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2008 Summer Olympics

Facts

Competition typeOlympic Games
Number and YearXXIX / 2008
Host cityBeijing, People's Republic of China(Venues)
Opening ceremony 8 August
Closing ceremony24 August
Competition dates6 – 24 August
OCOGBeijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad
Participants10899from204 countries
Medal events302in 41 disciplines
Other events15in 1 disciplines

Overview

China bid for the 2000 Olympic Games and considered themselves the favorite, and they were upset when the bid went instead to Sydney, which put on a nonpareil Olympic Games. China returned to bid again for the 2008 Olympic Games, and was this time successful. China hoped to use the Olympics as Tokyo had in 1964 and Seoul in 1988 to prove itself to the international community. The IOC awarded the bid to Beijing despite many people’s concerns about human rights abuses and media censorship within the nation.

Other problems arose with the bid as the Olympics came closer to fruition. The athletes’ biggest concern was the atmosphere in Beijing itself. On a typical day, the Beijing sky made a London pea-souper appear like minestrone. Distance athletes, such as marathoners and cyclists, were particularly concerned and a few even declined to compete in those events.

The Chinese planned the most international ever Torch Relay, even planning on taking the Torch to the top of Mount Everest. What they did not plan on was the response of the international community, which found in the Torch Relay a way for them to express their displeasure with many of China’s policies. The media was also unhappy with the Chinese and with the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee, as the Internet was not fully available to the media, which greatly limited the media’s access.

The Games began with a majestic Opening Ceremony, and the world’s press significantly changed its tune. Although the background problems were still around, they were somewhat ignored once the Olympics were underway. The Opening Ceremony was considered the most spectacular ever presented, although it came with a price tag rumored at $300 million (US) – for the ceremony alone. The venues were first-rate as well, highlighted by the track & field main stadium – the National Stadium, but called the Bird’s Nest for its appearance; and the aquatics main stadium, called the Water Cube. Also spectacular were the equestrian venues in Hong Kong. The equestrian events were held in Hong Kong because of quarantine restrictions in mainland China, similar to what occurred in 1956 with Melbourne and Stockholm.

And it was in the Water Cube that the highlight of the sports occurred in Beijing. There, American swimmerMichael Phelps, who had won six gold medals in Athina, entered eight events, and won eight gold medals. He won in almost every way possible – smashing world records and winning easily, such as in the 400 individual medley; having his teammateJason Lezak pull out a narrow 4×100 freestyle relay upset victory on the anchor leg; and narrowly out-touching silver medalistMilorad Cavić of Serbia in the 100 metre butterfly, winning by only 1/100th of a second. His medal haul brought his overall Olympic total to 14 gold medals and 16 medals in all – the most ever gold medals by any athlete, and the most ever medals by a man at the Olympics. His eight gold medals at a single Olympics surpassed the mark of seven set byMark Spitz in 1972 at München.

On the track the individual star was Jamaica’s young sprinterUsain Bolt. Bolt was only 21-years-old, but had first come to international prominence in 2002 at the World Junior Championships. Considered primarily a 200 runner until 2008, in May of the Olympic year he had broken the world record for 100 metres. His first event was the 100, which he won with a world record time of 9.69, but it was more the manner that he won. Well ahead by 70 metres, he shut down at 80, looking back, waving his arms in celebration and virtually jogging in. He still won the race by two metres and broke the world record. A few days later, he won the 200 gold medal in 19.30, breaking the supposedly inviolable world record of 19.32, set byMichael Johnson at the 1996 Olympics. Finally, Bolt seemingly helped his Jamaican teammates win gold in the 4×100, again breaking the world record. Following in the footsteps of triple Olympic sprint gold medalistsJesse Owens,Bobby Joe Morrow, andCarl Lewis, only “The Lightning Bolt” could claim to have won all three golds with world records. However, because of a later doping positive to one of his teammates,Nesta Carter, Jamaica would eventually be disqualified from the 4x100 and Bolt and Jamaica would lose that gold medal.

As a group the story of track & field was the Jamaican sprinters. In addition to Bolt and the Jamaican men’s 4×100 relay,Shelly-Ann Fraser won the women’s 100, leading a Jamaican medal sweep,Veronica Campbell-Brown won the women’s 200, followed byKerron Stewart who won a bronze,Shericka Williams took bronze in the women’s 400, andMelaine Walker won the women’s 400 hurdles. Their only stumble came in the women’s 4×100, which they were heavily favored to win until they dropped the baton during an exchange in the final, and did not finish.

On another track, Great Britain dominated cycling. After making a nationalized effort to win medals in cycling, they came thru in a big way in Beijing as they won five of seven gold medals in men’s track cycling and two of four in women’s track cycling. The star of the velodrome was Britain’sChris Hoy, who won the match sprint, the keirin, and led his British teammates to gold in the Olympic team sprint.

Overall, the Chinese had made a huge effort, as do most host countries, to improve their medal standings. For the Chinese, this worked, as they led the gold medal table with 48 gold medals to the 36 won by the United States. Overall, the US won the most medals, with 112, but the Chinese improved to second there with 100 total medals.

In the end the Beijing Olympics were considered one of the most beautifully conducted Olympic Games ever. The IOC had always stated that they hoped bringing the Olympics to China would help open up the country politically, as the 1988 Seoul Olympics had done. Whether that would occur was still to be determined but the Games themselves were magical.

Bid process

Bid voting at the 112thIOC Session in Moscow on 13 July 2001. Because of the number of candidate cities, an Evaluation Commission of the IOC was nominated whose task was to pare the number of candidates down to a more workable four or five prior to the final vote. There were five eliminated cities: Krung Thep (Bangkok) (Thailand), Al-Qahira (Cairo) (Egypt), La Habana (Havana) (Cuba), Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia) and Seville (Spain).

Round 1Round 2
BeijingChina4456
TorontoCanada2022
ParisFrance1518
İstanbulTurkey179
OsakaJapan6

Ceremonies

Officially opened byHu JintaoCHNPresident
TorchbearerXu HaifengCHNSHOTorch bearer within stadium
Gao MinCHNDIVTorch bearer within stadium
Li XiaoshuangCHNGARTorch bearer within stadium
Zhan XugangCHNWLFTorch bearer within stadium
Zhang JunCHNBDMTorch bearer within stadium
Chen ZhongCHNTKWTorch bearer within stadium
Sun JinfangCHNTorch bearer within stadium
Li NingCHNGARLit flame
Taker of the Athlete's OathZhang YiningCHNTTE
Taker of the Official's OathHuang LipingCHNGAR
Olympic Flag BearerZhang XielinCHNBearer
Pan DuoCHNBearer
Zheng FengrongCHNBearer
Yang Yang (A)CHNSTKBearer
Yang LingCHNSHOBearer
Mu XiangxiongCHNBearer
Xiong NiCHNDIVBearer
Li LingweiCHNBearer
FlagbearersFull list

Medal Disciplines

ArcheryCycling TrackSailing
Artistic GymnasticsDivingShooting
Artistic SwimmingEquestrian DressageSoftball
AthleticsEquestrian EventingSwimming
BadmintonEquestrian JumpingTable Tennis
BaseballFencingTaekwondo
BasketballFootballTennis
Beach VolleyballHandballTrampolining
BoxingHockeyTriathlon
Canoe SlalomJudoVolleyball
Canoe SprintMarathon SwimmingWater Polo
Cycling BMX RacingModern PentathlonWeightlifting
Cycling Mountain BikeRhythmic GymnasticsWrestling
Cycling RoadRowing

Other Disciplines

Wushu

Medal table

NOCGoldSilverBronzeTotal
People's Republic of China CHN482230100
United States USA363937112
Russian Federation RUS24132360
Great Britain GBR19131951
Germany GER16111441
Australia AUS14151746
Republic of Korea KOR1311832
Japan JPN98825
Italy ITA891027
France FRA7162043
Netherlands NED75416
Ukraine UKR741122
Kenya KEN64616
Spain ESP511319
Jamaica JAM54211
Poland POL45211
Ethiopia ETH4217
Romania ROU4149
Cuba CUB3101730
Canada CAN39820
Hungary HUN35210
Norway NOR3519
Brazil BRA341017
Belarus BLR34714
Czechia CZE3317
Slovakia SVK3306
New Zealand NZL3249
Georgia GEO3227
Kazakhstan KAZ2349
Denmark DEN2237
Democratic People's Republic of Korea PRK2226
Thailand THA2226
Mongolia MGL2204
Switzerland SUI2147
Argentina ARG2046
Mexico MEX2024
Belgium BEL2002
Zimbabwe ZIM1304
Slovenia SLO1225
Azerbaijan AZE1146
Indonesia INA1146
Bulgaria BUL1135
Türkiye TUR1135
Chinese Taipei TPE1124
Finland FIN1124
Latvia LAT1113
Dominican Republic DOM1102
Estonia EST1102
Portugal POR1102
Trinidad and Tobago TTO1102
India IND1023
Islamic Republic of Iran IRI1012
Cameroon CMR1001
Panama PAN1001
Tunisia TUN1001
Sweden SWE0415
Lithuania LTU0325
Nigeria NGR0325
Croatia CRO0235
Colombia COL0213
Greece GRE0213
Armenia ARM0145
Uzbekistan UZB0134
Austria AUT0123
Ireland IRL0123
Kyrgyzstan KGZ0123
Serbia SRB0123
Algeria ALG0112
Morocco MAR0112
Tajikistan TJK0112
The Bahamas BAH0112
Chile CHI0101
Ecuador ECU0101
Iceland ISL0101
Malaysia MAS0101
Samoa SAM0101
Singapore SGP0101
South Africa RSA0101
Sudan SUD0101
Vietnam VIE0101
Egypt EGY0022
Afghanistan AFG0011
Israel ISR0011
Mauritius MRI0011
Republic of Moldova MDA0011
Togo TOG0011
Venezuela VEN0011

Most successful competitors

AthleteNatGoldSilverBronzeTotal
Michael Phelps USA8008
Chris Hoy GBR3003
Zou Kai CHN3003
Steph Rice AUS3003
Libby Lenton-Trickett AUS2114
Yang Wei CHN2103
Leisel Jones AUS2103
Aaron Peirsol USA2103
Matt Grevers USA2103
Ryan Lochte USA2024

All medalists at these Games


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