Shawn L. Bird

Original poetry, commentary, and fiction. All copyrights reserved.

analysis- Olympic per capita medal count February 28, 2014

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 7:16 pm

To my mind, the real winners of the Sochi Olympics were Norway, Slovenia, and Austria.

Why?

According to the “official data” The Sochi Olympic winners were Russia first with 33 medals, Norway second with 26, and Canada third with 25.  Twenty-six nations medalled.  While I’m delighted that Canada did so well, I got pondering what the results would be like if we looked at medals per capita for each country.  

How can 8 medals from a population of 127 million (Japan) or 60 million (Italy)  be compared with 8 medals from a population of just 2 million? (Slovenia).  I don’t think they can.  So I did the math.

I found population data on Wikipedia and divided it by the medals earned to determine the numbers of medals earned per capita.   Sadly, my method drops Canada to tenth and Russia  to fourteenth place, but it’s a method that is more fair.

Here are the  results.  The per capita number shows how many people in the nation there are for each medal (gold, silver, or bronze) at the Sochi 2014 Olympics.

country                  population                 medals                 per capita

  1. Norway                       5,109,056                    26                    196,502  WOW!
  2. Slovenia                      2,061,721                    8                      257,715   IMPRESSIVE!
  3. Austria                        8,501,502                    17                    500,088
  4. Latvia                          2,005,200                    4                      501,300
  5. Sweden                       9,644,864                    15                    642,991
  6. Netherlands             16,839,100                  24                    701,629
  7. Switzerland                 8,112,200                    11                    737,473
  8. Finland                        5,450,614                    5                      1,090,123
  9. CzechRepublic         10,513,800                  8                      1,314,225
  10. Canada                      35,295,770                  25                    1,411,831
  11. Belarus                        9,468,100                    6                      1,578,017
  12. Germany                  80,619,000                  19                    4,243,105
  13. Croatia                          4,290,612                    1                      4,290,612
  14. Russia                      145,700,000                33                    4,354,545
  15. France                         65,820,916                  15                    4,388,061
  16. Slovakia                        5,415,459                    1                      5,415,459
  17. South Korea               50,219,669                  8                      6,277,459
  18. Poland                         38,502,396                  6                      6,417,066
  19. Italy                              59,943,933                  8                      7,492,992
  20. Australia                     23,390,492                  3                      7,796,831
  21. USA                            317,581,000                28                    11,342,179
  22. Japan                           127,180,000                8                      15,897,500
  23. Great Britain             63,705,000                  4                      15,926,250
  24. Kazakhstan                 17,165,000                  1                      17,165,000
  25. Ukraine                       45,426,200                  2                      22,713,100
  26. China                         1,360,720,000             9                      151,191,111
 

10 Responses to “analysis- Olympic per capita medal count”

  1. Jim Stewart's avatar narble Says:

    This is a great extrapolation!

    • Thanks. I was just pondering that if just THIS year, Norway had such amazing results, how many living Olympic medalists from the last 50 or 60 years are there in Norway? I discovered that Norway has won 329 Olympic medals. If the medalists are all still living, that’s one medalist for every 15,000 or so people. Crazy. I’m kind of pround of little Norway, even though I’ve never been there!

  2. Thaddeus Dombrowski's avatar Thaddeus Dombrowski Says:

    At some point, I stopped focusing on medal counts. I really didn’t care that the U.S. lost in hockey. Instead, I was happy for Canada.

    When we focus on the human beings, and their performances, we all win.

    • To be honest, when the difference between first and fifth is a fraction of a second in races, I think it’s just ridiculous. If you all come in at the same second, I think you all deserve a gold medal! Team games, well, we like to beat the US. Being smaller than the state of California alone, it feels like a delicious accomplishment.

  3. We are delighted to get anything!

  4. simono1968's avatar simono1968 Says:

    Interesting way of looking at it 😀

    • Thanks. Kind of fits with Finland’s highways that show different speed limits depending on the weather, or traffic fines that are assessed as percentage of income (which is very tough on NHL hockey players). Equity means different things!

  5. seanbidd's avatar seanbidd Says:

    On handicap, Norway thundered in then, and in third on line honours, kind of like racing different sail rated vessel.


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