website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Which are your Nation's Best and Worst Olympic Games ever?


Recommended Posts

5 minutes ago, LDOG said:

Summer games: Best in numbers were Amsterdam 28 & London 48 (3-3-1 both times). 

 

Worst were Montreal 76 and LA 84, zeroed both times with over 60 athletes. A very dark age for both the country and it's sport. 

 

In winter olympics it has been always been the same: nothing.

Argentina has been increasing its participation over the years though at the Winter Olympics.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237662
Share on other sites

Just now, uk12points said:

Best - Rio 2016 becoming the first nation ever to win more medals at the subsequent games than at their home games! And beating China to second place on the medals table. 

 

Worst - Atlanta 1996 we won just 1 gold medal, but it turned out to be exactly what we needed! The government and national lottery decided to invest in elite sport to ensure such a humiliation never happened again and it's only got better ever since!

 

 

Yes I do love the British Sports System. It has a few flaws, but I fell like there are more pros than cons.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237665
Share on other sites

I think worst or best depends on the expectations. we had Olympics with 1 medal but that was OK in that period of time because of the war, 8 years boycott etc.

 

worst - Beijing 2008, that was a nightmare for me. only 1 bronze until the last day when our very last athlete won the gold to make it at least less worse.

 

best - London 2012, the interesting thing is we are still receiving medals from that Olympics :d Iran finished the games with 4 gold medals (already an all time high) but re-testing gave Iran 2 more already and we are waiting for one more. 13 medals, 7 gold medals is not something we can repeat in near future. and actually when i look back to the Games, we could easily had 3 or 4 more gold medals. our best gold medal chance in Greco Wrestling got robbed blatantly, another guy in freestyle beat his main (and only) rival from Russia and was on his way to the gold medal but got injured in the semifinal and went to the hospital.

 

but my best Olympics was 2000 Sydney and that's why I use that logo in my avatar, winning 3 gold medals for the first time.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237670
Share on other sites

:CAN 

 

Best:

Winter: Without a doubt the Vancouver 2010 Games, which arguably were the best games of recent memory. Not only did Canada break its national record for total medals, Canada won a record 14 gold medal, which has yet to be surpassed, even with the two following editions have much more events. Those games were special for Canadian sport and it concluded with the last gold medal in men's hockey. Cannot be beaten I think in the future for Canadian sport. 

 

Summer: The COC looks like at overall medals first, so counting that Rio (holds tiebreak over Atlanta) for summer games. I did not include the boycotted 1984 games, which were by the most successful games for Canada.

 

Worst:

Montreal 1976 and Calgary 1988, only country to never win Gold in hosting a Summer Olympics, managed to repeat it in 1988. This is in contrast to Vancouver 2010.

In recent memory, Athens was a disaster and so was London. So if the pattern holds, Tokyo looks like a disaster waiting to happen, but with all these new medal events, I am hopeful for a record total of medals (again excluding LA 84).

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237671
Share on other sites

Easy.

 

1952-1984 won't count because we're busy building sports and boycotting this and that.

 

Best: Barcelona 1992, we won two golds. 

 

Worst: London 2012, not even a single medal in badminton, became part of a scandal instead.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237672
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Laraja said:

Winter games: What can I say? :lol: A special mention to Isabel Clark, the best result from a brazilian athlete at winter games so far. 9th place in Snowboard Cross in Turin 2006.

 

Summer games: In terms of number of medals, the worst Olympic Games were in Paris 1924, Los Angeles 1932, and Berlim 1936 without any medals. But, recently, Sydney 2000 was the worst, I remember the frustation when it finished without any gold medal, after a few participations improving Brazil's performance.

 

The best, of course, was Rio 2016.

I still can't believe Clark Ribeiro didn't do that 4 or 8 years later, but she did it in a time I wasn't paying attention to Brazilian winter sports yet :mad: Still, 9th. Wow.

.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237687
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, heywoodu said:

I could look at the medal tables but that doesn't really say that much about good or bad Olympics, and I'm not old enough to remember those from the early 90's or before, so...tough question :p 

 

I remember the speed skating at Salt Lake City and Jochem Uytdehaage's epic sub-13 made a big impression on young me :d 

 

Based on the medal table Sydney 2000 are the best (Summer) Olympics for the Netherlands with 25 medals.

 

The crazy thing is that 4 athletes were involved in 14 of those 25 medals, including 9 golds. The individual talent of Leontien van Moorsel (cycling W), Pieter van den Hoogenband (swimming M), Inge de Bruijn (swimming W) and Anky van Grinsven (dressage W) carried us in those games.

 

I grew up in the same neigbourhood as Pieter van den Hoogenband, so his medals were always special to me. I even got to touch them as a little kid at the local ceremony where they honored him after the games!

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237690
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, Jinzha said:

 

Based on the medal table Sydney 2000 are the best (Summer) Olympics for the Netherlands with 25 medals.

 

The crazy thing is that 4 athletes were involved in 14 of those 25 medals, including 9 golds. The individual talent of Leontien van Moorsel (cycling W), Pieter van den Hoogenband (swimming M), Inge de Bruijn (swimming W) and Anky van Grinsven (dressage W) carried us in those games.

 

I grew up in the same neigbourhood as Pieter van den Hoogenband, so his medals were always special to me. I even got to touch them as a little kid at the local ceremony where they honored him after the games!

Did you play football with him where he was substituted for being just really bad? :banana: 

 

For the non-Dutch: in 2010 the biggest peanut butter brand had a commercial with a young 'Pieter' playing football, who was really bad and ended up being substituted by his coach, who told him "it's going better and better!". Some kid in the dugout tells him "You really can't play football!" to which young Pieter answers with a smile: "Nope." and then jumps into the local canal :p 

 

Spoiler

 

Edited by heywoodu

.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237695
Share on other sites

Best: Helsinki 1952. I mean, it's pretty obvious, 16 gold medals, 42 medals, 3rd on the medal table. We won the football tournament with one of the most legendary teams ever in the history of sport (the Golden Team), dominated men's sabre once again with some true legends like Gerevich, won two gold medals in Gymnastics, four gold medals in Swimming. It's crazy how strong this team was.

 

But if you want a modern example for the best Olympics, I would go with Barcelona 1992. 11 gold medals. 30 medals. Our two legendary swimmers, Egerszegi and Darnyi won 5 gold medals, plus for the first time ever we won the women's K4 in canoe sprint. 

 

Worst: Beijing 2008. 3 gold medals. 10 medals. Worst placement on the medal table (21st) in the history of the Summer Games. Unlike the two "best" examples, I watching these Games live and it was a disaster for us. We had to wait for the first gold medal for sooo long that at some point everybody started to worry that we might not win any. It was a huge relief for the country when Vajda won C1 1000m. But despite the overall performance we still had some great moments, Cseh had an amazing SOG, won 3 silver medals, and only peak Phelps was able to beat him. Our men's water polo team won for the third time in a row, partially thanks to the Serbian team's total collapse and inability to beat the Americans in the SF. And the C2 bronze medal was the most emotional moment ever for all Hungarians, because Kozmann was able to win a medal with his new partner Kiss just a few months after his former partner, two-time Olympic champion György Kolonics died from heart failure while preparing for the Olympics. 

 

We don't have a "worst" Winter Olympics for obvious reasons, and the best is clearly Pyeongchang 2018, because we won our first ever winter gold medal there. 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237696
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Vektor said:

And the C2 bronze medal was the most emotional moment ever for all Hungarians, because Kozmann was able to win a medal with his new partner Kiss just a few months after his former partner, two-time Olympic champion György Kolonics died from heart failure while preparing for the Olympics. 

 

man, I remember this very well.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1938-which-are-your-nations-best-and-worst-olympic-games-ever/page/2/#findComment-237700
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • To be fair, I think most people don't even know there's an Olympic flag.     
    • 2026 WTA, 125 and ITF Tour Week 4   Results (January 26 - February 1, 2026)   Australian Open in Melbourne : - Results in AO 2026 Topic.   WTA 125 in Manila : 1. Camila Osorio 2. Donna Vekic 3. Tatiana Prozorova  (Russia) 3. Solana Sierra   W100 in Fujairah : 1. Lilli Tagger 2. Harriet Dart 3. Renata Zarazua 3. Alina Korneeva  (Russia)   W100 in San Diego : 1. Elvina Kalieva 2. Elizabeth Mandlik 3. Jennifer Brady 3. Mary Stoiana   W75 in Porto  : Ayla Aksu  d. Elizara Yaneva W75 in Vero Beach  : Bianca Andreescu  d. You Xiaodi W50 in Monastir  : Shi Han  d. Marina Bassols   W35 in Birmingham  : Elena Malogina  d. Noma Noha Akugue W15 in Antalya  : Nina Vargova  d. Beatrice Ricci W15 in Sharm El Sheikh  : Ren Yufei  d. Isabella Shinikova
    • 2026 ATP, Challenger and ITF Tour Week 4   Results (January 26 - February 1, 2026)   Australian Open in Melbourne : - Results in AO 2026 Topic.   Challenger 125 in Manama : 1. Kyrian Jacquet 2. Luca Nardi 3. Otto Virtanen 3. Mattia Bellucci   Challenger 125 in Quimper : 1. Luca Van Assche 2. Remy Bertola 3. Sascha Gueymard Wayenburg 3. Marc-Andrea Huesler   Challenger 100 in Concepcion : 1. Daniel Vallejo 2. Alejandro Tabilo 3. Marco Cecchinato 3. Tomas Barrios Vera   Challenger 100 in San Diego : 1. Zachary Svajda 2. Sebastian Korda 3. Patrick Kypson 3. Sho Shimabukuro   Challenger 75 in Oeiras II : 1. Chris Rodesch 2. Daniil Glinka 3. Alexis Galarneau 3. Frederico Ferreira Silva   Challenger 50 in Phan Thiet II : 1. Ilia Simakin  (Russia) 2. Zhou Yi 3. Daniel Michalski  3. Stefanos Sakellaridis   M25 in Glasgow  : Charles Broom  d. Lui Maxted M25 in Nubloch  : Daniel Masur  d. Karlis Ozolins M15 in Hyderabad  : Pawit Sornlaksup  d. Manish Sureshkumar M15 in Zahra  : Khumoyun Sultanov  d. Luca Staeheli M15 in Antalya  : Stefan Popovic  d. Iliyan Radulov M15 in Sharm El Sheikh  : Samuel Vincent Ruggeri  d. Semen Pankin  (Russia) M15 in Monastir  : Petr Nesterov  d. Tomasz Berkieta M15 in Naples  : William Grant  d. Duarte Vale M15 in Huamantla  : Braden Shick  d. Gage Brymer  
    • This caused so much outrage on Brazilian social media last night. "Why will she carry the flag and not a winter athlete, ridiculous!?"   People....the Olympic flag, not the national one, just...read  
    • 2026 Australian Open - Melbourne   Results (January 18 - February 1, 2026)   Men's Singles: 1. Carlos Alcaraz 2. Novak Djokovic 3. Alexander Zverev 3. Jannik Sinner 5. Alex de Minaur   5. Learner Tien   5. Lorenzo Musetti   5. Ben Shelton 9. Tommy Paul   9. Alexander Bublik   9. Francisco Cerundolo   9. Daniil Medvedev  (Russia) 9. Taylor Fritz   9. Jakub Mensik   9. Casper Ruud   9. Luciano Darderi     Women's Singles: 1. Elena Rybakina 2. Aryna Sabalenka  (Belarus) 3. Elina Svitolina 3. Jessica Pegula 5. Iva Jovic   5. Coco Gauff   5. Amanda Anisimova   5. Iga Swiatek 9. Victoria Mboko   9. Yulia Putintseva   9. Karolina Muchova   9. Mirra Andreeva  (Russia) 9. Madison Keys   9. Wang Xinyu   9. Elise Mertens   9. Maddison Inglis   Men's Doubles: 1. Christian Harrison  & Neal Skupski 2. Jason Kubler & Marc Polmans 3. Luke Johnson  & Jan Zielinski 3. Marcel Granollers  & Horacio Zeballos 5. Sadio Doumbia & Fabien Reboul   5. Marcelo Arevalo  & Mate Pavic   5. Orlando Luz & Rafael Matos   5. Petr Nouza & Patrik Rikl     Women's Doubles: 1. Elise Mertens  & Zhang Shuai 2. Anna Danilina  & Aleksandra Krunic 3. Gabriela Dabrowski  & Luisa Stefani 3. Ena Shibahara  & Vera Zvonareva  (Russia) 5. Katerina Siniakova  & Taylor Townsend   5. Hsieh Su-wei  & Jelena Ostapenko   5. Eri Hozumi  & Wu Fang-hsien   5. Kimberly Birrell & Talia Gibson     Mixed Doubles: 1. Olivia Gadecki & John Peers 2. Kristina Mladenovic & Manuel Guinard 3. Taylor Townsend  & Nikola Mektic 3. Luisa Stefani  & Marcelo Arevalo   Boys Singles: 1. Ziga Sesko 2. Keaton Hance 3. Zangar Nurlanuly 3. Ryo Tabata 5. Kai Thompson 5. Chen Kuan-shou   5. Jamie Mackenzie   5. Luis Guto Miguel   Girls Singles: 1. Ksenia Efremova 2. Ekaterina Tupitsyna  (Russia) 3. Thea Frodin   3. Rada Zolotareva  (Russia) 5. Mariia Makarova  (Russia) 5. Sun Xinran   5. Kanon Sawashiro   5. Shao Yushan   Boys Doubles: Connor Doig  & Dimitar Kisimov  d. Ymerali Ibraimi & Cooper Kose   Girls Doubles: Alena Kovackova & Jana Kovackova  d. Tereza Hermanova & Denisa Zoldakova   Wheelchair Men's Singles: 1. Tokito Oda 2. Martin de la Puente 3. Alfie Hewett 3. Gustavo Fernandez   Wheelchair Women's Singles: 1. Li Xiaohui 2. Diede de Groot 3. Yui Kamiji   3. Wang Ziying     Wheelchair Men's Quad Singles: 1. Niels Vink 2. Sam Schroder 3. Guy Sasson   3. Ahmet Kaplan     Wheelchair Men's Doubles: Gustavo Fernandez  & Tokito Oda  d. Daniel Caverzaschi  & Ruben Spaargaren   Wheelchair Women's Doubles: Li Xiaohui & Wang Ziying  d. Yui Kamiji  & Zhu Zhenzhen   Wheelchair Men's Quad Doubles: Guy Sasson  & Niels Vink  d. Heath Davidson  & Andy Lapthorne Results
    • a look into  homeplace at the Milano Olympic village (still no chairs nor tables )    
    • Additional venues have been announced for Football (Soccer).   The preliminary and knockout stages will be held at: New York Stadium in the New York Zone, stadium to be completed in 2027  Columbus Stadium in the Columbus Zone  Nashville Stadium in the Nashville Zone St. Louis Stadium in the St. Louis Zone San José Stadium in the San José Zone San Diego Stadium in the San Diego Zone   Final matches will be held at the Rose Bowl in Los Angeles.   The schedule for both the women’s and men’s Football (Soccer) tournaments, including the dates and match distribution per stadium, will be announced before the first ticket drop in April 2026.   https://www.stlcitysc.com/news/la28-unveils-seven-venues-for-the-2028-olympic-football-soccer-tournament-matches
    • 2026 LPGA Tour Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions - Florida   Results (January 29 - February 1, 2026)   (39.6 points)   Women's: 1. Nelly Korda 2. Amy Yang 3. Brooke Henderson 4. Lydia Ko 5. Miyu Yamashita 5. Hwang You-min 7. Jeeno Thitikul   7. Lottie Woad   9. Nasa Hataoka   9. Lee So-mi   9. Ryu Hae-ran 9. Ayaka Furue 9. Rose Zhang 9. Kim A-Lim 15. Akie Iwai 15. Jasmine Suwannapura   Results
    • 2026 PGA Tour Farmers Insurance Open - California    Results (January 29 - February 1, 2026)   (56.96 points)   Men's: 1. Justin Rose 2. Pierceson Coody 2. Kim Si-woo 2. Ryo Hisatsune 5. Jake Knapp 5. Stephan Jaeger   7. Sahith Theegala   7. Andrew Novak   7. Joel Dahmen   10. Maverick McNealy 11. Tony Finau   11. Ryan Gerard   11. Adam Schenk   11. Keith Mitchell   11. Hideki Matsuyama   11. Seamus Power   11. Li Haotong   Results
    • https://www.instagram.com/p/DUS5GffCM_I/   Erin Jackson and Frank Del Duca for Team USA
×
×
  • Create New...