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London 2012: Which countries dominate each Olympic sport?

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In need of Olympic medals? If you're British, you call on track cycling or sailing.

You might add rowing to that list and, after this summer, maybe triathlon will be up there too.

The point is that Team GB has become so dominant in a handful of sports that medals, even Olympic titles, in those disciplines can be all but guaranteed at London 2012.

By contrast, sports like handball and water polo had almost entirely passed Britain by until a home Games came around, while Greco-Roman wrestling still remains so obscure to us that not a single Briton has been entered.

Somewhere, however, there is a nation rubbing its hands with glee in anticipation of Greco-Roman wrestling, in exactly the same way as an expectant home crowd will throng London's velodrome.

Which is that nation? What about archery, slalom canoeing, modern pentathlon, table tennis - who cleans up in those sports and beyond?

Here is your definitive guide, based on past Olympic form, to the sporting monopolies of the Games.

ARCHERY - Nation to beat: South Korea

If there's an Olympic archery final, chances are a South Korean is in it. South Korea has won 16 of 32 gold medals on offer since the reintroduction of archery to the Olympics in 1972.

The US has won a further eight golds, while no other nation has won more than one Olympic title in that time, and Brits have picked up four bronze medals.

At Beijing 2008, the Koreans again won half of the four gold medals available, with China and Ukraine picking up the other two, in both cases at the expense of Korea. Unsurprisingly, Korea is among the 10 nations to have qualified the maximum six archers for London 2012.

ATHLETICS - Nation to beat: United States

It's not all about Jamaica - athletics forms such a broad church that medal micro-climates exist within its various disciplines.

For example, Kenya sits sixth in the all-time athletics medal table, but half of the nation's 22 gold medals in athletics came in distance events of 3000m or farther.

It will be no surprise that the United States dominates, having won more than 300 gold medals in athletics. Even the combined tally of the Soviet Union and Russia can only produce 82 golds, with Britain third on a total of 49. Finland, by virtue of gold-medal gluts during the Games' adolescence in 1920 and 1924, occupies fourth place with just one athletics gold medal fewer than Britain.

And yes, in recent history, Jamaica has carved out a niche as a rising athletics power. All of Jamaica's 13 gold medals in Olympic history have come in athletics, and eight of those have come from Athens 2004 and Beijing 2008.

The US finished with seven athletics gold medals inside Beijing's Bird's Nest stadium, with Russia, Kenya and Jamaica all taking six. Ethiopia's distance runners make them the other major medal factor in athletics, winning four golds in 2008.

BADMINTON - Nation to beat: China

Badminton has been dominated by Asian nations since its introduction to the Olympics in 1992.

Eleven of the 24 gold medals contested in that time have gone to China, with South Korea and Indonesia accounting for another six each. Completing a varied collection of nations, Denmark - which has a strong badminton heritage - is the owner of the one remaining gold, won in the men's singles at Atlanta 1996.

Were badminton and weightlifting removed from the Olympics, Indonesia's medal hopes would be devastated. Of the 25 Olympic medals Indonesians have won in history, 24 have come in those two sports (18 in badminton, six in weightlifting). Archery accounts for the 25th, a silver medal at Seoul 1988.

BASKETBALL - Nation to beat: United States

American dominance in this sport is unlikely to shock anybody. The nation whose NBA league monopolises global interest in basketball has racked up 19 gold medals, of which 13 came in the men's event and six were won by the women.

Historically, the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia were both major basketball powers with Olympic titles to their name. However, the break-up of both has handed dominance to the United States. In the last 20 years, the only Olympic title not won by the US was the 2004 men's event, where Argentina knocked the defending champions out at the semi-final stage before going on to win.

Basketball-mad Lithuania will be worth watching at London 2012, its national side having come through a qualifying tournament held in Venezuela earlier this month. The Lithuanian men won a world bronze medal in 2010 but failed to reach the European final on their own soil last year, squandering an early chance to reserve their place at the Games.

BOXING - Nation to beat: Cuba

Cuba comes into its own in boxing. The Communist nation's love affair with the sport is reflected in its Olympic prowess: Cuba's medal record in boxing is second only to the United States, with 32 gold medals to America's 48.

Cuba topped the boxing medal table at every Olympics from 1992 to 2004, enduring a frustrating succession of silver medals at Beijing 2008 but still earning a medal in eight of the 11 events, even if none were gold.

Now, men's boxing is wide open as a sport. Ten different nations were represented among the 11 winners in Beijing, including Britain (James DeGale won middleweight gold), with only China picking up two titles.

In women's boxing, new to the Games at London 2012, the story is different. China looks set to become the dominant force: at both the 2008 and 2010 women's World Championships, Chinese boxers reached the final in each of the three weights to be contested at the Olympics.

CANOEING - Nation to beat: Slovakia

Slalom canoeists are among Slovakia's greatest exports. Though the nation has only competed at the Olympics as a separate entity since 1994, the year after the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, it has won seven slalom canoe gold medals in that time - Slovakia's only summer Olympic titles.

Four people are responsible for those victories: Michal Martikan won the men's canoe single (C1) title in 1996 and 2008, Elena Kaliska has won the last two women's kayak single (K1) titles, and the Hochschorner brothers - Pavol and Peter - are three-time Olympic champions in the men's canoe double (C2), winning in Sydney, Athens and Beijing.

Sprint canoeing is largely the domain of Germany and Hungary, who each picked up six gold medals at the sport's 2011 World Championships, though Poland may be one to watch at London 2012 despite indifferent showings in Athens and Beijing. Britain has been building a strong sprint canoeing programme and GB will want more than the one gold medal won (by Tim Brabants) in Beijing.

CYCLING - Nation to beat: Great Britain

Great Britain dominated track cycling at Beijing 2008, but France has traditionally been a strong cycling nation at the Olympic Games.

The French won five cycling gold medals at both Atlanta 1996 and Sydney 2000, then placed second behind Britain in Beijing - albeit some distance back, picking up two gold and three silver medals to Team GB's eight gold and four silver.

France has won the last three men's mountain bike Olympic titles courtesy of Julien Absalon, finishing with a one-two in the event at Beijing 2008, while France's women also took first and second as women's BMX made its debut at the same Games.

DIVING - Nation to beat: China

The United States may be top of the all-time diving medal table, but that does not reflect the near-total dominance of China since it began taking the Olympic Games seriously.

China's first major presence at a summer Olympics came in 1984. Four years later, only American Greg Louganis stopped the Chinese from sweeping the board in the Seoul 1988 diving competition. Since then, only eight of the 32 diving gold medals on offer have been won by a nation other than China.

Australia's Matt Mitcham was the sole non-Chinese competitor to win a gold in the eight diving events contested at Beijing 2008, and China's divers will be similarly hard to beat at London 2012. China has won more gold medals in diving - 27 in total - than in any other sport.

EQUESTRIAN - Nation to beat: Germany

Germany is the undisputed equestrian powerhouse of the Games, producing 37 gold medallists in its various guises over the course of Olympic history.

These days, the medals in showjumping and eventing could come from any of several nations. Alongside Germany, you can expect strong challenges from the likes of Britain and the United States.

Dressage, on the other hand, has been a closed shop for decades. Not since Moscow 1980 has a nation other than the Netherlands or Germany won either the individual or team dressage Olympic titles. However, the British team for London 2012 looks strong enough to threaten that hegemony.

FENCING - Nation to beat: Italy

Between them, Italy, France and Hungary account for more than half of the near-600 fencing medals awarded since the dawning of the modern Olympic era.

Fencing has provided each of those three nations with more gold medals than any other sport. Italy has 45, France 41 and Hungary 34. However, while the Hungarians' glory days came largely in men's sabre fencing during the first half of the 20th Century, the Italians and French are still leaders in the sport, occupying the top two places at both Athens 2004 and Beijing 2008.

At the 2011 World Championships, held in Sicily, the Italians won four titles in Olympic events while Russia, increasingly a fencing force, won three.

FOOTBALL - Nation to beat: Spain

An impressive spell in the 1950s and 1960s saw Hungary win three Olympic men's football gold medals, enough for them to remain the most-decorated men's Olympic football team to this day. Uruguay, by dint of back-to-back successes in the 1920s, has two titles and lies joint-second on the all-time men's list alongside the Soviet Union and Argentina.

Argentina won the men's title at Beijing 2008 but the team failed to qualify for the London Olympics. It is hence difficult to say with any certainty who the favourites for the men's title in London are, particularly with the reintroduction of a British team for the first time since 1960. Spain and Brazil are among the strongest teams to have qualified.

The United States has dominated the women's event since its introduction at the Americans' home Games of 1996 in Atlanta, winning three of the four Olympic titles (the other going to Norway, who beat the US in Sydney). It is hard to see past them for gold at London 2012.

GYMNASTICS - Nation to beat: China

Gymnastics has traditionally had a strong association with Romania and, up until the 2008 Beijing Games, that remained the case: Romania topped the medal table for gymnastics at Athens 2004 and had been prominent at most Games since the 1980s, off the back of Nadia Comaneci's famous successes in Montreal and Moscow.

However, 2008 saw host nation China burst onto the scene, rocketing from one gold medal in Athens to 11 in Beijing, nine more than either the United States or Russia.

Do not expect a repeat of that stunning margin of victory at London 2012. While China still topped the medal table with four golds at the artistic gymnastics' 2011 World Championships in Tokyo, the US won as many titles and hosts Japan, led by men's superstar Kohei Uchimura, weighed in with two. The Japanese look to be a nation on the rise in the men's sport.

Russia is the unquestioned star of rhythmic gymnastics, and look out for Canada in the trampoline events. Though the Canadians have yet to win an Olympic gold medal, they have won more medals - five - in the sport than any other nation and have a strong team for London 2012.

HANDBALL - Nation to beat: France, Norway

As holders of the Olympic, world and European titles, Norway's women are the clear favourites for the handball gold medal at London 2012.

Handball is popular throughout Scandinavia and continental Europe, with Denmark winning women's Olympic gold three times in a row prior to Norway's victory at Beijing 2008.

The men's Olympic champions are France who, having won both of the intervening world titles, are - like Norway's women - on track to successfully defend their title.

HOCKEY - Nation to beat: Germany, Netherlands

Field hockey proved India's only source of Olympic gold medals for many years, but modern-day hockey has been the playground of Germany , Australia and the Netherlands .

Every hockey gold medal has gone to one of those three nations since Barcelona 1992, when hosts Spain dislodged the Germans after extra time in the women's final.

Britain's men and women are both dark horses for gold in 2012 but Argentina may be overdue an Olympic title. Women's hockey is hugely popular in Argentina and the World Cup winners, who beat Britain to the Champions Trophy title in January, are favourites to win gold this summer.

JUDO - Nation to beat: Japan

As you might expect, Japan is the leading judo nation in the world. You have to go back to Seoul 1988 to find the last occasion on which Japan did not top the judo medal table - in Seoul, hosts South Korea won two gold medals to Japan's one.

Japan has won more gold medals in judo (35) than in any other sport, a figure comfortably higher than that won by the second most successful nation in the sport's history, France.

China has recently emerged as a growing force in judo while Cuba often bubbles under at the Olympics. Cubans won six medals at both Athens 2004 and Sydney 2008, but failed to come home with a single gold medal from either.

MODERN PENTATHLON - Nation to beat: Russia

Combining fencing, swimming, riding, running and shooting into one sport, men's pentathlon has been the province of Russia in recent times. Russians won the men's Olympic title in Sydney, Athens and Beijing, only missing out to Kazakhstan in 1996.

On the women's side, Britain has proved a world power since a women's event was introduced to the Games at Sydney 2000. Four of the subsequent nine women's medals have been won by Britons, including gold for Steph Cook in Sydney.

However, Hungary is without doubt the world's biggest pentathlon nation. Pentathlons staged in Hungary draw huge crowds, local pentathletes gain celebrity status, and Beijing 2008 marked the first Olympics since Los Angeles 1984 - boycotted by Hungary, among others - in which no Hungarians won a pentathlon medal.

ROWING - Nation to beat: Great Britain

The peerless medal-winning efforts of Sirs Steve Redgrave and Matthew Pinsent, among others, have established Great Britain as a great among rowing nations. But outsiders may be surprised to learn of Romania's proud recent tradition in the sport.

Only gymnastics has proved more lucrative than rowing for Romanians at the Games. The nation topped the medal table at Sydney 2000 and Athens 2004, but slipped to ninth in Beijing 2008 with one gold and one bronze, while Britain and Australia finished first and second respectively with two gold medals.

That downward trend has continued in the world championships since 2008, with Romania picking up just one bronze medal in the past two years. The temptation may be to look to New Zealand in 2012. The Kiwis have hovered near the top end of the sport for much of the last decade, finishing second behind Britain at the 2011 World Championships.

SAILING - Nation to beat: Great Britain

Britannia currently rules the waves, Great Britain having finished first among sailing nations at each of the last three Olympic Games.

The British have won 24 gold medals in the history of sailing at the Games, five more than the second-placed United States, and GB nosed ahead of Australia by four gold medals to two at the Beijing Games four years ago.

Australia has been Britain's closest rival of late, and the Aussies took three gold medals to Britain's one at the 2011 ISAF World Championships off the coast of their home city of Perth.

SHOOTING - Nation to beat: China

The United States has a proud shooting history and tops the overall Olympic medal table, but not since Los Angeles 1984 has the US actually finished top in shooting at an individual Games.

Given the LA Games were also subject to a boycott, you have to go back to Munich 1972 to find an Olympic shooting medal table led by the Americans.

China , again, is increasingly the major player. Although they were vying for top spot as far back as LA (China and the US both won three gold medals, but China won fewer silver), since the year 2000 the medal table has been dominated by the Chinese, winning 12 gold medals at the last three Games.

SWIMMING - Nation to beat: Michael Phelps

Michael Phelps has, on his own, won more Olympic swimming titles than all but seven nations - and that's adding up every single Olympics.

It should hence be little surprise that the United States is far and away the most successful swimming nation, with almost 500 medals accrued. But in terms of importance to a nation's Olympic heritage, swimming means much more to Australia .

Australians have won 56 gold medals in the pool - athletics, far behind with 19, is the nation's second-strongest sport. Australia has finished a proud second to the US in each of the last three Olympic swimming medal tables.

SYNCHRO SWIMMING - Nation to beat: Russia

There is no doubt about the ruling nation in synchronised swimming. Since Sydney 2000, Russia has won both the team and duet titles (the only two gold medals available in the sport, which is only open to women) at every Olympics.

The production line continues, too: none of the nine-woman team which won gold for Russia at Beijing 2008 had been in the title-winning team eight years earlier.

At last year's World Championships, which offered a larger programme of events than the Games, seven gold medals were up for grabs. Russia won the lot by comfortable margins over China and Spain.

TABLE TENNIS - Nation to beat: China

Is it worth any nation other than China entering the Olympic table tennis tournament?

In the last 20 years, Chinese table tennis players have won 18 of the 20 Olympic titles on offer. Only South Korea in 2004 and Sweden in 1992 have managed to stand in the way of the Chinese. At their home Games in Beijing, China managed a one-two-three in both men's and women's singles.

No nation other than those mentioned has ever won a table tennis gold medal. China's total of 41 medals is more than every other nation combined. At the Olympics, this sport is theirs.

TAEKWONDO - Nation to beat: South Korea

In the decade for which taekwondo has been an Olympic sport, South Korea has stamped its authority on the medals.

Half of the eight gold medals on offer at Beijing 2008 went to Koreans, split equally between their male and female athletes. Mexico were an impressive second place with two golds.

Korea maintained their run during the 2011 World Championships, which the country hosted, but Iran - winners of two Olympic gold medals to date - made noteworthy progress, taking three world titles in the men's events to finish in second place.

TENNIS - Nation to beat: United States

It may come as a surprise to learn that Britain are second in the all-time Olympic tennis medal table, with 15 gold medals.

The problem? All 15 came during the sport's first stint in the Olympic programme, from 1896 to 1924. Tennis was subsequently dropped from the Games and did not make a reappearance until 1988, after which point Britain's sole medal dates to Atlanta 1996, won by Neil Broad and Tim Henman in men's doubles.

Olympic tennis is now quite an open field, not least because the doubles events create new national partnerships not found elsewhere on the pro tennis scene, which can throw up shock results.

The United States , however, has been the most prevalent name on the podium in recent years - in particular the Williams sisters, Olympic champions in women's doubles at both Sydney 2000 (where Venus won the singles) and Beijing 2008.

TRIATHLON - Nation to beat: Great Britain?

Triathlon made its Olympic debut at Sydney 2000 and, since then, a different nation has won every gold medal on offer: one each for Australia, Austria, Canada, Germany, New Zealand and Switzerland.

That may change in 2012, as Britain enters its home Olympics with not one but two world champions: Alistair Brownlee in men's triathlon (with younger brother Jonny ranked second in the world) and Helen Jenkins in the women's race.

It is feasible, though by no means certain, that Team GB could win both Olympic titles this summer and consequently leap to the top of the overall triathlon medal table. Equally, a strong Australian women's team might extend the lead their nation currently holds by virtue of its two silver medals.

VOLLEYBALL - Nation to beat: United States

Brazil and the United States traded blows at Beijing 2008 for indoor volleyball supremacy. The two met in both finals, the US emerging with men's gold and Brazil winning the women's Olympic title.

Previously, the Soviet Union had been a volleyball superpower and, in the vacuum after its demise, Cuba took over in the women's sport, winning three successive Olympic golds.

Brazilians have featured in six of the eight Olympic beach volleyball finals ever contested, but they emerged from Beijing with no gold medals as the US swept the board. Adding together the medal tables for beach and indoor volleyball, the US is on top with eight golds, ahead of Brazil's five.

WATER POLO - Nation to beat: Hungary

Hungary , famously, are the custodians of Olympic water polo, ever since the country's notorious skirmish with Soviet opponents in their semi-final at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne (Hungary, incidentally, having beaten Great Britain in the group stage en route).

The Soviet Union lost one of the Games' most ill-tempered encounters 4-0, a match later commemorated in the documentary Freedom's Fury, and the Hungarians claimed what was already their fourth Olympic title.

After a barren period in the 1980s and 1990s, Hungary has now pushed that up to nine titles, including the last three in the men's event. Their women are yet to win a title, there having been three separate champions - Australia, Italy and the Netherlands - since women's water polo was introduced at Sydney 2000.

WEIGHTLIFTING - Nation to beat: China

Weightlifting was the domain of the Soviet Union before its demise. Nowadays, China has taken up the mantle, topping the medal table at the last three Olympics after a brief period of Greek success in the mid-90s.

Compared to some sports, weightlifting offers an impressive array of medals - 15 golds are available, eight of which were won by China at Beijing 2008. South Korea, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Russia and Armenia all picked up three or more medals at those Games.

Notably, this is one of the few sports almost devoid of American success. Tara Nott Cunningham is the only United States weightlifter to win an Olympic title in the last half a century, and only then after a Bulgarian athlete had been stripped of gold for doping offences. The US team has sent more than 30 weightlifters to the Games of the past two decades, but Cunningham's gold is their only return in that time.

WRESTLING - Nation to beat: Russia

The United States takes its wrestling very seriously and finishes high up the medal table at each Games, but it is telling that its last appearance at the very top - a superb nine-gold haul - came at its home Los Angeles 1984 Games, boycotted by the Soviet Union.

Now, Russia is dominant. Russians won 21 gold medals at the last four Olympic Games, 12 more than the United States, including six at Beijing 2008.

Wrestling in Beijing marked a rare example of a sport where the hosts failed to make much of a mark. Although China finished fourth in the medal table for wrestling, they won only a lone gold medal, identical to their tally from Athens four years earlier.

Oh, and that nation that looks forward to Greco-Roman wrestling? Azerbaijan. Medals at every Games since 1996, contributing two of the four golds the country has won at the Olympics in that time.

BBC Sport - London 2012: Which countries dominate each Olympic sport?
 
sad that a 1.2 billion population can only bring out 2 gold medaks and six athletes, where a 5 million pop like Germany can bring out more than India :tdown:
 
China unveils smaller London Olympics team

BEIJING — China has announced a far smaller team for the London Olympics than the one that topped the gold medal table at home four years ago, but expectations are high of another dominant performance.

Just 396 Chinese athletes will go to London, down from a record-breaking 639 in Beijing and fewer even than the 407 who competed at the Athens Games in 2004.

But sports officials emphasised that the London-bound team, unveiled at a ceremony in Beijing on Tuesday, was still China's third-biggest for an Olympics and urged the athletes to bring their country glory.

"The Chinese athletes must get fully prepared and ready to face the challenges. We have to fight for each gold," Sports Minister Liu Peng said at the announcement ceremony.

In Beijing, China as the host country could be represented in every sport, however it failed to qualify in a number of events for London.

These included the men's volleyball and soccer tournaments, which would have added dozens of athletes to the delegation.

Nevertheless, pressure is building on the Chinese team to cement the country's status as an Olympic powerhouse.

"In the gold-medal rankings, China will for sure end in the top two," said Wei Jizhong, former secretary-general of the Chinese Olympic Committee, according to the China Daily newspaper.

China has long dominated in sports with a lower profile in Western countries, such as table tennis, badminton, diving, shooting, gymnastics and weightlifting.

Thirty-eight of China's table-topping 51 gold medals in Beijing came in these sports.

But in London, China is also looking for success in what are considered more prestigious Olympic sports, including swimming and track and field.

Among those with huge expectations on them in this regard is Sun Yang, who is tipped to become China's first male Olympic swimming champion.

Sun, who smashed Grant Hackett's decade-old 1,500m world record last year, ranks number one in the 400m, 800m and 1,500m.

Tennis superstar Li Na, who won China's first Grand Slam title at last year's French Open, will also be in London.

One of the other high-profile athletes going to London is 110m hurdler Liu Xiang, who famously won China's first track gold medal in Athens but then sensationally pulled out of the first heat in Beijing with an Achilles injury.

Australia also announced a streamlined team for London on Wednesday, with a similar explanation of not being able to qualify in enough events.

The Australian team of 410 is the lowest since Barcelona in 1992 and well down on the 632 who took part on home soil at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney.

An Australian Olympic Committee official said the team was the smallest for years because it failed to qualify for three of the 26 disciplines -- fencing, football and handball.

"The team being smaller than previous Olympics is all based on qualifications, it's not a financial decision," the official said.

South Korea also announced it would send just 245 athletes to compete in 22 events in London Olympics, the smallest number since 210 attended the 1984 Los Angeles Games.

But the Korea Olympic Committee (KOC) remained upbeat about its target of securing at least 10 golds and a finish inside the top 10 in the overall medal tally.

"We have trained and prepared very hard to achieve our goal," said team chief Lee Ki-Heung as he was presented with the national flag in a ceremony at Olympic Hall in eastern Seoul.

The South failed to qualify in basketball, tennis, equestrian events and canoeing. Its national sport, baseball, was dropped as an Olympic event.

AFP: China unveils smaller London Olympics team
 
i would say we are also very good at weightlifting and wrestling e.g

naim suleymanoglu-He won three Olympic Championships, seven World Championships and six European Championships and earned 46 world records

halil mutlu- Mutlu is one of the four weightlifters achieving three consecutive gold medals at the Olympic Games. His weightlifting career includes five World championships, nine European championships and more than 20 world records at 52 kg (115 lb), 54 kg (119 lb) and 56 kg (123 lb) combined.

nurcan taylan-She holds six European and one world record (and tied two more world records).

and some wrestlers cant be bothered to do all

is there a list of countries with how many they participate this year turkey 114 in olympics thats 3rd in europe

there should be oil wrestling which is The annual Kırkpınar tournament, held in Edirne in Turkish Thrace since 1362, is the oldest continuously running, sanctioned sporting competition in the world.

this years winner who wins a gold belt ali gurbuz , he beat a guy much bigger with technique

Bucak-g%C3%BCre%C5%9Flerinde-Ba%C5%9F-Pehlivan-Ali-G%C3%BCrb%C3%BCz.jpg
 
i would say we are also very good at weightlifting and wrestling e.g

naim suleymanoglu-He won three Olympic Championships, seven World Championships and six European Championships and earned 46 world records

halil mutlu- Mutlu is one of the four weightlifters achieving three consecutive gold medals at the Olympic Games. His weightlifting career includes five World championships, nine European championships and more than 20 world records at 52 kg (115 lb), 54 kg (119 lb) and 56 kg (123 lb) combined.

nurcan taylan-She holds six European and one world record (and tied two more world records).

and some wrestlers cant be bothered to do all

is there a list of countries with how many they participate this year turkey 114 in olympics thats 3rd in europe

You are right Turkey is certainly one of the strong competitor in weight lifting
 
anyone know koca yusuf turkish wrestler? one of the greatest wrestlers ever

WOWWW CHINA COMPETING WITH 396 THATS ALOT , WHAT IS THAT IN THE LIST TOP 3? BECAUSE WE ARE 114 AND WE ARE 3RD IN EUROPE SO IN THE WORLD 396 SHOULD BE TOP 3 OR 5

some info about koca yusuf


Yusuf İsmail (1857-4 July 1898), also widely known as Youssouf Ishmaelo, was a Turkish professional wrestler who competed in Europe and the United States as Yusuf Ismail the Terrible Turk during the 1890s. During his lifetime, his native Turks knew him as Şumnulu Yusuf Pehlivan. However, writer Rıza Tevfik posthumously awarded him the honorific Koca (great) and he was later remembered as Koca Yusuf.
Widely known for his massive size and brute strength, he was recognized as one of the top three strongmen in the world by Alan Calvert, pioneer of American weight training, and photographer Edmond Desbonnet during the turn of the century. Prior to his arrival in the United States, he remained undefeated in his near four-year career and successfully challenged Evan "Strangler" Lewis for the American Heavyweight Championship in 1898. Yusuf İsmail was the original wrestler to be known as "the Terrible Turk", however several others, including Kızılcıklı Mahmut (promoted as his son)[1] and Armenian American Robert Manoogian, also used the name throughout the first half of the 20th century.

and about he beat evan lewis of USA --Months later, he defeated Evan "Strangler" Lewis for the American Heavyweight Championship in Chicago, Illinois. Lewis was unable to overcome Ismail's massive size and strength nor manage to use his sleeper hold during the match. Ismail had the $5,000 prize money converted to gold and carried it in a money belt along with the title
 
sad that a 1.2 billion population can only bring out 2 gold medaks and six athletes, where a 5 million pop like Germany can bring out more than India :tdown:
:rofl:
I can't control my laughter considering the performance of your country (u also have a 200 million population)... atleast India gets some medals but your country none...
wait a minute your olympic team mainly comprises of hockey players barely any athlete... what a shame... :lol:
 
is there any list of how many members each country is participating with.
 
London 2012 Olympics: Indian team-full list

Zeenews Sports Bureau

London Olympics is just round the corner and India is set to send the biggest ever contingent to the mega event. 81 proud Indian athletes will grace the Olympic Park, Olympic Stadium, Millennium Stadium, Lord’s Cricket Ground and other venues as they get ready compete in 13 different disciplines with athletes from world over.

The likes of Deepika Kumari, Gagan Narang, Shiv Thapa will look to better the Beijing Olympics medal haul of 3 medals (1 Gold and 2 Bronze) as the likes of Abhinav Bindra, Vijender Singh and Shushil Kumar would fight for the ultimate glory one more time.

London 2012 Olympics: Indian team-full list
 
81? thats way too low for india with 1.3 bill population , even we have 114 and for me thats way too low
 
Pretty Informative, CT are you going to the Olympics in London ?
 
10M air rifle is one event in which there will be tough competition between India and China

One of shooting’s most sophisticated rivalries has almost silently taking firm roots in the soundless 10 metre ranges across the world. It’s the one involving Indian and Chinese shooters with Abhinav Bindra, Gagan Narang, Zhu Qinan and Wang Tao being the principal players. Earlier, this year at the Asian meet at Doha, the four crossed paths and with their Olympic quotas secured, it was a seen as a dry run ahead of London.

Wang and Zhu set the early pace with identical 598s/600. Bindra was a point adrift at third. Gagan struggled to hold his own after first two series of 99. Once in the final, the tables were turned. Bindra went past the Chinese with a 10.6. Then Qinan stormed back in the lead, but Bindra reined him in with a near-perfect 10.5 to bag gold. Wang, meanwhile, after slipping to fifth, had bounced back to win bronze. Narang ended strongly with the second best scores in the final after Bindra. A re-run of such hues is widely anticipated at London, four years after Bindra reduced silver-medallist Qinan to tears on the podium. There’s also multi-discipline winner Peter Sidi and current World No.2 Niccolo Campriani in the fierce field.

But Indians know, and Chinese know that Indians know, that come London, this could be as head-to-head as sport shooting could go.

After his Doha gold, which was also his first major medal after Beijing, though happy for his first-ever Asian gold, Bindra pulled on the practical mask of indifference. “It doesn’t hurt to do well but it doesn’t even help me. I can’t transplant this success onto the future. It’s good that it’s over.” He knew that the bigger test awaited him six months down the line.

Few metres away, Narang walked away with a sulk. Having sniffed bronze, he’d finished fourth. After taking it easy for a year after his 2010-high — including a perfect score of 600/600 at CWG — Narang hadn’t been on the individual podium often.

Chinese shooters aren’t known to talk much. But it’s apparent they hate losing to Indians. Shooting medals have been very dear to them after Xu Haifeng’s maiden success with gold in pistol at the 1984 Olympics.


read here India, China in Mexican standoff - Indian Express
 
Pretty Informative, CT are you going to the Olympics in London ?

Me No although i live just 15mins away from the stdium i prefer watching it on Tele

10M air rifle is one event in which there will be tough competition between India and China

One of shooting’s most sophisticated rivalries has almost silently taking firm roots in the soundless 10 metre ranges across the world. It’s the one involving Indian and Chinese shooters with Abhinav Bindra, Gagan Narang, Zhu Qinan and Wang Tao being the principal players. Earlier, this year at the Asian meet at Doha, the four crossed paths and with their Olympic quotas secured, it was a seen as a dry run ahead of London.

Wang and Zhu set the early pace with identical 598s/600. Bindra was a point adrift at third. Gagan struggled to hold his own after first two series of 99. Once in the final, the tables were turned. Bindra went past the Chinese with a 10.6. Then Qinan stormed back in the lead, but Bindra reined him in with a near-perfect 10.5 to bag gold. Wang, meanwhile, after slipping to fifth, had bounced back to win bronze. Narang ended strongly with the second best scores in the final after Bindra. A re-run of such hues is widely anticipated at London, four years after Bindra reduced silver-medallist Qinan to tears on the podium. There’s also multi-discipline winner Peter Sidi and current World No.2 Niccolo Campriani in the fierce field.

But Indians know, and Chinese know that Indians know, that come London, this could be as head-to-head as sport shooting could go.

After his Doha gold, which was also his first major medal after Beijing, though happy for his first-ever Asian gold, Bindra pulled on the practical mask of indifference. “It doesn’t hurt to do well but it doesn’t even help me. I can’t transplant this success onto the future. It’s good that it’s over.” He knew that the bigger test awaited him six months down the line.

Few metres away, Narang walked away with a sulk. Having sniffed bronze, he’d finished fourth. After taking it easy for a year after his 2010-high — including a perfect score of 600/600 at CWG — Narang hadn’t been on the individual podium often.

Chinese shooters aren’t known to talk much. But it’s apparent they hate losing to Indians. Shooting medals have been very dear to them after Xu Haifeng’s maiden success with gold in pistol at the 1984 Olympics.


read here India, China in Mexican standoff - Indian Express

i definitely dont want to miss that final what is your prediction of that outcome? india win?
 
Me No although i live just 15mins away from the stdium i prefer watching it on Tele



i definitely dont want to miss that final what is your prediction of that outcome? india win?

I watched the ones in Greece, 2008 in China was great.
 
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