By Tom Kando
With the imminent opening of the Olympic Games in London, I thought I’d entertain you with the following timely information:
During a previous Olympic Games, Sacramento Bee columnist Marcos Bretton bemoaned the fact that Mexico had done so poorly in terms of the medal count - just as badly as “Indo-freakin-nesia.” This prompted me to compute the various countries’ medals in proportion to their population.
In the table below, I select 30 countries “of interest”, out of 86 that got at least 1 medal in 2008. http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/olympics/2008/medals/tracker/ For the sake of simplicity, I do not distinguish between gold silver and bronze. The table ranks countries from best to worst, in terms of how many people does it take in each country to earn ONE Olympic medal?
Countries Ranked by number of Medals in Proportion to Population
| ||
Rank
|
Country
|
Number of people it takes to earn a medal
|
1
|
Bahamas
|
150,000
|
2
|
Jamaica
|
270,000
|
3
|
Iceland
|
300,000
|
5
|
Australia
|
430,000
|
6
|
New Zealand
|
440,000
|
7
|
Cuba
|
460,000
|
8
|
Armenia
|
500,000
|
10
|
Norway
|
560,000
|
11
|
Lithuania
|
600,000
|
12
|
Estonia
|
650,000
|
12
|
Trinidad and Tobago
|
650,000
|
20
|
Hungary
|
1 million
|
20
|
Netherlands
|
1 million
|
20
|
Switzerland
|
1 million
|
28
|
Britain
|
1.3 million
|
30
|
France
|
1.5 million
|
35
|
Canada
|
1.8 million
|
37
|
Russia
|
1.9 million
|
38
|
Germany
|
2 million
|
39
|
Italy
|
2.1 million
|
45
|
USA
|
2.8 million
|
57
|
Japan
|
5.1 million
|
66
|
Brazil
|
12.8 million
|
67
|
China
|
13.3 million
|
72
|
Afghanistan
|
24 million
|
78
|
Mexico
|
36 million
|
79
|
Iran
|
37 million
|
83
|
Indonesia
|
50.4 million
|
84
|
Egypt
|
80 million
|
86
|
India
|
400 million
|
87-204
|
118 other countries with zero medals
|
∞ million
|
Conclusions:
As you can see, the Bahamas were the strongest Olympic competitor, measured this way. It only took 150,000 Bahamians to earn an Olympic medal. On the other hand, it took 400 million Indians to earn one. Put it this way: it took 3000 more Indians than Bahamians to earn an Olympic medal. 118 countries did even worse than India - they got no medals at all.
Patterns:
1. There is a negative correlation between a country’s size and its Olympic success: Many of the most succesful countries are small. For example, the two largest and most powerful countries - the US and China - are ranked #45 and #67.
2. The most successful regions are the Caribbean, Australia-New Zealand, Scandinavia and the small, formerly communist countries of Eastern Europe (E.g. the Baltic States). In the middle of the pack are the large countries of Western Europe and North America. The worst performances are by large Latin American countries, the Middle East, South Asia and Africa.
Why?
1. Resources: The more money a country spends on training athletes, - by the government or privately - the more medals. Some countries are just too poor (Africa), other ones choose not to devote large resources to sports. So this factor is a combination of a country’s relative wealth and whether or not its policy is to use sports for nationalism.
2. Related to this is cheating: The more cheating, the more medals: the former Soviet world was best at cheating, sometimes even using hidden males in some women’s events. Today, most of the cheating is in the form of doping (use of illegal performance-enhancing drugs) and it knows no boundaries.
3. Culture, tradition: Eastern Europe still does pretty well. This is a legacy of the Soviet era, when sports were used for nationalism.
4. One thing which a country’s Olympic success does NOT reflect is its moral fiber, as the communists and fascists claimed. The London Games of 2012 will produce a fairly similar ranking. Countries that garner the most medals absolutely (China, the US) and those that earn the most of them relative to their size (Caribbean Islands, Baltic States, etc.) will wave their flags with great pride.
Others will say that all rankings are odious, as is all chauvinism. True. But it was the genius of the Ancient Greeks to try to substitute this healthy form of competition for war. So I say, let the games begin. Citius, altius, fortius! leave comment here
3 comments:
Tom,
it's all about pride. If a country's leadership does not have pride regarding the Olympic or any other sports event (equestrian), the populace won't respond. It's all about leadership and pride.
Thanks for your comment, Sam.
Pride, too. You're right.
Interesting
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