Monday, June 13, 2016

Olympic Weightlifting Championships by Year and Country (Infographic)

Olympic weightlifting is at its core an individual sport, and what ultimately matter’s is each person’s singular performance on the platform. (It’s just us against the weight, after all.) But while partner lifts like the tandem clean & jerk aren’t Olympic events — yet, we suppose — it takes more than just a talented individual athlete to come home with Olympic gold. Coaching, access to training resources and facilities, and governmental support all factor into which countries have success on weightlifting’s biggest stage — and which fall off over time.

Below, we’ve broken down Olympic championships in weightlifting by year and country. The result is an interesting look at patterns of success as countries rank highly in the weightlifting gold medal count, only to drop off permanently or reappear sometimes decades later.

Olympic Weightlifting Championships by Country

A few points to keep in mind:

  • Setting a world record doesn’t guarantee you a gold medal. At the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, Belarus’ Andrei Rybakou set a world record in the 85kg total but lost on bodyweight to China’s Lu Yong. Rybakou walked away with the record, but Yong took home the coveted gold.
  • Weightlifting was not a standalone event in Olympic Games between 1904 and 1920.
  • 1992 was a tumultuous year in Olympic competition. Due to the dissolution of the Soviet Union, most athletes from former Soviet States competed under the Unified Team banner, and collectively they brought home five gold medals.
  • The 1980 Moscow and 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games were each boycotted by significant athletic powerhouses due to Cold War tensions. This was especially impactful in weightlifting, as many of the world’s top weightlifting countries were not present.
  • The 2000 Sydney Games were the first to include women’s weightlifting as an Olympic sport. In the 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012 Games (and upcoming 2016 Rio Games), women had seven weight classes, while men had eight. There are rumors that the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) is considering introducing an eighth women’s weight class in the near future.

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