Yahoo Sports AM is our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it every weekday morning.
The final medal tally
(J’Kel Anderson/Yahoo Sports)
For the first time in Summer Olympics history, there was a tie atop the gold medal leaderboard as the U.S. and China both won 40 events in Paris.
Medal breakdown: Team USA’s 126 total medals far outpaced China’s 91, and were their most since winning a staggering 174 in 1984.
🇺🇸 USA: More than half of Team USA’s 40 golds came in athletics (14) and swimming (8). They also won three each in artistic gymnastics and cycling, two each in basketball, fencing and wrestling, and one each in soccer, golf, rowing, shooting, surfing and weightlifting.
🇨🇳 China: They’re the first nation to sweep all eight diving events, and took five each in table tennis, shooting and weightlifting. They also took three in boxing, two each in swimming, artistic gymnastics, artistic swimming, badminton and canoeing, and one each in athletics, cycling, tennis and rhythmic gymnastics.
Notes:
Gold medal top 10: USA (40), China (40), Japan (20), Australia (18), France (16), Netherlands (15), Great Britain (14), South Korea (13), Italy (12), Germany (12).
Winningest athletes: Chinese swimmer Zhang Yufei led all athletes with six medals, while five other swimmers tied for second with five medals each: France’s Léon Marchand, USA’s Torri Huske and Regan Smith, and Australia’s Kaylee McKeown and Mollie O’Callaghan.
First-time medalists: Saint Lucia (women’s 100m gold and 200m silver), Dominica (women’s triple jump gold), Albania (two men’s boxing bronzes), Cape Verde (men’s boxing bronze) and the Refugee Olympic Team (women’s boxing bronze) won their first medals in Paris.
Top fourth-place finishers: Italy led all nations in just missing out on the podium, with 26 fourth-place finishes. Team USA was second, with 22, coming that close to extending their already massive lead in the total medal count.
Fear the tree: Stanford finished with 39 medals, which puts the Cardinal behind only seven countries.
Full list of winners: 91 National Olympic Committees, plus the Refugee Olympic Team, won a medal across 329 medal events in 32 sports.
Photos of the day
(Dan Mullan/Getty Images)
👋 Au revoir, Paris 2024: The Summer Games came to an end on Sunday with a star-studded Closing Ceremony befitting the most thrilling Olympics in recent memory. 1,432 days until LA 2028!
(Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images)
🇺🇸 That was close! The U.S. women’s basketball team won its eighth consecutive gold medal by the narrowest of margins, erasing a 10-point second-half deficit to win 67-66. Of the USA’s 61 straight victories, this was just the third by single digits.
Hassan set an Olympic record in a thrilling women’s marathon that came down to a sprint. (Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)
🇳🇱 Hassan’s historic treble: Dutch runner Sifan Hassan achieved the unthinkable in Paris, winning gold in the marathon after having already claimed bronze in both the 5,000m and 10,000m. She’s the first woman to medal in those three events in the same Olympics.
Italy’s Elena Micheli competes during the riding portion of the modern pentathlon. (Alex Pantling/Getty Images)
🐎 Equestrian’s last ride: Show jumping has been part of every modern pentathlon since its 1912 Olympic debut. But beginning in LA 2028, the discipline will be replaced with an “American Ninja Warrior”-style obstacle race.
Day 16 recap: More from Sunday
Team USA is proudly funded by family, friends and fans like you. When you give to the Team USA Fund, 100% of your donation goes to athletes and the programming that supports them. Donate today.
(Gregory Hodge/Yahoo Sports)
Athlete spotlight: Diana Taurasi won her sixth gold medal on Sunday, making her the most decorated team sport athlete in Olympics history.
A legendary career: The best way to sum up the six-time Olympian’s greatness and longevity? Of the 61 consecutive Olympic basketball games won by Team USA, Taurasi has been part of 44.
On top of her six golds, the WNBA’s all-time scoring leader has won three NCAA titles, three WNBA titles, three FIBA World Cups and six EuroLeague titles — all this century.
“She’s one of the greatest competitors that women’s basketball has ever seen,” Team USA coach Cheryl Reeve told Yahoo Sports.
Must-see video: Taurasi family in tears after final Olympics
Plus: Check out Team USA’s Instagram for all kinds of highlights from the Closing Ceremony.
Team USA: News | Athletes | Shop
Daily trivia
(Screenshot: NBC)
LA 2028 will mark the third time that Los Angeles hosts the Summer Olympics.
Question: Can you name the other two years it hosted?
Answer at the bottom.
The venues that should host the L.A. Olympics
(Mike Blake/Reuters)
Paris showcased itself with incredible venues throughout the city during the 2024 Olympics. Now comes L.A.’s turn.
From Yahoo Sports’ Dan Wetzel:
Beach volleyball by the Eiffel Tower. Equestrian at the Palace of Versailles. Triathlon swimming in the Parisian sewer system.
Paris 2024 has incorporated some iconic venues into the Olympics.
That’s caused some to claim that Los Angeles should be nervous to host the 2028 Summer Olympics because the city supposedly lacks comparatively venerable structures and such a profound history.
Apparently they don’t teach school kids here about the rich tale of how the Kardashians settled on a favorite table at Nobu.
Anyway, the French like to be French and brag about everything this side of the smell of their subway system, but on behalf of the United States of America in general, and L.A. in particular, we say … bring it.
Yeah, sure, they held skateboarding and BMX in the same park as Louis the XVI and Marie Antoinette were beheaded and the marathon started in front of Paris’ ornate city hall that was built in 1357, and we acknowledge the aforementioned Versailles does have a decent gardener.
But L.A. takes a back seat to no one! After all, what is Mona Lisa but the original influencer, famous for being famous.
Read the story: From Randy’s Donuts to the gridlocked 405, these are the venues that should host LA 2028
Trivia answer: 1932 and 1984
We hope you enjoyed this edition of Yahoo Sports AM, our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox every weekday morning.
Source link : http://www.bing.com/news/apiclick.aspx?ref=FexRss&aid=&tid=66b9ed2c973c4d2881451e11fd4fc629&url=https%3A%2F%2Fsports.yahoo.com%2Fyahoo-sports-olympics-am-the-final-medal-tally-110421187.html&c=8872185418939396117&mkt=en-us
Author :
Publish date : 2024-08-12 00:04:00
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.