Olympic Winter Games medal table
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With 31 medals, Germany finished second in the national rankings at the 2018 Winter Games. Can a top placement also be achieved in Beijing? See the current status with all decisions here.
What will Germany do at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics? And which nation is in the lead? This is the current medal table:
Decisions of Thursday 10 February
Snowboard, women, halfpipe
- Gold: Chloe Kim (USA)
- Silver: Queralt Castellet (Spain)
- Bronze: Sena Tomita (Japan)
- 11. Leilani Ettel (Pullach in the Isar Valley)
Figure skating, men, singles
- Gold: Nathan Chen (USA)
- Silver: Yuma Kagiyama (Japan)
- Bronze: Shoma Uno (Japan)
Alpine skiing, men, combination
- Gold: Johannes Strolz (Austria)
- Silver: Aleksander Aamodt Kilde (Norway)
- Bronze: James Crawford (Kanada)
- Simon Jocher (Garmisch-Partenkirchen) retired
Snowboard Men Cross Singles
- Gold: Alessandro Hämmerle (Austria)
- Silver: Eliot Grondin (Canada)
- Bronze: Omar Visintin (Italy)
Nordic skiing/cross-country skiing, women, 10 km classic
Speed skating, women, 5000 m
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Gold: Irene Schouten (Netherlands) 6:43,51 Min.
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Silver: Isabelle Weidemann (Canada) 6:48.18
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Bronze: Martina Sablikova (Czech Republic) 6:50.09
Tobogganing, mixed, team relay
- Gold: Germany
- Silver: Austria
- Bronze: Latvia
Medal table Olympics 2022
Which nation performs best at the games? Traditionally, the medal table provides information about this. All podium places of the participating nations are listed and compared in the table. Sorting is based on the number of gold, silver and bronze medals.
Germany is one of the most successful nations at the Olympic Winter Games. After reunification, German athletes managed to finish first in the national rankings four times.
Medal table 2018: Germany in second place
At the past Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, Germany was only beaten by athletes from Norway out of 93 participating nations. Both nations came up with a total of 14 gold medals – the Scandinavians, however, collected more silver and bronze medals than the Germans.
1. Norway (Gold: 14, Silver: 14, Bronze: 11, Overall: 39)
2. Germany (14, 10, 7, 31)
3. Canada (11, 8, 10, 29)
4. USA (9, 8, 6, 23)
5. Netherlands (8, 6, 6, 20)
6. Sweden (7, 6, 1, 14)
7. South Korea (5, 8, 4, 17)
8. Switzerland (5, 6, 4, 15)
9. France (5, 4, 6, 15)
10. Austria (5, 3, 6, 14)