Contents
1 History
1.1 20th century
1.1.1 1900 to 1912 1.1.2 World War I 1.1.3 1920 to 1936 1.1.4 World War II 1.1.5 1948 to 1960 1.1.6 1964 to 1980 1.1.7 1984 to 1998
1.2 21st century
1.2.1 2002 to 2010 1.2.2 2014 to 2018 1.2.3 Future
2 Controversy
2.1 Host city legacy 2.2 Doping
3 Politics
3.1 Cold War 3.2 Boycott
4 Sports
4.1 Current sports 4.2 Demonstration events
5 Ten most successful nations 6 List of Winter Olympic Games 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External links
History[edit] 20th century[edit] 1900 to 1912[edit]
Ulrich Salchow at the 1908 Olympics.
A predecessor, the Nordic Games, were organised by General Viktor
Gustaf Balck in Stockholm, Sweden in 1901 and were held again in 1903
and 1905 and then every fourth year thereafter until 1926.[5] Balck
was a charter member of the IOC and a close friend of Olympic Games
founder Pierre de Coubertin. He attempted to have winter sports,
specifically figure skating, added to the Olympic programme but was
unsuccessful until the
1908 Summer Olympics
1908 Summer Olympics in London, United
Kingdom.[5] Four figure skating events were contested, at which Ulrich
Salchow (10-time world champion) and
Madge Syers
Madge Syers won the individual
titles.[6][7]
Three years later, Italian count
Eugenio Brunetta d'Usseaux proposed
that the IOC stage a week of winter sports included as part of the
1912 Summer Olympics
1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden. The organisers opposed this
idea because they desired to protect the integrity of the Nordic Games
and were concerned about a lack of facilities for winter
sports.[8][9][10]
World War I[edit]
The idea was resurrected for the 1916 Games, which were to be held in
Berlin, Germany. A winter sports week with speed skating, figure
skating, ice hockey and
Nordic skiing
Nordic skiing was planned, but the 1916
Olympics was cancelled after the outbreak of World War I.[9]
1920 to 1936[edit]
The first Olympics after the war, the 1920 Summer Olympics, were held
in Antwerp, Belgium, and featured figure skating and an ice hockey
tournament.[9] Germany, Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey were
banned from competing in the Games. At the IOC Congress held the
following year it was decided that the host nation of the 1924 Summer
Olympics, France, would host a separate "International Winter Sports
Week" under the patronage of the IOC.
Chamonix
Chamonix was chosen to host this
"week" (actually 11 days) of events. The Games proved to be a
success when more than 250 athletes from 16 nations competed in 16
events.[11] Athletes from Finland and
Norway
Norway won 28 medals, more than
the rest of the participating nations combined.[12]
Germany
Germany remained
banned until 1925, and instead hosted a series of games called
Deutsche Kampfspiele, starting with the Winter edition of 1922 (which
predated the first Winter Olympics). In 1925 the IOC decided to create
a separate winter event and the 1924 Games in
Chamonix
Chamonix was
retroactively designated as the first Winter Olympics.[9][11]
St. Moritz, Switzerland, was appointed by the IOC to host the second
Winter Games in 1928.[13] Fluctuating weather conditions challenged
the hosts. The opening ceremony was held in a blizzard while warm
weather conditions plagued sporting events throughout the rest of the
Games.[14] Because of the weather the 10,000 metre speed-skating
event had to be abandoned and officially cancelled.[15] The weather
was not the only noteworthy aspect of the 1928 Games:
Sonja Henie
Sonja Henie of
Norway
Norway made history when she won the figure skating competition at the
age of 15. She became the youngest Olympic champion in history, a
distinction she held for 70 years.[16]
The next Winter Olympics held in Lake Placid, New York, was the first
to be hosted outside of Europe. Seventeen nations and 252 athletes
participated.[17] This was less than in 1928, as the journey to Lake
Placid, United States, was long and expensive for most competitors,
who had little money in the midst of the Great Depression. The
athletes competed in fourteen events in four sports.[17] Virtually no
snow fell for two months before the Games, and there was not enough
snow to hold all the events until mid-January.[18] Sonja Henie
defended her Olympic title, and
Eddie Eagan
Eddie Eagan of the United States, who
had been an Olympic champion in boxing in 1920, won the gold medal in
the men's bobsleigh event to become the first, and so far only,
Olympian to have won gold medals in both the Summer and Winter
Olympics.[17]
The German towns of Garmisch and Partenkirchen joined to organise the
1936 edition of the Winter Games, held on 6–16 February.[19] This
was the last time the Summer and Winter Olympics were held in the same
country in the same year.
Alpine skiing
Alpine skiing made its Olympic debut, but
skiing teachers were barred from entering because they were considered
to be professionals.[20] Because of this decision the Swiss and
Austrian skiers refused to compete at the Games.[20]
World War II[edit]
World War II
World War II interrupted the holding of the Winter Olympics. The 1940
Games had been awarded to Sapporo, Japan, but the decision was
rescinded in 1938 because of the Japanese invasion of China. The Games
were then to be held at Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, but the 1940
Games were cancelled following the German invasion of Poland in
1939.[21] Due to the ongoing war, the 1944 Games, originally scheduled
for Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy, were cancelled.[22]
1948 to 1960[edit]
The opening ceremonies of the
1956 Winter Olympics
1956 Winter Olympics in Cortina
d'Ampezzo
St. Moritz
St. Moritz was selected to host the first post-war Games in 1948.
Switzerland's neutrality had protected the town during World War II,
and most of the venues were in place from the 1928 Games, which made
St. Moritz
St. Moritz a logical choice. It became the first city to host a Winter
Olympics twice.[23] Twenty-eight countries competed in Switzerland,
but athletes from
Germany
Germany and
Japan
Japan were not invited.[24] Controversy
erupted when two hockey teams from the
United States
United States arrived, both
claiming to be the legitimate U.S. Olympic hockey representative. The
Olympic flag presented at the
1920 Summer Olympics
1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp was
stolen, as was its replacement. There was unprecedented parity at
these Games, during which 10 countries won gold medals—more than any
Games to that point.[25]
The
Olympic Flame
Olympic Flame for the 1952 Games in Oslo, was lit in the fireplace
by skiing pioneer Sondre Nordheim, and the torch relay was conducted
by 94 participants entirely on skis.[26][27] Bandy, a popular sport in
the Nordic countries, was featured as a demonstration sport, though
only Norway, Sweden, and Finland fielded teams. Norwegian athletes won
17 medals, which outpaced all the other nations.[28] They were led by
Hjalmar Andersen
Hjalmar Andersen who won three gold medals in four events in the speed
skating competition.[29]
After not being able to host the Games in 1944,
Cortina d'Ampezzo
Cortina d'Ampezzo was
selected to organise the 1956 Winter Olympics. At the opening
ceremonies the final torch bearer, Guido Caroli, entered the Olympic
Stadium on ice skates. As he skated around the stadium his skate
caught on a cable and he fell, nearly extinguishing the flame. He was
able to recover and light the cauldron.[30] These were the first
Winter Games to be televised, and the first Olympics ever broadcast to
an international audience, though no television rights were sold until
the
1960 Summer Olympics
1960 Summer Olympics in Rome.[31] The Cortina Games were used to
test the feasibility of televising large sporting events.[31] The
Soviet Union
Soviet Union made its Olympic debut and had an immediate impact,
winning more medals than any other nation.[32] Soviet immediate
success might be explained by the advent of the state-sponsored
"full-time amateur athlete". The USSR entered teams of athletes who
were all nominally students, soldiers, or working in a profession, but
many of whom were in reality paid by the state to train
full-time.[33][34]
Chiharu Igaya
Chiharu Igaya won the first Winter Olympics medal
for
Japan
Japan and the continent of
Asia
Asia when he placed second in the
slalom.[35]
The IOC awarded the 1960 Olympics to Squaw Valley, United States. It
was an undeveloped resort in 1955, so from 1956 to 1960 the
infrastructure and all of the venues were built at a cost of
US$80,000,000.[36][37] The opening and closing ceremonies were
produced by Walt Disney.[38] The Squaw Valley Olympics was the first
winter Olympics to have a dedicated athletes' village[citation
needed], the first to use a computer (courtesy of IBM) to tabulate
results, and the first to feature female speed skating events. The
bobsleigh events were absent for the only time due to the cost of
building a bobsleigh run.[38]
1964 to 1980[edit]
The Herb Brooks Arena in Lake Placid (c. 2007), site of the "Miracle on Ice" in 1980
The Austrian city of
Innsbruck
Innsbruck was the host in 1964. Although
Innsbruck
Innsbruck was a traditional winter sports resort, warm weather caused
a lack of snow during the Games and the Austrian army was enlisted to
transport snow and ice to the sports venues.[38] Soviet speed-skater
Lidia Skoblikova
Lidia Skoblikova made history by winning all four speed skating
events. Her career total of six gold medals set a record for Winter
Olympics athletes.[38]
Luge
Luge was first contested in 1964, but the sport
received bad publicity when a competitor was killed in a pre-Olympic
training run.[39][40]
Held in the French town of Grenoble, the
1968 Winter Olympics
1968 Winter Olympics were the
first
Olympic Games
Olympic Games to be broadcast in colour. There were 1,158
athletes from 37 nations competing in 35 events.[41] French alpine ski
racer
Jean-Claude Killy became only the second person to win all the
men's alpine skiing events. The organising committee sold television
rights for US$2 million, which was more than twice the cost of
the broadcast rights for the
Innsbruck
Innsbruck Games.[42] Venues were spread
over long distances requiring three athletes' villages. The organisers
claimed that this was necessary to accommodate technological advances,
however critics disputed this, alleging that the layout would
incorporate the best possible venues for television broadcasts at the
athletes' expense.[42]
The 1972 Winter Games, held in Sapporo, Japan, were the first to be
hosted on a continent other than
North America
North America or Europe. The issue of
professionalism was disputed during these Games when a number of
alpine skiers were found to have participated in a ski camp at Mammoth
Mountain in the United States; three days before the opening ceremony,
IOC president
Avery Brundage
Avery Brundage threatened to bar the skiers from
competing in the Games as he insisted that they were no longer
amateurs having benefited financially from their status as
athletes.[43] Eventually only Austrian Karl Schranz, who earned more
than the other skiers, was excluded from the competition.[44] Canada
did not send teams to the 1972 or 1976 ice hockey tournaments in
protest at not being able to use players from professional
leagues.[45]
Francisco Fernández Ochoa
Francisco Fernández Ochoa became the first (and, as of
2018, only) Spaniard to win a Winter Olympic gold medal when he
triumphed in the slalom.[46]
The
1976 Winter Olympics
1976 Winter Olympics had initially been awarded in 1970 to Denver,
Colorado
Colorado in the United States. These Games would have coincided with
the year of Colorado's centennial and the
United States
United States Bicentennial.
However, in November 1972 the people of
Colorado
Colorado voted against public
funding of the Games by a 3:2 margin.[47][48] The IOC responded by
offering the Games to Vancouver-Garibaldi, British Columbia, which had
previously been an official candidate for the 1976 Games. However, a
change in the provincial government resulted in an administration that
did not support the Olympic bid, so the IOC's offer was rejected. Salt
Lake City, previously a candidate for the 1972 Winter Olympics, then
put itself forward, but the IOC opted instead to invite
Innsbruck
Innsbruck to
host the 1976 Games, as most of the infrastructure from the 1964 Games
had been maintained. Despite only having half the usual time to
prepare for the Games,
Innsbruck
Innsbruck accepted the invitation to replace
Denver
Denver in February 1973.[49] Two Olympic flames were lit because it
was the second time that the Austrian town had hosted the Winter
Games.[49] The 1976 Games featured the first combination bobsleigh and
luge track, in neighbouring Igls.[46] The
Soviet Union
Soviet Union won its fourth
consecutive ice hockey gold medal.[49]
In 1980 the Winter Olympics returned to Lake Placid, which had hosted
the 1932 Games. The first boycott of a Winter Olympics took place at
these Games, when
Taiwan
Taiwan refused to participate after an edict by the
IOC mandated that they change their name and national anthem.[50] This
was an attempt by the IOC to accommodate China, who wished to compete
using the same name and anthem as those used by Taiwan.[50] As a
result,
China
China participated for the first time since 1952. American
speed-skater
Eric Heiden
Eric Heiden set either an Olympic or World record in
every one of the five events in which he competed, winning a total of
five individual gold medals and breaking the record for most
individual golds in a single Olympics (both Summer and Winter).[51]
Hanni Wenzel
Hanni Wenzel won both the slalom and giant slalom and her country,
Liechtenstein, became the smallest nation to produce an Olympic gold
medallist.[52] In the "Miracle on Ice", the American hockey team
composed of college players beat the favoured seasoned professionals
from the Soviet Union, and progressed to eventually win the gold
medal.[53][nb 4]
1984 to 1998[edit]
Alberto Tomba, winner of five Olympic medals in Calgary, Albertville and Lillehammer
Sapporo, Japan, and Gothenburg, Sweden, were front-runners to host the
1984 Winter Olympics. It was therefore a surprise when Sarajevo,
Yugoslavia, was selected as host.[56] The Games were well-organised
and not affected by the run-up to the war that engulfed the country
eight years later.[57] A total of 49 nations and 1,272 athletes
participated in 39 events. Host nation Yugoslavia won its first
Olympic medal
Olympic medal when alpine skier
Jure Franko
Jure Franko won silver in the giant
slalom. Another sporting highlight was the free dance performance of
British ice dancers
Jayne Torvill
Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean; their Boléro
routine received unanimous perfect scores for artistic impression,
earning them the gold medal.[57]
The Olympic Torch from the 1988 Winter
Olympic Games
Olympic Games in Calgary
In 1988, the Canadian city of
Calgary
Calgary hosted the first Winter Olympics
to span three weekends, lasting for a total of 16 days.[58] New events
were added in ski-jumping and speed skating, while future Olympic
sports curling, short track speed skating and freestyle skiing made
their debut appearance as demonstration sports. The speed skating
events were held indoors for the first time, on the Olympic Oval.
Dutch skater
Yvonne van Gennip
Yvonne van Gennip won three gold medals and set two world
records, beating skaters from the favoured East German team in every
race.[59] Her medal total was equalled by Finnish ski jumper Matti
Nykänen, who won all three events in his sport. Alberto Tomba, an
Italian skier, made his Olympic debut by winning both the giant slalom
and slalom. East German Christa Rothenburger won the women's
1,000 metre speed skating event. Seven months later she would
earn a silver in track cycling at the Summer Games in Seoul, to become
the only athlete to win medals in both a Summer and Winter Olympics in
the same year.[58]
The 1992 Winter Games were the last to be held in the same year as the
Summer Games.[60] They were hosted in the French
Savoie
Savoie region, with
18 events held in the city of
Albertville
Albertville and the remaining events
spread out over the Savoie.[60] Political changes of the time were
reflected in the composition of the Olympic teams competing in France:
this was the first Games to be held after the fall of
Communism
Communism and
the fall of the
Berlin
Berlin Wall, and
Germany
Germany competed as a single nation
for the first time since the 1964 Games; former Yugoslavian republics
Croatia and Slovenia made their debuts as independent nations; most of
the former Soviet republics still competed as a single team known as
the Unified Team, but the
Baltic States
Baltic States made independent appearances
for the first time since before World War II.[61] At 16 years
old, Finnish ski jumper
Toni Nieminen made history by becoming the
youngest male Winter Olympic champion.[62] New Zealand skier Annelise
Coberger became the first Winter Olympic medallist from the southern
hemisphere when she won a silver medal in the women's slalom.
The 1994 Winter Olympics, held in Lillehammer, Norway, were the first
Winter Games to be held separately from the Summer Games. This change
resulted from the decision reached in the 91st
IOC Session
IOC Session (1986) to
separate the summer and winter Games and place them in alternating
even-numbered years.[63]
Lillehammer
Lillehammer is the northernmost city to ever
host the Winter Games and it was the second time the Games were held
in Norway, after the
1952 Winter Olympics
1952 Winter Olympics in Oslo. After the
dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1993, the Czech Republic and Slovakia
made their Olympic debuts.[64] The women's figure skating competition
drew media attention when American skater
Nancy Kerrigan
Nancy Kerrigan was injured
on 6 January 1994, in an assault planned by the ex-husband of opponent
Tonya Harding.[65] Both skaters competed in the Games, but the gold
medal was controversially won by
Oksana Baiul
Oksana Baiul who became Ukraine's
first Olympic champion, while Kerrigan won the silver medal.[66][67]
Johann Olav Koss of
Norway
Norway won three gold medals, coming first in all
of the distance speed skating events.[68] 13-year-old Kim Yoon-Mi
became the youngest-ever Olympic gold medallist when
South Korea
South Korea won
the women's 3,000 meter speed skating relay.
Russia
Russia won the most
events, with eleven gold medals, while
Norway
Norway achieved 26 podium
finishes, collecting the most medals overall on home ground. Juan
Antonio Samaranch described
Lillehammer
Lillehammer as "the best Olympic Winter
Games ever" in his closing ceremony speech.[69]
The
1998 Winter Olympics
1998 Winter Olympics were held in the Japanese city of
Nagano
Nagano and
were the first Games to host more than 2,000 athletes.[70] The men's
ice hockey tournament was opened to professionals for the first time.
Canada
Canada and the
United States
United States were favoured to win the tournament as
they both fielded numerous NHL players,[70] but surprisingly neither
team won any medals and it was the Czech Republic who prevailed.[70]
Women's ice hockey made its debut and the
United States
United States won the gold
medal.[71]
Bjørn Dæhlie
Bjørn Dæhlie of
Norway
Norway won three gold medals in Nordic
skiing, becoming the most decorated Winter Olympic athlete, with eight
gold medals and twelve medals overall.[70][72] Austrian Hermann Maier
survived a crash during the downhill competition and returned to win
gold in the super-G and the giant slalom.[70]
Tara Lipinski
Tara Lipinski of the
United States, aged just 15, became the youngest ever female gold
medallist in an individual event when she won the Ladies' Singles, a
record that had stood since
Sonja Henie
Sonja Henie of
Norway
Norway won the same event,
also aged 15, in
St. Moritz
St. Moritz in 1928. New world records were set in
speed skating largely due to the introduction of the clap skate.[73]
21st century[edit]
2002 to 2010[edit]
Olympic flame during the Opening Ceremony of the 2002 Games in Salt Lake City
The
2002 Winter Olympics
2002 Winter Olympics were held in Salt Lake City, United States,
hosting 77 nations and 2,399 athletes in 78 events in 7 sports.[74]
These Games were the first to take place since the September 11
attacks of 2001, which meant a higher degree of security to avoid a
terrorist attack. The opening ceremony saw signs of the aftermath of
the events of that day, including the flag that flew at Ground Zero,
NYPD officer Daniel Rodríguez singing "God Bless America", and honour
guards of NYPD and FDNY members.
German
Georg Hackl
Georg Hackl won a silver in the singles luge, becoming the
first athlete in Olympic history to win medals in the same individual
event in five consecutive Olympics.[74]
Canada
Canada achieved an
unprecedented double by winning both the men's and women's ice hockey
gold medals.[74]
Canada
Canada became embroiled with
Russia
Russia in a controversy
that involved the judging of the pairs figure skating competition. The
Russian pair of
Yelena Berezhnaya
Yelena Berezhnaya and
Anton Sikharulidze
Anton Sikharulidze competed
against the Canadian pair of
Jamie Salé
Jamie Salé and
David Pelletier
David Pelletier for the
gold medal. The Canadians appeared to have skated well enough to win
the competition, yet the Russians were awarded the gold. The judging
broke along
Cold War
Cold War lines with judges from former Communist countries
favouring the Russian pair and judges from Western nations voting for
the Canadians. The only exception was the French judge, Marie-Reine Le
Gougne, who awarded the gold to the Russians. An investigation
revealed that she had been pressured to give the gold to the Russian
pair regardless of how they skated; in return the Russian judge would
look favourably on the French entrants in the ice dancing
competition.[75] The IOC decided to award both pairs the gold medal in
a second medal ceremony held later in the Games.[76] Australian Steven
Bradbury became the first gold medallist from the southern hemisphere
when he won the 1,000 metre short-track speed skating event.[77]
Close-up of the
Olympic Flame
Olympic Flame during the
2006 Winter Olympics
2006 Winter Olympics in Turin
The Italian city of
Turin
Turin hosted the 2006 Winter Olympics. It was the
second time that
Italy
Italy had hosted the Winter Olympic Games. South
Korean athletes won 10 medals, including 6 gold in the short-track
speed skating events. Sun-Yu Jin won three gold medals while her
teammate
Hyun-Soo Ahn
Hyun-Soo Ahn won three gold medals and a bronze.[78] In the
women's Cross-Country team pursuit Canadian
Sara Renner
Sara Renner broke one of
her poles and, when he saw her dilemma, Norwegian coach Bjørnar
Håkensmoen decided to lend her a pole. In so doing she was able to
help her team win a silver medal in the event at the expense of the
Norwegian team, who finished fourth.[78][79] On winning the Super-G,
Kjetil-Andre Aamodt
Kjetil-Andre Aamodt of
Norway
Norway became the most decorated ski racer of
all time with 4 gold and 8 overall medals. He is also the only ski
racer to have won the same event at three different Olympics, winning
the Super-G in 1992, 2002 and 2006.
Claudia Pechstein
Claudia Pechstein of Germany
became the first speed skater to earn nine career medals.[78] In
February 2009, Pechstein tested positive for "blood manipulation" and
received a two-year suspension, which she appealed. The Court of
Arbitration for Sport upheld her suspension but a Swiss court ruled
that she could compete for a spot on the 2010 German Olympic team.[80]
This ruling was brought to the Swiss Federal Tribunal, which
overturned the lower court's ruling and precluded her from competing
in Vancouver.[81]
A memorial to
Nodar Kumaritashvili
Nodar Kumaritashvili in Whistler, photographed on 20
March 2010
In 2003 the IOC awarded the
2010 Winter Olympics
2010 Winter Olympics to Vancouver, thus
allowing
Canada
Canada to host its second Winter Olympics. With a population
of more than 2.5 million people
Vancouver
Vancouver is the largest
metropolitan area to ever host a Winter Olympic Games.[82] Over 2,500
athletes from 82 countries participated in 86 events.[83] The death of
Georgian luger
Nodar Kumaritashvili
Nodar Kumaritashvili in a training run on the day of
the opening ceremonies resulted in the Whistler Sliding Centre
changing the track layout on safety grounds.[84] Norwegian
cross-country skier
Marit Bjørgen
Marit Bjørgen won five medals in the six
cross-country events on the women's programme. She finished the
Olympics with three golds, a silver and a bronze.[85] The Vancouver
Games were notable for the poor performance of the Russian athletes.
From their first Winter Olympics in 1956 to the 2006 Games, a Soviet
or Russian delegation had never been outside the top five
medal-winning nations, but in 2010 they finished sixth in total medals
and eleventh in gold medals. President
Dmitry Medvedev
Dmitry Medvedev called for the
resignation of top sports officials immediately after the Games.[86]
Russia's disappointing performance at
Vancouver
Vancouver is cited as the reason
behind the implementation of a doping scheme alleged to have been in
operation at major events such as the 2014 Games at Sochi.[87] The
success of Asian countries stood in stark contrast to the
under-performing Russian team, with
Vancouver
Vancouver marking a high point for
medals won by Asian countries. In 1992 the Asian countries had won
fifteen medals, three of which were gold. In
Vancouver
Vancouver the total
number of medals won by athletes from
Asia
Asia had increased to
thirty-one, with eleven of them being gold. The rise of Asian nations
in Winter Olympics sports is due in part to the growth of winter
sports programmes and the interest in winter sports in nations such as
South Korea,
Japan
Japan and China.[88][89]
2014 to 2018[edit]
Sochi, Russia, was selected as the host city for the 2014 Winter
Olympics over Salzburg, Austria, and Pyeongchang, South Korea. This
was the first time that
Russia
Russia had hosted a Winter Olympics.[90] The
Games took place from 7 to 23 February 2014.[91] A record 2,800
athletes from 88 countries competed in 98 events. The Olympic Village
and Olympic Stadium were located on the
Black Sea
Black Sea coast. All of the
mountain venues were 50 kilometres (31 miles) away in the alpine
region known as Krasnaya Polyana.[90] The Games were the most
expensive so far, with a cost of £30 billion (USD 51 billion).
On the snow, Norwegian biathlete
Ole Einar Bjørndalen
Ole Einar Bjørndalen took two golds
to bring his total tally of Olympic medals to 13, overtaking his
compatriot
Bjørn Dæhlie
Bjørn Dæhlie to become the most decorated Winter Olympian
of all time. Another Norwegian, cross-country skier Marit Bjørgen
took three golds; her total of ten Olympic medals tied her as the
female Winter Olympian with most medals, alongside
Raisa Smetanina
Raisa Smetanina and
Stefania Belmondo. Snowboarder
Ayumu Hirano became the youngest
medallist on snow at the Winter Games when he took a silver in the
halfpipe competition at the age of fifteen. On the ice, the Dutch
dominated the speed skating events, taking 23 medals, four clean
sweeps of the podium places and at least one medal in each of the
twelve medal events.
Ireen Wüst
Ireen Wüst was their most successful competitor,
taking two golds and three silvers. In figure skating, Yuzuru Hanyu
became the first skater to break the 100-point barrier in the short
programme on the way to winning the gold medal. Among the sledding
disciplines, luger
Armin Zöggeler
Armin Zöggeler took a bronze, becoming the first
Winter Olympian to secure a medal in six consecutive Games.[90]
Following their disappointing performance at the 2010 Games, and an
investment of £600 million in elite sport,
Russia
Russia initially topped
the medal table, taking 33 medals including thirteen golds.[92]
However Grigory Rodchenkov, the former head of the Russian national
anti-doping laboratory, subsequently claimed that he had been involved
in doping dozens of Russian competitors for the Games, and that he had
been assisted by the Russian
Federal Security Service
Federal Security Service in opening and
re-sealing bottles containing urine samples so that samples with
banned substances could be replaced with "clean" urine. A subsequent
investigation commissioned by the
World Anti-Doping Agency
World Anti-Doping Agency led by
Richard McLaren concluded that a state-sponsored doping programme had
operated in
Russia
Russia from "at least late 2011 to 2015" across the "vast
majority" of Summer and Winter Olympic sports.[93] On 5 December 2017,
the IOC announced that
Russia
Russia would be banned from the 2018 Winter
Olympics with immediate effect[94] and by the end of 2017 the IOC
Disciplinary Commission had disqualified 43 Russian athletes,
stripping thirteen medals and knocking
Russia
Russia from the top of the
medal table, thus putting
Norway
Norway in the lead.[95][96][97]
On 6 July 2011, Pyeongchang, South Korea, was selected to host the
2018 Winter Olympics
2018 Winter Olympics over Munich, Germany, and Annecy, France.[98]
This was the first time that
South Korea
South Korea had been selected to host a
Winter Olympics and it was the second time the Olympics were held in
the country overall, after the
1988 Summer Olympics
1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul. The
Games took place from 9 to 25 February 2018. More than 2,900 athletes
from 92 countries participated in 102 events. The Olympic Stadium and
many of the sports venues were situated in the
Alpensia Resort
Alpensia Resort in
Daegwallyeong-myeon, Pyeongchang, while a number of other sports
venues were located in the
Gangneung Olympic Park in Pyeongchang's
neighboring city of Gangneung.
The lead-up to the
2018 Winter Olympics
2018 Winter Olympics was affected by the tensions
between North and
South Korea
South Korea and the ongoing Russian doping scandal.
Despite tense relations,
North Korea
North Korea agreed to participate in the
Games, enter with
South Korea
South Korea during the opening ceremony as a unified
Korea, and field a unified team in women's ice hockey. Individual
Russian athletes, who qualified and could demonstrate they had
complied with the IOC's doping regulations, were given the option to
compete neutrally in Pyeongchang as "Olympic Athletes from Russia"
(OAR) but they were not allowed to compete under the Russian flag.[94]
The Games saw the addition of big air snowboarding, mass start speed
skating, mixed doubles curling, and mixed team alpine skiing to the
programme. On the ice, the Netherlands again dominated the speed
skating, winning gold medals in seven of the ten individual events.
Dutch speed skater
Sven Kramer
Sven Kramer won gold in the men's 5000m event,
becoming the only male speed skater to win the same Olympic event
three times. On the snow,
Norway
Norway led the medal tally in cross-country
skiing, with
Marit Bjørgen
Marit Bjørgen winning bronze in the women's team sprint
and gold in the 30 kilometre classical event, bringing her total
Olympic medal
Olympic medal haul to fifteen, the most won by any athlete (male or
female) in Winter Olympics history.
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo became
the youngest ever male to win an Olympic gold in cross-country skiing
when he won the men's sprint at age 21.
Noriaki Kasai
Noriaki Kasai of
Japan
Japan became
the first athlete in history to participate in eight Winter Olympics
when he took part in the ski jumping qualification the day before the
opening of the Games.
Ester Ledecká
Ester Ledecká of the Czech Republic won gold in
the skiing super-G event and another gold in the snowboarding parallel
giant slalom, making her the first female athlete to win Olympic gold
medals in two different sports at a single Winter Games.
Norway
Norway led the total medal standings with 39, the highest number of
medals by a nation in any Winter Olympics, followed by Germany's 31
and Canada's 29. Host nation
South Korea
South Korea won seventeen medals, their
highest medal haul at a Winter Olympics.
Future[edit]
The host city for the 2022 Winter Olympics, is
Beijing
Beijing in northern
China, elected on 31 July 2015, at the
128th IOC Session
128th IOC Session in Kuala
Lumpur.
Beijing
Beijing will be the first city ever to have hosted both the
Summer and Winter Olympics. The
2022 Winter Olympics
2022 Winter Olympics will take place
between 4 and 20 February 2022.
Controversy[edit]
Main article:
Olympic Games
Olympic Games scandals and controversies § Winter
Olympics
Juan Antonio Samaranch, former IOC president, was implicated in a bidding scandal for the 2002 Winter Olympics.
The process for awarding host city honours came under intense scrutiny
after
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake City had been awarded the right to host the 2002
Games.[99] Soon after the host city had been announced it was
discovered that the organisers had engaged in an elaborate bribery
scheme to curry favour with IOC officials.[99] Gifts and other
financial considerations were given to those who would evaluate and
vote on Salt Lake City's bid. These gifts included medical treatment
for relatives, a college scholarship for one member's son and a land
deal in Utah. Even IOC president
Juan Antonio Samaranch
Juan Antonio Samaranch received two
rifles valued at $2,000. Samaranch defended the gift as
inconsequential since, as president, he was a non-voting member.[100]
The subsequent investigation uncovered inconsistencies in the bids for
every Games (both summer and winter) since 1988.[101] For example, the
gifts received by IOC members from the Japanese Organising Committee
for Nagano's bid for the
1998 Winter Olympics
1998 Winter Olympics were described by the
investigation committee as "astronomical".[102] Although nothing
strictly illegal had been done, the IOC feared that corporate sponsors
would lose faith in the integrity of the process and that the Olympic
brand would be tarnished to such an extent that advertisers would
begin to pull their support.[103] The investigation resulted in the
expulsion of 10 IOC members and the sanctioning of another 10. New
terms and age limits were established for IOC membership, and 15
former Olympic athletes were added to the committee. Stricter rules
for future bids were imposed, with ceilings imposed on the value of
gifts IOC members could accept from bid cities.[104][105][106]
Host city legacy[edit]
According to the IOC, the host city for the Winter Olympics is
responsible for "...establishing functions and services for all
aspects of the Games, such as sports planning, venues, finance,
technology, accommodation, catering, media services, etc., as well as
operations during the Games."[107] Due to the cost of hosting the
Games, most host cities never realise a profit on their
investment.[108] For example, the
2006 Winter Olympics
2006 Winter Olympics in Turin,
Italy, cost $3.6 billion to host. By comparison, the 1998 Winter
Olympics in Nagano, Japan, cost $12.5 billion.[109] The
organisers of the
Nagano
Nagano Games claimed that the cost of extending the
bullet train service from
Tokyo
Tokyo to
Nagano
Nagano was responsible for the
large price tag.[109] The organising committee had hoped that the
exposure gained from hosting the Winter Olympics, and the improved
access to
Nagano
Nagano from Tokyo, would benefit the local economy for years
afterwards. In actual fact, Nagano's economy did experience a
post-Olympic boom for a year or two, but the long-term effects have
not materialised as anticipated.[109] The likelihood of heavy debt is
a deterrent to prospective host cities, as well as the prospect of
unused sports venues and infrastructure saddling the local community
with upkeep costs into the future with no appreciable post-Olympic
value.[110]
The Winter games has the added problem of the alpine events requiring
a mountain location; the men's downhill needs an 800 meter altitude
difference along a suitable course. As this is a focal event that is
central to the Games, the IOC will not agree to it taking place a
great distance from the main host city.[111] The requirement for a
mountain location also means that venues such as hockey arenas often
have to be built in sparsely populated areas with little future need
for a large arena. Due to cost issues, the only candidate cities for
the
2022 Winter Olympics
2022 Winter Olympics were in dictatorship countries, and a number
of European countries declined due to political doubt over costs. Both
the 2006 and 2010 Games, which were hosted in countries where large
cities are located close to suitable mountain regions, had lower costs
since more venues and transport infrastructure already existed.
The IOC has enacted several initiatives to mitigate these concerns.
Firstly, the commission has agreed to fund part of the host city's
budget for staging the Games.[112] Secondly, the qualifying host
countries are limited to those that have the resources and
infrastructure to successfully host an
Olympic Games
Olympic Games without
negatively impacting the region or nation; this consequently rules out
a large portion of the developing world.[113] Finally, any prospective
host city planning to bid for the Games is required to add a "legacy
plan" to their proposal, with a view to the long-term economic and
environmental impact that hosting the Olympics will have on the
region.[114]
Doping[edit]
In 1967 the IOC began enacting drug testing protocols. They started by
randomly testing athletes at the 1968 Winter Olympics.[115] The first
Winter Games athlete to test positive for a banned substance was Alois
Schloder, a West German hockey player,[116] but his team was still
allowed to compete.[117] During the 1970s testing outside of
competition was escalated because it was found to deter athletes from
using performance-enhancing drugs.[118] The problem with testing
during this time was a lack of standardisation of the test procedures,
which undermined the credibility of the tests. It was not until the
late 1980s that international sporting federations began to coordinate
efforts to standardise the drug-testing protocols.[119] The IOC took
the lead in the fight against steroids when it established the
independent
World Anti-Doping Agency
World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) in November
1999.[120][121]
The
2006 Winter Olympics
2006 Winter Olympics in
Turin
Turin became notable for a scandal
involving the emerging trend of blood doping, the use of blood
transfusions or synthetic hormones such as
Erythropoietin
Erythropoietin (EPO) to
improve oxygen flow and thus reduce fatigue.[122] The Italian police
conducted a raid on the Austrian cross-country ski team's residence
during the Games where they seized blood-doping specimens and
equipment.[123] This event followed the pre-Olympics suspension of 12
cross-country skiers who tested positive for unusually high levels of
haemoglobin, which is evidence of blood doping.[122]
The
2014 Winter Olympics
2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi's Russian Doping Scandal has
resulted in the
International Olympic Committee
International Olympic Committee to begin disciplinary
proceedings against 28 (later increased to 46) Russian athletes who
competed at the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, acting on evidence
that their urine samples were tampered with.[124][125][126][127][128]
Politics[edit]
Cold War[edit]
A postage stamp issued by East
Germany
Germany in 1968 in commemoration of
their first Winter Olympics as an independent country
The Winter Olympics have been an ideological front in the Cold War
since the
Soviet Union
Soviet Union first participated at the 1956 Winter Games. It
did not take long for the
Cold War
Cold War combatants to discover what a
powerful propaganda tool the
Olympic Games
Olympic Games could be. The advent of the
state-sponsored "full-time amateur athlete" of the Eastern Bloc
countries further eroded the ideology of the pure amateur, as it put
the self-financed amateurs of the Western countries at a disadvantage.
The
Soviet Union
Soviet Union entered teams of athletes who were all nominally
students, soldiers, or working in a profession, but many of whom were
in reality paid by the state to train on a full-time basis.[33]
Nevertheless, the IOC held to the traditional rules regarding
amateurism until the '90s.[129]
The
Cold War
Cold War created tensions amongst countries allied to the two
superpowers. The strained relationship between East and West Germany
created a difficult political situation for the IOC. Because of its
role in World War II,
Germany
Germany was not allowed to compete at the 1948
Winter Olympics.[24] In 1950 the IOC recognised the West German
Olympic Committee, and invited East and West
Germany
Germany to compete as a
unified team at the 1952 Winter Games.[130] East
Germany
Germany declined the
invitation and instead sought international legitimacy separate from
West Germany.[131] In 1955 the
Soviet Union
Soviet Union recognised East
Germany
Germany as
a sovereign state, thereby giving more credibility to East Germany's
campaign to become an independent participant at the Olympics. The IOC
agreed to provisionally accept the East German National Olympic
Committee with the condition that East and West Germans compete on one
team.[132] The situation became tenuous when the
Berlin
Berlin Wall was
constructed in 1962 and western nations began refusing visas to East
German athletes.[133] The uneasy compromise of a unified team held
until the 1968
Grenoble
Grenoble Games when the IOC officially split the teams
and threatened to reject the host-city bids of any country that
refused entry visas to East German athletes.[134]
Boycott[edit]
The Winter Games have had only one national team boycott when Taiwan
decided not to participate in the
1980 Winter Olympics
1980 Winter Olympics held in Lake
Placid. Prior to the Games the IOC agreed to allow
China
China to compete in
the Olympics for the first time since 1952.
China
China was given permission
to compete as the "People's Republic of China" (PRC) and to use the
PRC flag and anthem. Until 1980 the island of
Taiwan
Taiwan had been
competing under the name "Republic of China" (ROC) and had been using
the ROC flag and anthem.[50] The IOC attempted to have the countries
compete together but when this proved to be unacceptable the IOC
demanded that
Taiwan
Taiwan cease to call itself the "Republic of
China".[135][136] The IOC renamed the island "Chinese Taipei" and
demanded that it adopt a different flag and national anthem,
stipulations that
Taiwan
Taiwan would not agree to. Despite numerous appeals
and court hearings the IOC's decision stood. When the Taiwanese
athletes arrived at the Olympic village with their Republic of China
identification cards they were not admitted. They subsequently left
the Olympics in protest, just before the opening ceremonies.[50]
Taiwan
Taiwan returned to Olympic competition at the 1984 Winter Games in
Sarajevo
Sarajevo as Chinese Taipei. The country agreed to compete under a flag
bearing the emblem of their
National Olympic Committee
National Olympic Committee and to play the
anthem of their
National Olympic Committee
National Olympic Committee should one of their
athletes win a gold medal. The agreement remains in place to this
day.[137]
Sports[edit]
The
Olympic Charter
Olympic Charter limits winter sports to "those ... which are
practised on snow or ice."[138] Since 1992 a number of new sports have
been added to the Olympic programme; which include short track speed
skating, snowboarding, freestyle and moguls skiing. The addition of
these events has broadened the appeal of the Winter Olympics beyond
Europe
Europe and North America. While European powers such as
Norway
Norway and
Germany
Germany still dominate the traditional Winter Olympic sports,
countries such as South Korea, Australia and
Canada
Canada are finding
success in the new sports. The results are: more parity in the
national medal tables; more interest in the Winter Olympics; and
higher global television ratings.[139]
Current sports[edit]
Sport Years Events Medal events contested in 2014
Alpine skiing Since 1936 11 Men's and women's downhill, super G, giant slalom, slalom, and combined, and parallel slalom.[140]
Biathlon Since 1960Note 3 11 Sprint (men: 10 km; women: 7.5 km), the individual (men: 20 km; women: 15 km), pursuit (men: 12.5 km; women: 10 km), relay (men: 4x7.5 km; women: 4x6 km; mixed: 2x7.5 km+2x6 km), and the mass start (men: 15 km; women: 12.5 km).[141]
Bobsleigh Since 1924 (except 1960) 3 Four-man race, two-man race and two-woman race.[142]
Cross-country skiing Since 1924 12 Men's sprint, team sprint, 30 km pursuit, 15 km, 50 km and 4x10 km relay; women's sprint, team sprint, 15 km pursuit, 10 km, 30 km and 4x5 km relay.[143]
Curling 1924, since 1998 3 Men's, women's and mixed doubles. tournaments.[144]
Figure skating Since 1924Note 1 5 Men's and women's singles; pairs; ice dancing and team event.[145]
Freestyle skiing Since 1992 10 Men's and women's moguls, aerials, ski cross, superpipe, and slopestyle.[146]
Ice hockey Since 1924Note 2 2 Men's and women's tournaments.[147]
Luge Since 1964 4 Men's and women's singles, men's doubles, team relay.[148]
Nordic combined Since 1924 3 Men's 10 km individual normal hill, 10 km individual large hill and team.[149]
Short track speed skating Since 1992 8 Men's and women's 500 m, 1000 m, 1500 m; women's 3000 m relay; and men's 5000 m relay.[150]
Skeleton 1928, 1948, Since 2002 2 Men's and women's events.[151]
Ski jumping Since 1924 4 Men's individual large hill, team large hill;[152] men's and women's individual normal hill.
Snowboarding Since 1998 8 Men's and women's parallel, half-pipe, snowboard cross, and slopestyle.[153]
Speed skating Since 1924 14 Men's and women's 500 m, 1000 m, 1500 m, 5000 m, Massstart and team pursuit; women's 3000 m; men's 10,000 m.[154]
^ Note 1.
Figure skating
Figure skating events were held at the 1908 and 1920 Summer
Olympics.
^ Note 2. A men's ice hockey tournament was held at the 1920 Summer
Olympics.
^ Note 3. The IOC's website now treats Men's Military Patrol at the
1924 Games as an event within the sport of Biathlon.[nb 2]
Demonstration events[edit]
Demonstration sports have historically provided a venue for host
countries to attract publicity to locally popular sports by having a
competition without granting medals.
Demonstration sports were
discontinued after 1992.[155] Military patrol, a precursor to the
biathlon, was a medal sport in 1924 and was demonstrated in 1928, 1936
and 1948, becoming an official sport in 1960.[156] The special figures
figure skating event was only contested at the 1908 Summer
Olympics.[157]
Bandy
Bandy (Russian hockey) is a sport popular in the Nordic
countries and Russia. In the latter it's considered a national
sport.[158] It was demonstrated at the
Oslo
Oslo Games.[159] Ice stock
sport, a German variant of curling, was demonstrated in 1936 in
Germany
Germany and 1964 in Austria.[20] The ski ballet event, later known as
ski-acro, was demonstrated in 1988 and 1992.[160] Skijöring, skiing
behind dogs, was a demonstration sport in
St. Moritz
St. Moritz in 1928.[159] A
sled-dog race was held at Lake Placid in 1932.[159]
Speed skiing was
demonstrated in
Albertville
Albertville at the 1992 Winter Olympics.[161] Winter
pentathlon, a variant of the modern pentathlon, was included as a
demonstration event at the 1948 Games in Switzerland. It included
cross-country skiing, shooting, downhill skiing, fencing and horse
riding.[141]
Ten most successful nations[edit]
Main article: All-time
Olympic Games
Olympic Games medal table
The table below uses official data provided by the IOC.
Defunct nation
No. Nation Games Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Norway (NOR) 23 132 125 111 368
2 United States (USA) 23 105 110 90 305
3 Germany (GER) 12 92 86 60 238
4 Austria (AUT) 23 64 81 87 232
5 Canada (CAN) 23 73 64 62 199
6 Soviet Union (URS) 9 78 57 59 194
7 Finland (FIN) 23 43 63 61 167
8 Sweden (SWE) 23 57 46 55 158
9 Switzerland (SUI) 23 55 46 52 153
10 Netherlands (NED) 21 45 44 41 130
List of Winter Olympic Games[edit]
Games Year Host Dates Nations Competitors Sports Disci- plines Events Top Nation Ref
Total Men Women
I 1924 Chamonix, France 25 January – 5 February 16 258 247 11 6 9 16 Norway (NOR) [2]
II 1928 St. Moritz, Switzerland 11–19 February 25 464 438 26 4 8 14 Norway (NOR) [3]
III 1932 Lake Placid, United States 4–15 February 17 252 231 21 4 7 14 United States (USA) [4]
IV 1936 Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany 6–16 February 28 646 566 80 4 8 17 Norway (NOR) [5]
1940 Awarded to Sapporo, Japan; cancelled due to World War II
1944 Awarded to Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy; cancelled due to World War II
V 1948 St. Moritz, Switzerland 30 January – 8 February 28 669 592 77 4 9 22 Norway (NOR) Sweden (SWE) [6]
VI 1952 Oslo, Norway 14–25 February 30 694 585 109 4 8 22 Norway (NOR) [7]
VII 1956 Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy 26 January – 5 February 32 821 687 134 4 8 24 Soviet Union (URS) [8]
VIII 1960 Squaw Valley, United States 18–28 February 30 665 521 144 4 8 27 Soviet Union (URS) [9]
IX 1964 Innsbruck, Austria 29 January – 9 February 36 1091 892 199 6 10 34 Soviet Union (URS) [10]
X 1968 Grenoble, France 6–18 February 37 1158 947 211 6 10 35 Norway (NOR) [11]
XI 1972 Sapporo, Japan 3–13 February 35 1006 801 205 6 10 35 Soviet Union (URS) [12]
XII 1976 Innsbruck, Austria 4–15 February 37 1123 892 231 6 10 37 Soviet Union (URS) [13]
XIII 1980 Lake Placid, United States 13–24 February 37 1072 840 232 6 10 38 Soviet Union (URS) [14]
XIV 1984 Sarajevo, Yugoslavia 8–19 February 49 1272 998 274 6 10 39 East Germany (GDR) [15]
XV 1988 Calgary, Canada 13–28 February 57 1423 1122 301 6 10 46 Soviet Union (URS) [16]
XVI 1992 Albertville, France 8–23 February 64 1801 1313 488 6 12 57 Germany (GER) [17]
XVII 1994 Lillehammer, Norway 12–27 February 67 1737 1215 522 6 12 61 Russia (RUS) [18]
XVIII 1998 Nagano, Japan 7–22 February 72 2176 1389 787 7 14 68 Germany (GER) [19]
XIX 2002 Salt Lake City, United States 8–24 February 78[162] 2399 1513 886 7 15 78 Norway (NOR) [20]
XX 2006 Turin, Italy 10–26 February 80 2508 1548 960 7 15 84 Germany (GER) [21]
XXI 2010 Vancouver, Canada 12–28 February 82 2566 1522 1044 7 15 86 Canada (CAN) [22]
XXII 2014 Sochi, Russia 7–23 February 88 2873 1714 1159 7 15 98 Russia (RUS) [23]
XXIII 2018 Pyeongchang, South Korea 9–25 February 92 2922 1680 1242 7 15 102 Norway (NOR) [24]
XXIV 2022 Beijing, China 4–20 February Future event [25]
Unlike the Summer Olympics, the cancelled
1940 Winter Olympics
1940 Winter Olympics and
1944 Winter Olympics
1944 Winter Olympics are not included in the official Roman numeral
counts for the Winter Games. While the official titles of the Summer
Games count Olympiads, the titles of the Winter Games only count the
Games themselves.
Map of Winter Olympics locations. Countries that have hosted one Winter Olympics are shaded green, while countries that have hosted two or more are shaded blue.
See also[edit]
List of multiple Winter Olympic medallists
List of participating nations at the Winter Olympic Games
Lists of Olympic medallists
Olympic Games
Olympic Games scandals and controversies
Winter Paralympic Games
Paralympic Games
Summer Olympic Games
Notes[edit]
^ "French and English are the official languages for the Olympic
Games.", [1].(..)
^ a b c The official website of the Olympic Movement now treats Men's
Military Patrol at the 1924 Games as an event within the sport of
Biathlon.[1][2] However, the 1924 Official Report treats it as an
event and discipline within what was then called Skiing and is now
called Nordic Skiing.[3][4]
^ At the closing of the 1924 Games a prize was also awarded for
'alpinisme' (mountaineering), a sport that did not lend itself very
well for tournaments:
Pierre de Coubertin
Pierre de Coubertin presented a prize for
'alpinisme' to Charles Granville Bruce, the leader of the expedition
that tried to climb
Mount Everest
Mount Everest in 1922.
^ The US beat the Soviets as part of a medal round that also included
Finland and Sweden, so they did not actually win the gold medal until
beating Finland a few days later.[54][55]
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^ Official Report (1924), p 646: Le Programme ... II. — Epreuves par
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tir). (The Programme ... II. — Team events - 12. Skiing :
Military Race (20 to 30 kilometres, with shooting)).
^ Official Report (1924), p 664: CONCOURS DE SKI - Jurys - COURSE
MILITAIRE. (Skiing Competitions - Juries - Military Race)
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Claudia Pechstein
Claudia Pechstein Tries
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^ "Canadian Statistics – Population by selected ethnic origins, by
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^ "
Vancouver
Vancouver 2010". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 24
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the most medals?". The Christian Science Monitor. CSMonitor.com.
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^ a b c "
Sochi
Sochi 2014". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 11
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^ Pinsent, Matthew (15 October 2011). "
Sochi
Sochi 2014: A look at Russia's
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Sochi
Sochi 2014:
Russia
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^ "
Russia
Russia state-sponsored doping across majority of Olympic sports,
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Russia
Russia Olympic medals stripped; new
Sochi
Sochi medal standings".
NBC Sports. November 27, 2017.
^ "
Russia
Russia toppled from
Sochi
Sochi 2014 medals first place but final count
unknown". Reuters. November 28, 2017.
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^ "It's looking downhill for Quebec's Olympic bid". December 13,
2010.
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^ Preuss (2004), p. 284
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Winter Olympic legacy can last for 60 years". The Daily Telegraph.
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^ Yesalis (2000), p. 57
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Sapporo Olympic Winter Games.
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Says State-Run Doping Fueled Olympic Gold". The New York Times.
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^ Brownell (2005), p. 187
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Canada
Canada ride new sports
to top of Winter Olympics medal count". The Christian Science Monitor.
CSMonitor.com. Retrieved 23 August 2010.
^ "Alpine Skiing". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ a b "Biathlon". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Bobsleigh". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Cross Country Skiing". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved
12 March 2010.
^ "Curling". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Figure Skating". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12
March 2010.
^ "Freestyle skiing". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12
March 2010.
^ "Ice Hockey". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Luge". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Nordic Combined". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12
March 2010.
^ "Short Track Speed Sskating". International Olympic Committee.
Retrieved 12 March 2010.
^ "Skeleton". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Ski Jumping". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Snowboard". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Speed Skating". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 12 March
2010.
^ "Olympic Sports". Inside The Games. Archived from the original on 10
July 2014. Retrieved 2 August 2014.
^ "
Biathlon
Biathlon history". USBiathlon.org. Archived from the original on 8
October 2011. Retrieved 26 March 2009.
^ "Figure Skating at the 1908
London
London Summer Games". Sports Reference
LLC. Retrieved 26 March 2009.
^ "Russian bandy players blessed for victory at world championship in
Kazan". Tatar-Inform. 21 January 2011. Archived from the original on
24 April 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
^ a b c Arnold, Eric (28 January 2010). "Strangest Olympics Sports In
History". Forbes. Forbes.com. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
^ "Freestyle Skiing History". The National Post. Canadian Broadcasting
Company. 4 December 2009. Archived from the original on 28 January
2010. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
^ Janofsky, Michael (18 December 1991). "Hitting the slopes in the
fast lane". The New York Times. NYTimes.com. Retrieved 26 March
2009.
^ The IOC site for the 2002 Winter
Olympic Games
Olympic Games gives erroneous
figure of 77 participated NOCs; however, one can count 78 nations
looking through official results of 2002 Games Part 1 Archived 3
January 2014 at the Wayback Machine., Part 2 Archived 18 January 2014
at the Wayback Machine., Part 3 Archived 18 January 2014 at the
Wayback Machine.. Probably this error is consequence that Costa Rica's
delegation of one athlete joined the Games after the Opening Ceremony,
so 77 nations participated in Opening Ceremony and 78 nations
participated in the Games.
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WorldCat Identities VIAF: 147224752 LCCN: n2006026303 GND: 4172569-4 SUDOC: 052611744 BNF: cb135685825 (data) NKC: ko2006341815
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