United States at the Olympics
The United States of America has sent athletes to every celebration of the modern Olympic Games, except the 1980 Summer Olympics, during which it led a boycott.
The United States Olympic Committee (USOC) is the National Olympic Committee for the United States.
U.S. athletes have won a total of 2,400 medals at the Summer Olympic Games and another 281 at the Winter Olympic Games. Most medals have been won in athletics (track and field) (767, 32%) and swimming (520, 22%). Thomas Burke was the first athlete to represent the United States at the Olympics. He took first place in both the 100 meters and the 400 meters of the 1896 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. U.S. athlete Michael Phelps is the most-decorated Olympic athlete of any nation, with 22 Olympic medals (including 18 golds).
The United States has won more gold and overall medals than any other country in the Summer Games and also has the second-most gold and overall medals at the Winter Games, trailing only Norway. From the mid-20th century to the late 1980s, the United States mainly competed with the Soviet Union at summer Games and with the Soviet Union, Norway, and East Germany at the Winter Games. However, it now primarily contends with China at the summer Games for both the overall medal count and the gold medal count and with Norway at the winter Games for the overall medal count. The United States has topped the total medal count at two winter Olympics: 1932 in Lake Placid and 2010 in Vancouver. At the 2010 games, the United States set a record for most total medals (37) of any country at a single Winter Olympics.
Hosted Games
The United States have hosted the Games on eight occasions, more than any other country:
Games | Host city | Dates | Nations | Participants | Events |
1904 Summer Olympics | St. Louis, Missouri | 1 July – 23 November | 12 | 651 | 91 |
1932 Winter Olympics | Lake Placid, New York | 7 – 15 February | 17 | 252 | 14 |
1932 Summer Olympics | Los Angeles, California | 30 July – 14 August | 37 | 1,332 | 117 |
1960 Winter Olympics | Squaw Valley, California | 2 – 20 February | 30 | 665 | 27 |
1980 Winter Olympics | Lake Placid, New York | 13 – 24 February | 37 | 1,072 | 38 |
1984 Summer Olympics | Los Angeles, California | 20 July – 18 August | 140 | 6,829 | 221 |
1996 Summer Olympics | Atlanta, Georgia | 18 July – 4 August | 197 | 10,318 | 271 |
2002 Winter Olympics | Salt Lake City, Utah | 8 – 24 February | 77 | 2,399 | 78 |
Medal tables by Games
- *Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.
Medals by Summer Games
|
Medals by Winter Games
|
Medals by summer sport
Leading in that sport
Dropped from the current Olympics program
Updated on March 1, 2014
*This table does not include two medals – one silver and one bronze – awarded in the ice hockey and figure skating events at the 1920 Summer Olympics
|
Medals by winter sport
Leading in that sport
Updated on March 1, 2014
*This table includes two medals – one silver and one bronze – awarded in the ice hockey and figure skating events at the 1920 Summer Olympics
|
Flagbearers
See also
References
- ↑ Warren Wofford was the flagbearer in the (Equestrian) parade in Stockholm for the Olympics Equestrian Sports Association events held there because a quarantine imposed on horses prevented equestrian events from taking place in Australia
- ↑ First woman to carry the flag at the Olympics for USA
External links
|
---|
| | | Africa | |
---|
| Americas | |
---|
| Asia | |
---|
| Europe | |
---|
| Oceania | |
---|
| Other | |
---|
| Historical | |
---|
| |
|
|
---|
| By state/territory | |
---|
| Major sports | |
---|
| Minor sports | |
---|
| International sporting competitions | |
---|
|