Olympics

U.S. wins Rio medal race, Canada surpasses goals

The United States decisively won the medal race in Rio, but many other countries, including Canada, are holding their heads high.

Canada matches best medal total for non-boycotted Summer Olympics

American Simone Manuel, left, tied with Canada's Penny Oleksiak for gold in the women's 100-metre freestyle at the Rio Olympics. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

By Tim Reynolds, The Associated Press

The U.S. Olympic Team made itself right at home in Rio.

The British, they had a games to savour as well.

The host Brazilians got soccer gold that they craved, the Russians struggled on the heels of the exposure of a state-sponsored doping program, and the Chinese finished well below expectations.

So went the medal race at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics, where the Americans — with women leading the way — dominated both the gold and overall totals. The U.S. finished with 46 gold medals, and 121 medals overall — its 51-total-medal margin over second-place China is the largest in a non-boycotted Olympics in nearly a century.

"This experience has been the dream of a lifetime for me," said U.S. gymnast and closing ceremony flag-bearer Simone Biles, who won five medals, four of them gold, in her first Olympics.

For the fourth consecutive games, U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps left with more medals than anyone else. He won six in Rio, while Biles and U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky each won five to lead to lead a big haul from American women.

U.S. women left Rio with 27 golds — by far the most among any team of female Olympians at these games — and 61 medals total. U.S. track star Allyson Felix, now a six-time gold medallist and a winner of nine medals in all, was particularly delighted to learn that women are bringing more medals home to American than the men.

"Got 'em," Felix said, smiling.

Canada reaches its goal

With 22 medals and a top-10 finish, Canada surpassed its goals in Rio and won its most medals at a Summer Games since 1996.

Going into the Games, chef de mission Curt Harnett said the aim was 19 medals and a top-12 finish.

Like the Americans, Canada's women led the way with 16 medals, matching their total for most earned in a Summer Games — Canada's women earned 16 at Los Angeles in 1984 — and breaking their record for most medals won in a non-boycotted Summer Games. The previous benchmark was 11 medals at Atlanta in 1996.

As a whole, Canada's four gold medals were the most it has won since Barcelona in 1992

Two programs which showed tremendous progress were the swimming and athletics teams, both well surpassing their totals from London 2012.

But on the flip side, Canada's rowing and canoe and kayaking programs had disastrous Games, each missing the podium after a combined five medals four years ago.

Rounding out the field

By now, the Americans winning the medal race is almost commonplace. But the significance in Rio was the sheer amounts of hardware.

The previous record for U.S. medals at a fully attended Olympics was 110, set at Beijing eight years ago. And the margin between first and second in the overall medals race this year tops all others (the boycotted games of 1980 and 1984 excluded) since the Americans won 67 more medals than Italy did at the 1932 Los Angeles Games.

"We weren't sure we were going to have that kind of success coming in," said USOC CEO Scott Blackmun, noting the track and swimming teams had plenty of first-time Olympians.

But Blackmun was thrilled by the results, and he wasn't the only one leaving Rio happy.

Even with far fewer athletes competing in Rio than it had in London four years ago — and no home-field advantage this time, either — Britain got more medals than ever in the modern games. The British won 67 medals in Rio, 27 of them gold.

"The atmosphere at the GB house has been amazing in the village," said Mo Farah, who won gold for Britain in the 5,000- and 10,000-meter races to match the feat he pulled off at London in 2012.

"Winning medals and just one after the other. Gold, silver, bronze. The atmosphere has been brilliant. To be able to go even further than London, I think as a nation we should be proud."

The Russians and the Chinese probably didn't feel the same.

China won 26 golds, just over half as many as it won in Beijing in 2008.

Russia — with its track team told to stay home because of the doping probe and a cloud hovering over its athletes who were in Rio, some of whom got publicly called out by competitors — finished with 19 golds and 56 medals overall, both well below its normal showings.

Usain Bolt finished off his triple-triple — three Olympics, three sprint golds in each — for Jamaica, in what he said was his last games.

Neymar's game-winning penalty kick decided a shootout and clinched the men's soccer gold medal for Brazil, a host that wasn't a factor in the medal standings but got the gold that it probably wanted most.

And 10 teams — including the independent team — won their first golds, including Monica Puig in women's tennis for Puerto Rico.

"That island has given me so much," Puig said. "So much love and support throughout my career and I just wanted this one for them."

Fiji, in the inaugural Olympic rugby sevens tournament, won its first Olympic medal ever: gold.


With files from Nick Murray, CBC Sports