What's new

Projecting the 2012 London Olympics medalists rankings

considering their population,I would say the best sporting nation is Jamaica.

Disagree although they do well on the medal tally all there medals come from single events and they're only good at track.

If we put all the sports together with Jamaica vs Australia , Australia would come ontop in a land slide.

In might not be Australia though as much as it pains me to say it;) New Zealand are also very good all round considering there population.
 
Olympics predictions for 2012

Story Highlights
The U.S. and China will battle for the overall medal lead at the London Olympics
Give Michael Phelps the slightest of edges against U.S. teammate Ryan Lochte
Usain Bolt is beatable; Jason Lezak could be an odd man out; no Ian Thorpe
1. The United States will not lead the medal table in London. China, which didn't fully compete in the Olympics until 1984, will conquer the overall medal standings for the first time, completing its rise into sports superpower status. The Chinese led the Beijing Games with 51 golds, but the U.S. had 110 total medals to the host nation's 100 to top the table for the fourth straight Olympics.

It could be very tight. USA Today projects China to win 93 medals and the U.S. 89. Going by recent world championships, China should beat the U.S. by at least 10 medals, but Americans are known for coming up bigger on the Olympic stage. Swimming could be key. The U.S. outmedaled China 31-6 in Beijing's Water Cube, but at the 2011 world championships the gap narrowed to 26-12.

2. The Michael Phelps-Ryan Lochte duel is too close to call, but if I have to pick now ... it's Phelps, barely. The world's two best swimmers should go head to head in two events -- the 200-meter freestyle and the 200 individual medley. Phelps is the defending Olympic champion in both, but Lochte won both world titles this year, becoming the alpha male of the pool in the process. I believe the races will be decided by hundredths. Projecting who will win by fingertips seven months in advance is a bit absurd, but Phelps-Lochte is the water-cooler debate going into the Games. A 2012 predictions column isn't complete without picking a side.

So here's my argument: Phelps has the intangibles and the motivation. He's been better on the Olympic stage, where he's always won those last-lunge finishes. Lochte, meanwhile, is preparing for a Phelps-like Olympic schedule he's never tried, with at least six events (he swam two in 2004 and four in 2008). We know Lochte handled the increased burden superbly at the world championships, but the Olympics take it up another notch.

Phelps and his coach, Bob Bowman, feed on any form of motivation they can find. You can bet Phelps is reminded daily about those two losses at worlds, where Lochte needed two personal bests to win by a combined half-second. Phelps said he wasn't in peak shape at that meet, but we also don't know if Lochte has reached his limit yet.

3. Only one out of Shawn Johnson, Nastia Liukin and Alicia Sacramone will make the Olympic team. The U.S. is so deep in women's gymnastics that it could win gold, silver and bronze if the Olympics allowed varsity, JV and freshman teams. Martha Karolyi can pick just one team of five gymnasts (down from seven in 1996 and six in 2008).

Karolyi essentially has two pools from which to choose. First, there are the teenagers who cruised to the 2011 world title -- Jordyn Wieber, Aly Raisman, McKayla Maroney, Sabrina Vega and Gabrielle Douglas. Second, the old guard (if there can be such a thing in gymnastics) in past Olympic and world championship medalists Johnson, Liukin, Sacramone, Rebecca Bross, Bridget Sloan and Chellsie Memmel. Wieber, the reigning world all-around champion, is a near lock for one spot. Maroney and Raisman are right behind. That leaves everyone else to fight for two more openings.

4. Usain Bolt will lose an Olympic race. There are more hazards in the way of the world's fastest man than in 2008 or 2009, when he went a combined 6-for-6 at the Olympics and world championships without rival. Bolt has slowed slightly, while Tyson Gay (2010) followed by Yohan Blake (2011) sped up enough to erase his invincibility. We've also seen Bolt succumb to track and field's new one-and-done false-start rule. He jumped the gun in the 100 at worlds this year, his disqualification allowing training partner Blake to break through. Blake then backed that up by running the second-fastest 200 ever, 19.26, two weeks later. Bolt's younger countryman is the biggest threat he's seen.

And then there are the relays. Jamaica has won the last three major 4x100s (2008 Olympics, 2009 worlds, 2011 worlds), but just ask the fumbling U.S. men about the dangers in negotiating speed with baton handoffs. There's also talk of Bolt's joining the 4x400 relay, where the U.S. will be favored regardless of the Jamaican lineup. Add it all up, and Bolt is beatable.

5. The 4x100 freestyle relay will make waves again. Remember the excitement of Jason Lezak's chasing down France's Alain Bernard in the final 20 meters in Beijing? Expect more drama in that relay, but this time it will start way before anybody plunges into the pool. And it may center on Lezak.

Of the four coveted spots on the U.S. 4x100 team, one will surely go to Phelps. Another will go to Nathan Adrian, assuming he's healthy and in form. Then it gets cloudy. There's Lochte, who many thought should have been on this relay at the world championships (where the U.S. settled for bronze without him). There are Garrett Weber-Gale and Cullen Jones, who were a part of the 2008 gold-medal relay. And then there's Lezak, who will be a grizzled 36. Lezak was the seventh-fastest U.S. man in the 100 meters in 2011. His 48.15 split in the relay at worlds was respectable, but he (and the team) needed to be better for the U.S. to win gold. There's no guarantee Lezak will make the Olympic team. Even if he does make it, there's no guarantee he'll be part of the relay final he made so magical in Beijing.

6. No Olympics for Ian Thorpe. If you've been keeping up with Thorpe's comeback, this isn't a bold prediction. Thorpe, 29, had not competed in nearly five years when he announced a return in February. His early results have been understandably rusty. Thorpe must shave another second off his 100 freestyle and two more seconds off his 200 freestyle to have any hope of making an Australian relay team (top six at trials). That Australia holds its trials in March (as opposed to June/July for the U.S.) doesn't help his cause.

7. Steve Redgrave will not light the Olympic cauldron. London oddsmaker William Hill installed the rower Redgrave, Britain's all-time leading gold-medal winner with five, as a 6-to-4 favorite for the greatest honor of the Games. While Redgrave would be a fine choice, I'll offer three more just as deserving: Roger Bannister, Kelly Holmes and Derek Redmond and his father.

8. Allyson Felix will win her first individual Olympic gold medal. I don't know if Felix will run the 200, the 400 or the 200 and the 400 in London, so this is somewhat a shot in the dark. But here's what I do know: Felix left her comfort zone, attempted the 200-400 double for the first time at the 2011 world championships and won a silver and a bronze (.23 away from two golds). Not too bad. Felix now refocuses on that elusive goal -- an individual Olympic gold. She's never won one. Felix and coach Bobby Kersee will pick the best out of three options to reach that objective -- a second year training for the 200 and the 400 together; switching back to her pet 200 (where she's a three-time world champion); or going all out for the 400, where she fell .03 short of a world title in her first try.

9. Social media will play an even bigger role than you think. Most major Olympic events fall between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. ET, during the workday and peak hours for Twitter and Facebook. NBC will air every event live "on one platform or another" but will keep its usual prime-time broadcast intact with delayed highlights, which leads one to believe that Phelps' swims and Bolt's sprints will first be aired online. Most notable Olympians use social media, and agents encourage them to interact with their fans. It's a recipe for two weeks' worth of memorable trending topics.

10. The British tabloids will have their say. No way 16 days go by without a scandal. But which athletes will land those headlines? That's one prediction I'm not going to make.
 
London 2012 Summer Olympics: United States medal results history
Published Monday, Jun 4, 2012 at 1:22 pm EDT
Staff report Sporting News

The United States carries a massive edge over all other national Olympic committees with roughly 2,300 combined medals heading into the London 2012 Summer Olympics.

Historical counts can differ slightly as a result of past multinational teams, but either way Team USA owns a 1,000-plus medal lead in the Summer Games on second-placed Soviet Union, a national Olympic committee which disbanded in 1992 shortly after the fall of the USSR. Host Great Britain sits in third with 725.5.

Gallery: Top U.S. athletes to watch | Olympic wishlist for London

While the most-decorated Olympian in U.S. history, swimmer Michael Phelps, carries his 14 gold and two bronze medals into London 2012 competition, this incarnation of the Summer Olympics is one that some experts predict America might struggle to keep the top spot.

China is fresh off shattering its personal record with 100 medals on home turf in the 2008 Beijing Olympics — finishing second to USA's 110 and first in gold medals by edging the U.S. 51 to 36 — and is expected to boost its relatively small but rapidly climbing overall total of 385. USA Today has China topping Team USA 92 to 89 in medals this summer.
Read more: London 2012 Summer Olympics: United States medal results history - London Olympics 2012 - Sporting News
 
Who can stop China in London?
By Manolo Iñigo
Philippine Daily Inquirer

11:15 pm | Wednesday, June 27th, 2012
winning attitude, massive public support, and the athlete’s personal discipline, China is the top choice to dominate the 2012 London Olympic Games on July 27 to August 12.

Four years ago, in the 2008 Beijing Games, China unseated perennial winner United States with a total of 51 gold, 21 silver, and 28 bronze medals. The US wound up second with a 36-38-36 gold-silver-bronze tally.

Other top finishers in Beijing were Russia (23-21-28), Great Britain (19-13-15), Germany (16-10-15), Australia (14-15-17), South Korea (13-10-8), Italy (8-10-10), and France (7-16-17).

Meanwhile, the Philippines, still seeking the elusive Olympic gold since joining the Games in 1914 in Paris, is sending a lean and mean delegation of nine athletes so far.

The early Olympic qualifiers are boxer Mark Anthony Barriga, judoka Tomohiko Hoshina, BMX rider Daniel Caluag, track and field’s Marestella Torres and Rene Herrera, swimmers Jasmine Alkhaldi and Jessie Khing Lacuna, and shooter Brian Rosario.

The last to join the Olympic team was weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz who is entered in the women’s 58-kilogram category.

“I thank the MVP (Manuel V. Pangilinan) Sports Foundation and the Philippine Sports Commission for their support for the weightlifting association,” said association president Monico Puentevella.

The last time the Philippines won an Olympic medal was in the 1996 Atlanta Games when boxer Mansueto “Onyok” Velasco brought home a silver.

“We are still on track and we have still three more weeks to finally win that elusive Olympic gold,” said chef de mission Manny T. Lopez, who is also the vice president of the Philippine Olympic Committee.

The POC is sending Barriga, Rosario, Alkhaldi, and Lacuna to a pre-Olympic training camp tomorrow with Torres and Herrera following them a week later.

Hoshima has decided to train in Tokyo and will fly to the Olympics on July 19. Caluag, the country’s brightest hope for a medal, will train and hone his skills in the Netherlands before proceeding to London.

Basketball living legend Robert Jaworski once said in an interview: “China closed the door to the outside world and worked feverishly to improve its sports program. And with the help of its National Sports Associations, the Chinese government took the lead in identifying its talents and training them to become world-class athletes. Now, China is an acknowledged world superpower not only in sports but in other aspects as well.”

I visited China twice: First during the historic “Ping Pong Diplomacy” in 1972 and the following year when it hosted the Afro-Asia Table Tennis Championships.

The Chinese athletes were virtually unknown then to the outside world. But with the government backing them to the hilt, China’s athletic prowess eventually became known far and wide.

With a population of a little over 1.2 billion, China has consistently made waves in the past Olympic Games.

In the 1988 Seoul Olympics, Chinese athletes captured only five golds and were hardly noticed. China later made big improvements in Barcelona in 1992 and Atlanta in 1996 by landing fourth both times. The Chinese moved up to third overall in Sydney in 2000, and finished second in Athens in 2004.

In London, China is expected to dominate table tennis, weightlifting, athletics, diving, swimming, shooting, badminton, taekwondo, canoeing, gymnastics, and judo.
 
2012 is a bad year for china in sports.
we lost our main female gymnast cheng fei to injury.
lost our top swimmer zhang lin due to poor form.
li na not doing well in tennis.
lost in badminton to that indian chick.

all bad signs, you need luck to win an olympic games.

we might be 3rd this time in gold medals and 3rd in overall medals.
 
no,China come very strong in swimmingpool and track and field and also many other events this year,I m a sports fan and I always keep track of all sports events.I count that China can easily top both gold and total medal tally list this summer.

英国奥运预测:中国43金力压美国 按规律降32%

2012年4月19日 15:04

  4月18日,2012年伦敦奥运会迎来开幕倒计时100天。在伦敦,奥运场馆基本就绪、7万志愿者整装待发、“激励一代人”口号兑现申办承诺、200万小学生准备感悟204个国家和地区的多元文化、上千社区的800万居民准备走上街道为奥运圣火助威……18日,伦敦发出信心十足的声音:我们准备好欢迎世界!

  中国奥运健儿正在积极备战。截至目前,中国运动员共有319人在22个大项、172个小项上获得伦敦奥运会参赛资格。预计中国将有380余名健儿参加奥运会。100天后,中国健儿将在伦敦交出怎样的答卷?

  伦敦奥运脚步已越来越近。中国体坛健儿正在秣马厉兵,向4年一届的体坛盛会发起冲刺。4年前,在北京,中国奥运健儿勇夺51枚金牌,首次登上金牌榜榜首。4年后,在伦敦,中国健儿能否复制4年前的辉煌?

  根据规律,51金降至34金?

  北京奥运会,中国代表团在17个项目上有金牌入账,其中体操、举重、跳水、射击、乒乓球和羽毛球6个项目是夺金主力,贡献36金。其他11个项目分享了15枚金牌。

  从北京到伦敦,中国具有冲击多枚金牌希望的优势项目基本上没有变化。不过,由于主场优势不再,中国优势项目受到削弱的可能性完全存在。

  对此,国家体育总局副局长蔡振华昨天指出,从近几届奥运会的规律看,伦敦奥运会上中国成绩下降在所难免,中国将力争在金牌榜和奖牌榜上站稳“第一集团”。

  据统计,前5届奥运会东道主在下一届奥运会获金牌数比东道主当届平均下降32.8%。如果按此推算,中国奥运军团在伦敦夺得的金牌数在34枚左右。

  中国体操队在北京奥运会共夺9金,是所有项目中贡献金牌数最多的。不过,国家体育总局体操运动管理中心主任罗超毅日前表示,在伦敦肯定拿不到9金。据记者了解,中国队在男团、吊环、单杠、双杠、男子自由体操、鞍马、平衡木、高低杠和女子自由体操项目上都有冲金实力,冲金点仍是9个左右。

  北京奥运收获8金的中国举重队,目前在女子48公斤和58公斤级,男子56公斤、62公斤和69公斤级别上夺金把握较大。从实力看,收获5至6金应比较靠谱,复制8金奇迹也是有可能的。

  中国跳水梦之队在北京奥运摘7金。在伦敦,跳水队的最高目标是包揽金牌。

  中国射击队在北京奥运夺得5金。转战伦敦,射击队的冲金点有10个左右。

  另一支“梦之队”中国乒乓球队在北京奥运包揽了4金,要想在伦敦继续包揽,难度较大。

  羽毛球队在北京奥运会上贡献3金。展望伦敦奥运,总教练李永波称目标仍是3金。

  大胆预测,中国夺金43枚?

  伦敦奥组委主席塞巴斯蒂安·科十分看好中国军团。他预测,伦敦奥运会上,中国将力压美国,领跑奖牌榜。他认为,奖牌榜前三应是中国、美国和俄罗斯。“如果你全面考虑,奖牌大户应该是中国。”

  北京奥运会上,美国获得了110枚奖牌,列奖牌榜头名。中国以51金高居金牌榜榜首,但是总奖牌数是100枚,位居第二。

  前意大利奥委会官员卢西亚诺·巴拉也看好中国,他认为中国将获得103枚奖牌,其中金牌43枚。而美国队将获得82枚奖牌,其中金牌35枚,俄罗斯将获得76枚奖牌,金牌30枚。

  全面考虑,除优势项目外,中国还在柔道、摔跤、拳击、跆拳道、蹦床、射箭、自行车、游泳、花样游泳、击剑、田径、赛艇、皮划艇和沙滩排球等十多个潜优势项目的若干小项上具备冲金实力。

  柔道项目,女子78公斤级的杨秀丽和78公斤以上级的佟文是各自项目的北京奥运会冠军得主,此次出征伦敦志在卫冕。摔跤项目的夺金点有西洛卓玛的女子63公斤级和王姣的女子72公斤级。拳击项目,北京奥运冠军邹市明的男子48公斤级是首要冲金点,中国姑娘也有希望在51公斤级和75公斤级项目上冲击1金。跆拳道项目,女子49公斤级的吴静钰和57公斤级的侯玉琢,具备很强的夺金实力。

  游泳项目,孙杨在男子400米自由泳和1500米自由泳上具备夺金实力。女将焦刘洋和刘子歌的100米蝶泳、200米蝶泳,叶诗文的200米个人混合泳,赵菁的100米仰泳以及女子4×200米自由泳接力项目也均是冲金点。如果发挥出色,中国有望超越北京奥运1金的成绩。至于田径,刘翔的男子110米栏、李艳凤的女子铁饼、巩立姣和李玲的女子铅球、张文秀的女子链球以及女子竞走等项目,都有冲金实力。

  中国在击剑项目上的冲金点有4个,分别是男子花剑的个人和团体、女子重剑的个人和团体。不过有希望、没把握。

  夺金40枚以上就能称王?

  在去年底召开的全国体育局长会议上,国家体育总局局长刘鹏透露,2011年中国选手在世界大赛中的奥运项目上获得的金牌数和奖牌数都处于国际领先地位,其中世界冠军就有138个。

  日前出版的德国《体育图片》杂志对过去一年以来的世锦赛、世界杯等重大比赛的成绩以及去年年终世界排名进行了系统研究,并根据权重给夏季奥运会各项目设置了分数。在总得分排行榜上,中国第1,俄罗斯第2,美国第3,英国、德国和法国分列第4至6位。

  对于中国奥运军团在伦敦的战绩,相关业内权威人士表现得谨慎乐观。原北京奥组委执行副主席、北京奥运城市发展促进会副会长蒋效愚上月接受采访时表示,很难预测中国代表团是否能够在伦敦奥运会上蝉联金牌总数第一,但进入金牌榜前三位还是有把握的。他还预测道,无论谁获得金牌总数第一,数量都不会超过50枚,估计40多枚就能得第一。

  客观上说,中国和主要竞争对手美国的优势项目几乎没有交叉,如果中国在多个优势项目上发挥稳定,有相当数量金牌入账,蝉联金牌数第一并非不可能完成的任务。

Host country Britian's latest prediction and calculation,China to top the medal tally again with 43 golds.
 
2012 is a bad year for china in sports.
we lost our main female gymnast cheng fei to injury.
lost our top swimmer zhang lin due to poor form.
li na not doing well in tennis.
lost in badminton to that indian chick.

all bad signs, you need luck to win an olympic games.

we might be 3rd this time in gold medals and 3rd in overall medals.
LUCK is not a sole factor, its just 5% or even lesser if required.
CHINA has a lot of talent in sports. we wish that you guys take the top spot, except badmiton(womens), tennis(doubles and mixed double), double trap and air rifle, kabadi, hockey. because we INDIANS are only concentrating here as this is where our strenghts and efforts are put in
 
no south asian country:(??

anyways there is asian giant China on the top atleast :)

One female pakistani swimmer also qualified for olympics
 
LUCK is not a sole factor, its just 5% or even lesser if required.
CHINA has a lot of talent in sports. we wish that you guys take the top spot, except badmiton(womens), tennis(doubles and mixed double), double trap and air rifle, kabadi, hockey. because we INDIANS are only concentrating here as this is where our strenghts and efforts are put in

i want china do well in swimming, track & field and gymnastics.
these are the sports america and the west usually pays the most attention to and gets the most coverage, so it would be sweet to make inroads into their dominant sports p*ss them off even more.

we do well in gymnastics, but have done poorly in recent years.
we have improved in swimming from 2008, but olympics is a whole different level of pressure from world champs.
track & field is slowly improving. especially field.
 
Russia Can’t Beat U.S., China in Olympics, Sports Minister Says

June 26, 2012, 3:21 PM CET
By Ira Iosebashvili
Russian President Vladimir Putin is sometimes thought to be setting unattainable goals, but his sports minister is more inclined toward conservative forecasts, at least when it comes to the performance of his country’s Olympic team in London this year.

Vitaly Mutko said he expected the Russian team to finish in the third place at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.

“We will fight for a place in the top three, but will not be able to beat the Americans or the Chinese,” Mr. Mutko said Tuesday. “Our main competitors for the third place will be Great Britain.”

Russia finished the 2008 Summer Olympics with 23 gold medals, compared to China’s 51 and the U.S.’s 36. Britain finished fourth with 19 gold medals.

Russia will be sending up to 445 athletes to the event, Mr. Mutko said.
 
The projection is always useless, let's see who can bring up the biggest gun during the match. :coffee:
 
China could possibly have highest medal tally in Olympics.

How about Pakistan medal prospect?
 
Back
Top Bottom