h a l f b a k e r yThere goes my teleportation concept.
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At the closing celebration, one country is given a kind of
"grand prize" of the Olympics, the award for most medals
won per capita.
The idea that smaller countries can win against larger
countries really has an appeal to it. The reason to have 4
medals at least is to keep it from being weird
by having
little countryetts like Tuvalu standing proud with their
one
bronze medal for goat milking or whatever.
Every winner from that country would stand shoulder to
shoulder and receive the award for their country.
Might as well have a gold, silver and bronze while you're
at
it. Last Olympics awards would be:
Gold: Norway 26 /
Silver: Slovenia 8 /
Bronze: Austria 17
stats
http://www.medalspercapita.com/ I googled it [Loris, Aug 22 2016]
[link]
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I say let single medal countries win. It will happen
sometimes, but not that often. |
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Yea, maybe. I was thinking one medal might be kind
of a fluke though. If however, a country like Trinidad
wins 4 medals, that's a scrappy little country that's
got some talent in the sports department. Might get
little countries to put more effort into their PE
programs in school, something that's pretty
important in my opinion. |
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I just wish I could watch it on regular tv without so
much focus on the medals and high-profile
personalities. |
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The medals themselves should be sized inversely according to the population of the country winning. Tuvalu's bronze would require a wagon to move it. |
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That, [bungston], is a manifestly brilliant idea.
China would look ridiculous proudly waving a gold
shirt-button. |
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Shorter ribbon for smaller nations so the medals
hang higher? So big countries would have the
medals down around the naval area, the smallest
would be more like a choker and then have
graduation lengths in between. More medals per
capita, the shorter the ribbon. |
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It's be pretty easy to do. I don't think the medalists
would care about the length of the ribbon when
they got back home, they'd have their medals in
the trophy case with the ribbon all tucked away. It
would only be apparent during the award
ceremony. |
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So at the end of the games when everybody's
having their final pictures taken, everybody gets
their final ribbon of the appropriate length. So
when the 4 gold medalists from Vatican City line
up they can proudly sport their 4 medals with very
short ribbons. |
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Most medals per capita, excluding those with <4 medals (Grenada, Bahamas) : Jamaica. |
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The score table looks like this: |
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rank country medals ~ medals_per_capita
1 Grenada 1 ~ 106,825
2 Bahamas 2 ~ 194,009
3 Jamaica 11 ~ 247,812
4 New Zealand ~ 18 255,316
5 Denmark 15 ~ 378,400
...
19 Great Britain 67 ~ 972,212
...
42 Russian Federation 56 ~ 2,573,157
43 United States 121 ~ 2,656,353
...
86 India 2 ~ 655,525,263 |
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Gold medals only:
1 Bahamas 1 ~ 388,019
2 Jamaica 6 ~ 454,323
3 Croatia 5 ~ 844,880
4 Fiji 1 ~ 892,145
5 New Zealand 4 ~ 1,148,925
...
13 Great Britain 27 ~ 2,412,527
...
30 United States 46 ~ 6,987,365
31 Russian Federation 19 ~ 7,584,042
...
58 Indonesia 1 ~ 257,563,815 |
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The carribbean owns, basically.
No doubt Russia boasts about getting more trophies per capita than the decadant USA, and USA is proud of getting more gold medals per capita than Russia ("We're number 30! we're number 30!")
And Britain is shitter than it thinks. |
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See? I think that's interesting information. |
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I'd knock off the lower numbered ones though. For
instance the real interesting one on the first list is
Jamaica with 11. They only have a 25% bigger
population than the Bahamas but wallop them in
the medal department by almost 600% |
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I just don't think people would get excited about a
country that won only 1 medal, no matter how
small they are. |
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"Wow everybody! Let's all salute the greatest
country in the Olympics this year! Grenada with
their 1 bronze medal!" People just wouldn't take it
seriously. Now Jamaica, New Zealand and
Denmark, those are countries to be looked upon
with awe. |
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I certainly agree it's interesting information. |
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//I'd knock off the lower numbered ones though. For instance the real interesting one on the first list is Jamaica with 11. They only have a 25% bigger population than the Bahamas but wallop them in the medal department by almost 600%// |
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No, those figures are per capita. How many people you have per medal won, effectively. |
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Jamaica have a population just over 7 times that of the Bahamas, but 'only' managed to get 6 times more gold medals. |
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You're right that if you're a small country it's easy to occasionally fluke the top of the table by getting a single medal. (Of course, they also often end up at the bottom of the table, with zero.) But to rule out small countries entirely is a bit unfair. Instead I suggest that you could average over several games worth of data. I believe it would be possible to develop a statistical model to only do this for the countries with small medal-counts. |
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For what it's worth, Bahamas and Grenada both had a gold medal in 2012, and Bahamas seems to have consistently been getting medals in previous games (including on average 1 gold since 2000).
Bahamas /definitely/ deserves to be at or near the top. |
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I say take the results on the day, and go with the
flukes. If Grenada winds up as winner once, then
good for Grenada. Wherever it is. |
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//Jamaica have a population just over 7 times that
of the Bahamas, but 'only' managed to get 6 times
more gold medals.// |
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Anyway, whether there's a minimum or not, I think
this idea would get a foothold among those smaller
countries. If I were Croatia I'd certainly be excited
about showing the US who the greatest country in
the world REALLY was. |
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Another interesting table might be medals per money spent
on athletes, not that that data would be easy to come by or
be good at squaring expensive vs. cheap sports.
I'd bet the Jamaicans, Kenyans, and Ethiopians would be up
near the top. |
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//New Zealand ... to be looked upon with awe//
In most things, also including sports prowess.
(Disclaimer: I might be a tiny bit biased...) |
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Quite so. Remind me which bit of Australia it's in? |
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Oooh, them's fightin' words... |
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