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United States at the Olympics

The United States of America has sent many athletes to the celebrations of the Olympic Games, starting with the first modern Olympics held in 1896. Athletes representing the United States have participated in every Olympic Games with the exception of the 1980 Summer Olympics, during which it led a boycott in protest of the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan. The United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC) is the National Olympic Committee for the United States.

American athletes have won a total of 2,629 medals (1,061 of them gold) at the Summer Olympic Games, and another 330 (114 of them gold) at the Winter Olympic Games. This makes the United States the most prolific medal-winning nation in the history of the Olympics. The United States remains one of the only major teams in the world to receive no government funding.[1][2][3][4]

Hosted Games edit

 
Swimmer Michael Phelps and President George W. Bush on August 10, 2008, at the National Aquatic Center in Beijing. Phelps is the most decorated Olympic athlete of all time.[5][6]

The United States has hosted or was the designated host of the modern Olympic Games on nine occasions, more than any other nation:

Games Host city Dates Nations Participants Events
1904 Summer Olympics St. Louis, Missouri July 1 – November 23 12 666 91
1932 Winter Olympics Lake Placid, New York February 7–15 17 252 14
1932 Summer Olympics Los Angeles, California July 30 – August 14 37 1,332 117
1960 Winter Olympics Squaw Valley, California February 2–20 30 665 27
1980 Winter Olympics Lake Placid, New York February 13–24 37 1,072 38
1984 Summer Olympics Los Angeles, California July 28 – August 12 140 6,829 221
1996 Summer Olympics Atlanta, Georgia July 19 – August 4 197 10,318 271
2002 Winter Olympics Salt Lake City, Utah February 8–24 77 2,399 78
2028 Summer Olympics Los Angeles, California July 14 – 30 TBA TBA TBA

Unsuccessful bids edit

Games City Winner of bid[7]
1916 Summer Olympics Cleveland Berlin
1920 Summer Olympics Atlanta
Cleveland
Philadelphia
Antwerp
1924 Summer Olympics Los Angeles Paris
1928 Summer Olympics Los Angeles Amsterdam
1944 Summer Olympics Detroit London
1948 Winter Olympics Lake Placid St Moritz
1948 Summer Olympics Baltimore
Los Angeles
Minneapolis
Philadelphia
London
1952 Winter Olympics Lake Placid Oslo
1952 Summer Olympics Chicago
Detroit
Los Angeles
Minneapolis
Philadelphia
Helsinki
1956 Winter Olympics Colorado Springs
Lake Placid
Cortina d'Ampezzo
1956 Summer Olympics Chicago
Detroit
Los Angeles
Minneapolis
Philadelphia
San Francisco
Melbourne
1960 Summer Olympics Detroit Rome
1964 Summer Olympics Detroit Tokyo
1968 Winter Olympics Lake Placid Grenoble
1968 Summer Olympics Detroit Mexico City
1972 Winter Olympics Salt Lake City Sapporo
1972 Summer Olympics Detroit Munich
1976 Winter Olympics Denver Innsbruck
1976 Summer Olympics Los Angeles Montreal
1980 Summer Olympics Los Angeles Moscow
1992 Winter Olympics Anchorage Albertville
1994 Winter Olympics Anchorage Lillehammer
1998 Winter Olympics Salt Lake City Nagano
2012 Summer Olympics New York City London
2016 Summer Olympics Chicago Rio de Janeiro

Medal tables edit

 
Francis Olympic Field of Washington University in St. Louis, site of the 1904 Olympic Games. The 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri were the first Olympic Games held outside of Europe.

The United States made its Olympic debut in 1896 in Athens, the very first edition of the modern games. The nation performed inconsistently in the pre-World War-I period, primarily due to fielding considerably fewer athletes than host countries, with the exception being the 1904 Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri, where the U.S. achieved its largest medal haul in history, a record that still stands today. During the interwar period, the U.S. enjoyed its greatest success, topping both gold and total medal counts at four straight Summer Games, before falling short in the 1936 Berlin games. The next summer Olympics were held in 1948 following World War II. In 1952, the Soviet Union made its Olympic debut, initiating a state-sponsored approach to international sport focused on projecting socio-political superiority. The rapid rise of the Soviet Union to challenge the United States as a leading Olympic power raised questions and suspicion about the means used to achieve this, including the pretense of professional athletes having amateur status and allegations of state-sponsored doping. After 20 years of competition on the Olympic stage, the USSR convincingly topped the medal chart at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. After that, the U.S. would not top the medal table in non-boycotted games until the 1996 Summer Olympics, five years after the USSR collapsed.[8][9] A bright spot for the United States was the 1984 games in Los Angeles, where the U.S. set a record for most gold medals won in a single Olympics (83), buoyed by the Soviet-led boycott. Coincident with a drive by the International Olympic Committee toward gender parity beginning in the 1990s, the U.S.’s fortunes improved, and the nation topped the medal table in the Summer Olympics six times since 1992 and placed second on two occasions.

In contrast to its summer Olympics status, the United States was not a power in the Winter Games until the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City. Hosting the games in 2002 boosted the U.S. winter sports program; since then, the country’s athletes have performed consistently well, never placing below fourth in the medal count. The nation won the most medals (37) at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver but dropped to 23 medals at the most recent 2018 games in Pyeongchang.

Best results in non-medaling sports:

Flagbearers edit

History edit

Early Olympics (1896–1912) edit

 
Several members of America's first Olympic team in 1896. Standing: T.E. Burke, Thomas P. Curtis, Ellery H. Clark. Seated: W.W. Hoyt, Sumner Paine, trainer John Graham, John B. Paine, Arthur C. Blake.
 
Margaret Abbott competing in golf. Abbott was the first American woman to win an Olympic event.

The first modern Olympic Games, held in Athens, Greece, saw the Americans fielding 14 athletes that competed in three sports. The hosts, on the other hand, had 169 athletes competing and won 46 medals. The American team managed to win only 20 medals, dwarfed by the enormous Greek team. However, the United States managed to win 11 gold medals, edging out Greece, who secured 10 golds, and allowing Team USA to finish first in the gold medal tally. James Connolly became the first modern Olympic champion by winning the triple jump, and Thomas Burke won three gold medals in various track events, assuming the title of the most successful athlete of the 1896 Games.[13]

At the 1900 Paris Olympics, the US team featured 75 athletes, a significant increase compared to 1896, but still considerably less than the French hosts, who fielded 720 competitors. The most notable of all American participants was Margaret Abbott, who became the first female American Olympic champion by winning the women's golf. The vast majority of American medals were won in the sport of athletics, where US athletes clinched 16 golds and 39 medals overall. Team USA won only 8 medals outside of athletics, four of them in golf. Overall, France dominated the medal standings, winning 29 gold and 112 total medals. The United States ranked second with 19 and 48, respectively, showing great efficiency, despite having significantly fewer athletes.[14]

The 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri, were the first ever Olympic Games held outside of Europe.

Interwar period (1920–1936) edit

 
Jesse Owens at the 1936 Olympics.

Jesse Owens achieved international fame at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Germany by winning four gold medals: in the 100 meters, long jump, 200 meters, and 4 × 100-meter relay, disproving the Nazi theory of Aryan racial superiority in the process.

Cold War era (1948–1992) edit

 
Bob Mathias became the star of the 1948 London games by winning the decathlon event at the age of 17. He would go on to repeat this feat at the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki, setting a new world record.

The 1948 London Olympics marked the first time that newly communist countries, occupied by the Soviet Union after WW2, competed in the games. The Soviets themselves declined to compete, sending only observers, after a long hesitation that saw Soviet leader Joseph Stalin demanding guarantees from his sports officials that the USSR would beat the US in the medal standings. The Soviet officials told him that chances were 50/50, and Stalin ultimately rejected the idea of competing in 1948. With its newest political rival absent, the United States comfortably dominated the games, winning 38 gold and 84 total medals, 22 gold and 40 total medals more than the runner-up Sweden. The most medals were won in track and field, 27, and swimming, 15. The US basketball team won its second consecutive gold medal, defeating France in the final, 65–21.[15]

 
Gold medal game in basketball at the 1952 Olympics between the US and the USSR. The Americans won, 36–25.

In 1952, Helsinki saw the Soviets sending a team for the first time. This was a beginning of a new era, as the Soviet Union would go on to dominate the Olympics for the next four decades. The Soviets viewed the Olympics as international battlefield, where they can achieve their political goals by winning medals, thus proving their system's superiority.[16][17][8] The Soviet authorities also significantly bent the amateur rules, that were in place at the time, by providing state-funding to their athletes who trained full-time and, unlike American self-financed amateurs, were de facto professionals. That would start a significant controversy, that will result in the amateur rules being abolished, though only in the 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, meaning that the Soviets benefited from those rules throughout their Olympic history.[18] The United States still topped the medal count at these games, winning 40 gold and 76 total medals, 22 gold and 5 total medals more than the Soviets who finished second. American athletes won 31 medals in track and field, their most successful sport. US basketball team won its third consecutive gold, twice defeating the Soviets in the process, American boxers won all five finals they entered, and American weightlifters edged their Soviet rivals 4 to 3 in terms of gold medals, with the two nations sweeping all seven events in the sport.[19][20]

 
Bobby Morrow won gold in 100 meters, 200 meters, and 4x100 meters relay (track and field) at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne.

Melbourne hosted the Olympics in 1956. There were calls for the expulsion of the Soviet Union following their invasion of Hungary, but the International Olympic Committee decided not to pursue any action. As a result, some nations boycotted the games in protest of the Soviets' presence, and the Hungarians themselves became engaged in a violent brawl with their Soviet counterparts in a water polo game, an event that was instantly called Blood in the Water. The US performance at the games was relatively successful, though it was getting harder and harder to compete with the Soviet machine. As a result, the Americans earned 32 gold and 78 total medals (second place in the medal standings), 5 gold and 24 total medals less than the first-placed Soviets. The US contingent was particularly successful in track and field, where American athletes amassed 31 medals. On the other hand, the US won only 2 golds in swimming, being unable to stop the Australian domination of the swimming events at these games. In weightlifting, the Americans and Soviets once again won all seven events, once again with a 4 to 3 ratio in favor of the US team. In boxing, the Soviets won 3 golds, while the Americans only managed to win two events. However, it was gymnastics where the USSR achieved its greatest success, winning 11 out of 17 events and guaranteeing the first place in the medal rankings. The US basketball team won its fourth consecutive gold, beating the Soviets in the final game, 89–55.[21]

 
Wilma Rudolph became the first woman in history to sweep 100 meters, 200 meters, and 4x100 meters relay at the 1960 Rome Games.

The 1960 Rome Olympics saw the Americans losing their grip on their traditionally successful sports, such as track and field and weightlifting. On the other hand, boxing, swimming (where the Americans won 9 gold medals, while being controversially denied gold in the 100 meters freestyle, despite showing the best time), and wrestling produced unexpectedly good results, which somewhat helped to compensate for what was lost in other sports. In track and field, the Soviets won 11 golds, only one less than the Americans. It is worth mentioning that the US team encountered many problems throughout the meet, such as a controversial disqualification of their gold medal-winning men's 4x100 relay team. In weightlifting, the Soviets, with the help of their state-of-the-art doping program, won five out of seven events, leaving the US with only one gold. 10 Soviet golds in gymnastics didn't surprise anyone, as the nation had always been a gymnastics powerhouse, but it did mean that the Soviets beat the Americans in the medal standings for the second straight summer games. The US basketball team, however, met the pre-tournament expectations and won its fifth consecutive gold medal, a noble feat, given that they had to compete against veteran pros from the USSR. The final result, 43 gold and 103 total medals for the Soviets to 34 gold and 71 total medals for the Americans, showed that America was no longer a leading force in Olympic competition.[22]

 
Don Schollander won 4 golds in swimming at the 1964 games in Tokyo, the largest individual medal haul in a single Olympics since Jesse Owens in 1936.

There was some redemption for the US at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, as the nation returned to the top of the gold medal count for the first time since 1952. Particularly successful was the US swimming team that won 13 out of available 18 golds and shattered 9 world records. In track and field, the Americans also improved on their 1960 performance, winning 14 gold and 24 total medals, while the Soviets left Japan with 5 gold and 18 total medals, a significant downturn compared to their 1960 results. The Soviets, however, continued to dominate Olympic weightlifting, and, with the American program falling apart, the USSR produced four golds and three silvers. The Soviet Union hoped to replicate that success in gymnastics and wrestling, the sports that, together with weightlifting, were strongly associated with their athletic prowess. However, they encountered a zealous resistance from the Japanese, who used their home-field advantage to stun the Soviets, beating them five to three in wrestling golds, and winning five gymnastics championships to their four. Thus, Japan had a major influence on the US–USSR medals race, and most certainly helped the Americans edge their biggest rivals, while also managing to produce its best ever medal output and finishing in third place. For the Americans, despite their dismal performance in boxing where they achieved only one gold, the 1964 Olympics were a definite success, with the nation winning 36 gold and 90 total medals compared to the Soviet tally of 30 gold and 96 total medals. Therefore, the US topped the gold medal count, finishing second in the total medal count, while the USSR topped the total medal count, finishing second in the gold medal count. The US basketball team won its sixth consecutive gold, beating the Soviets in the final, 73–59.[23]

 
There were many historic achievements at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics but, perhaps, the most significant among them was Bob Beamon's performance in the long jump, where he improved the world record by 55 centimeters.

The 1968 Mexico Olympics became the most successful summer games for the US in the post-war era. American athletes amassed 45 gold and 107 total medals, 16 gold and 16 total medals more than the second-placed Soviets. The US swimming team dominated the competition, winning a staggering 51 medals and sweeping the podium on five occasions. The Americans also managed to medal in every single of 29 swimming events, thus achieving a unique feat. The US track and field team pulled off a stellar performance as well with 15 gold and 28 total medals. Overall, swimming and athletics accounted for more than 70% of all US medals and ensured the first place in the medal table for the Americans, their second consecutive first-place finish in terms of gold medals, and their first finish at the top of the overall medal table since 1952. In other sports, however, the performance of American athletes was less convincing. The US weightlifting team continued to fade away, winning just one medal (compared to 7 in 1956), American boxers won 7 medals, though only two of them gold, US divers won 6 medals, and the men's volleyball team managed to stun the defending champions from the Soviet Union, beating them in five sets, but still finished out of medals; Soviets ultimately won gold, with their lone loss being to the US. In gymnastics, Japan continued to frustrate the Soviets, once again surpassing them in the medal standings. Last but not least, the US basketball team won its seventh consecutive gold medal, a feat not matched by any other Olympic team in ball sports. Very few would have assumed that this was the last time that the US finished first in the medal table in a fully attended Summer Olympics until 1996 (the Americans would top the medal standings in 1984 with the Soviet Union and its satellites boycotting).[24]

 
Peggy Fleming an American former figure skater and the only American in the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France to bring home a gold medal.

The Munich Olympics saw the Soviet Union begin its streak of topping the medal count at five consecutive summer games in which they participated (1972–1992, though in 1992 they would compete as the Unified Team as the USSR dissolved half a year prior to the games, and the newly independent countries decided to compete together). The sporting nature of the event was largely overshadowed by the Munich massacre in the second week, in which eleven Israeli athletes and coaches and a West German police officer at Olympic village were killed by Black September terrorists. There were multiple calls to cancel the games after the terrorist attack, but the IOC declined. From a sporting standpoint, these games were one of the most controversial in history, with many accusing the organizing committee of anti-Americanism and trying to appease the Soviet Union and East Germany. Indeed, these were one of the strangest Olympics ever for American athletes. US world record holders in the 100 meters were given the wrong starting time and were unable to compete in the event, thus paving the way for a Soviet to win. In swimming, the US gold medal winner in the 400 meters freestyle was stripped of his medal for using his prescription asthma medication, also depriving him of a chance at multiple medals. US boxers complained that they were judged unfairly in the bouts against their communist counterparts. In shooting, a US athlete initially won the 50 meters rifle only to be relegated to silver after a "review". Finally, in the most controversial event of the games, and one of the most controversial events of all time, the US basketball team was denied gold after apparently winning the final match against the Soviet Union. The final three seconds of the game were replayed three times until the Soviets came out on top. The Americans did not accept the silver medals, believing that they were robbed. This was the first US loss in Olympic basketball history and it ended the Americans' 63-game winning streak in Olympic basketball. In general, the US team greatly underperformed at these games, winning only 6 gold medals in track and field to the East Germans' 8 and Soviets' 9, though the Americans still won the most total medals, 22. In boxing, the Cubans and Soviets dominated, winning three and two championships, respectively, while the US won only one gold and four medals overall (compared to the Soviets' two and Cubans' five). In diving, the Americans won three medals; in soccer, the USSR and GDR fixed a bronze medal game, playing a tie, so both teams received bronze; in gymnastics, the Soviets edged their old rivals Japan to top the medal count; in weightlifting, the Soviets and Bulgarians won three golds each; in wrestling, the US team surprised with three golds in freestyle, yet the Soviets still dwarfed their medal tally with nine golds in freestyle and Greco-Roman (14–6 in total medals). In water polo, the Americans struck bronze, tying the eventual gold medalists the Soviet Union in the final round. Swimming was the only sport where the American team did not disappoint, winning 17 gold and 43 total medals, a good result, but still less than four years earlier. American women dominated swimming for the last time until 1992, as by 1976 they would be overtaken by East German dopers.[25]

 
In 1976, Margaret Murdock captured the silver in the three positions shooting event. Lanny Bassham and Murdock tied for the first place, but Murdock was placed second after review of the targets. Bassham suggested that two gold medals be given, and after this request was declined, asked Murdock to share the top step with him at the award ceremony. Women had no separate shooting events at the time and were allowed to compete with men. Murdock became the first woman to win an Olympic medal in shooting.[26]

The Eastern Bloc dominated the 1976 Montreal Olympics, with seven countries placing in the top ten of the medal table. The United States team was relegated to a third place in the medal standings for the first time in its history. This was an Olympics of contrasts: the US men's swimming team, despite the generally dismal showing of the overall delegation, swept 12 gold and 27 total medals in the 13 events that were on the program and broke 11 world records in the process (arguably the most dominant performance of any swimming team in history),[27] while the US women's swimming team, on the other hand, fell victim to what was later shown to be a pervasive East German doping program.[28] They still managed to win a gold medal, in an upset of the East Germans in the 4x100 freestyle relay. The event was held on the last day of the swimming program, and the American women were risking being deprived of gold for the first time in US Olympic history. The victory was somewhat overlooked at the time, but since the early 1990s, when public revelation of the doping program began, their gold medal is considered to be one of the most improbable upsets of all time.[28] In track and field, both the US men's and women's team were overwhelmed by East Germans who secured a bulk of medals in the signature sports of the US, resulting in the USSR topping the medal table. The US boxing team surprised everyone, advancing to six gold medal bouts and winning five of them, drawing parallels to a stellar 1952 team that also took five golds. The achievement was even more notable due to the fact that the American boxers were significantly younger and less experienced than their Cuban and Soviet counterparts.[29] In other sports, US divers won five medals, including two golds; the US equestrian team took home four medals; American shooters won three medals, including a historic silver by a woman in the mixed 50 meters rifle three positions; US freestyle wrestlers advanced to four gold medal bouts, yet won only one of them (all four were against the Soviets), concluding the meet with six medals overall. The US men's basketball team reclaimed the gold medal, while the women's team won a surprising silver, being ranked no higher than sixth prior to the start of the tournament. The Soviets and East Germans were unstoppable in canoeing, gymnastics, rowing, weightlifting and wrestling, going 1–2 in the overall medal standings (49 gold and 125 total medals for the Soviets, and 40 gold and 90 total medals for East Germans). The US won medals in 14 sports, finishing third with 34 gold and 94 total medals. The most successful day for the Americans was July 31 when they won 8 gold and 18 total medals.[30]

The 1980 Summer Olympics marked another first for the United States, as the nation led by far the largest and most significant boycott in the Olympic history. The boycott was motivated by the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, as well as by flagrant human rights violations in the USSR, and the regime's anti-Semitic policies.[31][32][33][34][35] The Soviet state-run media ridiculed the Americans as sore losers who couldn't get over the fact that they were no longer a perennial Olympic power, and simply didn't want to be embarrassed by the Soviets who would thrash them in the medal count. Indeed, all medal predictions pointed to an inevitable Soviet victory with 55–60 gold medals. East Germans were forecast to win 40–45 gold medals, while the Americans would wind up in third place with 30–35 golds. However, the world would never know what would have happened, as the United States and 65 other countries chose not to attend the Moscow Games, leaving them with the smallest attendance since 1956. Predictably, the great majority of the medals were taken by the host country and East Germany in what was the most skewed medal tally since 1904.[36] The Soviets amassed 80 gold (all-time record) and 195 total (second-best result after the US in 1904) medals in their anticlimactic performance.[37]

 
President Ronald Reagan and Mary Lou Retton with the U.S. Olympic Team in Los Angeles, 1984. Retton had just recovered in time from surgery to compete for the all-around title, where she completed two perfect 10s to defeat her Soviet-bloc competitor by .05 points for the gold medal.

In 1984, Los Angeles witnessed what was considered a retaliatory boycott by the Soviets and their satellites, although the Soviets cited security concerns and "chauvinistic sentiments and an anti-Soviet hysteria being whipped up in the United States." However, no threat to Eastern Bloc athletes was ever discovered, and the athletes from the Eastern Bloc country that did attend the 1984 games in Los Angeles—Romania—encountered no problems, and in fact were widely cheered above all other visiting nations at the Opening Ceremonies when they marched into the Coliseum (Romania ended up finishing third in overall medal count at the Games). The move by the Soviets left many "dumbfounded", as it was expected that they would try to thrash the US on their soil, thus achieving a significant propaganda victory. The forecasts again heavily favored the Soviet Union, with the Soviet athletes being expected to rack up 60–65 gold medals compared to 35–45 by the second-placed Americans. That didn't happen. Furthermore, despite the Soviet boycott, a record 140 nations (including China that participated for the first time since 1952) attended the games.[38]

 
Among Olympic medalists, Shannon Miller is tied with Simone Biles as the most decorated U.S. gymnast, male or female, each with seven Olympic medals.

There were fears that the Soviet Union would boycott the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul as well because South Korea had no diplomatic relations with the USSR, which recognized and supported only North Korea. However, the policies of Perestroika that were initiated by Gorbachev in 1985 led to the Soviet participation in the games. Cuba, clearly not understanding such a betrayal, decided to boycott the Olympics on its own, impacting the boxing field as a result. The Soviet Union was steadily moving towards its ultimate collapse but its sporting empire was still in its prime. The Soviets and their close allies from East Germany utterly dominated the games, winning 55 and 37 gold medals respectively (132 and 102 total medals).

During the Cold War period the Americans did their best to challenge the Soviets, but the playing field wasn't level. The Soviet athletes were funded by the state and trained full-time, while the US strictly obeyed the amateur rules, and its athletes were primarily self-financed students who were significantly younger and less experienced than the Soviet veterans. In addition to that, the Soviets developed a state-sponsored doping system, and supplied performance-enhancing drugs to the vast majority of their athletes.[35] Furthermore, they heavily invested in the development of a similar system in their satellite nation, East Germany, with a specific goal of making East Germans highly competitive in swimming and track and field, so that they can reduce the number of medals the Americans win in their signature sports. Unfortunately for the US, the Soviet strategy worked, and the gap between the USSR and US widened every four years until the collapse of the Soviet Union. In 1972, the Soviets won 50 gold and 99 total medals to the Americans' 33 and 94; in 1976, the USSR amassed 49 gold and 125 total medals to the Americans' 34 and 94; 1980 Olympics were boycotted by the US and its allies, the Soviets retaliated in 1984 by boycotting the LA Olympics together with their satellites; finally, in 1988, the USSR won 55 gold and 132 total medals to the Americans' 36 and 94 (the US finished third at those games, losing even to the East Germans). In 1992, the Soviets still fielded a team despite the dissolution of their state, yet the margin of their victory over the Americans became narrower: 45 gold and 112 total medals to the Americans' 37 and 108. By 1996, every former Soviet republic formed its own National Olympic Committee, and the countries participated as independent nations, with Russia assuming the Soviet place in the IOC and inheriting Soviet achievements as by far the largest of the former Soviet republics. So, in 1996, the Americans finally managed to return to the top spot in the medal rankings, winning 44 gold and 101 total medals compared to 26 gold and 63 total medals won by the second-placed Russians, thanks to the partial abolition of the amateur rules in the early 1990s (the American athletes still weren't state-sponsored, unlike their foreign counterparts, but they were now eligible for prize money and sponsorships). They were still disadvantaged by these rules in those sports where they weren't abolished (i.e., boxing, baseball, where Cubans continued to field state-sponsored pros against American amateurs), but the situation started improving.

Recent period (1994–present) edit

 
Jennie Finch signing autographs. From 1998 to 2010, Finch became the most recognizable face on a dominant squad. Her 2004 Olympics showing put her on an elite level, as she helped lead the USA softball team to a gold medal.

U.S. athletes have appeared in every Summer Olympics in recent decades. The United States, represented by the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC), competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Originally scheduled to take place in the summer of 2020, the Games were postponed to July 23 to August 8, 2021, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[39] The opening ceremony flag-bearers for the United States were baseball player Eddy Alvarez and basketball player Sue Bird.[40] Javelin thrower Kara Winger was the flag-bearer for the closing ceremony.[41] When USA Gymnastics announced that 2016 Olympic all-around champion Biles would not participate in the gymnastics all-around final, the spotlight fell on her American team-mates. The U.S. had won the event in each of the last five Olympic Games: a formidable winning streak was on the line. Sunisa Lee embraced the moment and stood tall to deliver for her country. She totaled 57.433 to hold off Rebeca Andrade of Brazil (57.298) to clinch the title. Lee also made history of her own. With victory in the all-around she became the first Hmong American gymnast to win an Olympic gold medal. With a silver in the women's team final and bronze in the individual uneven bars Lee left Tokyo with an impressive three Olympic medals. Lydia Jacoby Alaska's swimming sweetheart made history when she was the first Alaskan swimmer selected to make the U.S. Olympic swim team. She stunned the world to secure victory in the women's 100m breaststroke. Recent major champion Nelly Korda followed the winning ways of compatriot Xander Schauffele to take home gold in the women's golf competition. The 2.01m-tall thrower Ryan Crouser retained his Olympic title in the men's shot put and did so in some style, setting an Olympic record three times.

At the 2022 Winter Olympics, the USA exercised a diplomatic boycott, meaning it did not send any high-level delegation to the games, but would not hinder athletes from participating. The reasoning was the "ongoing genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang and other human rights abuses.”[42] A total of 25 medals meant Team USA won two more medals than in 2018, although it still signifies an overall decline after 37 medals in 2010 and 28 in 2014. Notable successes included Jessie Diggins becoming the first American female skier to win individual cross-country medals, figure skater Nathan Chen breaking the short program world record on route to the Olympic gold medal in the men’s singles, Erin Jackson becoming the first black female athlete to win speed skating gold, and Chloe Kim defending her title in the snowboarding women’s halfpipe. Veteran snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis, who last medaled in the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, was the only U.S. athlete with multiple gold medals, winning the women's snowboard cross event, and sharing the gold with teammate Nick Baumgartner in the mixed snowboard cross event.

Amateurism and professionalism edit

 
U.S. President George W. Bush visits Misty May-Treanor (left) and Kerri Walsh Jennings (right) at the 2008 Olympics.

The exclusion of professionals caused several controversies throughout the history of the modern Olympics. The 1912 Olympic pentathlon and decathlon champion Jim Thorpe was stripped of his medals, when it was discovered that he had played semi-professional baseball before the Olympics. His medals were posthumously restored by the IOC in 1983 on compassionate grounds.[43]

The advent of the state-sponsored "full-time amateur athlete" of the Eastern Bloc countries eroded the ideology of the pure amateur. It put the self-financed amateurs of the Western countries at a disadvantage. The Soviet Union entered teams of athletes who were all nominally students, soldiers, or working in a profession, but all of whom were in reality paid by the state to train on a full-time basis.[44][45][46] The situation greatly disadvantaged American athletes and was a major factor in the decline of American medal hauls in the 1970s and 1980s. As a result, the Olympics shifted away from amateurism, as envisioned by Pierre de Coubertin. They began allowing participation of professional athletes, but only in the 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union and its influence within the International Olympic Committee.[47][48][49]

Prize money edit

When a US athlete wins an Olympic medal, as of 2016, the USOPC paid the winner $25,000 for gold, $15,000 for silver, and $10,000 for bronze.[50] The USOPC increased the payouts by 25% to $37,000 for gold, $22,500 for silver, and $15,000 for bronze beginning in 2017.[51] These numbers are significantly lower than in other countries, where Olympic gold medalists receive up to $1 million from their governments for a gold medal.[52][53] Since 2018, payouts to Paralympic athletes have been the same as to the Olympians. The International Paralympic Committee noted that "'Operation Gold Awards' for [American] Paralympic athletes [would] be increased by as much as 400 percent."[54]

Doping edit

United States has had eight Olympic medals stripped for doping violations. In all cases, the US government or the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) had nothing to do with it, and sanctioned athletes acted on their own. In the case of swimmer Rick DeMont, the USOC has recognized his gold medal performance in the 1972 Summer Olympics in 2001,[55] but only the IOC has the power to restore his medal, and it has as of 2017 refused to do so.[55] DeMont originally won the gold medal in 4:00.26. Following the race, the IOC stripped him of his gold medal[56] after his post-race urinalysis tested positive for traces of the banned substance ephedrine contained in his prescription asthma medication, Marax. The positive test following the 400-meter freestyle final also deprived him of a chance at multiple medals, as he was not permitted to swim in any other events at the 1972 Olympics, including the 1,500-meter freestyle for which he was the then-current world record-holder. Before the Olympics, DeMont had properly declared his asthma medications on his medical disclosure forms, but the USOC had not cleared them with the IOC's medical committee.[57][55]

In 2003, Wade Exum, the United States Olympic Committee's director of drug control administration from 1991 to 2000, gave copies of documents to Sports Illustrated that revealed that some 100 American athletes failed drug tests from 1988 to 2000, arguing that they should have been prevented from competing in the Olympics but were nevertheless cleared to compete; among those athletes were Carl Lewis, Joe DeLoach and Floyd Heard.[58][59][60][61] Before showing the documents to Sports Illustrated, Exum tried to use them in a lawsuit against USOC, accusing the organization of racial discrimination and wrongful termination against him and cover-up over the failed tests. His case was summarily dismissed by the Denver federal Court for lack of evidence. The USOC claimed his case "baseless" as he himself was the one in charge of screening the anti-doping test program of the organization and clarifying that the athletes were cleared according to the rules.[62][63]

Carl Lewis broke his silence on allegations that he was the beneficiary of a drugs cover-up, admitting he had failed tests for banned substances, but claiming he was just one of "hundreds" of American athletes who were allowed to escape bans, concealed by the USOC. Lewis has acknowledged that he failed three tests during the 1988 US Olympic trials, which under international rules at the time should have prevented him from competing in the 1988 Summer Olympics.[64] Former athletes and officials came out against the USOC cover-up. "For so many years I lived it. I knew this was going on, but there's absolutely nothing you can do as an athlete. You have to believe governing bodies are doing what they are supposed to do. And it is obvious they did not," said former American sprinter and 1984 Olympic champion, Evelyn Ashford.[65]

Exum's documents revealed that Carl Lewis had tested positive three times at the 1988 Olympics trials for minimum amounts of pseudoephedrine, ephedrine, and phenylpropanolamine, which were banned stimulants. Bronchodilators are also found in cold medication. Due to the rules, his case could have led to disqualification from the Seoul Olympics and suspension from competition for six months. The levels of the combined stimulants registered in the separate tests were 2 ppm, 4 ppm and 6 ppm.[62] Lewis defended himself, claiming that he had accidentally consumed the banned substances. After the supplements that he had taken were analyzed to prove his claims, the USOC accepted his claim of inadvertent use, since a dietary supplement he ingested was found to contain "Ma Huang", the Chinese name for Ephedra (ephedrine is known to help weight loss).[62] Fellow Santa Monica Track Club teammates Joe DeLoach and Floyd Heard were also found to have the same banned stimulants in their systems, and were cleared to compete for the same reason.[66][67] The highest level of the stimulants Lewis recorded was 6 ppm, which was regarded as a positive test in 1988 but is now regarded as negative test. The acceptable level has been raised to ten parts per million for ephedrine and twenty-five parts per million for other substances.[62][68] According to the IOC rules at the time, positive tests with levels lower than 10 ppm were cause of further investigation but not immediate ban. Neal Benowitz, a professor of medicine at UC San Francisco who is an expert on ephedrine and other stimulants, agreed that "These [levels] are what you'd see from someone taking cold or allergy medicines and are unlikely to have any effect on performance."[62] Following Exum's revelations the IAAF acknowledged that at the 1988 Olympic Trials the USOC indeed followed the correct procedures in dealing with eight positive findings for ephedrine and ephedrine-related compounds in low concentration. Additionally, in 1988 the federation reviewed the relevant documents with the athletes' names undisclosed and stated that "the medical committee felt satisfied, however, on the basis of the information received that the cases had been properly concluded by the USOC as 'negative cases' in accordance with the rules and regulations in place at the time and no further action was taken".[69][70]

Disqualified medalists edit

The United States has had eight Olympic medals stripped, which is fifth in the ranking of countries with the most stripped medals.[71]

Russia–United States rivalry edit

Russia (in all its incarnations) and the United States have won more Olympic medals than any other nation.[78] Russia topped the overall medal count at seven Summer Olympics, and nine Winter Olympics, while the United States placed first at eighteen Summer Olympics, and one Winter Olympics. The countries developed a strong rivalry during the Cold War. While the tensions eased in the 1990s, the relations deteriorated in 2014 and 2016.[79]

Since the 1952 Summer Olympics, the United States has won 1,986 Summer and Winter Olympics medals, the most in that period, while Russia has won 1,973 medals, the second most in that period.

Summer Olympics edit

Medal totals of the Soviet Union/Unified Team/Russia/ROC[80][81][82] and the United States[83] since 1952, when the Soviet Union started to compete at the Summer Games.

Overall, the United States (18961976, 1984–present) has won 1,061 gold and 2,636 total medals, and Russia (1900, 19081912, 19521980, 1988–present) has won 610 gold and 1,627 total medals.

Winter Olympics edit

Medal totals of the Soviet Union/Unified Team/Russia/Olympic Athletes from Russia[80][81][82] and the United States[83] since 1956, when the Soviet Union started to compete at the Winter Games.

Overall, the United States (1924–present) has won 113 gold and 330 total medals, and Russia (1956–present) has won 142 gold and 376 total medals.

Basketball edit

1972 Olympics edit

 
Inside view (in 2014) of the Rudi-Sedlmayer-Halle, where the 1972 Olympic men's basketball final was played

The United States and Soviet Union sporting adversary reached its peak during the Cold War. The U.S. men's team was considered a favorite in the run-up to the 1972 Games. Since the first Olympic basketball tournament at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, the Americans hadn't lost a single game, winning seven consecutive gold medals in a dominating fashion. Their record reached an unprecedented 63-0 before the final game. Since the 1952 tournament, the Soviet team challenged the Americans, winning silver in 1952, 1956, 1960, and 1964, and bronze in 1968. Outside of the Olympics, the Soviets had already defeated the U.S. team in the World Championship play. However, the Americans never sent their best collegiate players to that tournament.

It is important to note that the Olympics strictly prohibited any involvement of professional athletes at the time. The Soviet Union and other Eastern Bloc countries used that rule to their advantage, listing all its top players as soldiers or workers, which allowed them to breach the amateur rules. Western experts classified these athletes as professionals.[84] On the other hand, leading American players were unable to play in the Olympics, as they were officially professional and played in the NBA. That disadvantage hadn't prevented the Americans from winning, as they won the first seven Olympic basketball tournaments without a single defeat.

The confrontation of the Soviet Union and United States on the basketball court was deeply connected to the confrontation on the political front. Many American viewers assumed that 1972 Games were openly anti-American.[85] There were rumors that the Communist party had bribed the officials, because they wanted the USSR to win 50 gold medals at these Olympics, in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Soviet Union.[86]

The United States team was the youngest in history. American players usually participated in the Olympics once before turning pro, and the U.S. team always had new players every four years. The 1972 team didn't have a clear leader. A rising star Bill Walton declined an invitation to participate. Nevertheless, the team was heavily favored, featuring such players as Doug Collins or Tommy Burleson (the tallest player among all teams).

The young American team was confronted by a veteran Soviet team, featuring stars Sergei Belov, Modestas Paulauskas, and Alexander Belov. The players had played together for more than seven years. For Gennadi Volnov it was the fourth Olympic appearance.

The Soviets performed strongly at the beginning, winning the first half 26:21. The Soviets kept the Americans 4–8 points behind during the first half.

In the second half Soviets targeted Dwight Jones, as they considered him the leader of the U.S. team. On the 28th minute he was provoked by Mikheil Korkia and responded. Both players were sent off. The Soviets were satisfied, as they deemed Korkia less significant for them than Jones for the Americans. The next minute Alexander Belov hit Jim Brewer during the free-throw, and Brewer was unable to continue playing. According to the Americans, the referees did not notice the foul.

With 10 minutes left, the Soviets increased their lead to 10 points. After that Americans finally started to press the Soviets. It helped them to cut the deficit to 1 point. Soviet players started to feel nervous. With less than a minute left, Doug Collins stole a Soviet pass at halfcourt and was fouled hard by Zurab Sakandelidze as he drove toward the basket, being knocked down into the basket stanchion. With three seconds remaining on the game clock, Collins was awarded two free throws and sank the first to tie the score at 49. Just as Collins lifted the ball to begin his shooting motion in attempting the second free throw, the horn from the scorer's table sounded, marking the beginning of a chain of events that left the game's final three seconds mired in controversy. Although the unexpected sound of the horn caused lead referee Renato Righetto to turn away from the free throw attempt and look over to the scorer's table, play was not stopped. Collins never broke his shooting motion and continued with his second free throw, scoring to put the U.S. ahead by a score of 50:49. Immediately following Collins' free throws, the Soviets inbounded the ball and failed to score. Soviet coaches claimed that they had requested a timeout before Collins' foul shots. The referees ordered the clock reset to three seconds, and the game's final seconds replayed. The horn sounded as a length-of-the-court Soviet pass was being released from the inbounding player, the pass missed its mark, and the American players began celebrating. Nevertheless, the final three seconds were replayed for a third time. This time, the Soviets' Alexander Belov and the USA's Kevin Joyce and Jim Forbes went up for the pass, and Belov caught the long pass from Ivan Edeshko near the American basket. Belov then laid the ball in for the winning points as the buzzer sounded.

Later Olympics edit

The Americans regained the basketball crown in 1976, but their ability to stay competitive with college players against seasoned professionals from the Soviet Union was decreasing. In 1988, the Soviets beat the United States once again, eliminating them in the semifinals. The 1988 game was a turning point in international basketball. FIBA officials started to realize that amateur rules were extremely unfair, and in 1989, NBA players were finally allowed in the Olympics.[87][88][89]

Ice hockey edit

 
An amateur photo featuring 1980 U.S. vs USSR ice hockey matchup

The 1980 hockey game between the U.S. and USSR was dubbed the "Miracle on Ice", when American college players defeated the heavily favored seasoned professionals from the Soviet Union, on the way to a gold medal at the Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York. The Soviet Union had won the gold medal in five of the six previous Winter Olympic Games, and were the favorites to win once more. Though ice hockey is not a major sport in most areas of the United States, the "Miracle" is often listed as one of the all-time greatest American sporting achievements. The U.S. also won the gold medal in the 1960 Games at Squaw Valley, California, defeating the Soviet Union, Canada, Czechoslovakia, and Sweden along the way. However, since this victory is not as well known as the 1980 win, it has come to be known as the "Forgotten Miracle".[90][91]

The U.S. and the Soviet Union next met at the Olympics in 1988. As in 1980, the Soviets were represented by their star-studded veterans, while the Americans fielded a team of college players. The Soviets won the encounter 7–5 and went on to win the gold medal, while the U.S. placed seventh.

 
Hilary Knight is one of the top stars in U.S. women's ice hockey. Knight helped lead Team USA to gold at the 2018 PyeongChang Games—their first Olympic victory in 20 years.

The two teams met again at the 1992 Olympics in a semi-final match. There, the Unified Team (the successor to the Soviet Union) won 5–2. While some stars had left the Soviet Union to play in the NHL, the Unified Team still boasted many veterans from their domestic professional league, while the Americans were represented primarily by college players. The Unified Team eventually won the gold medal, while the U.S. placed fourth.

The U.S. and Russia (the successor to the Unified Team) met twice at the 1996 World Cup of Hockey. The Americans won both games 5–2 enroute to the tournament championship.

The U.S., coached by Herb Brooks, and Russia, coached by Slava Fetisov, met twice in the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, which included a 2–2 round-robin draw and a 3–2 semi-final win for the Americans. The semi-final match was played 22 years to the day after the "Miracle on Ice" game. The U.S. eventually won silver, while Russia won bronze.

The two teams met in the quarterfinals of the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, with the U.S. earning a decisive 5–3 victory.

The U.S. and Russia played each other in a round-robin game at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. The game was tied 2–2 after overtime before the Americans prevailed in an eight-round shootout, with T. J. Oshie scoring on 4 of 6 attempts for the United States. The match has been dubbed by some as the "Marathon on Ice" due to its length.[92] Both teams, however, failed to medal; the Americans finished fourth (losing in the semis to Canada and to Finland in the bronze medal game), while the Russians placed fifth (losing to Finland in the quarterfinals).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ On 29 January 2024 CAS disqualified Valieva for four years retroactive to 25 December 2021 for an anti-doping rule violation. On 30 January 2024 the ISU reallocated medals to upgrade the United States to gold and Japan to silver while downgrading ROC to bronze.

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External links edit

  • "United States of America". International Olympic Committee. July 27, 2021.
  • "United States". Olympedia.com.
  • "Olympic Analytics/USA". olympanalyt.com.

united, states, olympics, also, united, states, summer, olympics, united, states, winter, olympics, united, states, america, sent, many, athletes, celebrations, olympic, games, starting, with, first, modern, olympics, held, 1896, athletes, representing, united. See also United States at the Summer Olympics and United States at the Winter Olympics The United States of America has sent many athletes to the celebrations of the Olympic Games starting with the first modern Olympics held in 1896 Athletes representing the United States have participated in every Olympic Games with the exception of the 1980 Summer Olympics during which it led a boycott in protest of the Soviet Union s invasion of Afghanistan The United States Olympic amp Paralympic Committee USOPC is the National Olympic Committee for the United States United States at theOlympicsFlag of the United StatesIOC codeUSANOCUnited States Olympic amp Paralympic CommitteeWebsitewww wbr teamusa wbr orgMedalsRanked 1stGold 1 175 Silver 951 Bronze 833 Total 2 959Summer appearances189619001904190819121920192419281932193619481952195619601964196819721976198019841988199219962000200420082012201620202024Winter appearances192419281932193619481952195619601964196819721976198019841988199219941998200220062010201420182022Other related appearances1906 Intercalated GamesAmerican athletes have won a total of 2 629 medals 1 061 of them gold at the Summer Olympic Games and another 330 114 of them gold at the Winter Olympic Games This makes the United States the most prolific medal winning nation in the history of the Olympics The United States remains one of the only major teams in the world to receive no government funding 1 2 3 4 Contents 1 Hosted Games 1 1 Unsuccessful bids 2 Medal tables 2 1 Medals by Summer Games 2 2 Medals by Winter Games 2 3 Medals by summer sport 2 4 Medals by winter sport 3 Flagbearers 4 History 4 1 Early Olympics 1896 1912 4 2 Interwar period 1920 1936 4 3 Cold War era 1948 1992 4 4 Recent period 1994 present 5 Amateurism and professionalism 6 Prize money 7 Doping 7 1 Disqualified medalists 8 Russia United States rivalry 8 1 Summer Olympics 8 2 Winter Olympics 8 3 Basketball 8 3 1 1972 Olympics 8 3 2 Later Olympics 8 4 Ice hockey 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksHosted Games edit nbsp Swimmer Michael Phelps and President George W Bush on August 10 2008 at the National Aquatic Center in Beijing Phelps is the most decorated Olympic athlete of all time 5 6 The United States has hosted or was the designated host of the modern Olympic Games on nine occasions more than any other nation Games Host city Dates Nations Participants Events1904 Summer Olympics St Louis Missouri July 1 November 23 12 666 911932 Winter Olympics Lake Placid New York February 7 15 17 252 141932 Summer Olympics Los Angeles California July 30 August 14 37 1 332 1171960 Winter Olympics Squaw Valley California February 2 20 30 665 271980 Winter Olympics Lake Placid New York February 13 24 37 1 072 381984 Summer Olympics Los Angeles California July 28 August 12 140 6 829 2211996 Summer Olympics Atlanta Georgia July 19 August 4 197 10 318 2712002 Winter Olympics Salt Lake City Utah February 8 24 77 2 399 782028 Summer Olympics Los Angeles California July 14 30 TBA TBA TBAUnsuccessful bids edit Games City Winner of bid 7 1916 Summer Olympics Cleveland Berlin1920 Summer Olympics AtlantaClevelandPhiladelphia Antwerp1924 Summer Olympics Los Angeles Paris1928 Summer Olympics Los Angeles Amsterdam1944 Summer Olympics Detroit London1948 Winter Olympics Lake Placid St Moritz1948 Summer Olympics BaltimoreLos AngelesMinneapolisPhiladelphia London1952 Winter Olympics Lake Placid Oslo1952 Summer Olympics ChicagoDetroitLos AngelesMinneapolisPhiladelphia Helsinki1956 Winter Olympics Colorado SpringsLake Placid Cortina d Ampezzo1956 Summer Olympics ChicagoDetroitLos AngelesMinneapolisPhiladelphiaSan Francisco Melbourne1960 Summer Olympics Detroit Rome1964 Summer Olympics Detroit Tokyo1968 Winter Olympics Lake Placid Grenoble1968 Summer Olympics Detroit Mexico City1972 Winter Olympics Salt Lake City Sapporo1972 Summer Olympics Detroit Munich1976 Winter Olympics Denver Innsbruck1976 Summer Olympics Los Angeles Montreal1980 Summer Olympics Los Angeles Moscow1992 Winter Olympics Anchorage Albertville1994 Winter Olympics Anchorage Lillehammer1998 Winter Olympics Salt Lake City Nagano2012 Summer Olympics New York City London2016 Summer Olympics Chicago Rio de JaneiroMedal tables editSee also All time Olympic Games medal table nbsp Francis Olympic Field of Washington University in St Louis site of the 1904 Olympic Games The 1904 Summer Olympics in St Louis Missouri were the first Olympic Games held outside of Europe The United States made its Olympic debut in 1896 in Athens the very first edition of the modern games The nation performed inconsistently in the pre World War I period primarily due to fielding considerably fewer athletes than host countries with the exception being the 1904 Olympics in St Louis Missouri where the U S achieved its largest medal haul in history a record that still stands today During the interwar period the U S enjoyed its greatest success topping both gold and total medal counts at four straight Summer Games before falling short in the 1936 Berlin games The next summer Olympics were held in 1948 following World War II In 1952 the Soviet Union made its Olympic debut initiating a state sponsored approach to international sport focused on projecting socio political superiority The rapid rise of the Soviet Union to challenge the United States as a leading Olympic power raised questions and suspicion about the means used to achieve this including the pretense of professional athletes having amateur status and allegations of state sponsored doping After 20 years of competition on the Olympic stage the USSR convincingly topped the medal chart at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich After that the U S would not top the medal table in non boycotted games until the 1996 Summer Olympics five years after the USSR collapsed 8 9 A bright spot for the United States was the 1984 games in Los Angeles where the U S set a record for most gold medals won in a single Olympics 83 buoyed by the Soviet led boycott Coincident with a drive by the International Olympic Committee toward gender parity beginning in the 1990s the U S s fortunes improved and the nation topped the medal table in the Summer Olympics six times since 1992 and placed second on two occasions In contrast to its summer Olympics status the United States was not a power in the Winter Games until the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City Hosting the games in 2002 boosted the U S winter sports program since then the country s athletes have performed consistently well never placing below fourth in the medal count The nation won the most medals 37 at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver but dropped to 23 medals at the most recent 2018 games in Pyeongchang Medals by Summer Games edit Host country Games Athletes Gold Silver Bronze Total Gold medals Total medals1896 Athens 14 11 7 2 20 1 21900 Paris 75 19 14 15 48 2 21904 St Louis 526 76 78 77 231 1 11908 London 122 23 12 12 47 2 21912 Stockholm 174 25 19 19 63 1 21920 Antwerp 288 41 27 27 95 1 11924 Paris 299 45 27 27 99 1 11928 Amsterdam 280 22 18 16 56 1 11932 Los Angeles 474 41 32 30 103 1 11936 Berlin 359 24 20 12 56 2 21948 London 300 38 27 19 84 1 11952 Helsinki 286 40 19 17 76 1 11956 Melbourne 297 32 25 17 74 2 21960 Rome 292 34 21 16 71 2 21964 Tokyo 346 36 26 28 90 1 21968 Mexico City 357 45 28 34 107 1 11972 Munich 400 33 31 30 94 2 21976 Montreal 396 34 35 25 94 3 21980 Moscow Did not participate1984 Los Angeles 522 83 61 30 174 1 11988 Seoul 527 36 31 27 94 3 31992 Barcelona 545 37 34 37 108 2 21996 Atlanta 646 44 32 25 101 1 12000 Sydney 586 37 24 32 93 1 12004 Athens 533 36 39 26 101 1 12008 Beijing 588 36 39 37 112 2 12012 London 530 48 26 30 104 1 12016 Rio de Janeiro 555 46 37 38 121 1 12020 Tokyo 621 39 41 33 113 1 12024 Paris Future event2028 Los Angeles Future event2032 Brisbane Future eventTotal 1061 830 738 2629 1 1 Medals by Winter Games edit Host country Games Athletes Gold Silver Bronze Total Gold medals Total medals1924 Chamonix 24 1 2 1 4 5 31928 St Moritz 24 2 2 2 6 2 21932 Lake Placid 64 6 4 2 12 1 11936 Garmisch Partenkirchen 55 1 0 3 4 8 61948 St Moritz 69 3 4 2 9 4 41952 Oslo 65 4 6 1 11 2 21956 Cortina d Ampezzo 67 2 3 2 7 6 51960 Squaw Valley 79 3 4 3 10 3 21964 Innsbruck 89 1 2 4 7 8 81968 Grenoble 95 1 5 1 7 9 81972 Sapporo 103 3 2 3 8 5 61976 Innsbruck 106 3 3 4 10 3 31980 Lake Placid 101 6 4 2 12 3 31984 Sarajevo 107 4 4 0 8 3 41988 Calgary 118 2 1 3 6 9 91992 Albertville 147 5 4 2 11 5 61994 Lillehammer 147 6 5 2 13 5 51998 Nagano 186 6 3 4 13 5 62002 Salt Lake City 202 10 13 11 34 3 22006 Turin 204 9 9 7 25 2 22010 Vancouver 212 9 15 13 37 3 12014 Sochi 222 9 9 10 28 4 22018 Pyeongchang 228 9 8 6 23 4 42022 Beijing 220 9 a 10 9 7 25 3 42026 Milan Cortina Future eventTotal 114 121 95 330 2 2 Medals by summer sport edit Leading in that sportSportGoldSilverBronzeTotal nbsp Athletics344269214827 nbsp Swimming257178143578 nbsp Shooting573128116 nbsp Wrestling554439138 nbsp Boxing502740117 nbsp Diving494646141 nbsp Artistic gymnastics374337117 nbsp Rowing33322489 nbsp Basketball252330 nbsp Tennis2161239 nbsp Sailing19231961 nbsp Weightlifting16171144 nbsp Archery1410933 nbsp Equestrian11232054 nbsp Track cycling11151339 nbsp Beach volleyball72211 nbsp Road cycling54413 nbsp Golf53513 nbsp Canoe sprint53412 nbsp Artistic swimming5229 nbsp Fencing4111833 nbsp Water polo46515 nbsp Volleyball43411 nbsp Football4228 nbsp Taekwondo32510 nbsp Softball3205 nbsp Judo24814 nbsp Rugby2002 nbsp BMX racing1225 nbsp Slalom canoeing1225 nbsp Baseball1124 nbsp Triathlon1124 nbsp Roque1113 nbsp Tug of war1102 nbsp 3x3 basketball1001 nbsp Jeu de paume1001 nbsp Surfing1001 nbsp Modern pentathlon0639 nbsp Polo0112 nbsp BMX freestyle0101 nbsp Lacrosse0101 nbsp Marathon swimming0101 nbsp Sport climbing0101 nbsp Field hockey0022 nbsp Mountain biking0022 nbsp Skateboarding0022 nbsp Karate0011Totals 47 entries 10618297372627Updated on December 31 2021 This table does not include two medals one silver awarded in the ice hockey and one bronze awarded in the figure skating events at the 1920 Summer Olympics The United States has never won an Olympic medal in the following current summer sports or disciplines badminton handball rhythmic gymnastics table tennis and trampoline gymnastics Medals by winter sport edit Leading in that sportSportGoldSilverBronzeTotal nbsp Speed skating30221971 nbsp Alpine skiing17211048 nbsp Figure skating17162154 nbsp Snowboarding1781035 nbsp Freestyle skiing1113933 nbsp Bobsleigh811928 nbsp Ice hockey412218 nbsp Short track speed skating47920 nbsp Skeleton3418 nbsp Nordic combined1304 nbsp Cross country skiing1214 nbsp Curling1012 nbsp Luge0336 nbsp Ski jumping0011Totals 14 entries 11412296332Updated on December 31 2021 This table includes two medals one silver awarded in the ice hockey and one bronze awarded in the figure skating events at the 1920 Summer Olympics The United States has never won an Olympic medal in the following current winter sport biathlon Best results in non medaling sports SummerSport Rank Athlete Event amp Year nbsp Badminton 8th Howard Bach amp Bob Malaythong Men s doubles in 2008 nbsp Handball 5th United States women s team Women s tournament in 1984 nbsp Rhythmic gymnastics 9th Mandy JamesAlaine Mata Baquerot Kate NelsonBrandi SiegelChallen SieversBecky Turner Women s group in 1996 nbsp Table tennis 6th Gao JunCrystal HuangWang Chen Women s team in 2008 nbsp Trampoline gymnastics 6th Savannah Vinsant Women s individual in 2012Nicole Ahsinger Women s individual in 2020WinterSport Rank Athlete Event amp Year nbsp Biathlon 6th Lowell BaileyTim BurkeSean DohertyLeif Nordgren Men s relay in 2018Flagbearers editSee also List of flag bearers for the United States at the Olympics Summer Olympics Games Athlete Sport1908 London Ralph Rose Athletics1912 Stockholm George Bonhag Athletics1920 Antwerp Pat McDonald Athletics1924 Paris Pat McDonald Athletics1928 Amsterdam Bud Houser Athletics1932 Los Angeles Morgan Taylor Athletics1936 Berlin Al Jochim Gymnastics1948 London Ralph Craig Sailing1952 Helsinki Norman Armitage Fencing1956 Melbourne Norman Armitage 11 Fencing1960 Rome Rafer Johnson Athletics1964 Tokyo Parry O Brien Athletics1968 Mexico City Janice Romary 12 Fencing1972 Munich Olga Fikotova Athletics1976 Montreal Gary Hall Sr Swimming1980 Moscow Did not participate1984 Los Angeles Ed Burke Athletics1988 Seoul Evelyn Ashford Athletics1992 Barcelona Francie Larrieu Smith Athletics1996 Atlanta Bruce Baumgartner Wrestling2000 Sydney Cliff Meidl Canoeing2004 Athens Dawn Staley Basketball2008 Beijing Lopez Lomong Athletics2012 London Mariel Zagunis Fencing2016 Rio de Janeiro Michael Phelps Swimming2020 Tokyo Eddy Alvarez BaseballSue Bird Basketball Winter Olympics Games Athlete Sport1924 Chamonix Clarence Abel Ice hockey1928 St Moritz Godfrey Dewey Cross country skiing team manager 1932 Lake Placid Billy Fiske Bobsleigh1936 Garmisch Partenkirchen Rolf Monsen Cross country skiing1948 St Moritz Jack Heaton Skeleton amp Bobsleigh1952 Oslo Jim Bickford Bobsleigh1956 Cortina d Ampezzo Jim Bickford Bobsleigh1960 Squaw Valley Don McDermott Speed skating1964 Innsbruck Bill Disney Speed skating1968 Grenoble Terry McDermott Speed skating1972 Sapporo Dianne Holum Speed skating1976 Innsbruck Cindy Nelson Alpine skiing1980 Lake Placid Scott Hamilton Figure skating1984 Sarajevo Frank Masley Luge1988 Calgary Lyle Nelson Biathlon1992 Albertville Bill Koch Cross country skiing1994 Lillehammer Cammy Myler Luge1998 Nagano Eric Flaim Speed Skating2002 Salt Lake City Amy Peterson Short track speed skating2006 Turin Chris Witty Speed skating2010 Vancouver Mark Grimmette Luge2014 Sochi Todd Lodwick Nordic combined2018 Pyeongchang Erin Hamlin Luge2022 Beijing Brittany Bowe Speed SkatingJohn Shuster CurlingHistory editEarly Olympics 1896 1912 edit nbsp Several members of America s first Olympic team in 1896 Standing T E Burke Thomas P Curtis Ellery H Clark Seated W W Hoyt Sumner Paine trainer John Graham John B Paine Arthur C Blake nbsp Margaret Abbott competing in golf Abbott was the first American woman to win an Olympic event The first modern Olympic Games held in Athens Greece saw the Americans fielding 14 athletes that competed in three sports The hosts on the other hand had 169 athletes competing and won 46 medals The American team managed to win only 20 medals dwarfed by the enormous Greek team However the United States managed to win 11 gold medals edging out Greece who secured 10 golds and allowing Team USA to finish first in the gold medal tally James Connolly became the first modern Olympic champion by winning the triple jump and Thomas Burke won three gold medals in various track events assuming the title of the most successful athlete of the 1896 Games 13 At the 1900 Paris Olympics the US team featured 75 athletes a significant increase compared to 1896 but still considerably less than the French hosts who fielded 720 competitors The most notable of all American participants was Margaret Abbott who became the first female American Olympic champion by winning the women s golf The vast majority of American medals were won in the sport of athletics where US athletes clinched 16 golds and 39 medals overall Team USA won only 8 medals outside of athletics four of them in golf Overall France dominated the medal standings winning 29 gold and 112 total medals The United States ranked second with 19 and 48 respectively showing great efficiency despite having significantly fewer athletes 14 The 1904 Summer Olympics in St Louis Missouri were the first ever Olympic Games held outside of Europe Interwar period 1920 1936 edit nbsp Jesse Owens at the 1936 Olympics Jesse Owens achieved international fame at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin Germany by winning four gold medals in the 100 meters long jump 200 meters and 4 100 meter relay disproving the Nazi theory of Aryan racial superiority in the process Cold War era 1948 1992 edit nbsp Bob Mathias became the star of the 1948 London games by winning the decathlon event at the age of 17 He would go on to repeat this feat at the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki setting a new world record The 1948 London Olympics marked the first time that newly communist countries occupied by the Soviet Union after WW2 competed in the games The Soviets themselves declined to compete sending only observers after a long hesitation that saw Soviet leader Joseph Stalin demanding guarantees from his sports officials that the USSR would beat the US in the medal standings The Soviet officials told him that chances were 50 50 and Stalin ultimately rejected the idea of competing in 1948 With its newest political rival absent the United States comfortably dominated the games winning 38 gold and 84 total medals 22 gold and 40 total medals more than the runner up Sweden The most medals were won in track and field 27 and swimming 15 The US basketball team won its second consecutive gold medal defeating France in the final 65 21 15 nbsp Gold medal game in basketball at the 1952 Olympics between the US and the USSR The Americans won 36 25 In 1952 Helsinki saw the Soviets sending a team for the first time This was a beginning of a new era as the Soviet Union would go on to dominate the Olympics for the next four decades The Soviets viewed the Olympics as international battlefield where they can achieve their political goals by winning medals thus proving their system s superiority 16 17 8 The Soviet authorities also significantly bent the amateur rules that were in place at the time by providing state funding to their athletes who trained full time and unlike American self financed amateurs were de facto professionals That would start a significant controversy that will result in the amateur rules being abolished though only in the 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union meaning that the Soviets benefited from those rules throughout their Olympic history 18 The United States still topped the medal count at these games winning 40 gold and 76 total medals 22 gold and 5 total medals more than the Soviets who finished second American athletes won 31 medals in track and field their most successful sport US basketball team won its third consecutive gold twice defeating the Soviets in the process American boxers won all five finals they entered and American weightlifters edged their Soviet rivals 4 to 3 in terms of gold medals with the two nations sweeping all seven events in the sport 19 20 nbsp Bobby Morrow won gold in 100 meters 200 meters and 4x100 meters relay track and field at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne Melbourne hosted the Olympics in 1956 There were calls for the expulsion of the Soviet Union following their invasion of Hungary but the International Olympic Committee decided not to pursue any action As a result some nations boycotted the games in protest of the Soviets presence and the Hungarians themselves became engaged in a violent brawl with their Soviet counterparts in a water polo game an event that was instantly called Blood in the Water The US performance at the games was relatively successful though it was getting harder and harder to compete with the Soviet machine As a result the Americans earned 32 gold and 78 total medals second place in the medal standings 5 gold and 24 total medals less than the first placed Soviets The US contingent was particularly successful in track and field where American athletes amassed 31 medals On the other hand the US won only 2 golds in swimming being unable to stop the Australian domination of the swimming events at these games In weightlifting the Americans and Soviets once again won all seven events once again with a 4 to 3 ratio in favor of the US team In boxing the Soviets won 3 golds while the Americans only managed to win two events However it was gymnastics where the USSR achieved its greatest success winning 11 out of 17 events and guaranteeing the first place in the medal rankings The US basketball team won its fourth consecutive gold beating the Soviets in the final game 89 55 21 nbsp Wilma Rudolph became the first woman in history to sweep 100 meters 200 meters and 4x100 meters relay at the 1960 Rome Games The 1960 Rome Olympics saw the Americans losing their grip on their traditionally successful sports such as track and field and weightlifting On the other hand boxing swimming where the Americans won 9 gold medals while being controversially denied gold in the 100 meters freestyle despite showing the best time and wrestling produced unexpectedly good results which somewhat helped to compensate for what was lost in other sports In track and field the Soviets won 11 golds only one less than the Americans It is worth mentioning that the US team encountered many problems throughout the meet such as a controversial disqualification of their gold medal winning men s 4x100 relay team In weightlifting the Soviets with the help of their state of the art doping program won five out of seven events leaving the US with only one gold 10 Soviet golds in gymnastics didn t surprise anyone as the nation had always been a gymnastics powerhouse but it did mean that the Soviets beat the Americans in the medal standings for the second straight summer games The US basketball team however met the pre tournament expectations and won its fifth consecutive gold medal a noble feat given that they had to compete against veteran pros from the USSR The final result 43 gold and 103 total medals for the Soviets to 34 gold and 71 total medals for the Americans showed that America was no longer a leading force in Olympic competition 22 nbsp Don Schollander won 4 golds in swimming at the 1964 games in Tokyo the largest individual medal haul in a single Olympics since Jesse Owens in 1936 There was some redemption for the US at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo as the nation returned to the top of the gold medal count for the first time since 1952 Particularly successful was the US swimming team that won 13 out of available 18 golds and shattered 9 world records In track and field the Americans also improved on their 1960 performance winning 14 gold and 24 total medals while the Soviets left Japan with 5 gold and 18 total medals a significant downturn compared to their 1960 results The Soviets however continued to dominate Olympic weightlifting and with the American program falling apart the USSR produced four golds and three silvers The Soviet Union hoped to replicate that success in gymnastics and wrestling the sports that together with weightlifting were strongly associated with their athletic prowess However they encountered a zealous resistance from the Japanese who used their home field advantage to stun the Soviets beating them five to three in wrestling golds and winning five gymnastics championships to their four Thus Japan had a major influence on the US USSR medals race and most certainly helped the Americans edge their biggest rivals while also managing to produce its best ever medal output and finishing in third place For the Americans despite their dismal performance in boxing where they achieved only one gold the 1964 Olympics were a definite success with the nation winning 36 gold and 90 total medals compared to the Soviet tally of 30 gold and 96 total medals Therefore the US topped the gold medal count finishing second in the total medal count while the USSR topped the total medal count finishing second in the gold medal count The US basketball team won its sixth consecutive gold beating the Soviets in the final 73 59 23 nbsp There were many historic achievements at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics but perhaps the most significant among them was Bob Beamon s performance in the long jump where he improved the world record by 55 centimeters The 1968 Mexico Olympics became the most successful summer games for the US in the post war era American athletes amassed 45 gold and 107 total medals 16 gold and 16 total medals more than the second placed Soviets The US swimming team dominated the competition winning a staggering 51 medals and sweeping the podium on five occasions The Americans also managed to medal in every single of 29 swimming events thus achieving a unique feat The US track and field team pulled off a stellar performance as well with 15 gold and 28 total medals Overall swimming and athletics accounted for more than 70 of all US medals and ensured the first place in the medal table for the Americans their second consecutive first place finish in terms of gold medals and their first finish at the top of the overall medal table since 1952 In other sports however the performance of American athletes was less convincing The US weightlifting team continued to fade away winning just one medal compared to 7 in 1956 American boxers won 7 medals though only two of them gold US divers won 6 medals and the men s volleyball team managed to stun the defending champions from the Soviet Union beating them in five sets but still finished out of medals Soviets ultimately won gold with their lone loss being to the US In gymnastics Japan continued to frustrate the Soviets once again surpassing them in the medal standings Last but not least the US basketball team won its seventh consecutive gold medal a feat not matched by any other Olympic team in ball sports Very few would have assumed that this was the last time that the US finished first in the medal table in a fully attended Summer Olympics until 1996 the Americans would top the medal standings in 1984 with the Soviet Union and its satellites boycotting 24 nbsp Peggy Fleming an American former figure skater and the only American in the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble France to bring home a gold medal The Munich Olympics saw the Soviet Union begin its streak of topping the medal count at five consecutive summer games in which they participated 1972 1992 though in 1992 they would compete as the Unified Team as the USSR dissolved half a year prior to the games and the newly independent countries decided to compete together The sporting nature of the event was largely overshadowed by the Munich massacre in the second week in which eleven Israeli athletes and coaches and a West German police officer at Olympic village were killed by Black September terrorists There were multiple calls to cancel the games after the terrorist attack but the IOC declined From a sporting standpoint these games were one of the most controversial in history with many accusing the organizing committee of anti Americanism and trying to appease the Soviet Union and East Germany Indeed these were one of the strangest Olympics ever for American athletes US world record holders in the 100 meters were given the wrong starting time and were unable to compete in the event thus paving the way for a Soviet to win In swimming the US gold medal winner in the 400 meters freestyle was stripped of his medal for using his prescription asthma medication also depriving him of a chance at multiple medals US boxers complained that they were judged unfairly in the bouts against their communist counterparts In shooting a US athlete initially won the 50 meters rifle only to be relegated to silver after a review Finally in the most controversial event of the games and one of the most controversial events of all time the US basketball team was denied gold after apparently winning the final match against the Soviet Union The final three seconds of the game were replayed three times until the Soviets came out on top The Americans did not accept the silver medals believing that they were robbed This was the first US loss in Olympic basketball history and it ended the Americans 63 game winning streak in Olympic basketball In general the US team greatly underperformed at these games winning only 6 gold medals in track and field to the East Germans 8 and Soviets 9 though the Americans still won the most total medals 22 In boxing the Cubans and Soviets dominated winning three and two championships respectively while the US won only one gold and four medals overall compared to the Soviets two and Cubans five In diving the Americans won three medals in soccer the USSR and GDR fixed a bronze medal game playing a tie so both teams received bronze in gymnastics the Soviets edged their old rivals Japan to top the medal count in weightlifting the Soviets and Bulgarians won three golds each in wrestling the US team surprised with three golds in freestyle yet the Soviets still dwarfed their medal tally with nine golds in freestyle and Greco Roman 14 6 in total medals In water polo the Americans struck bronze tying the eventual gold medalists the Soviet Union in the final round Swimming was the only sport where the American team did not disappoint winning 17 gold and 43 total medals a good result but still less than four years earlier American women dominated swimming for the last time until 1992 as by 1976 they would be overtaken by East German dopers 25 nbsp In 1976 Margaret Murdock captured the silver in the three positions shooting event Lanny Bassham and Murdock tied for the first place but Murdock was placed second after review of the targets Bassham suggested that two gold medals be given and after this request was declined asked Murdock to share the top step with him at the award ceremony Women had no separate shooting events at the time and were allowed to compete with men Murdock became the first woman to win an Olympic medal in shooting 26 The Eastern Bloc dominated the 1976 Montreal Olympics with seven countries placing in the top ten of the medal table The United States team was relegated to a third place in the medal standings for the first time in its history This was an Olympics of contrasts the US men s swimming team despite the generally dismal showing of the overall delegation swept 12 gold and 27 total medals in the 13 events that were on the program and broke 11 world records in the process arguably the most dominant performance of any swimming team in history 27 while the US women s swimming team on the other hand fell victim to what was later shown to be a pervasive East German doping program 28 They still managed to win a gold medal in an upset of the East Germans in the 4x100 freestyle relay The event was held on the last day of the swimming program and the American women were risking being deprived of gold for the first time in US Olympic history The victory was somewhat overlooked at the time but since the early 1990s when public revelation of the doping program began their gold medal is considered to be one of the most improbable upsets of all time 28 In track and field both the US men s and women s team were overwhelmed by East Germans who secured a bulk of medals in the signature sports of the US resulting in the USSR topping the medal table The US boxing team surprised everyone advancing to six gold medal bouts and winning five of them drawing parallels to a stellar 1952 team that also took five golds The achievement was even more notable due to the fact that the American boxers were significantly younger and less experienced than their Cuban and Soviet counterparts 29 In other sports US divers won five medals including two golds the US equestrian team took home four medals American shooters won three medals including a historic silver by a woman in the mixed 50 meters rifle three positions US freestyle wrestlers advanced to four gold medal bouts yet won only one of them all four were against the Soviets concluding the meet with six medals overall The US men s basketball team reclaimed the gold medal while the women s team won a surprising silver being ranked no higher than sixth prior to the start of the tournament The Soviets and East Germans were unstoppable in canoeing gymnastics rowing weightlifting and wrestling going 1 2 in the overall medal standings 49 gold and 125 total medals for the Soviets and 40 gold and 90 total medals for East Germans The US won medals in 14 sports finishing third with 34 gold and 94 total medals The most successful day for the Americans was July 31 when they won 8 gold and 18 total medals 30 The 1980 Summer Olympics marked another first for the United States as the nation led by far the largest and most significant boycott in the Olympic history The boycott was motivated by the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan as well as by flagrant human rights violations in the USSR and the regime s anti Semitic policies 31 32 33 34 35 The Soviet state run media ridiculed the Americans as sore losers who couldn t get over the fact that they were no longer a perennial Olympic power and simply didn t want to be embarrassed by the Soviets who would thrash them in the medal count Indeed all medal predictions pointed to an inevitable Soviet victory with 55 60 gold medals East Germans were forecast to win 40 45 gold medals while the Americans would wind up in third place with 30 35 golds However the world would never know what would have happened as the United States and 65 other countries chose not to attend the Moscow Games leaving them with the smallest attendance since 1956 Predictably the great majority of the medals were taken by the host country and East Germany in what was the most skewed medal tally since 1904 36 The Soviets amassed 80 gold all time record and 195 total second best result after the US in 1904 medals in their anticlimactic performance 37 nbsp President Ronald Reagan and Mary Lou Retton with the U S Olympic Team in Los Angeles 1984 Retton had just recovered in time from surgery to compete for the all around title where she completed two perfect 10s to defeat her Soviet bloc competitor by 05 points for the gold medal In 1984 Los Angeles witnessed what was considered a retaliatory boycott by the Soviets and their satellites although the Soviets cited security concerns and chauvinistic sentiments and an anti Soviet hysteria being whipped up in the United States However no threat to Eastern Bloc athletes was ever discovered and the athletes from the Eastern Bloc country that did attend the 1984 games in Los Angeles Romania encountered no problems and in fact were widely cheered above all other visiting nations at the Opening Ceremonies when they marched into the Coliseum Romania ended up finishing third in overall medal count at the Games The move by the Soviets left many dumbfounded as it was expected that they would try to thrash the US on their soil thus achieving a significant propaganda victory The forecasts again heavily favored the Soviet Union with the Soviet athletes being expected to rack up 60 65 gold medals compared to 35 45 by the second placed Americans That didn t happen Furthermore despite the Soviet boycott a record 140 nations including China that participated for the first time since 1952 attended the games 38 nbsp Among Olympic medalists Shannon Miller is tied with Simone Biles as the most decorated U S gymnast male or female each with seven Olympic medals There were fears that the Soviet Union would boycott the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul as well because South Korea had no diplomatic relations with the USSR which recognized and supported only North Korea However the policies of Perestroika that were initiated by Gorbachev in 1985 led to the Soviet participation in the games Cuba clearly not understanding such a betrayal decided to boycott the Olympics on its own impacting the boxing field as a result The Soviet Union was steadily moving towards its ultimate collapse but its sporting empire was still in its prime The Soviets and their close allies from East Germany utterly dominated the games winning 55 and 37 gold medals respectively 132 and 102 total medals During the Cold War period the Americans did their best to challenge the Soviets but the playing field wasn t level The Soviet athletes were funded by the state and trained full time while the US strictly obeyed the amateur rules and its athletes were primarily self financed students who were significantly younger and less experienced than the Soviet veterans In addition to that the Soviets developed a state sponsored doping system and supplied performance enhancing drugs to the vast majority of their athletes 35 Furthermore they heavily invested in the development of a similar system in their satellite nation East Germany with a specific goal of making East Germans highly competitive in swimming and track and field so that they can reduce the number of medals the Americans win in their signature sports Unfortunately for the US the Soviet strategy worked and the gap between the USSR and US widened every four years until the collapse of the Soviet Union In 1972 the Soviets won 50 gold and 99 total medals to the Americans 33 and 94 in 1976 the USSR amassed 49 gold and 125 total medals to the Americans 34 and 94 1980 Olympics were boycotted by the US and its allies the Soviets retaliated in 1984 by boycotting the LA Olympics together with their satellites finally in 1988 the USSR won 55 gold and 132 total medals to the Americans 36 and 94 the US finished third at those games losing even to the East Germans In 1992 the Soviets still fielded a team despite the dissolution of their state yet the margin of their victory over the Americans became narrower 45 gold and 112 total medals to the Americans 37 and 108 By 1996 every former Soviet republic formed its own National Olympic Committee and the countries participated as independent nations with Russia assuming the Soviet place in the IOC and inheriting Soviet achievements as by far the largest of the former Soviet republics So in 1996 the Americans finally managed to return to the top spot in the medal rankings winning 44 gold and 101 total medals compared to 26 gold and 63 total medals won by the second placed Russians thanks to the partial abolition of the amateur rules in the early 1990s the American athletes still weren t state sponsored unlike their foreign counterparts but they were now eligible for prize money and sponsorships They were still disadvantaged by these rules in those sports where they weren t abolished i e boxing baseball where Cubans continued to field state sponsored pros against American amateurs but the situation started improving Recent period 1994 present edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2020 nbsp Jennie Finch signing autographs From 1998 to 2010 Finch became the most recognizable face on a dominant squad Her 2004 Olympics showing put her on an elite level as she helped lead the USA softball team to a gold medal U S athletes have appeared in every Summer Olympics in recent decades The United States represented by the United States Olympic amp Paralympic Committee USOPC competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo Originally scheduled to take place in the summer of 2020 the Games were postponed to July 23 to August 8 2021 due to the COVID 19 pandemic 39 The opening ceremony flag bearers for the United States were baseball player Eddy Alvarez and basketball player Sue Bird 40 Javelin thrower Kara Winger was the flag bearer for the closing ceremony 41 When USA Gymnastics announced that 2016 Olympic all around champion Biles would not participate in the gymnastics all around final the spotlight fell on her American team mates The U S had won the event in each of the last five Olympic Games a formidable winning streak was on the line Sunisa Lee embraced the moment and stood tall to deliver for her country She totaled 57 433 to hold off Rebeca Andrade of Brazil 57 298 to clinch the title Lee also made history of her own With victory in the all around she became the first Hmong American gymnast to win an Olympic gold medal With a silver in the women s team final and bronze in the individual uneven bars Lee left Tokyo with an impressive three Olympic medals Lydia Jacoby Alaska s swimming sweetheart made history when she was the first Alaskan swimmer selected to make the U S Olympic swim team She stunned the world to secure victory in the women s 100m breaststroke Recent major champion Nelly Korda followed the winning ways of compatriot Xander Schauffele to take home gold in the women s golf competition The 2 01m tall thrower Ryan Crouser retained his Olympic title in the men s shot put and did so in some style setting an Olympic record three times At the 2022 Winter Olympics the USA exercised a diplomatic boycott meaning it did not send any high level delegation to the games but would not hinder athletes from participating The reasoning was the ongoing genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang and other human rights abuses 42 A total of 25 medals meant Team USA won two more medals than in 2018 although it still signifies an overall decline after 37 medals in 2010 and 28 in 2014 Notable successes included Jessie Diggins becoming the first American female skier to win individual cross country medals figure skater Nathan Chen breaking the short program world record on route to the Olympic gold medal in the men s singles Erin Jackson becoming the first black female athlete to win speed skating gold and Chloe Kim defending her title in the snowboarding women s halfpipe Veteran snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis who last medaled in the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin was the only U S athlete with multiple gold medals winning the women s snowboard cross event and sharing the gold with teammate Nick Baumgartner in the mixed snowboard cross event Amateurism and professionalism edit nbsp U S President George W Bush visits Misty May Treanor left and Kerri Walsh Jennings right at the 2008 Olympics The exclusion of professionals caused several controversies throughout the history of the modern Olympics The 1912 Olympic pentathlon and decathlon champion Jim Thorpe was stripped of his medals when it was discovered that he had played semi professional baseball before the Olympics His medals were posthumously restored by the IOC in 1983 on compassionate grounds 43 The advent of the state sponsored full time amateur athlete of the Eastern Bloc countries eroded the ideology of the pure amateur It put the self financed amateurs of the Western countries at a disadvantage The Soviet Union entered teams of athletes who were all nominally students soldiers or working in a profession but all of whom were in reality paid by the state to train on a full time basis 44 45 46 The situation greatly disadvantaged American athletes and was a major factor in the decline of American medal hauls in the 1970s and 1980s As a result the Olympics shifted away from amateurism as envisioned by Pierre de Coubertin They began allowing participation of professional athletes but only in the 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union and its influence within the International Olympic Committee 47 48 49 Prize money editWhen a US athlete wins an Olympic medal as of 2016 the USOPC paid the winner 25 000 for gold 15 000 for silver and 10 000 for bronze 50 The USOPC increased the payouts by 25 to 37 000 for gold 22 500 for silver and 15 000 for bronze beginning in 2017 51 These numbers are significantly lower than in other countries where Olympic gold medalists receive up to 1 million from their governments for a gold medal 52 53 Since 2018 payouts to Paralympic athletes have been the same as to the Olympians The International Paralympic Committee noted that Operation Gold Awards for American Paralympic athletes would be increased by as much as 400 percent 54 Doping editUnited States has had eight Olympic medals stripped for doping violations In all cases the US government or the United States Olympic Committee USOC had nothing to do with it and sanctioned athletes acted on their own In the case of swimmer Rick DeMont the USOC has recognized his gold medal performance in the 1972 Summer Olympics in 2001 55 but only the IOC has the power to restore his medal and it has as of 2017 refused to do so 55 DeMont originally won the gold medal in 4 00 26 Following the race the IOC stripped him of his gold medal 56 after his post race urinalysis tested positive for traces of the banned substance ephedrine contained in his prescription asthma medication Marax The positive test following the 400 meter freestyle final also deprived him of a chance at multiple medals as he was not permitted to swim in any other events at the 1972 Olympics including the 1 500 meter freestyle for which he was the then current world record holder Before the Olympics DeMont had properly declared his asthma medications on his medical disclosure forms but the USOC had not cleared them with the IOC s medical committee 57 55 In 2003 Wade Exum the United States Olympic Committee s director of drug control administration from 1991 to 2000 gave copies of documents to Sports Illustrated that revealed that some 100 American athletes failed drug tests from 1988 to 2000 arguing that they should have been prevented from competing in the Olympics but were nevertheless cleared to compete among those athletes were Carl Lewis Joe DeLoach and Floyd Heard 58 59 60 61 Before showing the documents to Sports Illustrated Exum tried to use them in a lawsuit against USOC accusing the organization of racial discrimination and wrongful termination against him and cover up over the failed tests His case was summarily dismissed by the Denver federal Court for lack of evidence The USOC claimed his case baseless as he himself was the one in charge of screening the anti doping test program of the organization and clarifying that the athletes were cleared according to the rules 62 63 Carl Lewis broke his silence on allegations that he was the beneficiary of a drugs cover up admitting he had failed tests for banned substances but claiming he was just one of hundreds of American athletes who were allowed to escape bans concealed by the USOC Lewis has acknowledged that he failed three tests during the 1988 US Olympic trials which under international rules at the time should have prevented him from competing in the 1988 Summer Olympics 64 Former athletes and officials came out against the USOC cover up For so many years I lived it I knew this was going on but there s absolutely nothing you can do as an athlete You have to believe governing bodies are doing what they are supposed to do And it is obvious they did not said former American sprinter and 1984 Olympic champion Evelyn Ashford 65 Exum s documents revealed that Carl Lewis had tested positive three times at the 1988 Olympics trials for minimum amounts of pseudoephedrine ephedrine and phenylpropanolamine which were banned stimulants Bronchodilators are also found in cold medication Due to the rules his case could have led to disqualification from the Seoul Olympics and suspension from competition for six months The levels of the combined stimulants registered in the separate tests were 2 ppm 4 ppm and 6 ppm 62 Lewis defended himself claiming that he had accidentally consumed the banned substances After the supplements that he had taken were analyzed to prove his claims the USOC accepted his claim of inadvertent use since a dietary supplement he ingested was found to contain Ma Huang the Chinese name for Ephedra ephedrine is known to help weight loss 62 Fellow Santa Monica Track Club teammates Joe DeLoach and Floyd Heard were also found to have the same banned stimulants in their systems and were cleared to compete for the same reason 66 67 The highest level of the stimulants Lewis recorded was 6 ppm which was regarded as a positive test in 1988 but is now regarded as negative test The acceptable level has been raised to ten parts per million for ephedrine and twenty five parts per million for other substances 62 68 According to the IOC rules at the time positive tests with levels lower than 10 ppm were cause of further investigation but not immediate ban Neal Benowitz a professor of medicine at UC San Francisco who is an expert on ephedrine and other stimulants agreed that These levels are what you d see from someone taking cold or allergy medicines and are unlikely to have any effect on performance 62 Following Exum s revelations the IAAF acknowledged that at the 1988 Olympic Trials the USOC indeed followed the correct procedures in dealing with eight positive findings for ephedrine and ephedrine related compounds in low concentration Additionally in 1988 the federation reviewed the relevant documents with the athletes names undisclosed and stated that the medical committee felt satisfied however on the basis of the information received that the cases had been properly concluded by the USOC as negative cases in accordance with the rules and regulations in place at the time and no further action was taken 69 70 Disqualified medalists edit Main article List of stripped Olympic medals The United States has had eight Olympic medals stripped which is fifth in the ranking of countries with the most stripped medals 71 1972 Summer Olympics Rick DeMont first place gold medalist Swimming Men s 400 m freestyle 72 2000 Summer Olympics Marion Jones first place gold medalist Athletics Women s 100 m 73 2000 Summer Olympics Marion Jones first place gold medalist Athletics Women s 200 m 73 2000 Summer Olympics Marion Jones third place bronze medalist Athletics Women s long jump 73 2000 Summer Olympics Relay team Antonio Pettigrew Jerome Young first place gold medalists Athletics Men s 4 400 m relay 74 2000 Summer Olympics Lance Armstrong third place bronze medalist Cycling Men s road time trial 75 2004 Summer Olympics Tyler Hamilton first place gold medalist Cycling Men s road time trial 76 2012 Summer Olympics Relay team Tyson Gay second place silver medalist Athletics Men s 4 100 m relay 77 Russia United States rivalry editThis section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Russia in all its incarnations and the United States have won more Olympic medals than any other nation 78 Russia topped the overall medal count at seven Summer Olympics and nine Winter Olympics while the United States placed first at eighteen Summer Olympics and one Winter Olympics The countries developed a strong rivalry during the Cold War While the tensions eased in the 1990s the relations deteriorated in 2014 and 2016 79 Since the 1952 Summer Olympics the United States has won 1 986 Summer and Winter Olympics medals the most in that period while Russia has won 1 973 medals the second most in that period Summer Olympics edit Medal totals of the Soviet Union Unified Team Russia ROC 80 81 82 and the United States 83 since 1952 when the Soviet Union started to compete at the Summer Games nbsp RussiaGames Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank1952 Helsinki 22 30 19 71 21956 Melbourne 37 29 32 98 11960 Rome 43 29 31 103 11964 Tokyo 30 31 35 96 21968 Mexico City 29 32 30 91 21972 Munich 50 27 22 99 11976 Montreal 49 41 35 125 11980 Moscow 80 69 46 195 11984 Los Angeles Did not participate1988 Seoul 55 31 46 132 11992 Barcelona 45 38 29 112 11996 Atlanta 26 21 16 63 22000 Sydney 32 28 29 89 22004 Athens 28 26 36 90 32008 Beijing 24 13 23 60 32012 London 20 20 29 68 42016 Rio de Janeiro 19 17 20 56 42020 Tokyo 20 28 23 71 52024 Paris Future event2028 Los Angeles2032 BrisbaneTotal 609 510 501 1619 2 nbsp United StatesGames Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank1952 Helsinki 40 19 17 76 11956 Melbourne 32 25 17 74 21960 Rome 34 21 16 71 21964 Tokyo 36 26 28 90 11968 Mexico City 45 28 34 107 11972 Munich 33 31 30 94 21976 Montreal 34 35 25 94 31980 Moscow Did not participate1984 Los Angeles 83 61 30 174 11988 Seoul 36 31 27 94 31992 Barcelona 37 34 37 108 21996 Atlanta 44 32 25 101 12000 Sydney 37 24 32 93 12004 Athens 36 39 26 101 12008 Beijing 36 39 37 112 22012 London 48 26 30 104 12016 Rio de Janeiro 46 37 38 121 12020 Tokyo 39 41 33 113 12024 Paris Future event2028 Los Angeles2032 BrisbaneTotal 696 549 482 1727 1 Overall the United States 1896 1976 1984 present has won 1 061 gold and 2 636 total medals and Russia 1900 1908 1912 1952 1980 1988 present has won 610 gold and 1 627 total medals Winter Olympics edit Medal totals of the Soviet Union Unified Team Russia Olympic Athletes from Russia 80 81 82 and the United States 83 since 1956 when the Soviet Union started to compete at the Winter Games nbsp RussiaGames Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank1956 Cortina d Ampezzo 7 3 6 16 11960 Squaw Valley 7 5 9 21 11964 Innsbruck 11 8 6 25 11968 Grenoble 5 5 3 13 21972 Sapporo 8 5 3 16 11976 Innsbruck 13 6 8 27 11980 Lake Placid 10 6 6 22 11984 Sarajevo 6 10 9 25 21988 Calgary 11 9 9 29 11992 Albertville 9 6 8 23 21994 Lillehammer 11 8 4 23 11998 Nagano 9 6 3 18 32002 Salt Lake City 5 4 4 13 52006 Turin 8 6 8 22 42010 Vancouver 3 5 7 15 112014 Sochi 11 9 9 29 12018 Pyeongchang 2 6 9 17 132022 Beijing 6 12 14 32 92026 Milan Cortina future eventTotal 142 119 125 376 3 nbsp United StatesGames Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank1956 Cortina d Ampezzo 2 3 2 7 61960 Squaw Valley 3 4 3 10 31964 Innsbruck 1 2 4 7 81968 Grenoble 1 5 1 7 91972 Sapporo 3 2 3 8 51976 Innsbruck 3 3 4 10 31980 Lake Placid 6 4 2 12 31984 Sarajevo 4 4 0 8 31988 Calgary 2 1 3 6 91992 Albertville 5 4 2 11 51994 Lillehammer 6 5 2 13 51998 Nagano 6 3 4 13 52002 Salt Lake City 10 13 11 34 32006 Turin 9 9 7 25 22010 Vancouver 9 15 13 37 32014 Sochi 9 9 10 28 42018 Pyeongchang 9 8 6 23 42022 Beijing 9 9 7 25 32026 Milan Cortina future eventTotal 97 103 84 284 4 Overall the United States 1924 present has won 113 gold and 330 total medals and Russia 1956 present has won 142 gold and 376 total medals Basketball edit 1972 Olympics edit See also 1972 Olympic Men s Basketball Final This section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Inside view in 2014 of the Rudi Sedlmayer Halle where the 1972 Olympic men s basketball final was playedThe United States and Soviet Union sporting adversary reached its peak during the Cold War The U S men s team was considered a favorite in the run up to the 1972 Games Since the first Olympic basketball tournament at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin the Americans hadn t lost a single game winning seven consecutive gold medals in a dominating fashion Their record reached an unprecedented 63 0 before the final game Since the 1952 tournament the Soviet team challenged the Americans winning silver in 1952 1956 1960 and 1964 and bronze in 1968 Outside of the Olympics the Soviets had already defeated the U S team in the World Championship play However the Americans never sent their best collegiate players to that tournament It is important to note that the Olympics strictly prohibited any involvement of professional athletes at the time The Soviet Union and other Eastern Bloc countries used that rule to their advantage listing all its top players as soldiers or workers which allowed them to breach the amateur rules Western experts classified these athletes as professionals 84 On the other hand leading American players were unable to play in the Olympics as they were officially professional and played in the NBA That disadvantage hadn t prevented the Americans from winning as they won the first seven Olympic basketball tournaments without a single defeat The confrontation of the Soviet Union and United States on the basketball court was deeply connected to the confrontation on the political front Many American viewers assumed that 1972 Games were openly anti American 85 There were rumors that the Communist party had bribed the officials because they wanted the USSR to win 50 gold medals at these Olympics in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Soviet Union 86 The United States team was the youngest in history American players usually participated in the Olympics once before turning pro and the U S team always had new players every four years The 1972 team didn t have a clear leader A rising star Bill Walton declined an invitation to participate Nevertheless the team was heavily favored featuring such players as Doug Collins or Tommy Burleson the tallest player among all teams The young American team was confronted by a veteran Soviet team featuring stars Sergei Belov Modestas Paulauskas and Alexander Belov The players had played together for more than seven years For Gennadi Volnov it was the fourth Olympic appearance The Soviets performed strongly at the beginning winning the first half 26 21 The Soviets kept the Americans 4 8 points behind during the first half In the second half Soviets targeted Dwight Jones as they considered him the leader of the U S team On the 28th minute he was provoked by Mikheil Korkia and responded Both players were sent off The Soviets were satisfied as they deemed Korkia less significant for them than Jones for the Americans The next minute Alexander Belov hit Jim Brewer during the free throw and Brewer was unable to continue playing According to the Americans the referees did not notice the foul With 10 minutes left the Soviets increased their lead to 10 points After that Americans finally started to press the Soviets It helped them to cut the deficit to 1 point Soviet players started to feel nervous With less than a minute left Doug Collins stole a Soviet pass at halfcourt and was fouled hard by Zurab Sakandelidze as he drove toward the basket being knocked down into the basket stanchion With three seconds remaining on the game clock Collins was awarded two free throws and sank the first to tie the score at 49 Just as Collins lifted the ball to begin his shooting motion in attempting the second free throw the horn from the scorer s table sounded marking the beginning of a chain of events that left the game s final three seconds mired in controversy Although the unexpected sound of the horn caused lead referee Renato Righetto to turn away from the free throw attempt and look over to the scorer s table play was not stopped Collins never broke his shooting motion and continued with his second free throw scoring to put the U S ahead by a score of 50 49 Immediately following Collins free throws the Soviets inbounded the ball and failed to score Soviet coaches claimed that they had requested a timeout before Collins foul shots The referees ordered the clock reset to three seconds and the game s final seconds replayed The horn sounded as a length of the court Soviet pass was being released from the inbounding player the pass missed its mark and the American players began celebrating Nevertheless the final three seconds were replayed for a third time This time the Soviets Alexander Belov and the USA s Kevin Joyce and Jim Forbes went up for the pass and Belov caught the long pass from Ivan Edeshko near the American basket Belov then laid the ball in for the winning points as the buzzer sounded Later Olympics edit The Americans regained the basketball crown in 1976 but their ability to stay competitive with college players against seasoned professionals from the Soviet Union was decreasing In 1988 the Soviets beat the United States once again eliminating them in the semifinals The 1988 game was a turning point in international basketball FIBA officials started to realize that amateur rules were extremely unfair and in 1989 NBA players were finally allowed in the Olympics 87 88 89 Ice hockey edit See also Miracle on Ice nbsp An amateur photo featuring 1980 U S vs USSR ice hockey matchupThe 1980 hockey game between the U S and USSR was dubbed the Miracle on Ice when American college players defeated the heavily favored seasoned professionals from the Soviet Union on the way to a gold medal at the Winter Olympics in Lake Placid New York The Soviet Union had won the gold medal in five of the six previous Winter Olympic Games and were the favorites to win once more Though ice hockey is not a major sport in most areas of the United States the Miracle is often listed as one of the all time greatest American sporting achievements The U S also won the gold medal in the 1960 Games at Squaw Valley California defeating the Soviet Union Canada Czechoslovakia and Sweden along the way However since this victory is not as well known as the 1980 win it has come to be known as the Forgotten Miracle 90 91 The U S and the Soviet Union next met at the Olympics in 1988 As in 1980 the Soviets were represented by their star studded veterans while the Americans fielded a team of college players The Soviets won the encounter 7 5 and went on to win the gold medal while the U S placed seventh nbsp Hilary Knight is one of the top stars in U S women s ice hockey Knight helped lead Team USA to gold at the 2018 PyeongChang Games their first Olympic victory in 20 years The two teams met again at the 1992 Olympics in a semi final match There the Unified Team the successor to the Soviet Union won 5 2 While some stars had left the Soviet Union to play in the NHL the Unified Team still boasted many veterans from their domestic professional league while the Americans were represented primarily by college players The Unified Team eventually won the gold medal while the U S placed fourth The U S and Russia the successor to the Unified Team met twice at the 1996 World Cup of Hockey The Americans won both games 5 2 enroute to the tournament championship The U S coached by Herb Brooks and Russia coached by Slava Fetisov met twice in the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City which included a 2 2 round robin draw and a 3 2 semi final win for the Americans The semi final match was played 22 years to the day after the Miracle on Ice game The U S eventually won silver while Russia won bronze The two teams met in the quarterfinals of the 2004 World Cup of Hockey with the U S earning a decisive 5 3 victory The U S and Russia played each other in a round robin game at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi The game was tied 2 2 after overtime before the Americans prevailed in an eight round shootout with T J Oshie scoring on 4 of 6 attempts for the United States The match has been dubbed by some as the Marathon on Ice due to its length 92 Both teams however failed to medal the Americans finished fourth losing in the semis to Canada and to Finland in the bronze medal game while the Russians placed fifth losing to Finland in the quarterfinals See also editList of United States Olympic medalists United States at the Paralympics United States at the Summer Olympics United States at the Winter Olympics United States at the Pan American Games Four territories of the United States send independent Olympic teams American Samoa Guam Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands Notes edit On 29 January 2024 CAS disqualified Valieva for four years retroactive to 25 December 2021 for an anti doping rule violation On 30 January 2024 the ISU reallocated medals to upgrade the United States to gold and Japan to silver while downgrading ROC to bronze References edit Team USA United States Olympic amp Paralympic Committee Retrieved April 9 2024 Unlike most countries Team USA does not receive government funding Crookston Paul August 10 2016 U S Has Done Fine with No Government Department of Sports National Review Hart Torrey August 7 2020 U S Olympic Athletes in Financial Limbo Without Olympics Events Bachman Rachel April 12 2020 WSJ News Exclusive U S Olympic Sports Groups Seek Government Aid Wall Street Journal via www wsj com Carter Vaughn Findley John Alexander Rothney January 1 2011 Twentieth Century World Cengage Learning p 4 ISBN 978 1 133 16880 5 Belmont and Belcourt Biographies September 1 2012 Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte Unauthorized Biographies Price World Publishing pp 8 ISBN 978 1 61984 221 2 Past Olympic host city election results GamesBids Archived from the 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Daily News Rafael Dan April 21 2016 1976 U S Olympic team reuniting June 11 ESPN com United States at the 1976 MontrA c al Summer Games Olympics at Sports Reference com April 17 2020 Archived from the original on April 17 2020 U Tulli Bringing Human Rights In The Campaign Against the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games and the Origins of the Nexus Between Human Rights and the Olympic Games in The International Journal of the History of Sport Vol 33 Issue 16 2016 2017 https www tandfonline com doi abs 10 1080 09523367 2017 1315104 The Olympic Boycott 1980 U S Department of State Archive Smith Terence January 20 1980 The President Said Nyet The New York Times How the Russians break the Olympic rules The Christian Science Monitor April 15 1980 a b Ruiz Rebecca R August 13 2016 The Soviet Doping Plan Document Reveals Illicit Approach to 84 Olympics The New York Times Moscow 1980 Olympic Games Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Library Edition http www library ebonline com eb article 9098213 1980 Moskva Summer Games Olympics at Sports Reference com April 17 2020 Archived from the original on April 17 2020 Bryan Fogel talks 1984 Summer Olympics boycott on The Jim Rome Podcast jimrome com Archived from the original on November 22 2017 Retrieved November 23 2017 Joint Statement from the International Olympic Committee and the Tokyo 2021 Organising Committee Olympics March 24 2020 Retrieved March 28 2020 Sue Bird And Eddy Alvarez Selected As Team USA s Flag Bearers For The Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 teamusa org July 21 2021 Archived from the original on July 25 2021 Retrieved August 8 2021 The flagbearers for the Tokyo 2020 Closing Ceremony Olympics com August 8 2021 Archived PDF from the original on August 8 2021 Retrieved August 8 2021 Cha Victor January 18 2022 The Biden Boycott of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jim Thorpe Biography Biography com Retrieved February 9 2009 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on August 25 2008 Retrieved February 22 2022 IOC statement of Lance Armstrong olympics com dead link Hamilton stripped of Athens gold BBC Sport IOC strips U S relay of silver after Tyson Gay case May 13 2015 All time Summer Olympics medals table 1896 2016 Statistic Statista USA Men s Team Vs Russia Was About More Than Just Hockey Time a b Olympic History of Soviet Union Olympics at Sports Reference com Archived from the original on April 17 2020 a b Olympic History of Unified Team Olympics at Sports Reference com Archived from the original on April 17 2020 a b Olympic History of Russia Olympics at Sports Reference com Archived from the original on April 17 2020 a b Olympic History of United States Olympics at Sports Reference com Archived from the original on April 19 2020 Classic 1972 USA vs USSR Basketball game ESPN August 6 2004 Retrieved April 13 2009 By Frank Saraceno Classic 1972 USA vs USSR Basketball game espn go com August 6 2004 Chris Elzey American Studies Purdue University 03 Seconds From Gold 2002 Journal of Sports History vol 29 issue 3 page 518 522 la84foundation org Hubbard Jan April 8 2020 The Vote That Cleared the Way for NBA Players to Play in FIBA Competitions USA Basketball Archived from the original on April 11 2020 Retrieved May 5 2020 Federation Rule Change Opens Olympics to N B A Players The New York Times April 8 1989 Retrieved August 5 2020 History of basketball at Olympics A tale of American domination Burnside Scott February 8 2010 Hockey s miracle before the Miracle ESPN Retrieved October 7 2011 The Morning Skate The Forgotten Miracle of 1960 The New York Times December 11 2009 Retrieved October 7 2011 Team USA Beats Russia In Marathon On Ice Team USA Archived from the original on February 15 2014 External links edit United States of America International Olympic Committee July 27 2021 United States Olympedia com Olympic Analytics USA olympanalyt com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States at the Olympics 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