THE 2014 WINTER OLYMPICS
WERE HELD IN
SOCHI, RUSSIA
THE U.S.A. TOOK 2ND PLACE IN THE
MEDAL COUNT, AFTER RUSSIA.
LOVE THE OLYMPICS!
CAN'T BELIEVE IT'S BEEN
12 YEARS
SINCE THE SALT LAKE
WINTER OLYMPICS!
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
The competition ended Sunday at the 2014 Winter Olympics. Which
nation ruled the medal count? How did the United States fare? Which
athletes went home with the biggest haul? And just how dominant was the
Dutch speedskating team? For The Win answers those questions, and many
more, with the 14 most interesting facts about the final Winter Olympics
medal count.
1. Russia ruled Russia
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
No matter the metric, the host nation won
a decisive medal-count victory.
Russia won 13 gold medals in Sochi, two more than runner-up Norway.
Overall, Russian athletes won 33 medals, five more than the United
States’ 28. It’s the first time the host nation swept both medal counts
since Norway did it at the 1952 Winter Games in Oslo.
2. United States is king of the bronze
USA TODAY Sports
It didn’t look good for the United States. No medals in individual
figure skating for the first time since 1936. No medals in speedskating
for the first time since 1984. The four most identifiable Winter
Olympians — Shaun White, Bode Miller, Lindsey Vonn, Shani Davis — won a
total of one bronze medal. (In Vonn’s defense, she wasn’t competing in
Sochi due to injury.) The women’s hockey team blew a late 2-0 lead in
the gold-medal game and the men’s team was outscored 6-0 in the medal
rounds. Still, it wasn’t all bad. American athletes won 28 medals, good
for second on the overall medal count. (That was nine fewer medals than
the U.S. won in Vancouver, however.) Team USA’s 12 bronze medals were
the most for any nation. It’s the third time in the past four Winter
Olympics the Americans have won that tally.
3. Dutch (speedskating) masters
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
The speedskating team from The Netherlands won 23 medals (eight gold,
seven silver, eight bronze). Among the remarkable aspects of that
achievement:
a. The Dutch speedskating team alone would have finished sixth on the overall medal count.
b. While the Dutch won 23 medals on the oval, all other nations won 13 medals
combined.
c. Since 1998, no other country has won more golds in speedskating
than the Dutch won in Sochi. (The U.S. and Germany had seven each.)
d. They did this all with just 41 athletes in Sochi. Canada earned one more medal with 180 more athletes.
e. The Netherlands only won one more medal in the Olympics. It came in short-track speedskating, of course.
4. The rise and fall of Germany
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
For the early days of the Winter Games, Germany led the gold-medal
count, thanks to a dominating performance in luge. (German lugers won
all four golds in the luge events.) But once luge ended, it was all
downhill from there, as Germany ended up finishing sixth in both medal
counts. That’s the worst performance for any post-Berlin Wall German
team and the worst for a main German Olympic squad in 46 years.
5. The Dutch did the most with the least
The Dutch team at the Opening Ceremony. (AP)
We’ve listed the
medal count by golds, total medals and
per-capita rates.
So how about medals per athlete in Sochi? Winning 10 medals with 100
athletes is more impressive than winning 12 medals with 200 athletes,
right?
It’s no surprise the Netherlands leads this total, with 24 medals
from 41 athletes equaling one medal for every 1.7 competitors. Belarus
was second (six medals for 24 competitors; 1 for 4), followed by Norway
(every 5.15 athletes), France (7) and Russia (7.03). The worst
medal-per-athlete rate was Slovakia, which won a single medal for its 62
athletes. Croatia was the smallest delegation to medal, winning one
with just 11 athletes. The biggest delegations not to medal in
Sochi? Romania and Estonia were shutout with 24 athletes each.
6. Belarus comes out of nowhere
Belarus won more medals in the 15k biathlon than from 2002-06. (USA TODAY Sports Images)
In its only five Olympics prior to Sochi, the former Soviet Republic
earned a total of one gold medal and never finished better than 15th in
the medal count. In Sochi, Belarusian athletes won five golds and
finished eighth in the medal count. Just by herself, biathlete Darya
Domracheva (three gold medals) did better in Sochi than her entire
nation had done at the five previous Winter Olympics.
7. Come on, Spain, Chinese Tapei and The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, pull your weight.
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
Through 44 events, 26 nations won medals at the Winter Olympics,
which tied the record set at both the 2006 and 2010 Winter Games. After
98 events, 26 nations won medals at the Winter Olympics. The record
remained. (Stat via
@nzaccardi).
8. The no-medal gold medalists
Iceland didn’t medal in Sochi. ICE-land didn’t medal at the Winter
Olympics. That’s like, I don’t know, the sun getting shut out at the
Summer Olympics. But this isn’t as unexpected as you’d think. Though
it’s baffling on all levels, Iceland has actually never medaled at any
Winter Games. The tiny nation sent just five athletes to Sochi and none
finished better than 34th in their respective events.
While it’s no surprise countries like Brazil, Lebanon and Togo didn’t
get medals in Sochi, the lack of success of a few nations might raise
an eyebrow. Belgium, for instance, has won just one medal since 1952 and
Denmark only has one medal
ever.
9. Mikaela Shiffrin pulled a Michael Phelps
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
As noted by
Alan Abrahamson,
skiing’s up-and-coming star finished fifth in her first Olympic race.
In her second, she won gold. Phelps pulled the same feat in the Summer
Games (over his first two appearances).
10. Speaking of Phelps …
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
Two years after the swimming star became the most decorated Summer
Olympian in history, Norwegian biathlete Ole Einar Bjoerndalen became
the most decorated Winter Olympian in history, winning his 13th carer
medal in Sochi. That moved him past his countryman and fellow
Bjoern, Bjoern Daehlie. Not to be outdone, another Norwegian
cross-country skier, Marit Bjoergen, became the most decorated female
Winter Olympian ever. She won her sixth career gold in Sochi.
11. Russian transplants named Vic pay off
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
Viktor Ahn, a South Korean speedskater who defected to Russia after
the Vancouver Games, won three gold medals and a bronze in short track
speedskating, making him the most decorated athlete in Sochi. Another
foreign-born Russian athlete, American Vic Wild, won two golds in
snowboard. Together, the Vic transplants would have finished a combined
eighth on the overall medal count.
The other three-time gold medalists in Sochi: Bjoergen and Domracheva.
12. Who went home with the most hardware?
(Getty Images)
Which athlete won the
most medals in Sochi? Would a Dutch
speedskater suprise you? Ireen Wust took home five medals from Russia,
winning two golds and three silvers. That was the biggest haul for any
athlete and more than all but 19 nations.
Norwegian biathlete Tora Berger and Suk Hee Shim, a Korean
short-track skater, had the Olympic rainbow award, winning gold, silver
and bronze at these Winter Games. The hard-luck athlete in Sochi was
Russian cross-country skier Maxim Vylegzhanin. He won three silvers, the
final two coming in races that totaled 2 hours, 13 minutes. In those,
he was a combined 1.68 seconds away from gold.
13. Americans didn’t double-up
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
Only two Americans won multiple medals in Sochi. Meryl Davis and
Charlie White won bronze in the team figure skating competition and a
historic gold in the ice dancing. The one gold and one bronze tied them
for 39th on the individual medal count.
14. Who ruled each sport?
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
Which nations won the medal counts for the 15 sports at the 2014
Winter Olympics? It was largely spread out, with nine different
countries being atop the 15 different sports.
Alpine skiing — Austria (3 gold/4 silver/2 bronze)
Biathlon — Norway (3/1/2)
Bobsled — Russia (2/0/0)
Cross-country — Norway (5/2/4)
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
Curling — Canada (2/0/0)
Figure skating — Russia (3/1/1)
Freestyle skiing — Canada (4/4/1)
Ice hockey — Canada (2/0/0)
Luge — Germany (4/1/0)
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
Nordic Combined — Norway (2/1/1)
Short track — Russia (3/1/1)
Skeleton — Russia (1/0/1)
Ski jumping — Germany and Poland (2/0/0)
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
Snowboarding — United States (3/0/2)
Speedskating — Netherlands (8/7/8)
(USA TODAY Sports Images)
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