retaining her crown before being pipped by Ulrike Meyfarth (Germany), who had become the youngest track and field winner 12 years before in Munich.
Yuri Sedykh (Soviet Union) 33pts
born 1955 Nova Cherkassk, Russia
Gold hammer 1976; hammer 1980
Silver hammer 1988
Sedykh smashed the world record just before the 1984 Games but was unable to compete in Los Angeles because of the Soviet Union boycott. It could have brought him a third consecutive gold and a much higher ranking. Two of his three wives were also Olympic champions - Lyudmila Kondratyeva (1980 100m) and Natalya Lisovskaya (1988 shot).
Tatyana Samolenko (Soviet Union) 33pts
born 1961 Sekretarka, Ukraine
Gold 3,000m 1988
Silver 3,000m 1992
Bronze 1,500m 1988
Fourth 1,500m 1992
Samolenko's golden moment came in Seoul when she held off the powerful challenge of Romania's Paul Ivan and Britain's Yvonne Murray in a fast race. Her achievements, however, were soured in 1993 when she tested positive for steroids.
Steven Lewis (United States) 33pts
born 1969 Los Angeles, California
Gold 400m 1988; 4x400m 1988; 4x400m 1992
Silver 400m 1992
Harry "Butch" Reynolds, the world record-holder, was the clear favourite for the one-lap gold in Seoul, but Lewis had other ideas and timed his lunge for the line perfectly to snatch the title. The Seoul final was the first race in which seven runners went under 45 seconds.
Hicham El Guerrouj (Morocco) 33pts
born 1974 Berkane
Gold 1,500m 2004; 5,000m 2004
Silver 1,500m 2000
Known as the "King of the Mile," it seemed that El Guerrouj might never claim an Olympic crown after falling in the 1996 final and being outkicked by Noah Ngeny in Sydney. In Athens, he silenced the doubters in fine style by not only winning the 1,500m but becoming the first runner since Paavo Nurmi in 1924 to add the 5,000m at the same Games.
Mildred Didrikson (United States) 33pts
born 1911 Port Arthur, Texas; died 1956 Galveston, Texas
Gold 80m hurdles 1932; javelin 1932
Silver high jump 1932
Babe Didrikson qualified for all five individual women's events at the Los Angeles Games but could only compete in three where she won two golds and a silver. She also excelled at basketball and golf and gained her nickname after hitting five home runs in a baseball game. She recorded several songs and married George Zaharias, a professional wrestler, in 1938.
Olga Bryzhina (Soviet Union / Ukraine) 33pts
born 1963 Krasnokamsk, Ukraine
Gold 400m 1988; 4x400m 1988; 4x400m 1988
Silver 400m 1992
A gritty one-lap specialist who took the individual crown in Seoul and twice anchored her team to victory in the relay. In 1988, Viktor Bryzhina, her husband, also won a gold medal in the 4x100m relay.
Linford Christie (Great Britian) 33pts
born 1960 St Andrew's, Jamaica
Gold 100m 1992
Silver 100m 1988; 4x100m 1988
Fourth 200m 1988; 4x100m 1992
A late developer, Christie was upgraded to silver in Seoul after Ben Johnson was stripped of his gold for testing positive for prohibited drugs. Four years later, Christie went one better in Barcelona and became the oldest man to win the 100m at the Games. Always a controversial character, his career was ended by a two-year ban for nandrolone use in 1999.
71=
Edvin Wide (Sweden) 33.5pts
born 1896 Turku, Finland; died 1996 Stockholm
Silver 10,000m 1924
Bronze 3,000m team 1920; 5,000m 1924; 5,000m 1928; 10,000m 1928
Although born in Finland, he qualified to run for Sweden and spent most of his career battling with the Flying Finns, picking up five medals behind the great distance men from his homeland. He said he could pass away in peace after finishing his last Olympic race in 1928, but actually lasted another 72 years before dying at the age of 100.
Wilma Rudolph (United States) 33.5pts
born 1940 St Bethleham,Tennessee; died 1994 Brentwood, Tennessee
Gold 100m 1960; 200m 1960; 4x100m 1960
Bronze 4x100m 1956
Rudolph was the 20th of 22 children and had suffered polio, double pneumonia and scarlet fever as a child forcing her to wear a brace on her left leg. By 16, however, she had qualified for the US Olympic team. In Rome, she became the first American woman to win three gold medals at the same Games.
Annegret Richter (Germany) 33.5pts
born 1950 Dortmund
Gold 4x100m 1972; 100m 1976
Silver 200m 1976
Fifth 100m 1972; 4x100m 1976
Richter set a world record of 11.01 in the semi-finals at Montreal and just held off reigning champion Renate Stecher (East Germany) and fellow West German Inge Helten to win gold.
69=
Gyula Zsivotzky (Hungary) 34pts
born 1937 Budapest; died 2007 Budapest
Gold hammer 1968
Silver hammer 1960; hammer 1964
Fifth hammer 1972
A consistent performer and formidable opponent in an event that holds a special place in Hungarian hearts. He set an Olympic record of 73.36m to win in Mexico having set a world record of 73.76m the same year. His son, Attila, came sixth in the decathlon in 2004.
Matthew McGrath (United States) 34pts
born 1878 Nenagh, Ireland; died 1941
Gold hammer 1912
Silver hammer 1908; hammer 1924
Fifth hammer 1920
Born in Tipperary, McGrath became a policeman in the States and despite taking up the hammer at the age of 27 became one of the greats of the discipline, maintaining a place in the world's top-ten rankings until he was 50. His winning throw in Stockholm, 54.74m, was an Olympic record while the shortest of his six attempts was still 15 feet better than anyone else's best.
66=
Don Quarrie (Jamaica) 34.5pts
born 1951 Kingston
Gold 200m 1976
Silver 100m 1976; 4x100m 1984
Bronze 200m 1980
Fifth 4x400m 1976
Quarrie had finished behind Hasely Crawford in the 1976 100m but made no mistake in the 200m to end a long quest for an Olympic gold medal that had begun in 1968 at the age of 17. A Jamaican hero, Quarrie has been honoured by a statue in his home town and a reggae tune by Joe Gibbs and the Guerillas.
Irina Privalova (Russia) 34.5pts
born 1968 Malakhovka
Gold 400m hurdles 2000
Silver 4x100m 1992
Bronze 100m 1992; 4x400m 2000
Fourth 200m 1992; 4x100m 1996
After several successful years as a sprinter, Privalova's career was boosted in 1999 when she was given a transplant for her Achilles tendon using tissue taken from a dead soldier. She switched to hurdling in 2000 and capped an amazing debut season at the event by winning the Olympic title in Sydney.
Irina Press (Soviet Union) 34.5pts
born 1939 Kharhov, Ukraine
Gold 80m hurdles 1960; pentathlon 1964
Fourth 4x100m 1960; 80m hurdles 1964. Sixth shot 1964
The younger of the formidable Press sisters, Irina was a powerful all-rounder who set a world record of 5,246 points when winning the pentathlon ahead of Britain's Mary Rand in 1964.
64=
Galina Zybina (Soviet Union) 35pts
born 1931 Leningrad
Gold shot 1952
Silver shot 1956
Bronze shot 1964
Fourth javelin 1952. Seventh shot 1960
Zybina collected a full set of Olympic medals in one of the strength events despite seeing her mother and brother die of cold and starvation during World War II and barely surviving herself.
John Ljunggren (Sweden) 35pts
born 1919; died 2000
Gold 50k walk 1948
Silver 50k walk 1960
Bronze 50k walk 1956
Fourth 20k walk 1956. Seventh 20k walk 1960
The Swede had a long and successful Olympic career, which saw him still competing and winning a silver medal in Rome at the age of 41. Ljunggren's finest moment came in London when he led from gun to tape to record an easy victory by almost seven minutes.
59=
Derartu Tulu (Ethiopia) 36pts
born 1972 Bekoji
Gold 10,000m 1992; 10,000m 2000
Bronze 10,000m 2004
Fourth 10,000m 1996
Liz McColgan, the 1991 world champion from Great Britain, was favourite to win the 1992 10,000m title but she was unable to shake off the field with her front-runnning tactics and Tulu sprinted away to win. The former shepherd from the Arsi highlands heralded the emergence of African women in the distance events and her victory over another front-running British woman, Paula Radcliffe, eight years later confirmed her place as one of the event's leading performers.
Peter Snell (New Zealand) 36pts
born 1938 Opunache
Gold 800m 1960; 800m 1964; 1,500m 1964
Snell had a short but illustrious athletics career that saw him snatch gold as an unknown in Rome and complete the 800m/1,500m double as one of the world's greatest-ever middle-distance runners four years later. In Tokyo, he had not even raced over the longer distance before. Now a US citizen, he lives in Texas and became an age-group national champion at orienteering in his sixties.
Pietro Mennea (Italy) 36pts
born 1952 Barletta
Gold 200m 1980
Bronze 200m 1972; 4x400m 1980
Fourth 200m 1976; 4x100m 1984. Fifth 4x400m 1984. Sixth 4x100m 1976. Seventh 200m 1984. Eighth 4x100m 1972
Mennea broke the 200m world record with 19.72 in 1979 while running at altitude in Mexico City, but he did not have an Olympic gold medal after two visits to the Games. It proved third time lucky for the Italian who glided down the home straight in Moscow to beat Britain's Allan Wells, the 100m champion. Mennea served as a member of the European Parliament from 1999 to 2004.
Tatyana Kazankina (Soviet Union) 36pts
born 1951 Petrovsk, Russia
Gold 800m 1976; 1,500m 1976; 1,500m 1980
Kazankina was a formidable opponent over 1,500m who stepped down in 1976 to also win the 800m title. In 1980, just 12 days after winning in Moscow, she lowered the world record to 3:52.47 and became the first woman to run faster than Paavo Nurmi. However, her performances were thrown into doubt when she received an 18-month ban after her team manager refused to let her take a drugs test in 1984.
Nathaniel Cartmell (United States) 36pts
born 1883 Uniontown, Kentucky; died 1967 New York City
Gold 4x400m 1908
Silver 100m 1904; 200m 1904
Bronze 200m 1908
Fourth 100m 1908
Cartmell picked up two silver medals behind Archie Hahn in St Louis and completed his set of Olympic gongs four years later with a bronze in the 200m and gold in the relay. After London, Cartmell stayed in Europe and became a professional runner. He retired in 1910 and turned to coaching at several leading universities and at the US Military Academy.
56=
Jackson Scholz (United States) 37pts
born 1897 Buchanan, Michigan; died 1986 Delray Beach, Florida
Gold 4x100m 1920; 200m 1924
Silver 100m 1924
Fourth 100m 1920; 200m 1928
In 1928, he became the first athlete to reach a final at three different Games. Before that, he had won two gold medals but is now probably most famous for coming second behind Harold Abrahams in the Chariots of Fire 100m final of 1924. He later became a writer of pulp fiction and published 31 sports novels.
Mohamed Gammoudi (Tunisia) 37pts
born 1938 Sidi Ach
Gold 5,000m 1968
Silver 10,000m 1964; 5,000m 1972
Bronze 10,000m 1968
A pioneer of the African running revolution, Gammoudi's finest hour came in Mexico when he charged to the front of the 5,000m field with two laps to go and managed to hold off the dual Kenyan challenge of Kip Keino and Naftali Temu.
James Connolly (United States) 37pts
born 1868 Boston, Massachusetts; died 1957 New York City
Gold triple jump 1896
Silver high jump 1896; triple jump 1900
Bronze long jump 1896
The son of Irish immigrants, Connolly became the first Olympic champion of the modern era when winning the triple jump in 13.71m, taking two hops with his right foot which was legal at the time. He competed in Paris four years later and attended the 1904 Games in St Louis as a journalist. He became an authority on maritime writing and published more than 200 short stories and 25 novels.
55
Wyomia Tyus (United States) 37.5pts
born 1945 Griffin, Georgia
Gold 100m 1964; 100m 1968; 4x100m 1968
Silver 4x100m 1964
Sixth 200m 1968
Became the first woman athlete to retain the 100m title when winning in a world record time of 11.08 in 1968. She returned to the track as a profesional in the 1970s and coached at Beverly Hills High School, as well as being a founding member of the Women's Sports Foundation. Tyus appeared with her family on television show Family Feud, winning a $5,000 prize.
52=
Parry O'Brien (United States) 38pts
born 1932 Santa Monica, California; died 2007 Santa Clarita, California
Gold shot 1952; shot 1956
Silver shot 1960
Fourth shot 1964
O'Brien revolutionised the event by turning his back on the front of the circle at the start of his throw. This new technique helped him to win consecutive titles. In 1956, he recorded the five best puts on the competition. O'Brien died in the pool while swimming in a masters competition in California.
Herb McKenley (Jamaica) 38pts
born 1922 Pleasant Valley, Clarendon; died 2007 Mona
Gold 4x400m (1952)
Silver 400m (1948); 200m (1952); 400m (1952)
Fourth 200m (1948)
After collecting three silver medals, McKenley's final chance for gold came in the 4x400m relay at Helsinki. Running the second leg, Jamaica were well behind the US, but McKenley ran an inspired leg to put his team in the lead and on the way to gold and a world record. He later served as a coach to the Jamaica team from 1954 to 1973.
Kelly Holmes (Great Britain) 38pts
born 1970 Pembury, Kent
Gold 800m 2004; 1,500m 2004
Bronze 800m 2000
Fourth 800m 1996 Seventh 1,500m 2000
Holmes quit the track as a junior to become a physical training instructor in the Army, but returned in 1992 to carve out one of the most glorious careers in British athletics. Often among the minor medals and usually hampered by injury, Holmes finally had a spell of good health and made the most of it in Athens. In claiming the 800m/1,500m double she became, at 34, the oldest woman to win each race at the Games. The only British woman in these rankings.
49=
Alain Mimoun (France) 39pts
born 1921 El Talegh, Algeria
Gold marathon 1956
Silver 10,000m 1948; 5,000m (1952); 10,000m (1952)
Mimoun's path to Olympic gold had been blocked by Emil Zatopek to such an extent that he had been called the great man's shadow. However, the Algerian-born Frenchman's golden moment finally came in Melbourne when he won the marathon by more than one and a half minutes with Zatopek over four minutes behind in sixth place.
Gail Devers (United States) 39pts
born 1966 Seattle, Washington
Gold 100m 1992; 100m 1996; 4x100m 1996
Fourth 100m hurdles 1996. Fifth 100m hurdles 1992
Devers was an explosive sprint hurdler who never got her favourite event right at the Games, despite winning three world titles over barriers. She made up for it by winning back-to-back 100m crowns in Barcelona and Atlanta. It was all the more amazing since she had been diagnosed with Graves' disease in 1990 and given radiation treatment.
Valeri Borzov (Soviet Union) 39pts
born 1949 Sambir, Ukraine
Gold 100m (1972); 200m (1972)
Silver 4x100m (1972)
Bronze 100m (1976); 4x100m (1976)
Borzov eased to victory in the 100m at Munich, but Eddie Hart and Rey Robinson had missed their quarter-finals and the Americans vowed to make amends in the longer sprint. Borzov, a great technician, was having none of it and cruised to victory in 20.00 to become the first non-North American to do the sprint double. He married Lyudmila Turischeva, the gymnast, who won two more gold medals than her husband. Borzov became the first President of the Ukranian Olympic Committee and served on the IOC.
47=
Philip Edwards (Canada) 39.5pts
born 1907 Georgetown, Guyana; died 1971 Montreal
Bronze 4x400m (1928); 800m (1932); 1,500m (1932); 4x400m (1932); 800m (1936)
Fourth 800m (1928); 4x400m (1936). Fifth 1,500m (1936)
Called the "Man of Bronze" after his exploits on the track, Edwards was a versatile middle-distance runner who became his adopted nation's leading Olympian. He liked to set the pace and despite fading in the closing stages managed to hold on to secure three individual medals. The first black Canadian to win a Commonwealth Games gold medal, he qualified as a doctor and specialised in tropical diseases. He served as a captain in the Canadian Army during World War II.
Valerie Brisco-Hooks (United States) 39.5pts
born 1960 Greenwood, Mississippi
Gold 200m (1984); 400m (1984); 4x400m (1984)
Silver 4x400m (1988)
Fourth 400m (1988)
In 1982, Brisco-Hooks had finished with running after having a baby. She was coaxed back to the track and two years later became the first athlete to record a 200-400m double at the Games, collecting a third gold in the relay for good measure. In 1986, she made a guest appearance on The Cosby Show.
43=
Arthur Wint (Jamaica) 40pts
born 1920 Manchester, Jamaica; died 1992 Linstead
Gold 400m (1948); 4x400m (1952)
Silver 800m (1948); 800m (1952)
Fifth 400m (1952)
Wint served with the RAF during World War II and stayed on in England to study medicine. At the London Games, he missed out on gold in the 800m but made amends in the one-lap event, finishing strongly to edge out team-mate Herb McKenley. Four years later, they teamed up to win gold in the 4x400m relay in a world-record time. Wint served as Jamaica's High Commisioner to Great Britain from 1974 to 1978.
Marie-Jose Perec (France) 40pts
born 1968 Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe
Gold 400m (1992); 200m (1996); 400m (1996)
Fourth 4x100m (1992). Sixth 4x100m (1996)
Perec was the first athlete to win the 400m twice and achieved a rare 200/400m double in Atlanta, beating Michael Johnson to the same feat by 20 minutes. She looked set for a showdown with Cathy Freeman in 2000, but struggled with her fitness and left the Olympic village in a blaze of publicity just before the Games.
Charles Paddock (United States) 40pts
born 1900 Gainesville, Texas; died 1943 Sitka, Alaska
Gold 100m (1920); 4x100m (1920)
Silver 200m (1920); 200m (1924)
Fifth 100m (1924)
Paddock was a World War I veteran who delighted the crowds with a trademark leap at the finish line. It helped him take gold at the Antwerp Games. He competed in the 100m final four years later with actor Dennis Christopher playing him in the film Chariots of Fire. Paddock died in a plane crash.
Volmari Iso-Hollo (Finland) 40pts
born 1907 Ylojarvi; died 1969 Heinola
Gold 3,000m steeplechase; 3,000m steeplechase (1936)
Silver 10,000m (1932)
Bronze 10,000m (1936)
One of the last of the Flying Finns, Iso-Hollo won a bizarre steeplechase in 1932, running a distance of some 3,460m after an official failed to change the lap markers. It had probably cost Iso-Hollo a world record, which he later achieved in 1933 and then again when winning the Olympic steeplechase again in 1936 in 9:03.8.
42
Frankie Fredericks (Namibia) 41pts
born 1967 Windhoek
Silver 100m 1992; 200m 1992; 100m 1996; 200m 1996
Fourth 200m 2004
Fredericks was one of the great sprinters of modern times, running under ten seconds for the 100m on 27 occasions. However, a gold medal alluded him despite running 19.68 behind Michael Johnson in the 1996 200m.
38=
Jesse Owens (United States) 42pts
born 1913 Lawrence County, Alabama; died 1980 Tucson, Arizona
Gold 100m (1936); 200m (1936); long jump (1936); 4x100m (1936)
Owens was the brightest light to shine at the Nazi Games in 1936 as he completed the grand slam of sprinting and jumping, a feat not equalled until 1984 by Carl Lewis. Reports that he was snubbed by Hitler were probably false and Owens later stated that he was hurt more by the treatment of his own government. He was reduced to running in exhibitions and often against racehorses as he tried to eke out a living and was only awarded a Congresional Gold Medal posthumously in 1990.
Volodymyr Holubnychy (Soviet Union) 42pts
born 1936 Sumy, Ukraine
Gold 20k walk (1960); 20k walk (1968)
Silver 20k walk (1972)
Bronze 20k walk (1964)
Seventh 20k walk (1976)
Holubnychy competed at five Games holding off late challenges in Rome and Mexico City to earn his gold medals. The Ukranian was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour in 1960, the Order of the Badge of Honour in 1969 and the Medal for Labour Heroism in 1972.
Betty Cuthbert (Australia) 42pts
born 1938 Merrylands, New South Wales
Gold 100m (1956); 200m (1956); 4x100m (1956); 400m (1964)
Cuthbert was the inaugural winner of the women's 400m when it was introduced at the Tokyo Games, some eight years after she had won three gold medals in Melbourne. In Rome, she had been forced to withdraw after one race because of a hamstring pull. In 1969, she developed multiple sclerosis and has spent the rest of her life in a wheelchair.
Sebastian Coe (Great Britain) 42pts
born 1956 Chiswick, London
Gold 1,500m (1980); 1,500m (1984)
Silver 800m (1980); 800m (1984)
Coe is the highest-ranked Great Britain athlete in the list and one of the nation's greatest-ever runners. The 800m was probably his best event but he failed to beat great rival Steve Ovett in Moscow and the giant Brazilian Joaquim Cruz four years later. However, he made amends in fine style at both Games with stunning victories over the metric mile, the first man to repeat his victory after James Lightbody (1904 and 1906). He later became an MP and chief of staff for Conservative leader William Hague before, as Lord Coe, leading London's successful bid for the 2012 Games.
37
Florence Griffith-Joyner (United States) 43.5pts
born 1959 Los Angeles, California; died 1998 Mission Viejo, California
Gold 100m (1988); 200m (1988); 4x100m (1988)
Silver 200m (1984); 4x400m (1988)
Flo-Jo's performances in Seoul stunned the world as she picked up three gold medals and a silver, recording times thought beyond the range of a woman. Critics thought her rapid improvement from the silver of 1984 had been fuelled by drugs and she did little to convince them otherwise by retiring in 1989 just before mandatory random testing was introduced. She died in her sleep in 1998 at the age of just 38, the victim of a congenital brain abnormality.
35=
Raelene Boyle (Australia) 44pts
born 1951 Melbourne, Victoria
Silver 200m (1968); 100m (1972); 200m (1972)
Fourth 100m (1968); 100m (1976). Fifth 4x100m (1968); 4x100m (1976). Sixth 4x100m (1972); 4x400m (1972)
Despite racing against the mighty eastern Europeans, Boyle managed to win three silver medals at the Games to add to the seven golds she won at the Commonwealth Games. She has twice recovered from cancer and now campaigns to raise awareness. In 1998, she was named as one of 100 National Living Treasures by the National Trust of Australia.
Evelyn Ashford (United States) 44pts
born 1957 Shreveport, Louisiana
Gold 100m (1984); 4x100m (1984); 4x100m (1988); 4x100m (1992)
Silver 100m (1988)
Fifth 100m (1976); Seventh 4x100m (1976)
Ashford was one of the favourites for gold in 1980 but when the US team boycotted, it seemed like her chance had gone. But she returned four years later to win the sprint in Los Angeles and kept going for two more Games, adding four more medals to her collection. After splitting from her coach in 1985, she was largely self-trained for the rest of her illustrious career.
34
Malvin Whitfield (United States) 44.5pts
born 1924 Bay City, Texas
Gold 800m (1948); 800m (1952); 4x400m (1948)
Silver 4x400m (1952)
Bronze 400m (1948)
Sixth 400m (1952)
Whitfield was an Air Force sergeant when he won the 800m in London. He returned to repeat the victory in 1952 having spent time as a tail-gunner in the Korean War. He became the first black winner of the James E Sullivan Award and set up sports programmes around the world working for the US Information Agency.
30=
Jan Zelezny (Czech Republic) 45pts
born 1966 Mlada, Boleslav
Gold javelin (1992); javelin (1996); javelin (2000)
Silver javelin (1988)
Zelezny was surprisingly beaten in 1988 and found it difficult to defeat Steve Backley (Great Britain) in European competition. However, from 1992 to 2000 he was unbeatable at the Games, peaking at just the right time to become the first javelin thrower to win three titles and four medals at the event.
Melvin Sheppard (United States) 45pts
born 1883 Almonesson Lake, New Jersey; died 1942 New York
Gold 800m (1908); 1,500m (1908); 4x400m (1908); 4x400m (1912)
Silver 800m (1912)
Sheppard had been rejected by the New York police for having a weak heart. It did not stop him winning three gold medals in 1908 and another two medals four years later in Stockholm. In the 1912 800m final, the first four runners beat the previous world record with Sheppard clocking 1:52.0 behind Ted Meredith (US), who recorded 1:51.9.
Viktor Sanayev (Soviet Union) 45pts
born 1945 Sukhumi, Georgia
Gold triple jump (1968); triple jump (1972); triple jump (1976)
Silver triple jump (1980)
In 1976, Sanayev became only the fourth athlete to win three gold medals in the same event. He nearly made it four in 1980, but was edged out by team-mate Jaak Uudmae. In 1972, Sanayev set a world record of 17.44m, which lasted for three years.
Tamara Press (Soviet Union) 45pts
born 1937 Kharkiv, Ukraine
Gold shot (1960); shot (1964); discus (1964)
Silver discus (1960)
Along with sister Irina, Press symbolised the increasing power of the Soviet Union's athletes during the Cold War. Her stature and success brought accusations of malpractice and when sex-testing was introduced to athletics, both women disappeared. In retirement, she became a civil engineer.
29
Kipchoge Keino (Kenya) 46pts
born 1940 Kipsamo
Gold 1,500m (1968); 3,000m steeplechase (1972)
Silver 1,500m (1972); 5,000m (1968)
Fifth 5,000m (1964)
One of the first of the great African runners to emerge from Kenya. Keino destroyed Jim Ryun (US), the 1,500m favourite and world record-holder, in the rarified air of Mexico City, taking the title by 20 metres, the largest winning margin in the event. Four years later, he added a second gold medal in the steeplechase despite having little experience over the barriers. Now lives on a farm and runs a charitable organisation for orphans and has built the Kip Keino School in Eldoret. Chairman of the Kenyan Olympic Association.
27=
Heike Drechsler (East Germany / Germany) 47pts
1964 Gera, East Germany
Gold long jump (1992); long jump (2000)
Silver long jump (1988)
Bronze 100m (1988); 200m (1988)
A fine sprinter and one of the greatest long jumpers in history. Unlike many of her team-mates, she survived the transition from East Germany to a united team and her performances improved after the fall of the Berlin Wall. She jumped over seven metres on more than 400 occasions.
Fanny Blankers-Koen (Holland) 47pts
born 1918 Lage Vuursche; died 2004 Hoofddorp
Gold 100m (1948); 200m (1948); 80m hurdles (1948); 4x100m (1948)
Fifth 4x100m (1936). Sixth high jump (1936)
One of the greatest athletes in history, Blankers-Koen competed in 1936 but had to wait until the Austerity Games in London at the age of 30 and with two children to show the world her awesome power, grace and versatility. She won four of the nine events open to women at the 1948 Games and would proabably have won the long jump had she entered. In 1999, she was named the Female Athlete of the Century by the IAAF.
26
Gwen Torrence (United States), 47.5pts
born 1965 Decatur, Georgia
Gold 200m (1992); 4x100m (1992); 4x100m (1996)
Silver 4x400m (1992)
Bronze 100m (1996)
Fourth 100m (1992). Fifth 100m (1988). Sixth 200m (1988)
Torrence was not the most popular athlete on the blocks - she had fast feet but also a fast mouth, accusing several of her opponents of drug-taking. At times, she may have had a point, but little in the way of evidence and it did little to endear her to her fellow athletes, officials and the watching public. After the track, she became a hairdresser.
22=
Al Oerter (United States) 48pts
born 1936 Queens, New York; died 2007 Fort Myers, Florida
Gold discus (1956); discus (1960); discus (1964); discus (1968)
Oerter survived a near-fatal car crash in 1957 and a succession of serious injuries to become the first athlete to win the same Olympic event four times in a row. He set an Olympic record at each of his gold-winning performances and a personal best of 69.46m when returning to the sport at the age of 43. After athletics, Oerter became an abstract artist, often covering a discus in paint and flinging it on to canvas.
Alvin Kraenzlein (United States) 48pts
born 1876 Milwaukee, Wisconsin; died 1928 Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Gold 60m 1900; 110m hurdles 1900; 200m hurdles 1900; 1900 long jump
Kraenzlein won four gold medals in just three days in Paris and he is only athlete to win four individual titles at the same Games. He earned a denatl degree, but gave up a career in dentistry to become a track coach, working with the national teams of Germany and Cuba.
Michael Johnson (United States) 48pts
born 1967 Dallas, Texas
Gold 4x400m (1992); 200m (1996); 400m (1996); 400m (2000); 4x400m (2000)
After a disappointing time in Barcelona when he contracted food poisoning, Johnson turned on the burners in Atlanta four years later with two stunning performances. First, he set an Olympic record in the 400m with 43.49 to beat second-placed Roger Black (Great Britain) by ten metres and then shattered the 200m world record to record 19.32 with a final 100m timed at 9.20. He was renowned for his unique upright style and short stride pattern.
Archie Hahn (United States) 48pts
born 1880 Dodgeville, Wisconsin; died 1955 Charlottesville, Virginia
Gold 60m 1904; 100m 1904; 200m 1904; 100m 1906
Charles Archibald Hahn was dubbed "The Milwaukee Meteor" and lived up to his name in St Louis by winning three sprint gold medals and if relays had been included in the early Games could be even higher in the rankings. He retained his 100m title two years later at the 1906 Games. Hahn became a leading coach and his book How to Sprint is still considered one of the classic texts on the subject.
20=
John Walter Tewksbury (United States) 49pts
born 1876 Ashley, Pennsylvania; died 1968 Tunkhannock, Pennsylvania
Gold 200m 1900; 400m hurdles 1900
Silver 60m 1900; 100m 1900; 200m hurdles 1900
Tewksbury became the first winner of the 200m as he collected a mighty haul of five medals at the Paris Games. He also won the first 400m hurdles race at the Olympics, which had barriers made of telegraph poles with a water jump as the final obstacle. He became a dentist after retiring from sport.
Robert Korzeniowski (Poland) 49pts
born 1968 Lubaczow
Gold 50k walk 1996; 20k walk 2000; 50k walk 2000; 50k walk 2004
Eighth 20k walk 1996
Korzeniowski confirmed his status as one of walking's greatest exponents when he became the first athlete to complete the 20k/50k double in Sydney. Four years later and at the age of 36, he won his fourth gold by finishing more than four minutes ahead of the second-placed walker. Korzeniowski was inspired to take up sport by Bruce Lee, the film star, and initially wanted to be martial arts star.
21
Harry Hillman (United States) 50pts
born 1881 Brooklyn, New York; died 1945 New Hampshire
Gold 400m (1904); 200m hurdles (1904); 400m hurdles (1904)
Silver 400m hurdles (1908)
Fourth 400m (1906)
On the way to the 1906 Games in Athens, Hillman was injured by a freak wave that washed over the deck of his ship. In 1909, he teamed up with Lawson Robertson to set a record for the three-legged race that has never been beaten. The pair of Olympians recorded 11 seconds for the 100 yards.
20
Renate Stecher (East Germany) 50.5pts
born 1950 Suptitz, East Germany
Gold 100m (1972); 200m (1972); 4x100m (1976)
Silver 4x100m (1972); 100m (1976)
Bronze 200m (1976)
Stecher dominated sprinting for several years in the 1970s, but in 1997 documents were released that showed that she had been given steroids by the East Germans in the two years leading up to the Munich Games.
19
John Flanagan (United States) 52pts
born 1873 Kilbreedy, Ireland; died 1938 Kilmallack, Ireland
Gold hammer (1900); hammer (1904); hammer (1908)
Silver 56lb weight (1904)
Fourth discus (1904). Seventh discus (1900)
John Jesus Flanagan emigrated from Ireland in 1897 and became a policeman in New York City. A year after his third consecutive hammer title, Flanagan became the oldest athlete to break a world record when he hurled the hammer 56.18m at the age of 41. He returned to Ireland and coached Patrick O'Callaghan, who became the first non-American to win the hammer with victory in 1928.
18
Hannes Kolehmainen (Finland) 52.5pts
born 1889 Kuopio; died 1966 Helsinki
Gold 5,000m 1912; 10,000m 1912; cross-country individual 1912; marathon 1920
Silver cross-country team 1912
Kolehmainen was already 10,000m champion when he won an epic duel with Jean Bouin (France) in the 5,000m, setting a world record time of 14:36.6. The vegetarian bricklayer's running career was interrupted by World War I while Bouin and the third-placed George Hutson (Great Britain) were both killed in action. Kolehmainen returned after the war to win his fourth gold medal, this time in the marathon.
17
Elmer Niklander (Finland) 53pts
born 1890; died 1942
Gold discus 1920
Silver discus (both hands) 1912; shot 1920
Bronze shot put (both hands) 1912
Fourth shot 1912; discus 1912. Sixth shot 1924. Seventh discus 1924. Eighth 56lb weight 1920
Niklander was a versatile thrower who had his career disrupted by World War I. After training in his back yard and taking part in local fire station tournaments, he returned strongly after the war to take gold in the discus in Antwerp.
15=
Lasse Viren (Finland) 56pts
born 1949 Myrskyla
Gold 5,000m (1972); 10,000m (1972); 5,000m (1976); 10,000m (1976)
Fifth marathon (1976); 10,000m (1980)
Viren recalled the days of the Flying Finns when he dominated the distance events at two Olympic Games in the 1970s. The policeman's most dramatic victory was his first when he stumbled and fell in the 1972 10,000m final, but picked himself up to eventually win by six metres and break the world record. Viren later served in the Finnish Parliament, representing the National Coalition Party from 1999 to 2007.
Robert Garrett (United States) 56pts
born 1875 Baltimore, Maryland; died 1961 Baltimore, Maryland
Gold shot (1896); discus (1896)
Silver high jump (1896); long jump (1896)
Bronze shot (1900); standing triple jump (1900)
Garrett was a wealthy young man from Princeton University who paid for himself and three other athletes to attend the first Games in Athens. He became the first winner of the shot put and then the discus despite never having competed in the event before. Won a bronze in the shot four years later after recording a distance in the qualifying round and refusing to take part in the final because it was held on a Sunday.
14
Emil Zatopek (Czechoslovakia) 60pts
born 1922 Koprivnice; died 2000 Prague
Gold 10,000m (1948); 5,000m (1952); 10,000m (1952); marathon (1952)
Silver 5,000m (1948)
Sixth marathon (1956)
Legendary distance runner who dominated the sport in the post-war years, recording 18 world records. He won 38 consecutive races over 10,000m between 1948 and 1954 and in Helsinki took gold in all three distance events, taking part in the 5,000m to give him something to do between the other two. His wife, Dana, won gold in the javelin at the same Games.
13
James Lightbody (United States) 61.5pts
born 1882 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; died 1953 Charleston, South Carolina
Gold 800m (1904); 1,500m (1904); 3,000m steeplechase (1904); 1,500m (1906)
Silver 4-mile team race (1904); 800m (1906)
A dominant middle-distance runner in the early years of the 20th Century, Lightbody was never regarded as a potential winner of any of the races he entered at the Games. However, he won six medals in St Louis and Athens, setting a world record of 4:05.4 in the 1904 1,500m. Lightbody's luck ran out in London when he failed to make the final in all three of his events.
12
Irena Szewinska (Poland) 62pts
born 1946 Leningrad, Russia
Gold 200m (1968); 400m (1976); 4x100m (1964)
Silver 200m (1964); long jump (1964)
Bronze 100m (1968); 200m (1972)
In a long and distinguished track career, Szewinska became the first woman to hold world records at 100m, 200m and 400m at the same time. She already had Olympic medals in four different events when she switched to 400m in 1973, but became the first woman to break 50 seconds in only her second one-lap race. In the 1976 final, she won by ten metres in a world-record time of 49.28. She became a member of the International Olympic Committee and in 2005 was elected as the third woman on the IAAF Council.
11
Shirley Strickland (Australia) 62.5pts
born 1925 Perth, Western Australia; died 2004 Perth, Western Australia
Gold 80m hurdles (1952); 80m hurdles (1956); 4x100m (1956)
Silver 4x100m 1948
Bronze 100m (1948); 100m (1952); 80m hurdles (1948)
Fourth 200m (1948). Fifth 4x100m (1952)
In 1948, Strickland finished behind Fanny Blankers-Koen in the hurdles, but four years later as a 27-year-old teacher with a degree in physics, Strickland claimed the Dutchwoman's world record in 10.9 and the gold medal. By the Melbourne Games, she was a mother, but took her personal medal tally to seven with golds in the hurdles and relay. In 2001, she sold her collection of sporting memorabilia, including her Olympic medals, to raise money for her grandchildren's education and to support environmental causes.
10
Jackie Joyner-Kersee (United States) 63pts
born 1962 East St Louis, Illinois
Gold long jump (1988); heptathlon (1988); heptathlon (1992)
Silver heptathlon (1984)
Bronze long jump (1992); long jump (1996)
Fifth long jump (1984)
One of the sport's great all-rounders, Joyner-Kersee excelled at the long jump as well as the multi-events discipline. In Seoul, she was unbeatable at both, taking the long jump title five days after winning the heptathlon. Part of a distinguished track and field family, Joyner-Kersee's brother is Al Joyner, triple jump gold medallist, her sister-in-law Florence Griffith Joyner, and she married Bob Kersee, her coach.
9
Ralph Rose (United States) 64pts
born 1885 Healdsburg, California; died 1913
Gold shot (1904); shot (1908); shot both hands (1912)
Silver discus (1904); shot (1912)
Bronze hammer (1904)
Sixth 56lb weight (1904)
Rose has become part of Olympic folklore as the US flag-bearer at the opening ceremony of the 1908 Games in London who refused to dip the Stars and Stripes in front of the King of England. There is some doubt that this protest was even noticed by the crowd, but no doubt that Rose was a great thrower with six Olympic medals. He died of pneumonia at the age of 28.
8
Meyer Prinstein (United States) 65pts
born 1878 Szczuczyn, Poland; died 1925 New York
Gold triple jump (1900); long jump 1904; triple jump (1904); long jump (1906)
Silver long jump (1900)
Fifth 60m (1904); 400m (1904)
Prinstein was not allowed to compete in the 1900 long jump final, held on a Sunday, by his team officials even though he was Jewish and Alvin Kraenzlein, the eventual winner, was a Christian. Prinstein was so angry he was said to have punched Kraenzlein and then returned the next day to win the triple jump. Prinstein became a lawyer and businessman in Jamaica and was inducted into the Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 1982.
7
Merlene Ottey (Jamaica / Slovenia) 70pts
born 1960 Hanover, Jamaica
Silver 100m (1996); 200m (1996); 4x100m (2000)
Bronze 100m (1984); 200m (1980); 200m (1984); 200m (1992); 4x100m (1996)
Fourth 100m (2000); 200m (1988). Fifth 100m (1992). Sixth 4x100m (1980). Eighth 4x100m (1984)
Ottey has won more medals than any other female athlete, but the gold always alluded her despite competing at seven Olympics and twice winning world titles at 200m. She could yet get a ninth medal as she came fourth in the 100m in 2000 won by Marion Jones, who has been stripped of her gold. Ottey competed for Slovenia in 2004, reaching the semi-finals of the 100m at the age of 44, and missed qualification for Beijing by just 0.028 seconds.
6
Ville Ritola (Finland) 75pts
born 1896 Peraseinajoki; died 1982 Helsinki
Gold 10,000m (1924); 3,000m steeplechase (1924); 3,000m team race (1924); cross-country team (1924); 5,000m (1928)
Silver 5,000m (1924); 10,000m (1928); cross-country individual (1924)
Ritola was in superlative form in Paris, winning the 10,000m by half a lap and breaking his own world record by 12 seconds. He was almost as devastating in the steeplechase with a 75-metre winning margin. Ritola had emigrated to the United States as a 17-year-old and trained with the Finnish-American Athletic Club, winning a host of titles in the States. He returned to his homeland in 1971.
5
Eric Lemming (Sweden) 94pts
born 1880 Gothenburg; died 1930 Gothenburg
Gold javelin (1908); freestyle javelin (1906); freestyle javelin (1908); javelin (1912)
Bronze shot (1906); pentathlon (1906)
Fourth high jump (1900); pole vault (1900); hammer (1900); discus (1906); stone throw (1906); javelin both hands (1912); Eighth discus (1900); hammer (1908)
A real multi-event specialist who won Olympic medals at four different track and field events and competed in at least nine others. He even won a bronze medal as part of the Swedish tug-of-war team in 1906, which does not count in this list. Lemming, like all the other competitors, used the same technique in both styles of the javelin throw, leading to the freestyle version being dropped after 1908. Lemming was a policeman in Stockholm.
4
Martin Sheridan (United States) 104pts
born 1881 Treenduff, Ireland; died Manhattan, New York
Gold discus (1904); shot (1906); discus (1906); discus (1908); discus Greek-style (1908)
Silver standing high jump (1906); standing long jump (1906); stone throw (1906)
Bronze standing long jump (1908)
Fourth shot (1904); discus Greek-style (1906)
Sheridan left Ireland as a 16-year-old to become a New York policeman and one of the great throwers of the early Games. In 1904, he tied with team-mate Ralph Rose and for the only time in Olympic history a throw-off decided the gold medal. The statement "This flag dips to no earthly king" has been attributed to Sheridan following a protest at the 1908 opening ceremony in London by Rose, the US flag-bearer. Sheridan, like Rose, died of pneumonia as a young man.
3
Carl Lewis (United States) 105pts
born 1961 Birmingham, Alabama
Gold 100m (1984); 100m (1988); 200m (1984); long jump (1984); long jump (1988); long jump (1992); long jump (1996); 4x100m (1984); 4x100m (1992)
Silver 200m (1988)
Probably the greatest athlete of the modern era, Lewis emulated Jesse Owens with the 100m, 200m, long jump and 4x100m golden slam in Los Angeles in 1984. He never quite reached those heights again but added another five gold medals and a silver to his collection. Rumours about drug-taking, which have never been substantiated, have taken some of the gloss off his achievements in recent years. In 1999, he was voted Sportsman of the Century by the IOC and World Athlete of the Century by the IAAF.
2
Paavo Nurmi (Finland) 108pts
born 1897 Turku; died 1973 Helsinki
Gold 10,000m (1920); cross-country individual (1920); cross-country team (1920); 1,500m (1924); 3,000m team race (1924); 5,000m (1924); cross-country individual (1924); cross-country team (1924); 10,000m (1928)
Silver 5,000m (1920); 5,000m (1928); 3,000m steeplechase (1928)
The king of the Flying Finns, Nurmi dominated middle-distance and distance running during the 1920s, setting 29 world records from 1,500m to 20km. He won nine gold medals and three silvers, but it could have been even more if he had been allowed by Finnish officials to compete in all the events he wanted and had not been declared a professional before the 1932 Games. Nurmi became a successful businessman in Finland and carried the torch into the stadium at the 1952 Games in Helsinki.
1
Raymond Ewry (United States) 120pts
born 1873 Lafayette, Indiana; died 1937 Long Island, New York
Gold standing high jump (1900); standing long jump (1900); standing triple jump (1900); standing high jump (1904); standing long jump (1904); standing triple jump (1904); standing high jump (1906); standing long jump (1906); standing high jump (1908); standing long jump (1908)
Ewry won ten gold medals, but is almost unknown as his unprecedented achievements occurred in events long gone from the Olympic schedules. His records are even more amazing given that he contracted polio as a boy, spent time in a wheelchair and was thought to be paralysed for life. He began exercising, regained the use of his legs and became the greatest standing jumper in history. His clearance of 1.60m in the standing high jump of 1904 would have been good enough for a silver medal with a run-up in 1896. The standing events were scrapped after 1912, but Ewry's world record of 3.47m in the long jump lasted until the 1930s.
* Notes
Results for the 1906 Interim Games in Athens have been included although they are not considered to be official by the International Olympic Committee.
All athletes' points have been credited to the nation for which they were competing at the time.
The points for the Unified Team of 1992 are credited to the Soviet Union.
The Czech Republic competed as Czechoslovakia from 1920-1992. Germany competed as West Germany from 1952-1988. East Germany competed as a separate nation from 1956-1988.
Source: The Times
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