1Russia1311933
2
Norway11510263
Canada10105254
United States9712285
Netherlands879246
Germany865197
Switzerland632118
Belarus50169
Austria4851710
France4471511
Poland411612
China342913
South Korea332814
Sweden2761515
Czech Republic242816
Slovenia224817
Japan143818
Finland131519
Great Britain112420
Ukraine101221
Slovakia100122
Italy026823
Latvia022424
Australia021325
Croatia010126
Kazakhstan0011Repeat after me:WE'RE NUMBER FOUR!! WE'RE NUMBER FOUR!!
There is this, anyway:
United States is king of the bronze
Some facts on the final Olympics counts for us:
It didn’t look good for the United States. No medals in individual figure skating for the first time since 1936. No medals in speedskating for the first time since 1984. The four most identifiable Winter Olympians — Shaun White, Bode Miller, Lindsey Vonn, Shani Davis — won a total of one bronze medal. (In Vonn’s defense, she wasn’t competing in Sochi due to injury.) The women’s hockey team blew a late 2-0 lead in the gold-medal game and the men’s team was outscored 6-0 in the medal rounds. Still, it wasn’t all bad. American athletes won 28 medals, good for second on the overall medal count. (That was nine fewer medals than the U.S. won in Vancouver, however.) Team USA’s 12 bronze medals were the most for any nation. It’s the third time in the past four Winter Olympics the Americans have won that tally.
Links: The 14 most fascinating facts about the final 2014 Winter Olympics medal count
Inside the Final Medal Count at the 2014 Winter Olympics