Statistics
Summer Olympic Games
Statistics
The following table of statistics came courtesy of the
Olympic Museum in Lausanne, though we have some different opinions about women’s
participation in 1900 which we have included at the end.
Women’s Participation in
the Modern Olympic Summer Games
Year |
Sports |
Events |
Countries |
Participants |
1896 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
*1900 |
2 |
3 |
5 |
19 |
1904 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
6 |
1908 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
36 |
1912 |
2 |
6 |
11 |
57 |
1920 |
2 |
6 |
13 |
77 |
1924 |
3 |
11 |
20 |
136 |
1928 |
4 |
15 |
26 |
290 |
1932 |
3 |
14 |
18 |
127 |
1936 |
4 |
15 |
26 |
328 |
1948 |
5 |
19 |
33 |
385 |
1952 |
6 |
25 |
51 |
518 |
1956 |
6 |
26 |
39 |
384 |
1960 |
6 |
29 |
45 |
610 |
1964 |
7 |
33 |
53 |
683 |
1968 |
7 |
39 |
54 |
781 |
1972 |
8 |
43 |
65 |
1058 |
1976 |
11 |
49 |
66 |
1247 |
1980 |
12 |
50 |
54 |
1125 |
1984 |
14 |
62 |
94 |
1567 |
1988 |
17 |
86 |
117 |
2186 |
1992 |
19 |
98 |
136 |
2708 |
1996 |
21 |
108 |
169 |
3626 |
2000 |
25 |
132 |
199 |
4069 |
*1900 |
6 |
10 |
5 |
23 |
* we believe the statistics for 1900
should now read as above (7 tennis, 1 sailing,3 croquet, 10 golf, 1 ballooning, 1
equestrianism)
From this table it can be seen that, apart from the
1932 and 1956 Olympics, there has been a steady and continuous increase in the number of
female events and competitors since 1896. (The reason for the decline in numbers in
‘32 and ‘56 was because the games were held in the USA and Australia and it was
expensive to send large teams. Where cost was an issue women tended to be left
behind more than men).
In
the first Olympic Games in which women competed (Paris 1900) women represented 5 countries
- USA, France, Great Britain, Switzerland and Bohemia.
The
Games of the New Millennium, the XXVII Olympiad, took place in Sydney between 15th
September and 1st October, 2000. There were 28 sports altogether and women took part in
25.
Women
did not contest 3 sports - Baseball ,Boxing and Wrestling. They competed in Softball
and men did not.
There
were 3 new sports in Sydney -Trampolining, Taekwondo and Triathlon. Women took part
in all 3.
Women
competed in the Modern Pentathlon for the first time at the Sydney Olympic Games. It
is an event for fit all-rounders. Within twelve hours they compete in a tough
programme of 5 events - Shooting, Fencing, Swimming, Showjumping and
Running. Originally the modern pentathlon was held over 4 days.
10
women’s teams competed in the Handball competition. Sydney 2000 was the first year
for the Australian handball teams - women and men.
Between
1928 and 1956 the women’s 800 metres was only held once, it was declared unsafe for
women and was banned until 1960.
In
1928 Edith Payne competed for Australia in the 800 metres in the Amsterdam Olympics, in
Sydney she was a guest of Honour at the Opening Ceremony, aged 94. Edith, who
talks about her 1928 experiences in ‘A Proper Spectacle’ also opened the
Olympic village and took part in the torch relay in her wheelchair.
Sydney
had the4th torch relay. The first was in Berlin, 1936. The first Paralympic
Torch relay was in 1988 in Seoul, the Paralympic torch was lit on 5th October.
The
first woman to light the Olympic flame was Enriqeuta Basilio of Mexico in 1968. The
first woman to take the Olympic Oath was Heidi Schuller in Munich, 1972.
British
Equestrian, Lorna Johnson, became the oldest female Olympian in 1972 at 70 years.
14
year old Romanian, Nadia Comaneci, achieved a perfect score of 10 in Gymnastics at the
Montreal Games, 1976. She ended the competition with a record 7 maximum marks.
She was also responsible for another record, she drew a world record crowd of 18,000 to
the women’s gymnastic finals.
Fanny
Blankers-Koen of the Netherlands is the most known successful mother, winning 4 gold
medals in the London Olympics in1948. The first successful father is unknown! The
first married women competed in the Olympics of 1900.
A
17 year old Dutch swimmer, Wihemina ‘Rie’ Mastenbroek, was the
first woman to win 4 Olympic medals. Rie won 3 golds and a silver
in the 1936 Berlin Olympics.
Top |