The 2008 Olympic Games
- The 2008 Olympic Games War Held In Beijing
- Beijing Olympic Games
- Play Olympic Games
- Hosted The 2008 Summer Olympic Games
- The Host Country Of The 2008 Olympic Games Was
Host city | Beijing, China | ||
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Motto | One World, One Dream (Chinese: 同一个世界 同一个梦想) | ||
Nations | 204 | ||
Athletes | 10,942 (4,637 women & 6,305 men) | ||
Events | 302 in 28 sports (41 disciplines) | ||
Opening | 8 August | ||
Closing | 24 August | ||
Opened by | |||
Cauldron | Li Ning[1] | ||
Stadium | Beijing National Stadium | ||
Summer | |||
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Winter | |||
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- View striking Olympic Videos of Beijing 2008 - see the best athletes, medal-winning performances and top Olympic Games moments. Javascript must be enabled for the correct page display skip to content.
- Liu entered the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games as a heavy favourite in the 110-metre hurdles. However, he pulled up after a false start in his first-round heat, having aggravated a chronic Achilles tendon injury, and subsequently withdrew from the Games. He returned to competition after 13 months of.
- The 2008 Summer Olympics medal table is a list of National Olympic Committees (NOCs) ranked by the number of gold medals won by their athletes during the 2008 Summer Olympics, held in Beijing, the capital of the People's Republic of China, from 8 August to 24 August 2008.Approximately 11,028 athletes from 204 NOCs participated in 302 events in 28 sports.
- Six of the sports facilities located on the city’s university campuses will be used by students after the Games. Beijing, 8 August, 2008, Opening Ceremony of the Games of the XXIXe Olympiad. The last runner of the Olympic Torch relay Li Ning prepares to light the Olympic cauldron. Official opening of the Games.
- Other articles where Beijing 2008 Olympic Games is discussed: Olympic Games: Beijing, China, 2008: In 2008 the Olympic Games were held in China for the first time. In the months prior to the Games’ start, a devastating earthquake in Sichuan province, international focus on China’s pollution problems, and protests over China’s human rights record and Tibet.
Six of the sports facilities located on the city’s university campuses will be used by students after the Games. Beijing, 8 August, 2008, Opening Ceremony of the Games of the XXIXe Olympiad. The last runner of the Olympic Torch relay Li Ning prepares to light the Olympic cauldron. Official opening of the Games. China bid for the 2000 Olympic Games and considered themselves the favorite. They were quite upset when the bid went instead to Sydney, which put on a nonpareil Olympic Games. China returned to bid again for the 2008 Olympic Games, and was this time successful.
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The 2008 Summer Olympic Games, officially known as the Games of the XXIX Olympiad (Chinese: 第二十九届夏季奥林匹克运动会; pinyin: Dì Èrshíjiǔ Jiè Xiàjì Àolínpǐkè Yùndònghuì) and commonly known as Beijing 2008, was an international multi-sport event that was held from 8–24 August 2008 in Beijing, China.[b]
A total of 10,942 athletes from 204 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) competed in 28 sports and 302 events (one event more than those scheduled for the 2004 Games).[2] This was the first time that China had hosted the Summer Olympics, but the third time that the Games had been held in East Asia, following the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, Japan, and the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. These were the second summer Olympic Games staged in a Communist country, after the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow and the third in a developing country after the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico and the 1980 Summer Olympics in the Soviet Union.
Beijing was awarded the 2008 Games over four competitors on 13 July 2001, having won a majority of votes from members of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) after two rounds of voting.[3] The Government of the People's Republic of China promoted the Games and invested heavily in new facilities and transport systems. A total of 37 venues were used to host the events, including twelve constructed specifically for the 2008 Olympics. The equestrian events were held in Hong Kong, making this the third Olympics for which the events were held under the jurisdiction of two different NOCs.[c] The sailing events were contested in Qingdao, while the football events took place across several different cities.
The official logo for the 2008 Games, titled 'Dancing Beijing', featured a stylised calligraphic character jīng (京, means capital) in reference to the host city. The Beijing Olympics was watched by 3,500,000,000 people worldwide and featured the longest distance for an Olympic Torch relay.[4][5][6][7][8][9] The event sets numerous world and Olympics records in the history of Sports, and is also the most expensive Summer Olympics of all time and second-most expensive overall, after the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.[10][11] The opening ceremony was lauded by spectators and numerous international presses as spectacular and spellbinding, and by many accounts 'the greatest ever in the history of Olympics'.[12][13][14]
An unprecedented 87 countries won at least one medal during the Games. China won the most gold medals, with 48, and became only the seventh different team to top an overall Olympic medal tally, winning a total of 100 medals overall. The United States placed second in the gold medal tally but won the highest number of medals overall, with a total of 112. The third place in the gold medal tally was achieved by Russia.
Beijing has been selected to host the 2022 Winter Olympics; it will become the first city to ever host both a Summer and Winter Games following it.
- 1Organization
- 5Games
- 6Participating National Olympic Committees
Organization[edit]
Bid[edit]
Beijing was elected as the host city for the 2008 Summer Olympics on 13 July 2001, during the 112thIOC Session in Moscow, defeating bids from Toronto, Paris, Istanbul, and Osaka. Prior to the session, five other cities (Bangkok, Cairo, Havana, Kuala Lumpur, and Seville) had submitted bids to the IOC, but failed to make the short list chosen by the IOC Executive Committee in 2000. After the first round of voting, Beijing held a significant lead over the other four candidates. Osaka received only six votes and was eliminated. In the second round, Beijing was supported by a majority of voters, eliminating the need for subsequent rounds.[15] Toronto's bid was their 5th failure since 1960 (failed bid for 1960, 1964, 1976 and 1996 games losing to Rome, Tokyo, Montreal and Atlanta).[16]
Members of the IOC did not disclose their votes, but news reports speculated that broad international support led to China's selection, especially from developing nations who had received assistance from China in the construction of stadiums. The size of China, its increased enforcement of doping controls, and sympathy concerning its loss of the 2000 Summer Olympics to Sydney were all factors in the decision.[17] Eight years earlier, Beijing had led every round of voting for the 2000 Summer Olympics before losing to Sydney by two votes in the final round.[18]
Human rights concerns expressed by Amnesty International and politicians in both Europe and the United States were considered by the delegates, according to IOC Executive Director François Carrard. Carrard and others suggested that the selection might lead to improvements in human rights in China. In addition, a number of IOC delegates who had formerly been athletes expressed concern about heat and air quality during the Games, considering the high levels of air pollution in Beijing. China outlined plans to address these environmental concerns in its bid application.[17]
2008 Summer Olympics bidding results | |||
---|---|---|---|
City | Nation | Round 1 | Round 2 |
Beijing | China | 44 | 56 |
Toronto | Canada | 20 | 22 |
Paris | France | 15 | 18 |
Istanbul | Turkey | 17 | 9 |
Osaka | Japan | 6 | — |
Costs[edit]
The Oxford Olympics Study 2016 estimates the outturn cost of the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics at US$6.8 billion in 2015-dollars and cost overrun at 2% in real terms.[19] This includes sports-related costs only, that is, (i) operational costs incurred by the organizing committee for the purpose of staging the Games, e.g., expenditures for technology, transportation, workforce, administration, security, catering, ceremonies, and medical services, and (ii) direct capital costs incurred by the host city and country or private investors to build the competition venues, the Olympic village, international broadcast center, and media and press center, which are required to host the Games. Indirect capital costs are not included, such as for road, rail, or airport infrastructure, or for hotel upgrades or other business investment incurred in preparation for the Games but not directly related to staging the Games. The Beijing Olympics' cost of US$6.8 billion compares with costs of US$4.6 billion for Rio 2016 and US$15 billion for London 2012. Average cost for the Summer Games since 1960 is US$5.2 billion.
On 6 March 2009, the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games reported that total spending on the games was 'generally as much as that of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games', which was equivalent to about US$15 billion. They went on to claim that surplus revenues from the Games would exceed the original target of $16 million.[20] Other reports, however, estimated the total costs from $40 billion to $44 billion, which would make the Games 'far and away the most expensive ever'.[21][22][23]
Its budget has since been exceeded by the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, which suffered from major cost overruns, causing the budget to exceed US$51 billion.[24][25]
Canadian Solar Constructed the 2000m Landscape Avenue Project for the Beijing Olympic Games Stadium in 2008.[26]
Venues[edit]
By May 2007 the construction of all 31 Beijing-based Olympic Games venues had begun.[27] The Chinese government renovated and constructed six venues outside Beijing as well as 59 training centres. The largest structures built were the Beijing National Stadium, Beijing National Indoor Stadium, Beijing National Aquatics Center, Peking University Gymnasium, Olympic Green Convention Center, Olympic Green, and Beijing Wukesong Culture & Sports Center. Almost 85% of the construction budget for the six main venues was funded by $2.1 billion (RMB¥17.4 billion) in corporate bids and tenders. Investments were expected from corporations seeking ownership rights after the Olympics.[28] Some events were held outside Beijing, namely football in Qinhuangdao, Shanghai, Shenyang, and Tianjin; sailing in Qingdao; and, because of the 'uncertainties of equine diseases and major difficulties in establishing a disease-free zone', the equestrian events were held in Hong Kong.[29]
The centrepiece of the 2008 Summer Olympics was the Beijing National Stadium, nicknamed 'The Bird's Nest' because of its nest-like skeletal structure. The stadium hosted both the opening and closing ceremonies as well as the athletics competition.[30] Construction of the venue began on 24 December 2003. The Guangdong Olympic Stadium was originally planned, constructed, and completed in 2001 to help host the Games, but a decision was made to construct a new stadium in Beijing.[31] In 2001, the city held a bidding process to select the best arena design. Several criteria were required of each design, including flexibility for post-Olympics use, a retractable roof, and low maintenance costs.[32] The entry list was narrowed to thirteen final designs.[33] The bird's nest model submitted by architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron in collaboration with Li Xinggang of China Architecture Design and Research Group (CADG) was selected as the top design by both a professional panel and by a broader audience during a public exhibition. The selection of the design became official in April 2003.[32] Construction of the stadium was a joint venture among the original designers, project architect Stefan Marbach, artist Ai Weiwei, and a group of CADG architects led by Li Xinggang. Its $423 million cost was funded by the state-owned corporate conglomerate CITIC and the Beijing State-Owned Assets Management Company.[32][34]
The 2008 Beijing Olympics caused traditional Hutong neighborhoods to be cleared for the construction of modern Olympic stadiums. In an effort to ensure success for the games, the government invested billions in building new infrastructure, although clearance to tiny, outdated neighborhoods in Beijing called hutongs resulted (Petrun). Jim Yardley, a New York Times reporter interviews Pan Jinyu, a 64-year-old local resident: 'They [the government] don't want foreigners to see this scarred old face'. Feng Shuqin and her husband, Zheng Zhanlin have lived in their house for 50 years and the family has owned the property before the Communists took control in 1949. The government, trying to clear the area, has offered them to move with a compensatory sum of US$175,000, but the family insists the land is worth US$1.4 million (Yardley). Michael Meyer, an American who lives in the hutongs reported that a total of 500,000 residents were relocated from their homes before the Olympics began (Meyer).
Transport[edit]
To prepare for Olympic visitors, Beijing's transportation infrastructure was expanded. Beijing's airport underwent a major renovation with the addition of the new Terminal 3, designed by architect Norman Foster.[35] Within the city itself, Beijing's subway was doubled in capacity and length, with the addition of 7 lines and 80 stations to the previously existing 4 lines and 64 stations. Included in this expansion was a new link connecting to the city's airport. A fleet of thousands of buses, minibuses, and official cars transported spectators, athletes, and officials between venues.[36][37]
In an effort to improve air quality, the city placed restrictions on construction sites and gas stations, and limited the use of commercial and passenger vehicles in Beijing.[38] From 20 July through 20 September, passenger vehicle restrictions were placed on alternative days depending on the terminal digit of the car's license plate. It was anticipated that this measure would take 45% of Beijing's 3.3 million cars off the streets. The boosted public transport network was expected to absorb the demand created by these restrictions and the influx of visitors, which was estimated at more than 4 million additional passengers per day.[39]
Marketing[edit]
The 2008 Summer Olympics emblem was known as Dancing Beijing. The emblem combined a traditional Chinese red seal and a representation of the calligraphiccharacterjīng (京, 'national capital', also the second character of Beijing's Chinese name) with athletic features. The open arms of the calligraphic word symbolized the invitation from China to the world to share in its culture. IOC presidentJacques Rogge was very happy with the emblem, saying, 'Your new emblem immediately conveys the awesome beauty and power of China which are embodied in your heritage and your people.'[40]
The official motto for the 2008 Olympics was 'One World, One Dream' (同一个世界 同一个梦想).[41] It called upon the whole world to join in the Olympic spirit and build a better future for humanity, and was chosen from over 210,000 entries submitted from around the world.[42] Following the announcement of the motto, the phrase was used by international advocates of Tibetan secession. Banners reading 'One World, One Dream, Free Tibet' were unfurled from various structures around the globe in the lead up to the Beijing Olympics, such as from the San FranciscoGolden Gate Bridge and the Sydney Opera House in Australia.[43]
The mascots of Beijing 2008 were the five Fuwa, each representing both a colour of the Olympic rings and a symbol of Chinese culture. In 2006, the Beijing Organizing Committee released pictograms of 35 Olympic disciplines (for some multi-discipline sports, such as cycling, a single pictogram was released).[44][45] This set of sport icons was named the beauty of seal characters, because of each pictogram's likeness to Chinese seal script.[45]
Media coverage[edit]
The 2008 Games were the first to be produced and broadcast entirely in high definition by the host broadcaster.[46] In comparison, American broadcaster NBC broadcast only half of the 2006 Turin Winter Games in HD.[47][48] In their bid for the Olympic Games in 2001, Beijing stated to the Olympic Evaluation Commission that there would be 'no restrictions on media reporting and movement of journalists up to and including the Olympic Games.'[49] However, some media outlets claimed that organizers ultimately failed to live up to this commitment.[d]
According to Nielsen Media Research, 4.7 billion viewers worldwide tuned into some of the television coverage, one-fifth larger than the 3.9 billion who watched the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. American broadcaster NBC produced only 2 hours of online streaming video for the 2006 Winter Games but produced approximately 2,200 hours of coverage for the 2008 Summer Games. CNN reported that, for the first time, 'live online video rights in some markets for the Olympics have been separately negotiated, not part of the overall 'broadcast rights.' The new media of the digital economy was said to be growing 'nine times faster than the rest of the advertising market.'[51]
The international European Broadcasting Union (EBU) provided live coverage and highlights of all arenas only for certain territories on their website, Eurovisionsports.tv.[52] Many national broadcasters likewise restricted the viewing of online events to their domestic audiences.[53] The General National Copyright Administration of China announced that 'individual (sic) and websites will face fines as high as 100,000 yuan for uploading recordings of Olympic Games video to the internet',[54] part of an extensive campaign to protect the pertinent intellectual property rights.[55][56] The Olympic Committee also set up a separate YouTube channel at Beijing 2008.[57]
Theme song[edit]
The theme song of the 2008 Olympic Games was 'You and Me,' which was composed by Chen Qigang, the musical director of the opening ceremony. It was performed during the opening ceremony by Chinese singer Liu Huan and British singer Sarah Brightman.[58][59]
Torch relay[edit]
The design of the 2008 Olympic Torch was based on traditional scrolls and used a traditional Chinese design known as the 'Propitious Clouds' (祥云). The torch was designed to remain lit in 65 km/h (40 mph) winds, and in rain of up to 50 mm (2 in) per hour.[60]
The relay, with the theme 'Journey of Harmony', was met with protests and demonstrations by pro-Tibet supporters throughout its journey. It lasted 130 days and carried the torch 137,000 km (85,000 mi)—the longest distance of any Olympic torch relay since the tradition began at the 1936 Berlin Games.[61][62] The torch relay was described as a 'public relations disaster' for China by USA Today,[63] with protests against China's human rights record, particularly focused on Tibet. The IOC subsequently barred future Olympics organizers from staging international torch relays.[64]
The relay began 24 March 2008, in Olympia, Greece. From there, it traveled across Greece to Panathinaiko Stadium in Athens, and then to Beijing, arriving on 31 March. From Beijing, the torch followed a route passing through every continent except Antarctica. The torch visited cities on the Silk Road, symbolizing ancient links between China and the rest of the world. A total of 21,880 torchbearers were selected from around the world by various organizations and entities.[65]
The international portion of the relay was problematic. The month-long world tour encountered wide-scale anti-Chinese protests. After trouble in London involving attempts by protesters to put out the flame, the torch was extinguished in Paris the following day.[66] The American leg in San Francisco on 9 April was altered without prior warning to avoid such disturbances, although there were still demonstrations along the original route.[67] The relay was further delayed and simplified after the 2008 Sichuan earthquake hit western China.[68]
The flame was carried to the top of Mount Everest[65] on a 108 km (67 mi) long 'highway' scaling the Tibetan side of the mountain, built especially for the relay. The $19.7 million blacktop project spanned from Tingri County of Xigazê Prefecture to the Everest Base Camp.[69] In March 2008, China banned mountaineers from climbing its side of Mount Everest, and later persuaded the Nepalese government to close their side as well, officially citing environmental concerns.[70] It also reflected concerns by the Chinese government that Tibet activists may try to disrupt its plans to carry the Olympic torch up the world's tallest peak.[71]
The originally proposed route would have taken the torch through Taipei after leaving Vietnam and before heading for Hong Kong. However, the government of Taiwan (then led by the independence-leaning Democratic Progressive Party) objected to this proposal, claiming that this route would make the portion of the relay in Taiwan appear to be part of the torch's domestic journey through China, rather than a leg on the international route.[72] This dispute, as well as Chinese demands that the flag and the national anthem of the Republic of China be banned along the route led the government of Taiwan to reject the proposal that it be part of the relay route, and the two sides of the Taiwan Strait subsequently blamed each other for injecting politics into the event.[73]
Calendar[edit]
In the following calendar for the 2008 Olympic Games, each blue box represents an event competition, such as a qualification round, on that day. The yellow boxes represent days during which medal-awarding finals for a sport were held. Each bullet in these boxes is an event final, the number of bullets per box representing the number of finals that were contested on that day. On the left the calendar lists each sport with events held during the Games, and at the right how many gold medals were won in that sport. There is a key at the top of the calendar to aid the reader.[74]
- All dates are Beijing Time (UTC+8)
OC | Opening ceremony | ● | Event competitions | 1 | Gold medal events | EG | Exhibition gala | CC | Closing ceremony |
August | 6th Wed | 7th Thu | 8th Fri | 9th Sat | 10th Sun | 11th Mon | 12th Tue | 13th Wed | 14th Thu | 15th Fri | 16th Sat | 17th Sun | 18th Mon | 19th Tue | 20th Wed | 21st Thu | 22nd Fri | 23rd Sat | 24th Sun | Events | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ceremonies | OC | CC | N/A | ||||||||||||||||||
Archery | ● | 1 | 1 | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | 4 | |||||||||||||
2 | 4 | 6 | 6 | 5 | 3 | 6 | 7 | 7 | 1 | 47 | |||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 2 | 2 | 5 | ||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | ||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | 2 | |||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 4 | 6 | 11 | ||||||
Canoeing | Slalom | ● | 2 | ● | ● | 2 | 16 | ||||||||||||||
Sprint | ● | ● | ● | ● | 6 | 6 | |||||||||||||||
Cycling | Road cycling | 1 | 1 | 2 | 18 | ||||||||||||||||
Track cycling | 1 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||||||||||||||
BMX | ● | 2 | |||||||||||||||||||
Mountain biking | 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | ● | ● | 1 | ● | 1 | ● | 1 | ● | 1 | 8 | ||||||||
● | ● | ● | 2 | ● | 1 | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | 1 | 6 | |||||||||
1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 10 | ||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | 2 | |||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | ● | 1 | 2 | ||||||||
Gymnastics | Artistic | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | ● | 4 | 3 | 3 | EG | 18 | ||||||||
Rhythmic | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | |||||||||||||||||
Trampolining | ● | 1 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | 2 | |||||
2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 14 | ||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 2 | |||||||||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 7 | 7 | 14 | |||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 11 | |||||||||
2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 15 | ||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | ||||||||||||
● | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 34 | ||||||||||
● | ● | 1 | ● | 1 | 2 | ||||||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | 4 | ||||||||||
2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 8 | |||||||||||||||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 3 | 4 | |||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 2 | |||||||||||||||||||
Volleyball | Beach volleyball | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | 4 | |||||
Indoor volleyball | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | 1 | |||||
● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | 1 | ● | 1 | 2 | |||||||
1 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 15 | |||||||||||
2 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 18 | |||||||||||||
Daily medal events | 7 | 14 | 13 | 19 | 17 | 15 | 18 | 27 | 37 | 18 | 20 | 11 | 21 | 21 | 32 | 12 | 302 | ||||
Cumulative total | 7 | 21 | 34 | 53 | 70 | 85 | 103 | 130 | 167 | 185 | 205 | 216 | 237 | 258 | 290 | 302 | |||||
August | 6th Wed | 7th Thu | 8th Fri | 9th Sat | 10th Sun | 11th Mon | 12th Tue | 13th Wed | 14th Thu | 15th Fri | 16th Sat | 17th Sun | 18th Mon | 19th Tue | 20th Wed | 21st Thu | 22nd Fri | 23rd Sat | 24th Sun | Events |
Olympic and world records[edit]
125 Olympic records including 37 world records were set in various events at the Games. In swimming, sixty-five Olympic swimming records including 25 world records were broken due to the use of the LZR Racer, a specialized swimming suit developed by NASA and the Australian Institute of Sport.[75] Only two swimming Olympic records remained intact after the Games.
Games[edit]
Opening ceremony[edit]
The opening ceremony officially began at 8:00 pm China Standard Time (UTC+8) on 8 August 2008 in the Beijing National Stadium.[76] The number 8 is associated with prosperity and confidence in Chinese culture, and here it was a triple eight for the date and one extra for time (close to 08:08:08 pm).[77] The ceremony was co-directed by Chinese filmmaker Zhang Yimou and Chinese choreographer Zhang Jigang[78] and featured a cast of over 15,000 performers.[79] The ceremony lasted over four hours and was reported to have cost over US$100 million to produce.[80]UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and leaders from 95 countries attended this ceremony.
A rich assembly of ancient Chinese art and culture dominated the ceremony. It opened with the beating of Fou drums for the countdown. Subsequently, a giant scroll was unveiled and became the show's centerpiece. The official song of the 2008 Olympics, titled 'You and Me', was performed by Britain's Sarah Brightman and China's Liu Huan, on a large spinning rendition of the globe.[81] The last recipient in the Olympic Torch relay, former Chinese gymnastLi Ning ignited the cauldron, after being suspended into the air by wires and completing a lap of the National Stadium at roof height.[82]
The opening ceremony was lauded by spectators and various international presses as 'spectacular' and 'spellbinding'.[83] Hein Verbruggen, chairman of the IOC Coordination Commission for the XXIX Olympiad, called the ceremony 'a grand, unprecedented success.'[84]
Sports[edit]
The program for the Beijing Games was quite similar to that of the 2004 Summer Olympics held in Athens. There were 28 sports and 302 events at the 2008 Games. Nine new events were held, including two from the new cycling discipline of BMX. Women competed in the 3000 metre steeplechase for the first time. Open water swimming events for men and women, over the distance of 10 kilometres (6.2 mi), were added to the swimming discipline. Team events (men and women) in table tennis replaced the doubles events.[85] In fencing, women's team foil and women's team sabre replaced men's team foil and women's team épée.[e] Two sports were open only to men, baseball and boxing, while one sport and one discipline were open only to women, softball and synchronized swimming. Equestrian and mixed badminton are the only sports in which men and women compete together, although three events in the Sailing allowed the opportunity for both males and female participants. However, only male participants took part in all three events.[87][88]
The following were the 302 events in 28 sports that were contested at the Games. The number of events contested in each sport is indicated in parentheses (in sports with more than one discipline, as identified by the IOC,[89] these are also specified).
- Aquatics
- Diving(8)
- Swimming(34)
- Synchronized swimming(2)
- Water polo(2)
- Archery(4)
- Athletics(47)
- Badminton(5)
- Baseball(1)
- Basketball(2)
- Boxing(11)
- Canoeing
- Slalom (4)
- Sprint (12)
- Cycling
- BMX (2)
- Road (4)
- Track (10)
- Mountain bike (2)
- Equestrian
- Dressage (2)
- Eventing (2)
- Jumping (2)
- Fencing(10)
- Field hockey(2)
- Football(2)
- Gymnastics
- Artistic (14)
- Rhythmic (2)
- Trampoline (2)
- Handball(2)
- Judo(14)
- Modern pentathlon(2)
- Rowing(14)
- Sailing(11)
- Shooting(15)
- Softball(1)
- Table tennis(4)
- Taekwondo(8)
- Tennis(4)
- Triathlon(2)
- Volleyball
- Beach volleyball (2)
- Volleyball (2)
- Weightlifting(15)
- Wrestling
- Freestyle (11)
- Greco-Roman (7)
In addition to the official Olympic sports, the Beijing Organising Committee was given special dispensation by the IOC to run a wushu competition in parallel to the Games. The Wushu Tournament Beijing 2008 saw 128 athletes from 43 countries participate, with medals awarded in 15 separate events; however, these were not to be added to the official medal tally since Wushu was not on the programme of the 2008 Olympic Games.[90]
Closing ceremony[edit]
The 2008 Summer Olympics Closing Ceremony concluded the Beijing Games on 24 August 2008. It began at 8:00 pm China Standard Time (UTC+8), and took place at the Beijing National Stadium.
The Ceremony included handover of the Games from Beijing to London. Guo Jinlong, the Mayor of Beijing handed over the Olympic flag to the Mayor of London Boris Johnson, followed by a performance organized by the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games (LOCOG). This presentation included performances by guitarist Jimmy Page, and recording artist Leona Lewis. Footballer David Beckham was also featured during London's presentation.[91]
Medal table[edit]
Of the 204 nations that participated in the 2008 Games, 87 earned medals and 54 of those won at least one gold medal, both of these figures setting new records for Olympic Games.[92][93] There were 117 participating countries that did not win any medals. Athletes from China won the highest number of gold medals of any nation at these Games, with 48, thus making China the seventh nation to rank top in the medal table in the history of the modern Olympics, along with the United States (fifteen times), France (in 1900), Great Britain (in 1908), Germany (in 1936), the Soviet Union (six times), and the Unified Team (in 1992).[92]
The United States team won the most medals overall, with 112. Afghanistan,[94]Mauritius,[95]Sudan,[96]Tajikistan[97] and Togo[98] won their first ever Olympic medals. Mongolia (which previously held the record for most medals without a gold)[99] and Panama[100] won their first gold medals. Four members of the water polo team from Serbia won the first medal for their country under its new name, having previously won medals representing Yugoslavia and Serbia and Montenegro.[101]
American swimmer Michael Phelps won a total of eight gold medals, more than any other athlete in a single Olympic games, setting numerous world and Olympic records in the process.[92] Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt also set records in several different events, completing the 100 m final with a time of 9.69 seconds, beating his own previous world record.[102] Russian-born American gymnast Nastia Liukin won the all-around gold medal in artistic gymnastics, becoming the third American female to do so, following in the footsteps of Mary Lou Retton in 1984 and Carly Patterson in 2004.[103]
These are the top ten nations that won medals in the 2008 Games.
Host nation
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | China* | 48 | 22 | 30 | 100 |
2 | United States | 36 | 39 | 37 | 112 |
3 | Russia | 24 | 13 | 23 | 60 |
4 | Great Britain | 19 | 13 | 19 | 51 |
5 | Germany | 16 | 11 | 14 | 41 |
6 | Australia | 14 | 15 | 17 | 46 |
7 | South Korea | 13 | 11 | 8 | 32 |
8 | Japan | 9 | 7 | 9 | 25 |
9 | Italy | 8 | 9 | 10 | 27 |
10 | France | 7 | 16 | 20 | 43 |
Totals (10 nations) | 194 | 156 | 187 | 537 |
Podium Sweeps[edit]
Date | Sport | Event | NOC | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
17 August | Athletics | Women's 100 metres | Jamaica | Shelly-Ann Fraser | Sherone Simpson Kerron Stewart | Not awarded |
17 August | Tennis | Women's singles | Russia | Elena Dementieva | Dinara Safina | Vera Zvonareva |
18 August | Athletics | Men's 400 metres hurdles | United States | Angelo Taylor | Kerron Clement | Bershawn Jackson |
21 August | Athletics | Men's 400 metres | United States | LaShawn Merritt | Jeremy Wariner | David Neville |
22 August | Table tennis | Women's singles | China | Zhang Yining | Wang Nan | Guo Yue |
23 August | Table tennis | Men's singles | China | Ma Lin | Wang Hao | Wang Liqin |
Participating National Olympic Committees[edit]
Blue = Participating for the first time. Green = Have previously participated. Yellow square is host city (Beijing)
All but one of the 205 recognized National Olympic Committees (NOCs) that existed as of 2008 participated in the 2008 Summer Olympics, the exception being Brunei.[104] Three countries participated in the Olympic Games for their first time: the Marshall Islands, Montenegro and Tuvalu.[105]
While not a full member recognized by the IOC and thus not allowed to compete formally in the Olympics, the Macau Sports and Olympic Committee sent a delegation to participate in the Wushu Tournament Beijing 2008, being the only unrecognized National Olympic Committee to have taken part in the 2008 Summer Olympics. It also coordinated efforts with the Chinese Olympic Committee to organize the torch relay through Macau.
The Marshall Islands and Tuvalu gained National Olympic Committee status in 2006 and 2007 respectively, and 2008 was the first games in which they were eligible to participate.[106][107] The states of Serbia and Montenegro, which participated at the 2004 Games jointly as Serbia and Montenegro, competed separately for the first time. The Montenegrin Olympic Committee was accepted as a new National Olympic Committee in 2007.[107] Neighboring Kosovo, however, did not participate. After the declaration of independence in Kosovo, the IOC specified requirements that Kosovo needs to meet before being recognized by the IOC; most notably, it has to be recognized as independent by the United Nations.[108][109][110]
More than 100 sovereigns, heads of state and heads of government as well as 170 Ministers of Sport attended the Beijing Olympic Games.[111]
Participating National Olympic Committees |
---|
|
National participation changes[edit]
Athletes from the Republic of China (Taiwan) competed at the 2008 Games as Chinese Taipei (TPE) under the Chinese Taipei Olympic flag and used the National Banner Song as their official anthem. The participation of Taiwan was briefly in doubt because of disagreements over the name of their team in the Chinese language and concerns about Taiwan marching in the Opening Ceremony next to the special administrative region of Hong Kong. A compromise on the naming was reached, and Taiwan was referred to during the games as 'Chinese Taipei,' rather than 'Taipei, China,' as the mainland China government had proposed. In addition, the Central African Republic was placed between Chinese Taipei and the Special Administrative Regions during the march of nations.[112]
Starting in 2005, North Korea and South Korea held meetings to discuss the possibility of sending a united team to the 2008 Olympics.[113][114] The proposal failed, because of disagreements about how athletes would be chosen; North Korea was demanding a certain percentage representation for its athletes. A subsequent attempt to broker an agreement for the two nations to walk together during the March of Nations failed as well, despite their having done so during the 2000 and 2004 Games.[115]
On 24 July 2008, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) banned Iraq from competing in the 2008 Olympic Summer Games because of 'political interference by the government in sports.'[116][117] The IOC reversed its decision five days later and allowed the nation to compete after a pledge by Iraq to ensure 'the independence of its national Olympics panel' by instituting fair elections before the end of November. In the meantime, Iraq's Olympic Organisation was run by 'an interim committee proposed by its national sports federations and approved by the IOC.'[118]
Brunei Darussalam was due to take part in the 2008 Summer Olympic Games. However, they were disqualified on 8 August, having failed to register either of their two athletes.[119] The IOC spokeswoman Emmanuelle Moreau said in a statement that 'it is a great shame and very sad for the athletes who lose out because of the decision by their team not to register them. The IOC tried up until the last minute, midday Friday August 8, 2008, the day of the official opening, to have them register, but to no avail.'[120] Brunei's Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports issued a press release stating that their decision not to participate was due to an injury to one of their athletes.[121]
Georgia announced on 9 August 2008, that it was considering withdrawing from the Beijing Olympic Games because of the 2008 South Ossetia war, but it went on to compete while the conflict was still ongoing.[122]
Participation of athletes with disabilities[edit]
South African swimmer Natalie du Toit, whose left leg was amputated following a motor scooter accident, qualified to compete at the Beijing Olympics. The five time gold medalist at the Athens Paralympics in 2004 made history by becoming the first amputee to qualify for the Olympic Games since Olivér Halassy in 1936. She was able to compete in the Olympics rather than the Paralympics because she does not use a prosthetic leg while swimming.[123] Polish athlete Natalia Partyka, who was born without a right forearm, competed in Table Tennis in both the 2008 Olympic Games and 2008 Paralympic Games.[124]
Concerns and controversies[edit]
A variety of concerns over the Games, or China's hosting of the Games, had been expressed by various entities, including claims that China violated its pledge to allow open media access,[125] various supposed human rights violations,[126][127] its alleged continuous support of repressive regimes (such as Zimbabwe, Myanmar, Sudan and North Korea), air pollution in both the city of Beijing and in neighbouring areas,[128] proposed boycotts,[129][130] warnings of the possibility that the Beijing Olympics could be targeted by terrorist groups,[131] disruption from pro-Tibetan protesters,[132] and religious persecutions.[133]
There were also claims that several members of China's women's gymnastics team, including double gold medal winner He Kexin, were too young to compete under the Fédération Internationale de Gymnastique's rules for Olympic eligibility, but all were exonerated after an official IOC investigation.[134][135][136]
Collectively, the Beijing Olympics are associated with a variety of problematic topics: the ecological impact, residential displacement due to construction, treatment of migrant workers, the government's political stance on Tibet, etc.[137] In the lead-up to the Olympics, the government allegedly issued guidelines to the local media for their reporting during the Games: most political issues not directly related to the games were to be downplayed; topics such as pro-Tibetan independence and East Turkestan movements were not to be reported on, as were food safety issues such as 'cancer-causing mineral water'.[138] As the 2008 Chinese milk scandal broke in September 2008, there was widespread speculation that China's desire for a perfect Games may have been a factor contributing towards the delayed recall of contaminated infant formula.[139][140]
The games were hit by a number of doping scandals before and after the games had commenced. Seven Russian track and field stars were suspended just before the start of the games for allegedly tampering with their urine samples, only five of the seven were due to take part in the games. Eleven Greek weightlifters also failed tests in the run up to the games and the entire Bulgarian weightlifting team had to withdraw after eleven of their weightlifters also failed tests. A small number of athletes from other nations also failed pre-games tests.[141][142][143] Urine samples taken from the games were re-analysed in 2016–17 using more advanced technologies that were not available at the time of competition. 61 athletes failed these re-tests, with 50 medals being stripped.[citation needed]
Legacy[edit]
The 2008 Olympic Games have been generally accepted by the world's media as a logistical success.[144][145] Many of the worst fears about the games failed to materialize: no terrorists struck Beijing; no athlete protested at the podium (though Swedish wrestler Ara Abrahamian tossed his bronze medal in disgust over judging), and the air quality – due largely to favorable weather patterns – was not as bad as many had feared beforehand despite being the worst in Olympics history.[146][147] Hopes that hosting the Games would lead to improvements in human rights protections and rule of law in China, however, went unfulfilled.[148]
Many in China viewed the Olympics as 'an affirmation of a single nationalistic dream' and saw protests during the international torch relay as an insult to China.[149] The Games also bolstered domestic support for the Chinese government, and for the policies of the Communist Party, giving rise to concerns that the Olympics would give the state more leverage to suppress political dissent, at least temporarily.[150] Efforts to quell any unrest before and during the Games also contributed to a rapid expansion in the size and political clout of China's internal security forces, and this growth continued through the following years.[151] Reports also indicated that the Olympics boosted the political careers of pro-Beijing politicians in Hong Kong, as many Chinese gold medal winners campaigned on behalf of the pro-Beijing DAB during the 2008 election,[152] although any trend towards greater identification by Hong Kongers with Mainland China appears to have been short-lived.[153]
The long-term economic impact of the games on China and Beijing in particular is not yet clear. Some sectors of the economy may have benefited from the influx of tourists, and other sectors such as manufacturing lost revenue because of plant closings related to the government's efforts to improve air quality. Four years after the Games, many of the specially constructed facilities were underused or even deserted.[154] It is generally expected by economists that there will be no lasting effects on Beijing's economy from the games.[155]
One 2009 study found that countries which host the Olympics experience a significant boost in trade. But this is also the case for countries which merely bid to host. 'The benefit, in other words, came from the signal that a country was open for business, not from the spending itself.'[156]
Seven years after the 2008 Games, Beijing was awarded the 2022 Winter Olympics. It will thus be the first city to host both the Summer and Winter Games.
See also[edit]
- Olympic Games celebrated in China
- 2008 Summer Olympics – Beijing
- 2014 Summer Youth Olympics – Nanjing
- 2022 Winter Olympics – Beijing
Notes[edit]
- ^IOC records state Hu Jintao opened the Beijing Games as 'President', de jure head of state. Though Hu Jintao was also de factoruler as General Secretary of the Communist Party of China, that title is not reflected in IOC records.
- ^Although the games officially started on 8 August 2008, the first football matches were held on 6 August.
- ^The other two instances were: the 1956 Olympic Games, where the equestrian events were held in Stockholm, Sweden, due to strict Australian quarantine rules, and the other Olympic events were held in Melbourne, Australia; and the 1920 Olympic Games, which were hosted by Antwerp, Belgium, but the final two races of the 12 ft (3.7 m) dinghy event in sailing took place in the Netherlands.
- ^The New York Times, for instance, said that 'those promises have been contradicted by strict visa rules, lengthy application processes and worries about censorship.'[50]
- ^The fencing programme included six individual events and four team events; the FIE's rules call for the set of team events to be different from those held in the previous Games and for at least one team event in each weapon to be contested. The fourth event is determined by a vote. In 2004, the three men's team events (foil, sabre, épée) and the women's épée were held, so in 2008 the women's foil and sabre events were automatically selected, as well as the men's épée. The fourth event, men's sabre, was chosen over men's foil by a 45:20 vote.[86]
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- ^'Interpol chief warns of Olympic terror threat'. intelasia.net. Archived from the original on 2 November 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
- ^O'Sullivan, Mike (10 August 2008). 'Bush Olympic Visit Highlights Religion in China'. Voice of America. Archived from the original on 26 August 2009. Retrieved 2 July 2009.
- ^'AsianWeek's Most Memorable Moments of the 2008 Beijing Olympics'. asianweek.com. Archived from the original on 24 January 2016.
- ^'Olympic probe into age-fixing of Chinese gymnasts'. 21 August 2008. Archived from the original on 7 December 2010. Retrieved 29 November 2010.
- ^'2008 Chinese gymnasts cleared, but 2000 team eyed'. ESPN. Associated Press. 1 October 2008. Archived from the original on 4 October 2008. Retrieved 1 October 2008.
- ^Kang, Jaeho; Traganou, Jilly (2011). 'The Beijing National Stadium as Media-space'. Design and Culture. 3 (2): 145–163. doi:10.2752/175470811X13002771867761.
- ^Stephen Hutcheon, 'Was China's milk scandal hushed up?', 'The full list of edicts', New Zealand Herald (15 September 2008)
- ^Richard Spencer in Beijing (15 September 2008). 'China accused over contaminated baby milk'. Telegraph.co.uk.
- ^'China Says Complaints About Milk Began in 2007'. The New York Times. 24 September 2008.
- ^'Bulgaria withdraws lifting team'. BBC Sport. 27 June 2008. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
- ^'Greek 'B' samples test positive'. BBC Sport. 2 May 2008. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
- ^'Seven Russians handed doping bans'. BBC Sport. 20 October 2008. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
- ^'Top events of 2008 – After the Games: China's Olympic legacy'. Archived from the original on 19 January 2009. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
- ^Skalij, Wally (24 August 2008). 'Beijing Olympics were logistically successful and sneaky, too'. LA Times. Retrieved 29 August 2008.
- ^'China Launches Olympic-Size Headache'. 20 August 2008. Archived from the original on 29 August 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
- ^Jamieson, Alastair (22 June 2009). 'Beijing Olympics were the most polluted games ever, researchers say'. The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 26 June 2009. Retrieved 26 June 2009.
- ^'China a finalist for 2022 Olympics but facing human rights criticism'. The Washington Post. 11 September 2014. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
- ^April Rabkin (1 August 2008). '→Beijing Olympic Games all about China, Chinese Leaders keen to impress, inspire their own people'. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
- ^Gardner, Dinah (25 August 2008). 'China's Olympic legacy'. Archived from the original on 29 August 2008. Retrieved 29 August 2008.
- ^'China's new rulers, Princelings and the goon state, The rise and rise of the princelings, the country's revolutionary aristocracy'. The Economist. 14 April 2011. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
- ^'Democrats perform well despite 'Olympic factor' in Hong Kong elections'. 8 September 2008. Archived from the original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 6 June 2009.
- ^Higgins, Andrew (11 January 2012). 'China denounces 'Hong Konger' trend'. The Washington Post. Retrieved 22 July 2012.
- ^McDonald, Mark (15 July 2012). ''Ruin Porn' — the Aftermath of the Beijing Olympics'. The New York Times. Retrieved 21 July 2012.
- ^'Beijing's economy – Going for gold'. The Economist. 25 August 2008. Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 29 August 2008.
- ^Does Hosting the Olympics Actually Pay Off?, New York Times, Binyamin Appelbaum, Aug. 5, 2014. On how hosting boosts trade as does merely bidding to host, the article cites economists Andrew K. Rose at the University of California, Berkeley, and Mark M. Spiegel at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
External links[edit]
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Beijing 2008. |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2008 Summer Olympics. |
- 'Beijing 2008'. Olympic.org. International Olympic Committee.
- 'Results and Medalists—2008 Summer Olympics'. Olympic.org. International Olympic Committee.
- '2008 Summer Olympics Official Site'. Archived from the original on 12 October 2008. Retrieved 20 June 2013.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
- Mallon, Bill (18 January 2019). 'ALL OLYMPIC DOPING POSITIVES – THE COUNT BY GAMES'. OlympStats.
Preceded by Athens | Summer Olympic Games Beijing XXIX Olympiad (2008) | Succeeded by London |
Part of a series on |
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The 2008 Summer Olympics were held in Beijing, People's Republic of China, from 8 August to 24 August 2008.[Note 1] Approximately 11,028 athletes from 204 National Olympic Committees (NOC) participated.[1] Overall, 302 events in 28 sports were held; 165 events were opened to men, 127 were opened to women and 10 were mixed events. In total there was one more event than in the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece.[2]
Nine new events were held, including two from the new cycling discipline of BMX. Women competed in the 3000 metre steeplechase for the first time. Marathon open water swimming events for men and women, over the distance of 10 kilometres, were added to the swimming discipline. Team events (men and women) in table tennis replaced the doubles events.[3] In fencing, women's team foil and women's team sabre replaced men's team foil and women's team épée.[Note 2] Two sports were open only to men, baseball and boxing, while one sport and one discipline were open only to women, softball and synchronized swimming. Equestrian is the only sport in which men and women compete together in the same events.[4][5] Baseball and softball may have made their last appearances in Olympics history during these Games, as the International Olympic Committee voted to remove them from the programme of the 2012 Olympics.[6] A total of 958 medals for events (302 gold, 303 silver and 353 bronze) were awarded. In boxing, judo, taekwondo and wrestling, two bronze medals are awarded in each weight class.[7] Therefore, the total number of bronze medals is greater than the total number of gold or silver medals. Additionally there were ties for a silver medal and two bronze medals.[8][9]
A total of 1,881 individual athletes won medals. Chinese athletes won the most gold medals with 48 (100 total), and the United States won the most total medals with 110 (including 36 gold).[10] Athletes from 87 countries won medals, while 55 nations won at least one gold medal, both setting new records for Olympic Games.[11] Athletes from Afghanistan (Rohullah Nikpai – Taekwondo, men's 58 kg),[12]Mauritius (Bruno Julie – boxing, bantamweight),[13]Sudan (Ismail Ahmed Ismail – athletics, men's 800 m),[14]Tajikistan (Rasul Boqiev – judo, men's 73 kg),[15] and Togo (Benjamin Boukpeti – canoeing, men's K-1 slalom)[16] won their NOCs' first Olympic medal. Athletes from Mongolia (Naidangiin Tüvshinbayar – judo, men's 100 kg),[17] and Panama (Irving Saladino – athletics, men's long jump)[18] won their nations' first gold medal.
American swimmer Michael Phelps was the most successful athlete, winning eight gold medals and setting a new record for most golds won in a single edition of the Olympics (the previous record, seven, had been set in 1972 by Mark Spitz).[19] Phelps also set a new record for most career gold medals (14), and his 16 total medals were ranked second all-time behind Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina (18) at the time. In 2012 Phelps set a record for most total medals.[20] Several records for career medals in a sport were tied or surpassed, including cycling (Bradley Wiggins of the United Kingdom won two gold, tied for record with six career medals); judo (Ryoko Tani of Japan won a bronze, five career medals); softball (Laura Berg of the United States won a gold and Natalie Ward, Melanie Roche and Tanya Harding of Australia won a bronze; all have four career medals); swimming (Michael Phelps, 16 career medals); taekwondo (Steven López of the United States won a bronze and Hadi Saei of Iran won a gold, both three career medals); and table tennis (Wang Nan of China won a gold and silver medal, five career medals).[20]
2008 Olympics has the most medals stripped for doping violations (50). The leading country is Russia with 14 medals stripped.
Contents | ||
StatisticsReferences |
Archery[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's individual details | Viktor Ruban Ukraine | Park Kyung-Mo South Korea | Bair Badënov Russia |
Women's individual details | Zhang Juanjuan China | Park Sung-Hyun South Korea | Yun Ok-hee South Korea |
Men's team details | South Korea(KOR) Im Dong-Hyun Lee Chang-hwan Park Kyung-Mo | Italy(ITA) Ilario Di Buò Marco Galiazzo Mauro Nespoli | China(CHN) Jiang Lin Li Wenquan Xue Haifeng |
Women's team details | South Korea(KOR) Joo Hyun-Jung Park Sung-Hyun Yun Ok-hee | China(CHN) Chen Ling Guo Dan Zhang Juanjuan | France(FRA) Virginie Arnold Sophie Dodemont Bérengère Schuh |
Athletics[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 100 m details | Usain Bolt Jamaica | Richard Thorempson Trinidad and Tobago | Walter Dix United States |
Women's 100 m details | Shelly-Ann Fraser Jamaica | Sherone Simpson Jamaica | None |
Kerron Stewart Jamaica | |||
Men's 200 m details | Usain Bolt Jamaica | Shawn Crawford United States | Walter Dix United States |
Women's 200 m details | Veronica Campbell-Brown Jamaica | Allyson Felix United States | Kerron Stewart Jamaica |
Men's 400 m details | LaShawn Merritt United States | Jeremy Wariner United States | David Neville United States |
Women's 400 m details | Christine Ohuruogu Great Britain | Shericka Williams Jamaica | Sanya Richards United States |
Men's 800 m details | Wilfred Kipkemboi Bungei Kenya | Ismail Ahmed Ismail Sudan | Alfred Kirwa Yego Kenya |
Women's 800 m details | Pamela Jelimo Kenya | Janeth Jepkosgei Busienei Kenya | Hasna Benhassi Morocco |
Men's 1500 m details | Asbel Kipruto Kiprop Kenya | Nicholas Willis New Zealand | Mehdi Baala France |
Women's 1500 m details | Nancy Jebet Langat Kenya | Iryna Lishchynska Ukraine | Nataliya Tobias Ukraine |
Men's 5000 m details | Kenenisa Bekele Ethiopia | Eliud Kipchoge Kenya | Edwin Cheruiyot Soi Kenya |
Women's 5000 m details | Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene Ethiopia | Not Awarded | Meseret Defar Tola Ethiopia |
Men's 10,000 m details | Kenenisa Bekele Ethiopia | Sileshi Sihine Ethiopia | Micah Kemboi Kogo Kenya |
Women's 10,000 m details | Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene Ethiopia | Shalane Flanagan United States | Linet Chepkwemoi Masai Kenya |
Men's marathon details | Samuel Kamau Wanjiru Kenya | Jaouad Gharib Morocco | Tsegaye Kebede Wordofa Ethiopia |
Women's marathon details | Constantina Diţă-Tomescu Romania | Catherine Nyambura Ndereba Kenya | Zhou Chunxiu China |
Men's 110 m hurdles details | Dayron Robles Cuba | David Payne United States | David Oliver United States |
Women's 100 m hurdles details | Dawn Harper United States | Sally McLellan Australia | Priscilla Lopes-Schliep Canada |
Men's 400 m hurdles details | Angelo Taylor United States | Kerron Clement United States | Bershawn Jackson United States |
Women's 400 m hurdles details | Melaine Walker Jamaica | Sheena Tosta United States | Tasha Danvers Great Britain |
Men's 3000 m steeplechase details | Brimin Kipruto Kenya | Mahiedine Mekhissi-Benabbad France | Richard Kipkemboi Mateelong Kenya |
Women's 3000 m steeplechase details | Gulnara Samitova-Galkina Russia | Eunice Jepkorir Kenya | Yekaterina Volkova Russia |
Men's 4 × 100 m relay details | Trinidad and Tobago(TRI) Keston Bledman Marc Burns Emmanuel Callender Richard Thompson Aaron Armstrong | Japan(JPN) Naoki Tsukahara Shingo Suetsugu Shinji Takahira Nobuharu Asahara | Brazil Vicente Lima Sandro Viana Bruno de Barros José Carlos Moreira |
Women's 4 × 100 m relay details | Belgium(BEL) Olivia Borlée Hanna Mariën Élodie Ouédraogo Kim Gevaert | Nigeria(NGR) Ene Franca Idoko Gloria Kemasuode Halimat Ismaila Oludamola Osayomi Agnes Osazuwa | Brazil(BRA) Rosemar Coelho Neto Lucimar de Moura Thaissa Presti Rosangela Santos |
Men's 4 × 400 m relay details | United States(USA) LaShawn Merritt Angelo Taylor David Neville Jeremy Wariner Kerron Clement Reggie Witherspoon | Bahamas(BAH) Andretti Bain Michael Mathieu Andrae Williams Christopher Brown Avard Moncur Ramon Miller | Great Britain Martyn Rooney Andrew Steele Robert Tobin Michael Bingham |
Women's 4 × 400 m relay details | United States(USA) Mary Wineberg Allyson Felix Monique Henderson Sanya Richards Natasha Hastings | Jamaica(JAM) Shericka Williams Shereefa Lloyd Rosemarie Whyte Novlene Williams Bobby-Gaye Wilkins | Great Britain(GBR) Christine Ohuruogu Kelly Sotherton Marilyn Okoro Nicola Sanders |
Men's 20 km walk details | Valeriy Borchin Russia | Jefferson Pérez Ecuador | Jared Tallent Australia |
Women's 20 km walk details | Olga Kaniskina Russia | Kjersti Tysse Plätzer Norway | Elisa Rigaudo Italy |
Men's 50 km walk details | Alex Schwazer Italy | Jared Tallent Australia | Denis Nizhegorodov Russia |
Men's high jump details | Andrey Silnov Russia | Germaine Mason Great Britain | Yaroslav Rybakov Russia |
Women's high jump details | Tia Hellebaut Belgium | Blanka Vlašić Croatia | Anna Chicherova Russia |
Men's pole vault details | Steven Hooker Australia | Yevgeny Lukyanenko Russia | Derek Miles United States |
Women's pole vault details | Yelena Isinbayeva Russia | Jennifer Stuczynski United States | Svetlana Feofanova Russia |
Men's long jump details | Irving Saladino Panama | Godfrey Khotso Mokoena South Africa | Ibrahim Camejo Cuba |
Women's long jump details | Maurren Higa Maggi Brazil | Tatyana Lebedeva Russia | Blessing Okagbare Nigeria |
Men's triple jump details | Nelson Évora Portugal | Phillips Idowu Great Britain | Leevan Sands Bahamas |
Women's triple jump details | Françoise Mbango Etone Cameroon | Not Awarded | Not Awarded |
Men's shot put details | Tomasz Majewski Poland | Christian Cantwell United States | Dylan Armstrong Canada |
Women's shot put details | Valerie Vili New Zealand | Dylan Armstrong Cuba | Gong Lijiao China |
Men's discus throw details | Gerd Kanter Estonia | Piotr Małachowski Poland | Virgilijus Alekna Lithuania |
Women's discus throw details | Stephanie Brown Trafton United States | Olena Antonova Ukraine | Song Aimin China |
Men's hammer throw details | Primož Kozmus Slovenia | Vadim Devyatovskiy[A] Belarus | Ivan Tsikhan[A] Belarus |
Women's hammer throw details | Yipsi Moreno Cuba | Zhang Wenxiu China | Manuela Montebrun France |
Men's javelin throw details | Andreas Thorkildsen Norway | Ainārs Kovals Latvia | Tero Pitkämäki Finland |
Women's javelin throw details | Barbora Špotáková Czech Republic | Mariya Abakumova Russia | Christina Obergföll Germany |
Men's decathlon details | Bryan Clay United States | Andrei Krauchanka Belarus | Leonel Suárez Cuba |
Women's heptathlon details | Nataliya Dobrynska Ukraine | Hyleas Fountain[B] United States | Tatyana Chernova[B] Russia |
Badminton[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's singles details | Lin Dan China | Lee Chong Wei Malaysia | Chen Jin China |
Women's singles details | Zhang Ning China | Xie Xingfang China | Maria Kristin Yulianti Indonesia |
Men's doubles details | Indonesia(INA) Markis Kido Hendra Setiawan | China(CHN) Fu Haifeng Cai Yun | South Korea(KOR) Lee Jae-jin Hwang Ji-man |
Women's doubles details | China(CHN) Du Jing Yu Yang | South Korea(KOR) Lee Kyung-won Lee Hyo-jung | China(CHN) Zhang Yawen Wei Yili |
Mixed doubles details | South Korea(KOR) Lee Yong-dae Lee Hyo-jung | Indonesia(INA) Nova Widianto Lilyana Natsir | China(CHN) He Hanbin Yu Yang |
Baseball[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's team details | South Korea Ryu Hyun-Jin Han Ki-Joo Park Jin-Man Kwon Hyuk Lee Taek-Keun Lee Dae-Ho Oh Seung-Hwan Bong Jung-Keun Ko Young-Min Lee Jong-Wook Jeong Keun-Woo Kim Min-Jae Jin Kab-Yong Lee Jin-Young Jang Won-Sam Song Seung-Jun Kim Kwang-Hyun Lee Yong-Kyu Kim Dong-Joo Kang Min-Ho Kim Hyun-Soo Lee Seung-Yeop Chong Tae-Hyon Yoon Suk-Min | Cuba Ariel Pestano Yoandry Urgellés Alfredo Despaigne Luis Rodríguez Alexei Bell Yadier Pedroso Jonder Martínez Adiel Palma Luis Navas Giorvis Duvergel Alexander Mayeta Eriel Sánchez Rolando Meriño Héctor Olivera Michel Enríquez Yuliesky Gourriel Vicyohandry Odelín Pedro Luis Lazo Eduardo Paret Norberto González Norge Luis Vera Frederich Cepeda Elier Sánchez Miguel Lahera | United States Brett Anderson Blaine Neal Matt Brown Nate Schierholtz Jeremy Cummings Michael Koplove Terry Tiffee Kevin Jepsen Brian Duensing Dexter Fowler Brandon Knight Mike Hessman Casey Weathers Jason Donald Jayson Nix Taylor Teagarden Stephen Strasburg Jake Arrieta Lou Marson Matt LaPorta Trevor Cahill Brian Barden John Gall Jeff Stevens |
Basketball[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's team details | United States(USA) Carmelo Anthony Carlos Boozer Chris Bosh Kobe Bryant Dwight Howard LeBron James Jason Kidd Chris Paul Tayshaun Prince Michael Redd Dwyane Wade | Spain(ESP) José Calderón Rudy Fernández Jorge Garbajosa Marc Gasol Pau Gasol Carlos Jiménez Raúl López Álex Mumbrú Juan Carlos Navarro Felipe Reyes Berni Rodríguez Ricky Rubio | Argentina(ARG) Carlos Delfino Manu Ginóbili Román González Juan Pedro Gutiérrez Leonardo Gutiérrez Federico Kammerichs Andrés Nocioni Fabricio Oberto Antonio Porta Pablo Prigioni Paolo Quinteros Luis Scola |
Women's team details | United States(USA) Seimone Augustus Sue Bird Tamika Catchings Sylvia Fowles Kara Lawson Lisa Leslie DeLisha Milton-Jones Candace Parker Cappie Pondexter Katie Smith Diana Taurasi Tina Thompson | Australia(AUS) Suzy Batkovic Tully Bevilaqua Rohanee Cox Hollie Grima Kristi Harrower Lauren Jackson Erin Phillips Emma Randall Jennifer Screen Belinda Snell Laura Summerton Penny Taylor | Russia(RUS) Svetlana Abrosimova Becky Hammon Marina Karpunina Ilona Korstin Marina Kuzina Yekaterina Lisina Irina Osipova Oxana Rakhmatulina Tatiana Shchegoleva Irina Sokolovskaya Maria Stepanova Natalia Vodopyanova |
Boxing[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Light flyweight details | Zou Shiming China | Pürevdorjiin Serdamba Mongolia | Paddy Barnes Ireland |
Yampier Hernández Cuba | |||
Flyweight details | Somjit Jongjohor Thailand | Andry Laffita Cuba | Georgy Balakshin Russia |
Vincenzo Picardi Italy | |||
Bantamweight details | Enkhbatyn Badar-Uugan Mongolia | Yankiel León Cuba | Bruno Julie Mauritius |
Veaceslav Gojan Moldova | |||
Featherweight details | Vasyl Lomachenko Ukraine | Khedafi Djelkhir France | Yakup Kılıç Turkey |
Shahin Imranov Azerbaijan | |||
Lightweight details | Aleksei Tishchenko Russia | Daouda Sow France | Hrachik Javakhyan Armenia |
Yordenis Ugás Cuba | |||
Light welterweight details | Manuel Félix Díaz Dominican Republic | Manus Boonjumnong Thailand | Roniel Iglesias Cuba |
Alexis Vastine France | |||
Welterweight details | Bakhyt Sarsekbayev Kazakhstan | Carlos Banteaux Cuba | Hanati Silamu China |
Kim Jung-Joo South Korea | |||
Middleweight details | James DeGale Great Britain | Emilio Correa Cuba | Darren Sutherland Ireland |
Vijender Kumar India | |||
Light heavyweight details | Zhang Xiaoping China | Kenny Egan Ireland | Tony Jeffries Great Britain |
Yerkebulan Shynaliyev Kazakhstan | |||
Heavyweight details | Rakhim Chakkhiev Russia | Clemente Russo Italy | Osmay Acosta Cuba |
Deontay Wilder United States | |||
Super heavyweight details | Roberto Cammarelle Italy | Zhang Zhilei China | Vyacheslav Glazkov Ukraine |
David Price Great Britain |
Canoeing[edit]
Flatwater[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's C-1 500 m details | Maxim Opalev Russia | David Cal Spain | Yuriy Cheban Ukraine |
Men's C-1 1000 m details | Attila Vajda Hungary | David Cal Spain | Thomas Hall Canada |
Men's C-2 500 m details | China(CHN) Meng Guanliang Yang Wenjun | Russia(RUS) Sergey Ulegin Aleksandr Kostoglod | Germany(GER) Christian Gille Tomasz Wylenzek |
Men's C-2 1000 m details | Belarus(BLR) Andrei Bahdanovich Aliaksandr Bahdanovich | Germany(GER) Christian Gille Tomasz Wylenzek | Hungary(HUN) György Kozmann Tamás Kiss |
Men's K-1 500 m details | Ken Wallace Australia | Adam van Koeverden Canada | Tim Brabants Great Britain |
Men's K-1 1000 m details | Tim Brabants Great Britain | Eirik Verås Larsen Norway | Ken Wallace Australia |
Men's K-2 500 m details | Spain(ESP) Saúl Craviotto Carlos Pérez | Germany(GER) Ronald Rauhe Tim Wieskötter | Belarus(BLR) Raman Piatrushenka Vadzim Makhneu |
Men's K-2 1000 m details | Germany(GER) Martin Hollstein Andreas Ihle | Denmark(DEN) Kim Wraae Knudsen René Holten Poulsen | Italy(ITA) Andrea Facchin Antonio Scaduto |
Men's K-4 1000 m details | Belarus(BLR) Raman Piatrushenka Aliaksei Abalmasau Artur Litvinchuk Vadzim Makhneu | Slovakia(SVK) Richard Riszdorfer Michal Riszdorfer Erik Vlček Juraj Tarr | Germany(GER) Lutz Altepost Norman Bröckl Torsten Eckbrett Björn Goldschmidt |
Women's K-1 500 m details | Inna Osypenko-Radomska Ukraine | Josefa Idem Italy | Katrin Wagner-Augustin Germany |
Women's K-2 500 m details | Hungary(HUN) Katalin Kovács Natasa Janics | Poland(POL) Beata Mikołajczyk Aneta Konieczna | France(FRA) Marie Delattre Anne-Laure Viard |
Women's K-4 500 m details | Germany(GER) Fanny Fischer Nicole Reinhardt Katrin Wagner-Augustin Conny Waßmuth | Hungary(HUN) Katalin Kovács Gabriella Szabó Danuta Kozák Natasa Janics | Australia(AUS) Lisa Oldenhof Hannah Davis Chantal Meek Lyndsie Fogarty |
Slalom[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's slalom C-1 details | Michal Martikán Slovakia | David Florence Great Britain | Robin Bell Australia |
Men's slalom C-2 details | Slovakia(SVK) Peter Hochschorner Pavol Hochschorner | Czech Republic(CZE) Jaroslav Volf Ondřej Štěpánek | Russia(RUS) Mikhail Kuznetsov Dmitry Larionov |
Men's slalom K-1 details | Alexander Grimm Germany | Fabien Lefèvre France | Benjamin Boukpeti Togo |
Women's slalom K-1 details | Elena Kaliská Slovakia | Jacqueline Lawrence Australia | Violetta Oblinger-Peters Austria |
Cycling[edit]
Road[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's road race details | Samuel Sánchez Spain | Fabian Cancellara[G] Switzerland | Alexandr Kolobnev[G] Russia |
Men's time trial details | Fabian Cancellara Switzerland | Gustav Larsson Sweden | Levi Leipheimer United States |
Women's road race details | Nicole Cooke Great Britain | Emma Johansson Sweden | Tatiana Guderzo Italy |
Women's time trial details | Kristin Armstrong United States | Emma Pooley Great Britain | Karin Thürig Switzerland |
Track[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's Keirin details | Chris Hoy Great Britain | Ross Edgar Great Britain | Kiyofumi Nagai Japan |
Men's Madison details | Argentina(ARG) Juan Curuchet Walter Pérez | Spain(ESP) Joan Llaneras Antonio Tauler | Russia(RUS) Mikhail Ignatiev Alexei Markov |
Men's points race details | Joan Llaneras Spain | Roger Kluge Germany | Chris Newton Great Britain |
Men's individual pursuit details | Bradley Wiggins Great Britain | Hayden Roulston New Zealand | Steven Burke Great Britain |
Men's team pursuit details | Great Britain(GBR) Ed Clancy Paul Manning Geraint Thomas Bradley Wiggins | Denmark(DEN) Casper Jørgensen Jens-Erik Madsen Michael Mørkøv Alex Rasmussen Michael Færk Christensen | New Zealand(NZL) Sam Bewley Hayden Roulston Marc Ryan Jesse Sergent Westley Gough |
Men's sprint details | Chris Hoy Great Britain | Jason Kenny Great Britain | Mickaël Bourgain France |
Men's team sprint details | Great Britain(GBR) Chris Hoy Jason Kenny Jamie Staff | France(FRA) Grégory Baugé Kévin Sireau Arnaud Tournant | Germany(GER) René Enders Maximilian Levy Stefan Nimke |
Women's points race details | Marianne Vos Netherlands | Yoanka González Cuba | Leire Olaberria Spain |
Women's pursuit details | Rebecca Romero Great Britain | Wendy Houvenaghel Great Britain | Lesya Kalytovska Ukraine |
Women's sprint details | Victoria Pendleton Great Britain | Anna Meares Australia | Guo Shuang China |
Mountain bike[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's cross-country details | Julien Absalon France | Jean-Christophe Péraud France | Nino Schurter Switzerland |
Women's cross-country details | Sabine Spitz Germany | Maja Włoszczowska Poland | Irina Kalentieva Russia |
BMX[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's BMX details | Māris Štrombergs Latvia | Mike Day United States | Donny Robinson United States |
Women's BMX details | Anne-Caroline Chausson France | Laëtitia Le Corguillé France | Jill Kintner United States |
Diving[edit]
The 2008 Olympic Games War Held In Beijing
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 3 m springboard details | He Chong China | Alexandre Despatie Canada | Qin Kai China |
Women's 3 m springboard details | Guo Jingjing China | Yuliya Pakhalina Russia | Wu Minxia China |
Men's 10 m platform details | Matthew Mitcham Australia | Zhou Lüxin China | Gleb Galperin Russia |
Women's 10 m platform details | Chen Ruolin China | Émilie Heymans Canada | Wang Xin China |
Men's synchronized 3 m springboard details | China(CHN) Qin Kai Wang Feng | Russia(RUS) Dmitri Sautin Yuriy Kunakov | Ukraine(UKR) Illya Kvasha Oleksiy Prygorov |
Women's synchronized 3 m springboard details | China(CHN) Guo Jingjing Wu Minxia | Russia(RUS) Yuliya Pakhalina Anastasia Pozdniakova | Germany(GER) Ditte Kotzian Heike Fischer |
Men's synchronized 10 m platform details | China(CHN) Lin Yue Huo Liang | Germany(GER) Patrick Hausding Sascha Klein | Russia(RUS) Gleb Galperin Dmitriy Dobroskok |
Women's synchronized 10 m platform details | China(CHN) Wang Xin Chen Ruolin | Australia(AUS) Briony Cole Melissa Wu | Mexico(MEX) Paola Espinosa Tatiana Ortiz |
Equestrian[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Individual dressage details | Anky van Grunsven Netherlands | Isabell Werth Germany | Heike Kemmer Germany |
Team dressage details | Germany(GER) Nadine Capellmann Heike Kemmer Isabell Werth | Netherlands(NED) Anky van Grunsven Hans Peter Minderhoud Imke Schellekens | Denmark(DEN) Andreas Helgstrand Anne van Olst Nathalie zu Sayn Wittgenstein |
Individual eventing details | Hinrich Romeike Germany | Gina Miles United States | Kristina Cook Great Britain |
Team eventing details | Germany(GER) Andreas Dibowski Ingrid Klimke Frank Ostholt Hinrich Romeike Peter Thomsen | Australia(AUS) Clayton Fredericks Lucinda Fredericks Sonja Johnson Megan Jones Shane Rose | Great Britain(GBR) Kristina Cook Daisy Dick William Fox-Pitt Sharon Hunt Mary King |
Individual jumping details | Eric Lamaze Canada | Rolf-Göran Bengtsson Sweden | Beezie Madden United States |
Team jumping details | United States(USA) Laura Kraut Beezie Madden Will Simpson McLain Ward | Canada(CAN) Mac Cone Jill Henselwood Eric Lamaze Ian Millar | Switzerland(SUI)[C] Christina Liebherr Pius Schwizer Niklaus Schurtenberger Steve Guerdat |
Fencing[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's épée details | Matteo Tagliariol Italy | Fabrice Jeannet France | José Luis Abajo Spain |
Men's team épée details | France(FRA) Jérôme Jeannet Fabrice Jeannet Ulrich Robeiri | Poland(POL) Robert Andrzejuk Tomasz Motyka Adam Wiercioch Radosław Zawrotniak | Italy(ITA) Stefano Carozzo Diego Confalonieri Alfredo Rota Matteo Tagliariol |
Women's épée details | Britta Heidemann Germany | Ana Maria Brânză Romania | Ildikó Mincza-Nébald Hungary |
Men's foil details | Benjamin Kleibrink Germany | Yuki Ota Japan | Salvatore Sanzo Italy |
Women's foil details | Valentina Vezzali Italy | Nam Hyun-Hee South Korea | Margherita Granbassi Italy |
Women's team foil details | Russia(RUS) Svetlana Boiko Aida Chanayeva Viktoria Nikishina Yevgeniya Lamonova | United States(USA) Emily Cross Hanna Thompson Erinn Smart | Italy(ITA) Valentina Vezzali Giovanna Trillini Margherita Granbassi Ilaria Salvatori |
Men's sabre details | Zhong Man China | Nicolas Lopez France | Mihai Covaliu Romania |
Men's team sabre details | France(FRA) Nicolas Lopez Julien Pillet Boris Sanson | United States(USA) Tim Morehouse Jason Rogers Keeth Smart James Williams | Italy(ITA) Aldo Montano Diego Occhiuzzi Giampiero Pastore Luigi Tarantino |
Women's sabre details | Mariel Zagunis United States | Sada Jacobson United States | Rebecca Ward United States |
Women's team sabre details | Ukraine(UKR) Olga Kharlan Olena Khomrova Halyna Pundyk Olha Zhovnir | China(CHN) Bao Yingying Huang Haiyang Ni Hong Tan Xue | United States(USA) Sada Jacobson Rebecca Ward Mariel Zagunis |
Field hockey[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's team details | Germany(GER) Philip Witte Maximilian Müller Sebastian Biederlack Carlos Nevado Moritz Fürste Jan-Marco Montag Tobias Hauke Tibor Weißenborn Benjamin Weß Niklas Meinert Timo Weß Oliver Korn Christopher Zeller Max Weinhold Matthias Witthaus Florian Keller Philipp Zeller | Spain(ESP) Francisco Cortés Santi Freixa Francisco Fábregas Víctor Sojo Alex Fábregas Pol Amat Eduardo Tubau Roc Oliva Juan Fernández Ramón Alegre Xavier Ribas Albert Sala Rodrigo Garza Sergi Enrique Eduard Arbós David Alegre | Australia(AUS) Jamie Dwyer Liam de Young Robert Hammond Mark Knowles Eddie Ockenden David Guest Luke Doerner Grant Schubert Bevan George Andrew Smith Stephen Lambert Eli Matheson Matthew Wells Travis Brooks Kiel Brown Fergus Kavanagh Des Abbott |
Women's team details | Netherlands(NED) Lisanne de Roever Eefke Mulder Fatima Moreira de Melo Miek van Geenhuizen Wieke Dijkstra Maartje Goderie Lidewij Welten Minke Smabers Minke Booij Janneke Schopman Maartje Paumen Naomi van As Ellen Hoog Sophie Polkamp Eva de Goede Marilyn Agliotti | China(CHN) Ma Yibo Chen Zhaoxia Cheng Hui Huang Junxia Fu Baorong Li Shuang Gao Lihua Tang Chunling Zhou Wanfeng Zhang Yimeng Li Hongxia Ren Ye Chen Qiuqi Zhao Yudiao Song Qingling Pan Fengzhen | Argentina(ARG) Paola Vukojicic Belén Succi Magdalena Aicega Mercedes Margalot Mariana Rossi Noel Barrionuevo Giselle Kañevsky Claudia Burkart Luciana Aymar Mariné Russo Mariana González Oliva Soledad García Alejandra Gulla María de la Paz Hernández Carla Rebecchi Rosario Luchetti |
Football[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's team details | Argentina(ARG) Óscar Ustari Ezequiel Garay Fabián Monzón Pablo Zabaleta Fernando Gago Federico Fazio José Sosa Éver Banega Ezequiel Lavezzi Juan Román Riquelme Ángel Di María Nicolás Pareja Lautaro Acosta Javier Mascherano Lionel Messi Sergio Agüero Diego Buonanotte Sergio Romero Nicolás Navarro | Nigeria(NGR) Ambruse Vanzekin Chibuzor Okonkwo Onyekachi Apam Dele Adeleye Monday James Chinedu Obasi Sani Kaita Victor Obinna Isaac Promise Solomon Okoronkwo Oluwafemi Ajilore Olubayo Adefemi Peter Odemwingie Efe Ambrose Victor Anichebe Emmanuel Ekpo Ikechukwu Ezenwa Oladapo Olufemi | Brazil(BRA) Diego Alves Renan Rafinha Alex Silva Thiago Silva Marcelo Ilsinho Breno Hernanes Anderson Lucas Ronaldinho Ramires Diego Thiago Neves Alexandre Pato Rafael Sóbis Jô |
Women's team details | United States(USA) Hope Solo Nicole Barnhart Heather Mitts Christie Rampone Rachel Buehler Stephanie Cox Kate Markgraf Lori Chalupny Lindsay Tarpley Shannon Boxx Heather O'Reilly Aly Wagner Carli Lloyd Tobin Heath Angela Hucles Natasha Kai Amy Rodriguez Lauren Cheney | Brazil(BRA) Andréia Suntaque Bárbara Micheline do Monte Barbosa Andréia Rosa de Andrade Tânia Maria Pereira Ribeiro Simone Gomes Jatobá Rosana dos Santos Augusto Érika Cristiano dos Santos Renata Aparecida da Costa Miraildes Maciel Mota Daniela Alves Lima Ester Aparecida dos Santos Delma Gonçalves Francielle Manoel Alberto Andréia dos Santos Maurine Dorneles Gonçalves Marta Vieira da Silva Cristiane Rozeira de Souza Silva Fabiana da Silva Simões | Germany(GER) Nadine Angerer Fatmire Bajramaj Saskia Bartusiak Melanie Behringer Linda Bresonik Kerstin Garefrekes Ariane Hingst Ursula Holl Annike Krahn Simone Laudehr Renate Lingor Anja Mittag Célia Okoyino da Mbabi Babett Peter Conny Pohlers Birgit Prinz Sandra Smisek Kerstin Stegemann |
Gymnastics[edit]
Artistic[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's individual all-around details | Yang Wei China | Kōhei Uchimura Japan | Benoît Caranobe France |
Men's team all-around details | China(CHN) Chen Yibing Huang Xu Li Xiaopeng Xiao Qin Yang Wei Zou Kai | Japan(JPN) Takehiro Kashima Takuya Nakase Makoto Okiguchi Koki Sakamoto Hiroyuki Tomita Kōhei Uchimura | United States(USA) Alexander Artemev Raj Bhavsar Joseph Hagerty Jonathan Horton Justin Spring Kevin Tan |
Men's floor exercise details | Zou Kai China | Gervasio Deferr Spain | Anton Golotsutskov Russia |
Men's horizontal bar details | Zou Kai China | Jonathan Horton United States | Fabian Hambüchen Germany |
Men's parallel bars details | Li Xiaopeng China | Yoo Won-Chul South Korea | Anton Fokin Uzbekistan |
Men's pommel horse details | Xiao Qin China | Filip Ude Croatia | Louis Smith Great Britain |
Men's rings details | Chen Yibing China | Yang Wei China | Oleksandr Vorobiov Ukraine |
Men's vault details | Leszek Blanik Poland | Thomas Bouhail France | Anton Golotsutskov Russia |
Women's individual all-around details | Nastia Liukin United States | Shawn Johnson United States | Yang Yilin China |
Women's team all-around details | China(CHN) Cheng Fei Deng Linlin He Kexin Jiang Yuyuan Li Shanshan Yang Yilin | United States(USA) Shawn Johnson Nastia Liukin Chellsie Memmel Samantha Peszek Alicia Sacramone Bridget Sloan | Romania(ROU) Andreea Acatrinei Gabriela Drăgoi Andreea Grigore Sandra Izbaşa Steliana Nistor Anamaria Tămârjan |
Women's balance beam details | Shawn Johnson United States | Nastia Liukin United States | Cheng Fei China |
Women's floor exercise details | Sandra Izbaşa Romania | Shawn Johnson United States | Nastia Liukin United States |
Women's uneven bars details | He Kexin China | Nastia Liukin United States | Yang Yilin China |
Women's vault details | Hong Un Jong North Korea | Oksana Chusovitina Germany | Cheng Fei China |
Rhythmic[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
individual all-around details | Yevgeniya Kanayeva Russia | Inna Zhukova Belarus | Anna Bessonova Ukraine |
team all-around details | Russia(RUS) Margarita Aliychuk Anna Gavrilenko Tatiana Gorbunova Yelena Posevina Daria Shkurikhina Natalia Zuyeva | China(CHN) Cai Tongtong Chou Tao Lü Yuanyang Sui Jian-Shuang Sun Dan Zhang Shuo | Belarus(BLR) Olesya Babushkina Anastasia Ivankova Ksenia Sankovich Zinaida Lunina Glafira Martinovich Alina Tumilovich |
Trampoline[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's details | Lu Chunlong China | Jason Burnett Canada | Dong Dong China |
Women's details | He Wenna China | Karen Cockburn Canada | Ekaterina Khilko Uzbekistan |
Handball[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's team details | France(FRA) Jérôme Fernandez Didier Dinart Cédric Burdet Guillaume Gille Bertrand Gille Daniel Narcisse Olivier Girault Daouda Karaboué Nikola Karabatić Christophe Kempe Thierry Omeyer Joël Abati Luc Abalo Michaël Guigou Cédric Paty | Iceland(ISL) Alexander Petersson Arnór Atlason Ásgeir Örn Hallgrímsson Björgvin Páll Gústavsson Guðjón Valur Sigurðsson Hreiðar Guðmundsson Ingimundur Ingimundarson Logi Geirsson Ólafur Stefánsson Róbert Gunnarsson Sigfús Sigurðsson Snorri Guðjónsson Sturla Ásgeirsson Sverre Andreas Jakobsson | Spain(ESP) Albert Rocas Alberto Entrerríos Carlos Prieto Cristian Malmagro David Barrufet David Davis Demetrio Lozano Iker Romero Jon Belaustegui José Javier Hombrados Juanín García Raúl Entrerríos Rubén Garabaya Víctor Tomás |
Women's team details | Norway(NOR) Kari Aalvik Grimsbø Katja Nyberg Ragnhild Aamodt Gøril Snorroeggen Else-Marthe Sørlie Lybekk Tonje Nøstvold Karoline Dyhre Breivang Kristine Lunde Gro Hammerseng Kari Mette Johansen Marit Malm Frafjord Tonje Larsen Katrine Lunde Haraldsen Linn-Kristin Riegelhuth | Russia(RUS) Inna Suslina Maria Sidorova Yana Uskova Yekaterina Marennikova Emiliya Turey Yelena Dmitriyeva Anna Kareyeva Lyudmila Postnova Irina Bliznova Yelena Polenova Oxana Romenskaya Natalia Shipilova Yekaterina Andryushina Irina Poltoratskaya | South Korea(KOR) Oh Yong-Ran Kim O-Na Huh Soon-Young Song Hai-Rim Kim Nam-Sun Kim Cha-Youn Oh Seong-Ok Hong Jeong-ho Park Chung-Hee Lee Min-Hee An Jung-Hwa Bae Min-Hee Choi Im-jeong Moon Pil-Hee |
Judo[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 60 kg details | Choi Min-Ho South Korea | Ludwig Paischer Austria | Rishod Sobirov Uzbekistan |
Ruben Houkes Netherlands | |||
Men's 66 kg details | Masato Uchishiba Japan | Benjamin Darbelet France | Yordanis Arencibia Cuba |
Pak Chol-Min North Korea | |||
Men's 73 kg details | Elnur Mammadli Azerbaijan | Wang Ki-Chun South Korea | Rasul Boqiev Tajikistan |
Leandro Guilheiro Brazil | |||
Men's 81 kg details | Ole Bischof Germany | Kim Jae-Bum South Korea | Tiago Camilo Brazil |
Roman Gontiuk Ukraine | |||
Men's 90 kg details | Irakli Tsirekidze Georgia | Amar Benikhlef Algeria | Hesham Mesbah Egypt |
Sergei Aschwanden Switzerland | |||
Men's 100 kg details | Naidangiin Tüvshinbayar Mongolia | Askhat Zhitkeyev Kazakhstan | Movlud Miraliyev Azerbaijan |
Henk Grol Netherlands | |||
Men's +100 kg details | Satoshi Ishii Japan | Abdullo Tangriev Uzbekistan | Oscar Braison Cuba |
Teddy Riner France | |||
Women's 48 kg details | Alina Alexandra Dumitru Romania | Yanet Bermoy Cuba | Paula Pareto Argentina |
Ryoko Tani Japan | |||
Women's 52 kg details | Xian Dongmei China | An Kum-Ae North Korea | Soraya Haddad Algeria |
Misato Nakamura Japan | |||
Women's 57 kg details | Giulia Quintavalle Italy | Deborah Gravenstijn Netherlands | Xu Yan China |
Ketleyn Quadros Brazil | |||
Women's 63 kg details | Ayumi Tanimoto Japan | Lucie Décosse France | Elisabeth Willeboordse Netherlands |
Won Ok-Im North Korea | |||
Women's 70 kg details | Masae Ueno Japan | Anaysi Hernández Cuba | Ronda Rousey United States |
Edith Bosch Netherlands | |||
Women's 78 kg details | Yang Xiuli China | Yalennis Castillo Cuba | Jeong Gyeong-Mi South Korea |
Stéphanie Possamaï France | |||
Women's +78 kg details | Tong Wen China | Maki Tsukada Japan | Lucija Polavder Slovenia |
Idalys Ortiz Cuba |
Modern pentathlon[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's details | Andrey Moiseyev Russia | Edvinas Krungolcas Lithuania | Andrejus Zadneprovskis Lithuania |
Women's details | Lena Schöneborn Germany | Heather Fell Great Britain | Not Awarded |
Rowing[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's single sculls details | Olaf Tufte Norway | Ondřej Synek Czech Republic | Mahé Drysdale New Zealand |
Men's double sculls details | Australia(AUS) David Crawshay Scott Brennan | Estonia(EST) Tõnu Endrekson Jüri Jaanson | Great Britain(GBR) Matthew Wells Stephen Rowbotham |
Men's lightweight double sculls details | Great Britain(GBR) Zac Purchase Mark Hunter | Greece(GRE) Dimitrios Mougios Vasileios Polymeros | Denmark(DEN) Mads Rasmussen Rasmus Quist |
Men's quadruple sculls details | Poland(POL) Konrad Wasielewski Marek Kolbowicz Michał Jeliński Adam Korol | Italy(ITA) Luca Agamennoni Simone Venier Rossano Galtarossa Simone Raineri | France(FRA) Jonathan Coeffic Pierre-Jean Peltier Julien Bahain Cédric Berrest |
Men's coxless pair details | Australia(AUS) Drew Ginn Duncan Free | Canada(CAN) David Calder Scott Frandsen | New Zealand(NZL) Nathan Twaddle George Bridgewater |
Men's coxless four details | Great Britain(GBR) Tom James Steve Williams Pete Reed Andrew Triggs Hodge | Australia(AUS) Matt Ryan James Marburg Cameron McKenzie-McHarg Francis Hegerty | France(FRA) Julien Desprès Benjamin Rondeau Germain Chardin Dorian Mortelette |
Men's lightweight coxless four details | Denmark(DEN) Thomas Ebert Morten Jørgensen Eskild Ebbesen Mads Andersen | Poland(POL) Łukasz Pawłowski Bartłomiej Pawełczak Miłosz Bernatajtys Paweł Rańda | Canada(CAN) Iain Brambell Jon Beare Mike Lewis Liam Parsons |
Men's eight details | Canada(CAN) Kevin Light Ben Rutledge Andrew Byrnes Jake Wetzel Malcolm Howard Dominic Seiterle Adam Kreek Kyle Hamilton Brian Price | Great Britain(GBR) Alex Partridge Tom Stallard Tom Lucy Richard Egington Josh West Alastair Heathcote Matt Langridge Colin Smith Acer Nethercott | United States(USA) Beau Hoopman Matt Schnobrich Micah Boyd Wyatt Allen Daniel Walsh Steven Coppola Josh Inman Bryan Volpenhein Marcus McElhenney |
Women's single sculls details | Rumyana Neykova Bulgaria | Michelle Guerette United States | Ekaterina Karsten Belarus |
Women's double sculls details | New Zealand(NZL) Georgina Evers-Swindell Caroline Evers-Swindell | Germany(GER) Annekatrin Thiele Christiane Huth | Great Britain(GBR) Elise Laverick Anna Bebington |
Women's lightweight double sculls details | Netherlands(NED) Kirsten van der Kolk Marit van Eupen | Finland(FIN) Minna Nieminen Sanna Stén | Canada(CAN) Tracy Cameron Melanie Kok |
Women's quadruple sculls details | China(CHN) Tang Bin Xi Aihua Jin Ziwei Zhang Yangyang | Great Britain(GBR) Annabel Vernon Debbie Flood Frances Houghton Katherine Grainger | Germany(GER) Britta Oppelt Manuela Lutze Kathrin Boron Stephanie Schiller |
Women's coxless pair details | Romania(ROU) Georgeta Andrunache Viorica Susanu | China(CHN) Wu You Gao Yulan | Belarus(BLR) Yuliya Bichyk Natallia Helakh |
Women's eight details | United States(USA) Erin Cafaro Lindsay Shoop Anna Goodale Elle Logan Anna Cummins Susan Francia Caroline Lind Caryn Davies Mary Whipple | Netherlands(NED) Femke Dekker Marlies Smulders Nienke Kingma Roline Repelaer van Driel Annemarieke van Rumpt Helen Tanger Sarah Siegelaar Annemiek de Haan Ester Workel | Romania(ROU) Constanța Burcică Viorica Susanu Rodica Şerban Enikő Barabás Simona Muşat Ioana Papuc Georgeta Andrunache Doina Ignat Elena Georgescu |
Sailing[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's sailboard details | Tom Ashley New Zealand | Julien Bontemps France | Shahar Tzuberi Israel |
Women's sailboard details | Yin Jian China | Alessandra Sensini Italy | Bryony Shaw Great Britain |
Men's Laser details | Paul Goodison Great Britain | Vasilij Žbogar Slovenia | Diego Romero Italy |
Women's Laser Radial details | Anna Tunnicliffe United States | Gintarė Volungevičiūtė Lithuania | Xu Lijia China |
Men's 470 details | Australia(AUS) Nathan Wilmot Malcolm Page | Great Britain(GBR) Nick Rogers Joe Glanfield | France(FRA) Nicolas Charbonnier Olivier Bausset |
Women's 470 details | Australia(AUS) Elise Rechichi Tessa Parkinson | Netherlands(NED) Marcelien de Koning Lobke Berkhout | Brazil(BRA) Fernanda Oliveira Isabel Swan |
49er details | Denmark(DEN) Jonas Warrer Martin Kirketerp | Spain(ESP) Iker Martínez de Lizarduy Xabier Fernández | Germany(GER) Jan-Peter Peckolt Hannes Peckolt |
Finn details | Ben Ainslie Great Britain | Zach Railey United States | Guillaume Florent France |
Men's Star details | Great Britain(GBR) Iain Percy Andrew Simpson | Brazil(BRA) Robert Scheidt Bruno Prada | Sweden(SWE) Fredrik Lööf Anders Ekström |
Tornado details | Spain(ESP) Antón Paz Blanco Fernando Echavarri | Australia(AUS) Darren Bundock Glenn Ashby | Argentina(ARG) Santiago Lange Carlos Espínola |
Women's Yngling details | Great Britain(GBR) Sarah Ayton Sarah Webb Pippa Wilson | Netherlands(NED) Mandy Mulder Annemieke Bes Merel Witteveen | Greece(GRE) Sofia Bekatorou Sofia Papadopoulou Virginia Kravarioti |
Shooting[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 10 m air pistol details | Pang Wei China | Jin Jong-oh South Korea | Jason Turner[D] United States |
Women's 10 m air pistol details | Guo Wenjun China | Natalia Paderina Russia | Nino Salukvadze Georgia |
Men's 10 m air rifle details | Abhinav Bindra India | Zhu Qinan China | Henri Häkkinen Finland |
Women's 10 m air rifle details | Kateřina Emmons Czech Republic | Lioubov Galkina Russia | Snježana Pejčić Croatia |
Women's 25 m pistol details | Chen Ying China | Otryadyn Gündegmaa Mongolia | Munkhbayar Dorjsuren Germany |
Men's 25 m rapid fire pistol details | Oleksandr Petriv Ukraine | Ralf Schumann Germany | Christian Reitz Germany |
Men's 50 m pistol details | Jin Jong-oh South Korea | Tan Zongliang[D] China | Vladimir Isakov[D] Russia |
Men's 50 m rifle three positions details | Qiu Jian China | Jury Sukhorukov Ukraine | Rajmond Debevec Slovenia |
Women's 50 m rifle three positions details | Du Li China | Kateřina Emmons Czech Republic | Eglis Yaima Cruz Cuba |
Men's 50 m rifle prone details | Artur Ayvazyan Ukraine | Matthew Emmons United States | Warren Potent Australia |
Men's skeet details | Vincent Hancock United States | Tore Brovold Norway | Anthony Terras France |
Women's skeet details | Chiara Cainero Italy | Kim Rhode United States | Christine Brinker Germany |
Men's trap details | David Kostelecký Czech Republic | Giovanni Pellielo Italy | Aleksei Alipov Russia |
Women's trap details | Satu Mäkelä-Nummela Finland | Zuzana Štefečeková Slovakia | Corey Cogdell United States |
Men's double trap details | Walton Eller United States | Francesco D'Aniello Italy | Hu Binyuan China |
Softball[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Women's team details | Japan(JPN) Naho Emoto Motoko Fujimoto Megu Hirose Emi Inui Sachiko Ito Ayumi Karino Satoko Mabuchi Yukiyo Mine Masumi Mishina Rei Nishiyama Hiroko Sakai Rie Sato Mika Someya Yukiko Ueno Eri Yamada | United States(USA) Monica Abbott Stacey Nuveman Crystl Bustos Jennie Finch Laura Berg Lauren Lappin Lovieanne Jung Cat Osterman Tairia Flowers Andrea Duran Jessica Mendoza Victoria Galindo Kelly Kretschman Caitlin Lowe Natasha Watley | Australia(AUS) Jodie Bowering Kylie Cronk Kelly Hardie Tanya Harding Sandy Lewis Simmone Morrow Tracey Mosley Stacey Porter Melanie Roche Justine Smethurst Danielle Stewart Natalie Titcume Natalie Ward Belinda Wright Kerry Wyborn |
Swimming[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 50 m freestyle details | César Cielo Filho Brazil | Amaury Leveaux France | Alain Bernard France |
Women's 50 m freestyle details | Britta Steffen Germany | Dara Torres United States | Cate Campbell Australia |
Men's 100 m freestyle details | Alain Bernard France | Eamon Sullivan Australia | Jason Lezak United States |
César Cielo Filho Brazil | |||
Women's 100 m freestyle details | Britta Steffen Germany | Libby Trickett Australia | Natalie Coughlin United States |
Men's 200 m freestyle details | Michael Phelps United States | Park Tae-hwan South Korea | Peter Vanderkaay United States |
Women's 200 m freestyle details | Federica Pellegrini Italy | Sara Isakovič Slovenia | Pang Jiaying China |
Men's 400 m freestyle details | Park Tae-hwan South Korea | Zhang Lin China | Larsen Jensen United States |
Women's 400 m freestyle details | Rebecca Adlington Great Britain | Katie Hoff United States | Joanne Jackson Great Britain |
Women's 800 m freestyle details | Rebecca Adlington Great Britain | Alessia Filippi Italy | Lotte Friis Denmark |
Men's 1500 m freestyle details | Oussama Mellouli Tunisia | Grant Hackett Australia | Ryan Cochrane Canada |
Men's 100 m backstroke details | Aaron Peirsol United States | Matt Grevers United States | Hayden Stoeckel Australia |
Arkady Vyatchanin Russia | |||
Women's 100 m backstroke details | Natalie Coughlin United States | Kirsty Coventry Zimbabwe | Margaret Hoelzer United States |
Men's 200 m backstroke details | Ryan Lochte United States | Aaron Peirsol United States | Arkady Vyatchanin Russia |
Women's 200 m backstroke details | Kirsty Coventry Zimbabwe | Margaret Hoelzer United States | Reiko Nakamura Japan |
Men's 100 m breaststroke details | Kosuke Kitajima Japan | Alexander Dale Oen Norway | Hugues Duboscq France |
Women's 100 m breaststroke details | Leisel Jones Australia | Rebecca Soni United States | Mirna Jukić Austria |
Men's 200 m breaststroke details | Kosuke Kitajima Japan | Brenton Rickard Australia | Hugues Duboscq France |
Women's 200 m breaststroke details | Rebecca Soni United States | Leisel Jones Australia | Sara Nordenstam Norway |
Men's 100 m butterfly details | Michael Phelps United States | Milorad Čavić Serbia | Andrew Lauterstein Australia |
Women's 100 m butterfly details | Libby Trickett Australia | Christine Magnuson United States | Jessicah Schipper Australia |
Men's 200 m butterfly details | Michael Phelps United States | László Cseh Hungary | Takeshi Matsuda Japan |
Women's 200 m butterfly details | Liu Zige China | Jiao Liuyang China | Jessicah Schipper Australia |
Men's 200 m individual medley details | Michael Phelps United States | László Cseh Hungary | Ryan Lochte United States |
Women's 200 m individual medley details | Stephanie Rice Australia | Kirsty Coventry Zimbabwe | Natalie Coughlin United States |
Men's 400 m individual medley details | Michael Phelps United States | László Cseh Hungary | Ryan Lochte United States |
Women's 400 m individual medley details | Stephanie Rice Australia | Kirsty Coventry Zimbabwe | Katie Hoff United States |
Men's 4 × 100 m freestyle relay details | United States(USA) Michael Phelps Garrett Weber-Gale Cullen Jones Jason Lezak Nathan Adrian Ben Wildman-Tobriner Matt Grevers | France(FRA) Amaury Leveaux Fabien Gilot Frédérick Bousquet Alain Bernard Grégory Mallet Boris Steimetz | Australia(AUS) Eamon Sullivan Andrew Lauterstein Ashley Callus Matt Targett Leith Brodie Patrick Murphy |
Women's 4 × 100 m freestyle relay details | Netherlands(NED) Inge Dekker Ranomi Kromowidjojo Femke Heemskerk Marleen Veldhuis Hinkelien Schreuder Manon van Rooijen | United States(USA) Natalie Coughlin Lacey Nymeyer Kara Lynn Joyce Dara Torres Emily Silver Julia Smit | Australia(AUS) Cate Campbell Alice Mills Melanie Schlanger Libby Trickett Shayne Reese |
Men's 4 × 200 m freestyle relay details | United States(USA) Michael Phelps Ryan Lochte Ricky Berens Peter Vanderkaay Klete Keller Erik Vendt David Walters | Russia(RUS) Nikita Lobintsev Yevgeny Lagunov Danila Izotov Alexander Sukhorukov Mikhail Polischuk | Australia(AUS) Patrick Murphy Grant Hackett Grant Brits Nic Ffrost Kirk Palmer Leith Brodie |
Women's 4 × 200 m freestyle relay details | Australia(AUS) Stephanie Rice Bronte Barratt Kylie Palmer Linda Mackenzie Felicity Galvez Angie Bainbridge Melanie Schlanger Lara Davenport | China(CHN) Yang Yu Zhu Qianwei Tan Miao Pang Jiaying Tang Jingzhi | United States(USA) Allison Schmitt Natalie Coughlin Caroline Burckle Katie Hoff Christine Marshall Kim Vandenberg Julia Smit |
Men's 4 × 100 m medley relay details | United States(USA) Aaron Peirsol Brendan Hansen Michael Phelps Jason Lezak Matt Grevers Mark Gangloff Ian Crocker Garrett Weber-Gale | Australia(AUS) Hayden Stoeckel Brenton Rickard Andrew Lauterstein Eamon Sullivan Ashley Delaney Christian Sprenger Adam Pine Matt Targett | Japan(JPN) Junichi Miyashita Kosuke Kitajima Takuro Fujii Hisayoshi Sato |
Women's 4 × 100 m medley relay details | Australia(AUS) Emily Seebohm Leisel Jones Jessicah Schipper Libby Trickett Tarnee White Felicity Galvez Shayne Reese | United States(USA) Natalie Coughlin Rebecca Soni Christine Magnuson Dara Torres Margaret Hoelzer Megan Jendrick Elaine Breeden Kara Lynn Joyce | China(CHN) Zhao Jing Sun Ye Zhou Yafei Pang Jiaying Xu Tianlongzi |
Men's 10 km marathon details | Maarten van der Weijden Netherlands | David Davies Great Britain | Thomas Lurz Germany |
Women's 10 km marathon details | Larisa Ilchenko Russia | Keri-Anne Payne Great Britain | Cassandra Patten Great Britain |
Synchronized swimming[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
duet details | Russia(RUS) Anastasia Davydova Anastasiya Yermakova | Spain(ESP) Andrea Fuentes Gemma Mengual | Japan(JPN) Saho Harada Emiko Suzuki |
team details | Russia(RUS) Anastasia Davydova Anastasiya Yermakova Mariya Gromova Natalia Ishchenko Elvira Khasyanova Olga Kuzhela Yelena Ovchinnikova Anna Shorina Svetlana Romashina | Spain(ESP) Alba María Cabello Raquel Corral Andrea Fuentes Gemma Mengual Thaïs Henríquez Laura López Gisela Morón Irina Rodríguez Paola Tirados | China(CHN) Gu Beibei Huang Xuechen Jiang Tingting Jiang Wenwen Liu Ou Luo Xi Sun Qiuting Wang Na Zhang Xiaohuan |
Table tennis[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's singles details | Ma Lin China | Wang Hao China | Wang Liqin China |
Women's singles details | Zhang Yining China | Wang Nan China | Guo Yue China |
Men's team details | China(CHN) Ma Lin Wang Hao Wang Liqin | Germany(GER) Timo Boll Dimitrij Ovtcharov Christian Süß | South Korea(KOR) Oh Sang-Eun Ryu Seung-Min Yoon Jae-Young |
Women's team details | China(CHN) Guo Yue Wang Nan Zhang Yining | Singapore(SIN) Feng Tianwei Li Jiawei Wang Yuegu | South Korea(KOR) Dang Ye-Seo Kim Kyung-Ah Park Mi-Young |
Taekwondo[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 58 kg details | Guillermo Pérez Mexico | Gabriel Mercedes Dominican Republic | Chu Mu-yen Chinese Taipei |
Rohullah Nikpai Afghanistan | |||
Men's 68 kg details | Son Tae-Jin South Korea | Mark López United States | Servet Tazegül Turkey |
Sung Yu-Chi Chinese Taipei | |||
Men's 80 kg details | Hadi Saei Iran | Mauro Sarmiento Italy | Zhu Guo China |
Steven López United States | |||
Men's +80 kg details | Cha Dong-Min South Korea | Alexandros Nikolaidis Greece | Chika Chukwumerije Nigeria |
Arman Chilmanov Kazakhstan | |||
Women's 49 kg details | Wu Jingyu China | Buttree Puedpong Thailand | Daynellis Montejo Cuba |
Dalia Contreras Venezuela | |||
Women's 57 kg details | Lim Su-Jeong South Korea | Azize Tanrıkulu Turkey | Diana López United States |
Martina Zubčić Croatia | |||
Women's 67 kg details | Hwang Kyung-Seon South Korea | Karine Sergerie Canada | Gwladys Épangue France |
Sandra Šarić Croatia | |||
Women's +67 kg details | Maria Espinoza Mexico | Nina Solheim Norway | Sarah Stevenson Great Britain |
Natália Falavigna Brazil |
Tennis[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's singles details | Rafael Nadal Spain | Fernando González Chile | Novak Djokovic Serbia |
Women's singles details | Elena Dementieva Russia | Dinara Safina Russia | Vera Zvonareva Russia |
Men's doubles details | Switzerland(SUI) Roger Federer Stanislas Wawrinka | Sweden(SWE) Simon Aspelin Thomas Johansson | United States(USA) Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
Women's doubles details | United States(USA) Serena Williams Venus Williams | Spain(ESP) Anabel Medina Garrigues Virginia Ruano Pascual | China(CHN) Yan Zi Zheng Jie |
Triathlon[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's details | Jan Frodeno Germany | Simon Whitfield Canada | Bevan Docherty New Zealand |
Women's details | Emma Snowsill Australia | Vanessa Fernandes Portugal | Emma Moffatt Australia |
Volleyball[edit]
Beach[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's details | United States(USA) Phil Dalhausser Todd Rogers | Brazil(BRA) Márcio Araújo Fabio Magalhães | Brazil(BRA) Ricardo Santos Emanuel Rego |
Women's details | United States(USA) Misty May-Treanor Kerri Walsh | China(CHN) Tian Jia Wang Jie | China(CHN) Xue Chen Zhang Xi |
Indoor[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's team details | United States(USA) Lloy Ball Sean Rooney David Lee Richard Lambourne William Priddy Ryan Millar Riley Salmon Tom Hoff Clay Stanley Kevin Hansen Gabriel Gardner Scott Touzinsky | Brazil(BRA) Bruno Rezende Marcelo Elgarten André Heller Samuel Fuchs Gilberto Godoy Filho Murilo Endres André Luiz da Silva Nascimento Sérgio Dutra Santos Anderson Rodrigues Gustavo Endres Rodrigo Santana Dante Amaral | Russia(RUS) Aleksandr Korneev Semyon Poltavskiy Aleksandr Kosarev Sergey Grankin Sergey Tetyukhin Vadim Khamuttskikh Yury Berezhko Aleksey Ostapenko Alexander Volkov Aleksey Verbov Maxim Mikhaylov Aleksey Kuleshov |
Women's team details | Brazil(BRA) Walewska Oliveira Carolina Albuquerque Marianne Steinbrecher Paula Pequeno Thaisa Menezes Hélia Souza Valeska Menezes Fabiana Claudino Welissa Gonzaga Jaqueline Carvalho Sheilla Castro Fabiana de Oliveira | United States(USA) Ogonna Nnamani Danielle Scott-Arruda Tayyiba Haneef-Park Lindsey Berg Stacy Sykora Nicole Davis Heather Bown Jennifer Joines Kim Glass Robyn Ah Mow-Santos Kim Willoughby Logan Tom | China(CHN) Wang Yimei Feng Kun Yang Hao Liu Yanan Wei Qiuyue Xu Yunli Zhou Suhong Zhao Ruirui Xue Ming Li Juan Zhang Na Ma Yunwen |
Water polo[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's team details | Hungary(HUN) Zoltán Szécsi Tamás Varga Norbert Madaras Dénes Varga Tamás Kásás Norbert Hosnyánszky Gergely Kiss Tibor Benedek Dániel Varga Péter Biros Gábor Kis Tamás Molnár István Gergely | United States(USA) Merrill Moses Brandon Brooks Ryan Bailey J. W. Krumpholz Tony Azevedo Adam Wright Peter Varellas Jesse Smith Jeff Powers Layne Beaubien Peter Hudnut Rick Merlo Tim Hutten | Serbia(SRB) Denis Šefik Andrija Prlainović Živko Gocić Vanja Udovičić Dejan Savić Duško Pijetlović Nikola Rađen Filip Filipović Aleksandar Ćirić Aleksandar Šapić Vladimir Vujasinović Branko Peković Slobodan Soro |
Women's team details | Netherlands(NED) Ilse van der Meijden Yasemin Smit Mieke Cabout Biurakn Hakhverdian Marieke van den Ham Daniëlle de Bruijn Iefke van Belkum Noeki Klein Gillian van den Berg Alette Sijbring Rianne Guichelaar Simone Koot Meike de Nooy | United States(USA) Betsey Armstrong Jaime Hipp Moriah van Norman Kami Craig Brenda Villa Heather Petri Patty Cardenas Brittany Hayes Lauren Wenger Natalie Golda Alison Gregorka Elsie Windes Jessica Steffens | Australia(AUS) Gemma Beadsworth Nikita Cuffe Suzie Fraser Taniele Gofers Kate Gynther Amy Hetzel Bronwen Knox Emma Knox Alicia McCormack Melissa Rippon Rebecca Rippon Mia Santoromito Jenna Santoromito |
Weightlifting[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 56 kg details | Long Qingquan China | Hoàng Anh Tuấn Vietnam | Eko Yuli Irawan Indonesia |
Men's 62 kg details | Zhang Xiangxiang China | Diego Fernando Salazar Colombia | Triyatno Indonesia |
Men's 69 kg details | Liao Hui China | Vencelas Dabaya France | Yordanis Borrero Cuba |
Men's 77 kg details | Sa Jae-Hyouk South Korea | Li Hongli China | Gevorg Davtyan Armenia |
Men's 85 kg details | Lu Yong China | Tigran Martirosyan Armenia | Jadier Valladares Cuba |
Men's 94 kg details | Szymon Kołecki Poland | Arsen Kasabiev Georgia | Yoandry Hernández Cuba |
Men's 105 kg details | Andrei Aramnau Belarus | Dmitry Klokov Russia | Marcin Dołęga Poland |
Men's +105 kg details | Matthias Steiner Germany | Evgeny Chigishev Russia | Viktors Ščerbatihs Latvia |
Women's 48 kg details | Chen Wei-ling Chinese Taipei | Im Jyoung-hwa South Korea | Pensiri Laosirikul Thailand |
Women's 53 kg details | Prapawadee Jaroenrattanatarakoon Thailand | Yoon Jin-Hee South Korea | Raema Lisa Rumbewas Indonesia |
Women's 58 kg details | Chen Yanqing China | O Jong Ae North Korea | Wandee Kameaim Thailand |
Women's 63 kg details | Pak Hyon Suk North Korea | Lu Ying-chi Chinese Taipei | Christine Girard Canada |
Women's 69 kg details | Oksana Slivenko Russia | Leydi Solís Colombia | Abeer Abdelrahman Egypt |
Women's 75 kg details | Alla Vazhenina Kazakhstan | Lidia Valentín Spain | Damaris Aguirre Mexico |
Women's +75 kg details | Jang Mi-Ran South Korea | Ele Opeloge Samoa | Mariam Usman Nigeria |
Wrestling[edit]
Freestyle[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 55 kg details | Henry Cejudo(USA) | Tomohiro Matsunaga(JPN) | Besik Kudukhov(RUS) |
Radoslav Velikov(BUL) | |||
Men's 60 kg details | Mavlet Batirov(RUS) | Kenichi Yumoto(JPN) | Bazar Bazarguruev(KGZ) |
Morad Mohammadi(IRI) | |||
Men's 66 kg details | Ramazan Şahin(TUR) | Andriy Stadnik(UKR) | Sushil Kumar(IND) |
Otar Tushishvili(GEO) | |||
Men's 74 kg details | Buvaisar Saitiev(RUS) | Murad Gaidarov(BLR) | Kiril Terziev(BUL) |
Gheorghiță Ștefan(ROU) | |||
Men's 84 kg details | Revaz Mindorashvili(GEO) | Yusup Abdusalomov(TJK) | Taras Danko(UKR) |
Georgy Ketoyev(RUS) | |||
Men's 96 kg details | Shirvani Muradov(RUS) | Giorgi Gogshelidze(GEO) | Khetag Gazyumov(AZE) |
Michel Batista(CUB) | |||
Men's 120 kg details | Bakhtiyar Akhmedov(RUS) | David Musuľbes(SVK) | Marid Mutalimov(KAZ) |
Disney Rodríguez(CUB) | |||
Women's 48 kg details | Carol Huynh(CAN) | Chiharu Icho(JPN) | Mariya Stadnik(AZE) |
Iryna Merleni(UKR) | |||
Women's 55 kg details | Saori Yoshida(JPN) | Xu Li(CHN) | Tonya Verbeek(CAN) |
Jackeline Rentería(COL) | |||
Women's 63 kg details | Kaori Icho(JPN) | Alena Kartashova(RUS) | Yelena Shalygina(KAZ) |
Randi Miller(USA) | |||
Women's 72 kg details | Wang Jiao(CHN) | Stanka Zlateva(BUL) | Kyoko Hamaguchi(JPN) |
Agnieszka Wieszczek(POL) |
Greco-Roman[edit]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's 55 kg details | Nazyr Mankiev(RUS) | Rovshan Bayramov(AZE) | Park Eun-Chul(KOR) |
Roman Amoyan(ARM) | |||
Men's 60 kg details | Islambek Albiev(RUS) | Nurbakyt Tengizbayev(KAZ) | Ruslan Tyumenbayev(KGZ) |
Sheng Jiang(CHN) | |||
Men's 66 kg details | Steeve Guenot(FRA) | Kanatbek Begaliev(KGZ) | Armen Vardanyan(UKR) |
Mikhail Siamionau(BLR) | |||
Men's 74 kg details | Manuchar Kvirkelia(GEO) | Chang Yongxiang(CHN) | Yavor Yanakiev(BUL) |
Christophe Guenot(FRA) | |||
Men's 84 kg details | Andrea Minguzzi(ITA) | Zoltán Fodor(HUN) | Nazmi Avluca(TUR) |
Vacant[E] | |||
Men's 96 kg details | Aslanbek Khushtov(RUS) | Mirko Englich(GER) | Adam Wheeler(USA) |
Marek Švec(CZE) | |||
Men's 120 kg details | Mijaín López(CUB) | Mindaugas Mizgaitis(LTU) | Yury Patrikeyev(ARM) |
Yannick Szczepaniak(FRA) |
Statistics[edit]
Medal leaders[edit]
Athletes that won at least three gold medals or at least four total medals are listed below.
Athlete | Nation | Sport | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michael Phelps | United States(USA) | Swimming | 8 | 0 | 0 | 8 |
Chris Hoy | Great Britain(GBR) | Cycling | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
Zou Kai | China(CHN) | Gymnastics | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
Stephanie Rice | Australia(AUS) | Swimming | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
Libby Trickett | Australia(AUS) | Swimming | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
Ryan Lochte | United States(USA) | Swimming | 2 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
Nastia Liukin | United States(USA) | Gymnastics | 1 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
Kirsty Coventry | Zimbabwe(ZIM) | Swimming | 1 | 3 | 0 | 4 |
Shawn Johnson | United States(USA) | Gymnastics | 1 | 3 | 0 | 4 |
Natalie Coughlin | United States(USA) | Swimming | 1 | 2 | 3 | 6 |
Source:[21]
Notes[edit]
^ Note 1. Although the official opening of the Games was on 8 August 2008, football matches were held beginning on 6 August.[22]
^ Note 2. The fencing programme included six individual events and four team events, though the team events were a different set than were held in 2004. The International Fencing Federation's rules call for events not held in the previous Games to receive automatic selection and for at least one team event in each weapon to be held. Voting is conducted to determine the fourth event. In 2004, the three men's team events and the women's épée were held. Thus, in 2008, the women's foil and sabre events and men's épée were automatically selected. Men's sabre was chosen over foil by a 45–20 vote.[23]
Microsoft text to speech engine. Mar 03, 2009 The Microsoft Speech SDK 5.1 adds Automation support to the features of the previous version of the Speech SDK. You can now use the Win32 Speech API (SAPI) to develop speech applications with Visual Basic ®, ECMAScript and other Automation languages.
Beijing Olympic Games
References[edit]
- General
- 'Results and Medalists—2008 Summer'. Olympic.org. International Olympic Committee.
- 'Schedules & results'. The Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-08-07. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- 'Total Medals By Nation'. Sports Illustrated. 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- Specific
Play Olympic Games
- ^'NOC entry forms received' (Press release). International Olympic Committee. 2008-08-01. Archived from the original on 2008-08-08. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
(..) confirmed the qualification of 11,028 athletes, including 363 supplement athletes holding a P card.
- ^'Athens 2004'. International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 2009-06-10.
- ^'A 2008 Summer Olympics primer'. New York Daily News. 2008-08-10. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- ^'Beijing 2008: Games Programme Finalised'. International Olympic Committee. 2006-04-27. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- ^'Programme of the Games of the XXIX Olympiad, Beijing 2008'(PDF). International Olympic Committee. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- ^Michaelis, Vicki (2005-07-08). 'Baseball, softball bumped from Olympics'. USA Today. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- ^'Beijing 2008–Games of the XXVIV Olympiad'. International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
- ^Randy Harvey (2008-08-17). 'Jamaicans 1-2-3 in women's 100'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-08-17.
- ^'GOLD: x2 for U.S.'The Globe and Mail. 2008-08-12. Archived from the original on 2008-08-17. Retrieved 2008-08-12.
Arkady Vyatchanin of Russia and Hayden Stoeckel of Australia tied for bronze.
- ^'BBC Sport Beijing 2008, Medals table'. BBC. 2008-10-14. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
- ^Crary, David (2009-08-24). 'The final count: China's gold rush'. NBCOlympics.com. NBC. Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
- ^'Afghans win first Olympic medal'. BBC Sports. 2009-06-05. Retrieved 2008-08-20.
- ^'Mauritian delight at first ever medal'. Times of India. 2008-08-22. Archived from the original on 2008-08-27. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
- ^Osman, Mohamed (2008-08-24). 'Darfur runner wins Sudan's first Olympic medal'. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
- ^Talmadge, Eric (2008-08-11). 'Italy, Azerbaijan win golds'. The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
- ^'Togo claims first Olympic medal'. BBC News. 2008-08-12. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
- ^'Naidan wins Mongolia's first gold'. BBC News. 2008-08-14. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
- ^'Liu out, Isinbayeva gets world record'. The New York Times. 2008-08-18. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
- ^Caple, Jim (2008-08-17). 'How can one not be won over by Phelps' feat?'. ESPN. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
- ^ ab'Factsheet: Records and medals Games of the Olympiad'(PDF) (Press release). International Olympic Committee. January 2009. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2009-08-23. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
- ^'Multiple-Medal Winners'. The Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. Archived from the original on 2009-08-15. Retrieved 2009-06-06.
- ^Marcus, Jeffrey (2008-08-07). 'U.S. Opens With Win Over Japan'. The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-01-18.
- ^'List of decisions of the 2006 General Assembly'(PDF). Fédération Internationale d'Escrime. 2006-04-08. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
External links[edit]
Hosted The 2008 Summer Olympic Games
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2008 Summer Olympics medal winners. |