Nicaragua at the Olympics

Last updated
Nicaragua at the
Olympics
Flag of Nicaragua.svg
IOC code NCA
NOC Comité Olímpico Nicaragüense
Website www.con.org.ni
Medals
Gold
0
Silver
0
Bronze
0
Total
0
Summer appearances

Nicaragua first participated at the Olympic Games in 1968, and has sent athletes to compete in every Summer Olympic Games since then, except the 1988 Games which they did not attend due to "athletic and financial considerations." [1] Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega had previously asserted that Nicaragua would boycott the 1988 Games in support of North Korea. [a]

Contents

The nation has never participated in the Winter Olympic Games.

To date, no athletes from Nicaragua have won an Olympic medal, although the baseball team finished in fourth place at the 1996 Summer Olympics.

The National Olympic Committee for Nicaragua was created in 1959 and recognized by the International Olympic Committee that same year.

Medal tables

Medals by Summer Games

GamesAthletesGoldSilverBronzeTotalRank
1968 Mexico City 11 0000
1972 Munich 8 0000
1976 Montreal 15 0000
1980 Moscow 5 0000
1984 Los Angeles 5 0000
1988 Seoul did not participate
1992 Barcelona 8 0000
1996 Atlanta 26 0000
2000 Sydney 6 0000
2004 Athens 5 0000
2008 Beijing 5 0000
2012 London 6 0000
2016 Rio de Janeiro 5 0000
2020 Tokyo 8 0000
2024 Paris 7 0000
2028 Los Angeles future event
2032 Brisbane
Total0000

See also

Notes

  1. Ortega first made this claim on February 7, 1986, when he said Nicaragua would not participate in Seoul if North Korea's proposal to co-host were not realized. [2] :121 On September 15, 1986, while visiting North Korea, Ortega repeated his assertion at a banquet hosted by Kim Il Sung that "Nicaragua will not participate in the Games if the co-hosting proposal of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is not realized". [3] On May 20, 1987, Nicaraguan NOC President Moisés Hassan reiterated his country's intentions, saying "if the 1988 Olympics are not carried out in Pyongyang and Seoul, the two Korean capitals, Nicaragua will not attend this event". [4] Despite these three prior attestations to Nicaragua's boycott intent, on January 16, 1988, in a telex sent by Nicaraguan NOC President Hassan to IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch, there was no mention of North Korea in the reasons given by Hassan. Instead, Hassan claimed a 'lack of concentration on sport' due to hostilities in Nicaragua, non-qualification of their best athletes through the Pan American Games, and a 'bad economic situation' as being the reasons for Nicaragua's boycott. Samaranch dismissed the reasons in Hassan's telex as false, saying they were "a feeble rationalization of a political decision not to participate", and reminded Hassan in a reply telex that the Nicaraguan NOC would not share in any of the Olympic Solidarity funds for the period of 1988–1992 if it failed to participate in the Seoul Games. [2] :271–272

References

  1. Janofsky, Michael (16 January 1988). "Cubans Turn Their Back on the Seoul Olympics". New York Times . Retrieved 27 September 2017.
  2. 1 2 Pound, Richard W. (1994). Five Rings Over Korea: The Secret Negotiations Behind the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN   0-316-71507-7. S2CID   128077481.
  3. "President Daniel Ortega Says Nicaragua to Boycott 1988 Seoul Olympics Unless North Korea Given Co-Hosting Role". UPI. September 15, 1986.
  4. "Nicaragua Conditions Its Attendance at Olympic Games". UPI. May 20, 1987.