SLAM!Sports
 


 SPORT INDEX
 

 Previous Olympics
 










Tuesday, August 17, 3:02 PM
OLYMPIC SWIMMING MEDAL WINNERS
(Men's 4x200-meter freestyle relay)

ATHENS 2004:

Gold - United States (Michael Phelps, Ryan Lochte, Peter
                      Vanderkaay, Klete Keller)
Silver - Australia (Grant Hackett, Michael Klim, Nicholas
                    Sprenger, Ian Thorpe)
Bronze - Italy (Emiliano Brembilla, Massimiliano Rosolino,
                Simone Cercato, Filippo Cercato)

SYDNEY 2000:

Gold - Australia (Ian Thorpe, Michael Klim, Todd Pearson,
                  William Kirby)
Silver - United States (Scott Goldblatt, Josh Davis, Jamie
                        Rauch, Klete Keller)
Bronze - Netherlands (Martijn Zuijdweg, Johan Kenkhuis, Marcel
                      Wouda, Pieter van den Hoogenband)

ATLANTA 1996:

Gold - United States (Josh Davis, Joe Hudepohl, Bradley 
                      Schumacher, Ryan Berube)
Silver - Sweden (Anders Lyrbring, Anders Holmertz, Christer 
                 Wallin, Lars Frolander)
Bronze - Germany (Christian Trager, Aimo Heilmann, Christian 
                  Keller, Steffen Zesner)

BARCELONA 1992:

Gold - Unified team (Dmitri Lepikov, Vladimir Pychnenko,
                     Veniamin Taianovitch, Evgueni Sadovyi)
Silver - Sweden (Christer Wallin, Anders Holmertz, 
                 Tommy Werner, Lars Frolander)
Bronze - United States (Joe Hudepohl, Melvin Stewart, 
                        Jon Olsen, Doug Gjersten)

SEOUL 1988:

Gold - United States (Troy Dalbey, Matthew Cetlinski, 
                      Douglas Gjertsen, Matthew Biondi)
Silver - East Germany (Uwe Dassler, Sven Lodziewski, 
                       Thomas Femming, Steffen Zesner)
Bronze - West Germany (Erik Hochstein, Thomas Fahrner, 
                       Rainier Henkel, Michael Gross)

LOS ANGELES 1984:

Gold - United States (Michael Heath, David Larson, Jeffrey Float
                      L. Bruce Hayes)
Silver - West Germany (Thomas Fahrner, Dirk Korthals, Alexander
                       Schwotka, Michael Gross)
Bronze - Great Britain (Neil Cochran, Paul Easter, Paul Howe, 
                        Andrew Astbury)

MOSCOW 1980:

Gold - Soviet Union (Sergei Kopliakov, Vladimir Salnikov, 
                     Ivar Stukolkin, Andrei Krylov)
Silver - West Germany (Frank Pfutze, Jorg Woithe, Detlev Grabs, 
                       Rainier Stroibach)
Bronze - Brazil (Jorge Lutz Fernandes, Marcus Laborne Mattioli, 
                 Cyro Marques, Djan Madruga Garrido)

MONTREAL 1976:

Gold - United States (Mike Bruner, Bruce Furniss, John Naber, 
                      Jim Montgomery)
Silver - Soviet Union (Vladimir Rastakov, Andrei Bogdanov, 
                       Sergei Kopliakov, AndreI Krylov)
Bronze - Great Britain (Alan McClatchey, David Dunne, Gordon Downie 
	    		Brian Brinkley)

MUNICH 1972:

Gold - United States (John Kinsella, Frederick Tyler, 
                      Stephen Genter, Mark Spitz)
Silver - East Germany (Klaus Steinbach, Werner Lampe, 
                       Hans-Gunter Vosseler, Hans-Joachim Fassnacht)
Bronze - Soviet Union (Igor Grivennikov, Viktor Mazanov, 
                       Georgi Kulikov, Vladimir Bure)

MEXICO CITY 1968:

Gold - United States (John Nelson, Stephen Rerych, Mark Spitz, 
                      Donald Schollander)
Silver - Australia (Gregory Rogers, Graham White, Robert Windle, 
                    Michael Windle)
Bronze - Soviet Union (Vladimir Bure, Semyon Belits-Geiman, 
                       Georgi Kulikov, Leonoid Ilychiev)

TOKYO 1964:

Gold - United States (Stephen Clark, Roy Saari, Gary Ilman, 
                      Donald Schollander)
Silver - X-Germany (Horst-Gunther Gregor, Gerhard Hetz, 
                    Frank Wiegand, Hans-Joachim Klein)
Bronze - Japan (Makoto Fukui, Kunihiro Iwasaki, Toshio Shoji, 
                Yujiaki Okabe)

X-team comprised of East and West Germans

ROME 1960:

Gold - United States (Geroge Harrison, Richard Blick, Michael Troy,
                      F. Jeffrey Farrell)
Silver - Japan (Makoto Fukui, Hiroshi Ishii, Tsuyoshi Yamanaka,
		Tatsuo Fujimoto)
Bronze - Australia (David Dickson, John Devitt, Murray Rose, Jon
		    Konrads)

MELBOURNE 1956:

Gold - Australia (Kevin O'Halloran, John Devitt, Murray Rose, 
                  John Henricks)
Silver - United States (Richard Hanley, George Breen, 
                        William Woolsey, Ford Konno)
Bronze - Soviet Union (Vitaly Sorokin, Vladimir Strushanov, 
                       Gennady Nikolayev, Boris Nitikin)

HELSINKI 1952:

Gold - United States (Wayne Moore, William Woolsey, Ford Konno, 
                      James McLane)
Silver - Japan (Hiroshi Suzuki, Yoshihiro Hamaguchi, Toru Goto, 
                Teijiro Tanakawa)
Bronze - France (Jospeh Benardo, Aldo Eminente, Alexandre Jany, 
                 Jean Boiteux)

LONDON 1948:

Gold - United States (Walter Ris, James McLane, Wallace Wolf, 
                      William Smith)
Silver - Hungary (Elemer Szathmary, Gyorgy Mitro, Imre Nyeki, 
                  Geza Kadas)
Bronze - France (Joseph Benardo, Henri Padou, Rene Cornu, 
                 Alexandre Jany)

BERLIN 1936:

Gold - Japan (Masanori Yusa, Shigeo Suguira, Masaharu Taguchi, 
              Shigeo Arai) 
Silver - United States (Ralph Flanagan, John Macionis, 
                        Paul Wolf, Jack Medica)
Bronze - Hungary (Arpad Lengyel, Oszkar Abay-Nemes, Odon Grof, 
                  Ferenc Csik)

LOS ANGELES 1932:

Gold - Japan (Yasuji Miyazaki, Masonori Yusa, 
              Takashi Yomoyama, Hisakichi Toyoda)
Silver - United States (Frank Booth, George Fissler, Marola 
                        Kalili, Manuella Kalili)
Bronze - Hungary (Andras Wanie, Laszlo Szabados,
                  Andras Szekely, Istavan Barany)

AMSTERDAM 1928:

Gold - United States (Austin Clapp, Waltr Laufer, 
                      George Kojac, Johnny Weismuller)
Silver - Japan (Hiroshi Yoneyama, Nobuo Arai, 
                Tokhuei Sada, Tatsuo Takaishi)
Bronze - Canada (F. Munro Bourne, James Thompson, 
                 Garnet Ault, Walter Spence)

PARIS 1924:

Gold - United States (Walter O'Connor, Harry Glancy, 
                     Ralph Breyer, Johnny Weissmuller
Silver - Australia (Maurice Christie, Ernest Henry, 
                   Francis Beaurepaire, Andrew "Boy" Charlton)
Bronze - Sweden (Georg Werner, Orvar Trolle, Ake Borg, Arne Borg)

ANTWERP 1920:

Gold - United States (Perry McGilivray, Pua Kela Kealoha, 
                      Norman Ross, Duke Paoa Kahanamoku)
Silver - Australia (Henry Hay, William Herald, Ivan Stedman, 
                    Francis Beaurepaire)
Bronze - Great Britain (Leslie Savage, Edward Percival Peter, 
                        Henry Taylor, Harold Annison)

STOCKHOLM 1912:

Gold - Australia/New Zealand (Cecil Healy, Malcolm Champion, 
                              Leslie Boardman, Harold Hardwick)
Silver - United States (Kenneth Huszagh, Harry Hebner, 
                        Perry McGilivray, Duke Paoa Kahanamoku)
Bronze - Great Britain (William Foster, Thomas Battersby, 
                        John Hatfield, Henry Taylor)

LONDON 1908:

Gold - Great Britain (John Derbyshire, Paul Radmilovic, 
                      William Foster, Henry Taylor)
Silver - Hungary (Joszef Munk, Imre Zachar, Bela Las-Torres, 
                  Zoltan Halmay)
Bronze - United States (Harry Hebner, Leo Goodwin, 
                        Charles Daniels, Leslie Rich)

ATHENS 1906:

Gold - Hungary (Jozsef Onody, Henrik Hajos, Geza Kiss, 
                Zoltan Halmay)
Silver - Germany (Ernst Bahnmeyer, Oskar Schiele, 
                  Emil Rausch, Max Pape)
Bronze - Great Britain (William Henry, John Derbyshire, 
                        Henry Taylor, John Arthur Jarvis)

1896 - 1904:

not held
st 08-17-04 14:55 et




CANOE home | We welcome your feedback.
Copyright © 2004, CANOE, a division of Netgraphe Inc. All rights reserved.