With the Games of the XXX Olympiad fully underway in
London, I thought I would turn myself towards some Olympic numbers. I fully
intended to do a look at declining records for speed across sports (swimming,
track and field, cycling and so on) and still might get to it, but I was
intrigued by a different statistic before I could get that effort off the
ground.
China has become a dominant player in the Cold War-era
game of topping the Olympic medal table. Since their return to the games in
1984 after 32 years – China boycotted the Olympics between 1952 and 84 due to
the presence of the Republic of China, known in the IOC since 1979 as Chinese
Taipei – they have won 385 medals in seven Summer Olympics. This obscures somewhat
their recent run of strong results with 221 of those medals having come in the
last three games. What prompted further inquiry was not the volume, however,
but the composition of the total.
Most of what
glitters…
What’s really remarkable in China’s Olympic history is
the pattern of gold-heavy performance that has held for the last several games.
In Beijing the Chinese team pulled in 100 medals, of which 51 were gold (51% if
you’re paying attention). The 2004 team in Athens won 63 medals with 32 of them
being gold (51%). In Syndey, in 2000, the Chinese won 28 medals as part of a
total haul of 58 (48%). As of Saturday afternoon, August 4th, the
Chinese team in London has won 53 total medals with 25 of them being gold (47%).
Percentage of gold medals, all countries with 50+ medals in a single games since 2000 |
This performance is pretty remarkable historically. In
the history of the Olympics dating back to 1952, the first games I would
consider “modern”[1], a
nation has topped 50% 134 times. If we exclude those with less than 10 total
medals, however, the number drops to 13. With only countries that won 50 or
more there have only been 4 instances, two of which were China.
It pays to be big
Other big winners display a bias towards gold, though to
a lesser degree than the Chinese. The top countries in the 1952 to 2008 period and
their percentage of gold medals are the United States (41%), the Soviet Union
(39%), East Germany (37%), Australia (30%) and China (42%). No country tops 40%
between China’s 385 overall medals and New Zealand’s 81 total[2].
One possible explanation for large countries in general
is that by virtue of their size, the best athlete from that country in a given
event is more likely to be the best in the world. The second-best athlete, if
results are distributed normally, would still be world-class, but not
necessarily likely to pull in a medal.
Ancient Chinese
secret?
So if being big explains some of this, why do the Chinese
still outperform other big nations? The answer, until the World Anti-Doping
Agency says otherwise, is that they choose their spots. It’s not that they don’t
field athletes in sports in which they are not competitive, it’s that they
maintain dominance in the sports they currently dominate even as they expand
their breadth.
The top five sports for China, in terms of number of
medals won, are Gymnastics (56), Diving (49), Weightlifting (43), Shooting (42)
and Table Tennis (41). The gold percentages for these sports are 43%, 55%, 56%,
45% and 49%, respectively. While the overall percentage of medals won by China
that are gold is 42%, these five sports have a gold percentage of 49%.
Excluding these sports, China averages a very mortal 32%.
Great success!
Why, then, is China able to dominate these sports for
such a long period? Without offending these sports’ many competitors and fan,
these are mainly niche sports for most of the world. It makes sense that the
lowest gold percentage of these sports is Gymnastics because it is the one with
the most global appeal, and competition. China has a massive pool of talent to
draw from and has clearly elected to devote resources to these smaller sports. Any
sport with local interest such as Table Tennis or Gymnastics makes their task
that much easier. Without knowing precisely how much they are spending, I would
speculate that a dollar (or yuan) spent on Weightlifting is far more productive
in terms of gold medals than one spent on Swimming or Track and Field.
China’s success in these niche sports comes at a time
when centrally planned national sports programs have been decimated. With the
fall of the Soviet Union, a strong competitor in Weightlifting, Gymnastics and
Shooting no longer exists. The governments that have taken over Eastern Bloc
countries have generally behaved more like Western countries in terms of sports
funding, leaving individual sports to fend for themselves based on interest and
sponsorship.
The events being added to the Olympics have helped China
too. Four new events (men’s and women’s 3 and 10 meter synchronized diving)
were added to Diving starting in the 2000 Sydney games. Of the 16 golds awarded
since then, China has won 13 of them with 2 additional silvers. The other major
sports for China have similarly benefited: Table Tennis was only added in 1988
(China has won 20 of the 24 gold medals ever awarded – along with 21 of the
other 52), Shooting went from 7 events up to 1980 to 10 in the 96-04 games and still
has 9 events while Weightlifting and Gymnastics have been generally static.
Other nations wanting to outperform at the Olympics should
take note: investment helps, but choose your investment targets wisely. Also,
if you can, make sure that your main competitors change governments and stop
competing so hard with you. That second one is more aspirational.
[1]
The 1948 games, known in the host country as the austerity games, were too
close to World War II for me to think of them as modern given the likely
disruptions in the lives of athletes (and others) and the limited roster of
countries participating. Pre-World War II games were much smaller events with
1936’s Berlin Olympics topping out at 49 countries while the 1952 Helsinki
games featured athletes from 69. The explosion of countries being formed out of
former colonies pushed the total number to 121 by 1972 in Munich.
[2]
The Unified team of 1992 won 112 medals with 45 (40%) being gold, but only
existed for that year and was an extension of the Soviet team.
"I fully intended to do a look at declining records for speed across sports (swimming, track and field, cycling and so on) and still might get to it"...time to get to it, and focus on the swimming. I want to know if the "suit era" was really all about the suits. Check out these medal statistics: http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/olympics/2012/medals/sports/swimming#medals
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