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100 Olympic Trivia Questions That Will Make You Rethink Everything You Thought You Remembered

By
Rebecca Nelson, Sports Media Cert.
A vibrant soccer game with a full crowd in a modern stadium, capturing the energy of the sport.

The ancient Greeks competed naked and covered in olive oil, and somehow that’s not even in the top five weirdest things about Olympic history. I’ve been running trivia nights for years, and Olympic questions are a special breed. Everyone thinks they know the Olympics. They remember Usain Bolt’s pose, they remember the Miracle on Ice, they remember their country’s medal count from whichever Games they watched as a kid. But the confidence is the trap. The Olympics stretch across 130 years of modern competition and nearly three millennia if you count the ancient version, and the gaps in what people actually know are enormous and wonderfully exploitable.

Here are 100 olympic trivia questions I’ve tested on real rooms full of real people. Some of them will feel like layups. Some will start arguments. A few will make you genuinely angry at your own brain.

The Ones That Feel Easy Until They Don’t

1. What city hosted the first modern Olympic Games in 1896?

This is a warm-up, but I use it to build false confidence. Everyone gets it, everyone feels smart, and then the next ten questions start dismantling that feeling brick by brick.

Show Answer
Athens, Greece

 

2. How many rings are on the Olympic flag, and what do they represent?

People nail the number instantly. It’s the second part that gets interesting. I’ve heard “the five original sports” more times than I can count.

Show Answer
Five rings, representing the five continents of the world (Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, and Oceania). A common wrong answer is that each ring’s color represents a specific continent , Pierre de Coubertin actually said the six colors (including the white background) are those that appear on every national flag.

 

3. Which country has won the most total Olympic gold medals in history?

The argument here is always whether to count the Soviet Union’s medals under Russia. I don’t. The question says country, not geopolitical successor state.

Show Answer
The United States. Common wrong answer: if you combine all Soviet/Russian totals, it gets closer, which is why this sparks debate.

 

4. The Olympic motto is “Citius, Altius, Fortius.” What does it mean in English?

Most people get two out of three. It’s the order that trips them up, or they swap one word for something that sounds right but isn’t.

Show Answer
“Faster, Higher, Stronger.” In 2021, the IOC added “Communiter” , Together , making it “Faster, Higher, Stronger , Together.”

 

5. What sport has been included in every single modern Summer Olympics since 1896?

In a room of twenty people, I’ll get at least five different answers shouted at once. Track and field seems obvious, but that’s not specific enough. Swimming? Not in 1896 the way you’re thinking.

Show Answer
Athletics (track and field), swimming, cycling, fencing, and gymnastics have all appeared at every Summer Games. If forced to pick one, athletics is the safest answer, as it’s the centerpiece sport. Many people guess swimming, which technically also qualifies.

 

6. Which city has hosted the most Olympic Games (Summer and Winter combined)?

London people say London. Americans say Los Angeles. Both are reasonable. Only one is right, at least until 2028.

Show Answer
London , hosted the Summer Olympics in 1908, 1948, and 2012. Paris tied it in 2024 with three Summer Games (1900, 1924, 2024). Los Angeles will host its third in 2028.

 

7. In what year were women first allowed to compete in the modern Olympics?

People consistently guess too late. They picture the suffrage movement and aim for the 1920s. The actual answer is earlier and more complicated than they expect.

Show Answer
1900, at the Paris Games. Twenty-two women competed in five sports: tennis, sailing, croquet, equestrianism, and golf. Common wrong answer: 1928, which is when women were first allowed in track and field.

 

8. What do Olympic gold medals mostly consist of?

This is one of those questions where the answer makes people briefly distrust every institution they’ve ever believed in.

Show Answer
Silver. Olympic gold medals are required to be at least 92.5% silver, plated with at least 6 grams of gold. The last time solid gold medals were awarded was 1912.

 

9. Which country marches first in the Parade of Nations at the opening ceremony?

I love this one because people who’ve watched dozens of opening ceremonies suddenly can’t remember. They know it’s always the same country, and then they second-guess themselves into oblivion.

Show Answer
Greece, as the birthplace of the Olympics. The host country marches last.

 

10. How often were the ancient Olympic Games held?

Quick and clean. But about a third of any room will say “annually” with full confidence.

Show Answer
Every four years, a period known as an Olympiad. This tradition is why we still hold the modern Games on a four-year cycle.

 

Memory Is a Liar

11. Usain Bolt holds the world record in the 100 meters. What is it, to the hundredth of a second?

Everyone remembers Bolt. Almost nobody remembers the exact time. They’ll say 9.58, 9.69, 9.72 , all numbers that existed at some point in his career. Only one is the record.

Show Answer
9.58 seconds, set at the 2009 World Championships in Berlin. Not at the Olympics , his Olympic best was 9.63 in London 2012. People often conflate the two.

 

12. Which gymnast scored the first perfect 10 in Olympic history?

The scoreboard couldn’t even display it. That detail alone makes this question land every single time.

Show Answer
Nadia Comăneci of Romania, at the 1976 Montreal Games. The scoreboard showed 1.00 because it wasn’t programmed for a 10.0.

 

13. Michael Phelps is the most decorated Olympian of all time. How many total Olympic medals did he win?

People always lowball this. They’ll say 22 or 23, and when you tell them the real number, there’s this pause where they try to do the math of how many events that even is.

Show Answer
28 medals (23 gold, 3 silver, 2 bronze). The next closest is Larisa Latynina with 18.

 

14. In what sport did Muhammad Ali (then Cassius Clay) win his Olympic gold medal?

Nobody misses the sport. But ask them what weight class and what year, and suddenly the room gets quiet.

Show Answer
Boxing, light heavyweight division, at the 1960 Rome Olympics. He was 18 years old.

 

15. Which country boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics, and which country boycotted the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics in retaliation?

Cold War trivia hits different with people who lived through it. They remember the anger but not always which boycott was which.

Show Answer
The United States (along with 65 other nations) boycotted Moscow 1980. The Soviet Union (along with 13 allies) boycotted Los Angeles 1984.

 

16. What was the “Miracle on Ice”?

Americans treat this like scripture. Everyone else in the room tends to have a vague sense it involved hockey and the Cold War. What surprises people is that the Soviet game wasn’t even the gold medal game.

Show Answer
The U.S. men’s hockey team’s 4-3 upset victory over the Soviet Union at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid. The U.S. still had to beat Finland two days later to win gold, which they did 4-2.

 

17. Jesse Owens won four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Name any two of the four events.

I give partial credit on this one at live events. People always get the 100m and the long jump. The other two are where it falls apart.

Show Answer
100 meters, 200 meters, long jump, and 4×100 meter relay.

 

18. The 1936 Olympics were held in Berlin under Nazi rule. Which city hosted the Winter Olympics that same year?

This one floors people. They don’t realize the Winter and Summer Games were in different cities but the same country that year.

Show Answer
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. Both the Summer and Winter Games of 1936 were held in Nazi Germany.

 

19. Who lit the Olympic cauldron at the 1996 Atlanta Games?

One of the most emotional moments in Olympic ceremony history. People who watched it live remember the trembling hand. People who didn’t often guess wrong.

Show Answer
Muhammad Ali. He was visibly affected by Parkinson’s disease, and the moment became one of the most iconic images in Olympic history.

 

20. What happened at the 1972 Munich Olympics that overshadowed the entire Games?

I don’t use this one for laughs. Some questions need to exist in a trivia set because the history matters, not because they’re fun.

Show Answer
The Munich massacre , 11 Israeli Olympic team members were taken hostage and ultimately killed by the Palestinian militant group Black September. The Games were suspended for 34 hours before controversially continuing.

 

Sports You Forgot Were Olympic

21. Tug of war was once an Olympic sport. In which year was it last contested?

The fact that it was Olympic at all gets a laugh. The fact that it lasted as long as it did gets a bigger one.

Show Answer
1920, at the Antwerp Games. It was part of the Olympics from 1900 to 1920. Great Britain won the most tug of war medals overall.

 

22. Name a sport that was added to the Olympic program for the 2020 Tokyo Games (held in 2021).

Skateboarding is the answer everyone reaches for. The deeper cuts are more interesting.

Show Answer
Skateboarding, surfing, sport climbing, karate, and baseball/softball (returning after being dropped). Karate was then removed again for Paris 2024.

 

23. In which Olympic sport do competitors use a “stone” and a “broom”?

Even people who’ve never watched a Winter Olympics somehow know this one. It’s the sport that looks like aggressive housework.

Show Answer
Curling.

 

24. What sport was removed from the Olympics after 1904 and didn’t return until 2016?

This one plays beautifully because the sport itself is one of the most popular in the world. People can’t believe it was ever gone.

Show Answer
Golf. It was played at the 1900 and 1904 Games, then dropped for 112 years before returning in Rio 2016.

 

25. What is the only sport in which men and women compete directly against each other at the Olympics?

Equestrian events. The horse doesn’t care about your gender, and neither do the judges. This answer always sparks a follow-up conversation about whether the horse is the real athlete.

Show Answer
Equestrian. Men and women have competed together in dressage, eventing, and show jumping since 1952.

 

26. Which combat sport allows kicks to the head but not punches to the face?

People who train in martial arts get this instantly. Everyone else starts guessing combat sports they’ve vaguely heard of.

Show Answer
Taekwondo. Points are scored for kicks to the head and torso, and punches to the torso, but punches to the head are not permitted.

 

27. What Olympic event combines cross-country skiing and rifle shooting?

The mental image of someone skiing full speed and then trying to hit a tiny target while their heart rate is through the roof is genuinely thrilling. It’s also one of the oldest Winter Olympic sports.

Show Answer
Biathlon. It originated from Scandinavian military training exercises.

 

28. Breaking (breakdancing) debuted at the 2024 Paris Olympics. True or false: it will also be at the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

People assume once a sport is in, it stays in. The Olympics don’t work that way.

Show Answer
False. Breaking was dropped from the 2028 Los Angeles program. The host city gets input on which sports to include.

 

29. What is the longest race in Olympic swimming?

People who follow swimming nail this. Everyone else guesses 200m or 400m and then their eyes go wide.

Show Answer
The 1500 meters freestyle (for men; the women’s 1500m was added in 2020). That’s 30 laps of a 50-meter pool. The 10km open water marathon swim is technically longer but is held in open water, not the pool.

 

30. Which Winter Olympic sport involves athletes sliding headfirst down an ice track at speeds exceeding 80 mph on a tiny sled?

Luge and skeleton get confused constantly. The direction you’re facing is the whole difference, and people never remember which is which.

Show Answer
Skeleton. In luge, athletes go feet-first on their backs. In skeleton, they go headfirst on their stomachs. Common wrong answer: luge.

 

Numbers That Don’t Feel Real

31. How many sports were contested at the first modern Olympics in 1896?

The whole thing was almost quaint by today’s standards. Fourteen nations showed up. The marathon didn’t even have a set course.

Show Answer
Nine sports: athletics, cycling, fencing, gymnastics, shooting, swimming, tennis, weightlifting, and wrestling.

 

32. How many countries participated in the 2024 Paris Olympics?

People always guess too low. The number of nations at the Olympics now is genuinely staggering.

Show Answer
206 delegations (including the IOC Refugee Olympic Team and individual neutral athletes). More countries participate in the Olympics than are members of the United Nations.

 

33. What is the youngest age at which someone has won an Olympic gold medal?

The answer is so young it makes you uncomfortable. We’re talking about a child.

Show Answer
The youngest known gold medalist is believed to be a French boy (possibly as young as 7-10 years old) who coxed a rowing pair at the 1900 Paris Games. His identity was never confirmed. The youngest verified individual gold medalist is Marjorie Gestring, who won diving gold at age 13 in 1936.

 

34. Oscar Swahn of Sweden holds the record for the oldest Olympic gold medalist. How old was he?

The sport he competed in makes the age even more impressive. Or less, depending on how you think about it.

Show Answer
64 years old, winning gold in team shooting (double-shot running deer) at the 1912 Stockholm Games. He also competed in the 1920 Games at age 72, winning a silver medal.

 

35. How long is an Olympic marathon, in miles?

Runners know this cold. Non-runners round to 26 and feel good about it. The .2 matters, and the reason it’s .2 is one of the best stories in Olympic history.

Show Answer
26.2 miles (42.195 kilometers). The distance was standardized at the 1908 London Games so the race could start at Windsor Castle and finish in front of the royal box at the Olympic stadium. That extra 385 yards changed marathon history forever.

 

36. How many times have the Olympics been canceled entirely?

People always forget that “postponed” and “canceled” aren’t the same thing. Tokyo 2020 was postponed. The cancellations were for darker reasons.

Show Answer
Three times: 1916 (World War I), 1940 (World War II), and 1944 (World War II). Tokyo 2020 was postponed to 2021 but not canceled.

 

37. In the ancient Olympics, how long did the Games last at their peak?

People assume the ancient Games were a one-day affair. They were a full-blown festival.

Show Answer
Five days. The program eventually included athletic events, religious ceremonies, sacrifices, feasting, and artistic competitions.

 

38. Approximately how many athletes competed at the 2024 Paris Olympics?

Get within a thousand and I’ll give you credit at a live event.

Show Answer
Approximately 10,500 athletes. The IOC has been working to keep this number from growing further, aiming for gender parity at around 5,250 per gender.

 

39. How many consecutive Olympics did wrestler Aleksandr Karelin go undefeated before finally losing?

Karelin is the most dominant athlete most people have never heard of. His loss in the 2000 final was one of the biggest upsets in Olympic history.

Show Answer
Karelin won gold at three consecutive Olympics (1988, 1992, 1996) without losing. His unbeaten streak in international competition lasted 13 years before Rulon Gardner of the U.S. stunned him in the 2000 Sydney final.

 

40. What is the most-watched Olympic event globally?

Americans say swimming. Everyone else says the 100 meters. The actual answer depends on how you measure it, but one event consistently draws the planet’s attention more than any other.

Show Answer
The men’s 100 meters final. It’s often called “the fastest race on Earth” and consistently draws the single largest TV audience of any Olympic event.

 

Where Confidence Goes to Die

41. Which country has won the most Olympic medals in gymnastics?

Americans think about Simone Biles and say the U.S. Russians think about the Soviet legacy. The answer requires you to think about gymnastics history as a whole, not just the last twenty years.

Show Answer
The Soviet Union/Russia (combined) leads the all-time gymnastics medal count. If you count only post-Soviet Russia, the United States has surged ahead in recent decades, particularly on the women’s side.

 

42. What color medal did the original modern Olympics not award?

This one gets audible gasps. The medal system we take for granted wasn’t always the system.

Show Answer
Gold. At the 1896 Athens Games, winners received silver medals and an olive branch. Runners-up received copper (bronze) medals. Gold-silver-bronze wasn’t standardized until 1904.

 

43. Which athlete has won the most Winter Olympic gold medals?

Cross-country skiing dominates the Winter medal counts, and the answer reflects that. But most people guess a figure skater or a skier they’ve seen on TV.

Show Answer
Marit Bjørgen of Norway, with 8 gold medals (15 total medals) in cross-country skiing. Common wrong answer: Bjørn Dæhlie, who held the record before her with 8 golds as well, but fewer total medals.

 

44. In which Olympics did professional athletes first compete in basketball?

Everyone remembers the Dream Team. Not everyone remembers which Games it was. And fewer still know that the rules had to change to make it possible.

Show Answer
1992 Barcelona Olympics. FIBA changed its rules in 1989 to allow NBA players to compete, leading to the legendary U.S. “Dream Team” featuring Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, and Larry Bird.

 

45. Only one person has won Olympic medals in both the Summer and Winter Games. Who?

This isn’t true anymore, but the phrasing makes people think hard. The correct version of this question has a different shape.

Show Answer
This is actually a trick , multiple athletes have accomplished this. The most famous is Eddie Eagan (USA), who won gold in boxing in 1920 and gold in bobsled in 1932. Lauryn Williams and Clara Hughes are among others. Eagan is the only one to win gold in both.

 

46. What country won the first-ever Olympic gold medal in rugby sevens (the men’s event)?

Rugby sevens was added in 2016, and the winner shocked absolutely everyone who follows the sport.

Show Answer
Fiji. It was also Fiji’s first Olympic medal of any kind, in any sport, ever. The entire nation essentially shut down to celebrate.

 

47. The Olympic flame is lit in Olympia, Greece before every Games. What is used to light it?

A lighter? A match? No. The method is deliberately ancient, and it’s beautiful.

Show Answer
A parabolic mirror that concentrates the sun’s rays. The ceremony is performed by actresses in ancient Greek costumes at the ruins of the Temple of Hera in Olympia.

 

48. Which country has competed in every single modern Summer Olympics?

People guess the U.S. or the U.K. They’re not wrong, exactly, but the full list is shorter than you’d think, and one of the countries on it surprises everyone.

Show Answer
Greece, Australia, France, Great Britain, and Switzerland have competed in every Summer Olympics since 1896. The U.S. has also competed in every Summer Games. People are often surprised by Switzerland and Australia being on this list.

 

49. In 2000, Cathy Freeman lit the Olympic cauldron in Sydney. What was significant about her beyond that moment?

If you watched those Games, you remember the bodysuit. You remember the silence before her 400m final. You remember an entire country holding its breath.

Show Answer
Cathy Freeman is an Indigenous Australian who went on to win the 400 meters gold medal at those same Games. She was the first Aboriginal Australian to win an individual Olympic gold, and her victory was a deeply symbolic moment for reconciliation in Australia.

 

50. What does the “D” stand for in “IOC”?

Wait. There’s no D in IOC. But I’ve asked this at live events and watched people confidently say “Development” or “Department” before their brain catches up. The real question: what do the letters actually stand for?

Show Answer
International Olympic Committee. There is no D. This is a pattern-interrupt question that tests whether people actually know the abbreviation or just recognize it.

 

The Host City Round

51. Which city was the first in the Southern Hemisphere to host the Olympics?

People guess Sydney. It’s a good guess. It’s wrong by 44 years.

Show Answer
Melbourne, Australia, in 1956. Common wrong answer: Sydney (2000) or Rio de Janeiro (2016).

 

52. The 1940 Olympics were originally awarded to which city before being canceled due to World War II?

The fact that these Games were planned at all, and where they were planned, adds a layer of historical irony that makes the answer land hard.

Show Answer
Tokyo, Japan. Japan withdrew as host in 1938 due to the Second Sino-Japanese War. Helsinki was briefly named as a replacement before the Games were canceled entirely. Tokyo wouldn’t host the Olympics until 1964.

 

53. Which was the first Asian city to host the Summer Olympics?

This one separates people who know Olympic history from people who know recent Olympic history.

Show Answer
Tokyo, Japan, in 1964.

 

54. Name the only country in South America to have hosted the Olympics.

Show Answer
Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, 2016). It remains the only South American host to date.

 

55. Which city hosted both the Summer and Winter Olympics in the same year?

This is a trick question, and I love watching people try to logic their way to an answer. No city has done this. But the Summer and Winter Games used to happen in the same year, just in different cities.

Show Answer
No city has ever hosted both in the same year. However, the Summer and Winter Games were held in the same year (in different cities) until 1992. The Winter Games shifted to a separate four-year cycle starting in 1994.

 

56. What was unusual about the equestrian events at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics?

Australia’s strict quarantine laws created one of the strangest logistical situations in Olympic history.

Show Answer
The equestrian events were held in Stockholm, Sweden , over 9,000 miles away , because Australia’s quarantine regulations wouldn’t allow the entry of foreign horses. It’s the only time Olympic events for a single Games have been held on a different continent.

 

57. Which city will host the 2032 Summer Olympics?

This was announced years ago, but unless you specifically remember the announcement, you’re guessing.

Show Answer
Brisbane, Australia.

 

58. The 2028 Olympics will be held in Los Angeles. What other years did LA host?

One of the years is famous for a boycott. The other is famous for being surprisingly profitable, which changed how cities thought about hosting forever.

Show Answer
1932 and 1984. The 1984 Games were notable for being one of the first to turn a significant profit, largely through corporate sponsorship and using existing infrastructure.

 

59. Sarajevo hosted the 1984 Winter Olympics. What happened to the Olympic venues less than a decade later?

This answer isn’t trivia. It’s history that should make you sit with it for a second.

Show Answer
Many of the venues were destroyed or heavily damaged during the Siege of Sarajevo (1992-1996) in the Bosnian War. The bobsled track became a military position. The Olympic stadium area was used as a makeshift cemetery.

 

60. Which was the first Winter Olympics to be held in the Southern Hemisphere?

Read it carefully. This is another trap.

Show Answer
No Winter Olympics has ever been held in the Southern Hemisphere. All Winter Games have been hosted in Europe, North America, or East Asia.

 

The Ones That Start Arguments

61. What country does the IOC recognize as having won the most gold medals at a single Olympics?

The answer depends on whether you count the Soviet Union, which is exactly why this question starts fights.

Show Answer
The Soviet Union won 80 gold medals at the 1980 Moscow Olympics (boycotted by the U.S. and others). The United States won 83 gold medals at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics (boycotted by the Soviets). Both numbers carry an asterisk the size of the Cold War.

 

62. Is chess an Olympic sport?

It’s recognized by the IOC. That’s not the same thing. This distinction matters and people argue about it constantly.

Show Answer
No. Chess is recognized by the IOC as a sport, but it has never been included in the Olympic program. The International Chess Federation (FIDE) has lobbied for inclusion repeatedly.

 

63. In figure skating, what is the difference between a toe loop and a loop jump?

I include this one specifically because people who are certain they know figure skating often can’t actually explain the jumps. It’s a humbling moment.

Show Answer
A toe loop uses a toe pick assist for takeoff from the back outside edge of the opposite foot. A loop jump takes off and lands on the same back outside edge with no toe assist. The distinction is in how the skater initiates the jump.

 

64. Has any athlete ever been stripped of an Olympic medal and later had it reinstated?

The doping saga in Olympic history is long and messy. Some cases were overturned. Some weren’t. The rules kept changing.

Show Answer
Yes. Jim Thorpe is the most famous case. He was stripped of his 1912 pentathlon and decathlon gold medals for having played semi-professional baseball, violating amateurism rules. His medals were posthumously reinstated in 1983, and in 2022, the IOC officially recognized him as the sole gold medalist in both events.

 

65. In the 2002 Winter Olympics figure skating scandal, what happened to the pairs competition results?

This is one of those moments where the Olympics stopped being about sport and became a geopolitical thriller on live television.

Show Answer
A French judge admitted to being pressured to vote for the Russian pair (Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze) over the Canadian pair (Salé and Pelletier). The IOC ultimately awarded gold medals to both pairs. The scandal also led to the complete overhaul of the figure skating scoring system, replacing the 6.0 system with the current International Judging System.

 

66. Can Olympic athletes compete for a country they weren’t born in?

People have strong opinions about this. The rules are more flexible than most assume, and the results are sometimes bizarre.

Show Answer
Yes. Athletes can compete for any country of which they hold citizenship, subject to a waiting period (usually three years) if they’ve previously competed for another nation. This has led to some countries actively recruiting athletes from other nations, particularly in sports like table tennis and distance running.

 

67. What is the Olympic Truce?

The ancient version was taken seriously enough that wars were paused. The modern version is more symbolic, and that gap between ideal and reality is the whole story.

Show Answer
The Olympic Truce (ekecheiria) is a tradition from ancient Greece where all hostilities were ceased during the Games to allow safe passage for athletes and spectators. The modern Olympic Truce is a UN resolution calling for a cessation of hostilities during the Games, though it has no enforcement mechanism and has been violated repeatedly.

 

68. Which country has the most Olympic medals without ever winning a gold?

This is a heartbreak question. Some countries have come so close, so many times.

Show Answer
As of 2024, this distinction has shifted over time. Malaysia, Monaco, and several others have accumulated medals without gold. The Philippines went 97 years (1924-2021) before winning their first gold medal through Hidilyn Diaz in weightlifting at Tokyo 2020.

 

69. What unusual protest did Tommie Smith and John Carlos make at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics?

Everyone knows the image. Fewer people know what happened to them afterward, which is the part that matters.

Show Answer
They raised black-gloved fists during the national anthem on the medal podium in a human rights salute. Both were expelled from the Games and received death threats. The Australian silver medalist, Peter Norman, wore a human rights badge in solidarity and was ostracized by Australian athletics for decades. Smith and Carlos were pallbearers at Norman’s funeral in 2006.

 

70. Has the Olympic torch relay ever gone to space?

This sounds like a joke question. It is not.

Show Answer
Yes. In 2013, ahead of the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, the Olympic torch was taken to the International Space Station by Russian cosmonauts. It went on a spacewalk outside the station. The torch was not lit in space, for obvious reasons.

 

The Deep Cuts

71. What was the first Olympic sport to include a women’s event?

It wasn’t track. It wasn’t swimming. The actual answer reflects the social norms of 1900 in a way that’s both charming and infuriating.

Show Answer
Tennis (and golf, croquet, and sailing also included women at the 1900 Paris Games). Charlotte Cooper of Great Britain became the first individual female Olympic champion by winning the tennis singles.

 

72. In what year did the Summer and Winter Olympics stop being held in the same year?

The split is more recent than people think. If you were alive in 1992, you lived through the last year of the old system.

Show Answer
1992 was the last year both were held. The Winter Olympics shifted to 1994 (Lillehammer), creating the current alternating two-year cycle.

 

73. What is the only Olympic sport that doesn’t require physical exertion by the athlete?

This is debatable, and that’s the point. I’ve had people argue for twenty minutes about what “physical exertion” means.

Show Answer
Shooting is often cited. Equestrian could also qualify depending on your definition, since the horse does the physical work (though riders would strongly disagree). Art competitions were also part of the Olympics from 1912 to 1948.

 

74. Art competitions were once part of the Olympics. In what categories could you win a medal?

The founder of the modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin, believed the Games should celebrate the mind as well as the body. He actually won a gold medal himself.

Show Answer
Architecture, literature, music, painting, and sculpture. Pierre de Coubertin won gold in literature at the 1912 Games under a pseudonym for his poem “Ode to Sport.”

 

75. Which country won the first Olympic basketball gold medal?

Basketball was played outdoors on dirt courts in its Olympic debut. The final was played in rain and mud. The final score is almost unbelievable.

Show Answer
The United States, at the 1936 Berlin Games. The gold medal game was played outdoors on a clay court in pouring rain, and the U.S. beat Canada 19-8. Yes, 19-8. Dribbling was nearly impossible in the mud.

 

76. Abebe Bikila of Ethiopia won the 1960 Olympic marathon in a unique way. What was unusual about his run?

One of the greatest athletic performances in history, and the detail everyone remembers is the simplest one.

Show Answer
He ran barefoot through the streets of Rome and won in world record time. He also won the marathon again in 1964 in Tokyo, this time wearing shoes, finishing in another world record.

 

77. What is the Refugee Olympic Team, and when did it first compete?

This is one of those questions where the answer makes the room go quiet in a good way.

Show Answer
The Refugee Olympic Team (EOR) is composed of athletes who are refugees and cannot compete for their home countries. It first competed at the 2016 Rio Olympics with 10 athletes. The team marched second in the opening ceremony, right after Greece, to a standing ovation.

 

78. Which Olympic host city built an artificial island for its sailing events?

The lengths host cities go to for Olympic infrastructure are genuinely insane. This example is one of my favorites.

Show Answer
Enoshima, used for the Tokyo 1964 and Tokyo 2020 Games, is a natural island, but the question is actually best answered by Weymouth and Portland for the 2012 London Games, where the sailing venue was on the Jurassic Coast. However, the most dramatic example of artificial island construction for the Olympics was in Qingdao for the 2008 Beijing sailing events, where extensive land reclamation reshaped the coastline. Multiple Games have involved significant maritime infrastructure projects.

 

79. In the decathlon, how many events are there and over how many days?

“Deca” means ten, so people get the first part. The second part is where about half the room guesses wrong.

Show Answer
Ten events over two days. Day one: 100m, long jump, shot put, high jump, 400m. Day two: 110m hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin, 1500m.

 

80. Which swimmer was nicknamed “Thorpedo” and dominated the 2000 and 2004 Olympics?

Australians in the room perk up immediately. Everyone else usually gets there but not as fast as they think they will.

Show Answer
Ian Thorpe of Australia. He won five gold medals across the 2000 Sydney and 2004 Athens Games. His size 17 feet were considered a natural advantage.

 

Almost There

81. What is the “Olympic oath,” and who takes it?

People know athletes take an oath. They don’t know that judges and coaches also take separate oaths, or what the words actually are.

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The Olympic oath is a pledge taken during the opening ceremony. Since 2020, a single oath is taken on behalf of athletes, judges, and coaches. The oath includes a commitment to “respect and abide by the rules” and compete “without doping and without drugs.” The first oath was taken at the 1920 Antwerp Games.

 

82. Which sprinter was stripped of his 1988 Olympic 100m gold medal after testing positive for stanozolol?

The most famous doping scandal in Olympic history. The race itself lasted 9.79 seconds. The fallout lasted decades.

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Ben Johnson of Canada. Carl Lewis was elevated to gold, though Lewis himself later admitted to testing positive for banned substances at the U.S. Olympic Trials. The entire final has been called the dirtiest race in history.

 

83. What does the term “Olympiad” technically refer to?

Most people use it to mean “an Olympic Games.” They’re wrong, and the correct definition is more interesting.

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An Olympiad is the four-year period between Olympic Games, not the Games themselves. The Games of the XXX Olympiad (London 2012) refers to the 30th four-year cycle, not the 30th time the Games were held. Canceled Games still count in the numbering.

 

84. Which country has won the most Olympic medals in ice hockey?

Canadians assume Canada. Russians assume Russia. The answer requires you to think about longevity, not just dominance.

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Canada leads the all-time Olympic ice hockey medal count when combining men’s and women’s results. The Soviet Union/Russia is close behind, particularly in men’s hockey.

 

85. What sport made its Olympic debut in Paris 2024 after being dropped following 1904?

We covered this earlier with golf, so this is a different sport. The Paris organizers had a flair for bringing back the unusual.

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This is a bit of a trick , no sport returned to Paris 2024 after being absent since exactly 1904. However, the question might lead people to breaking (breakdancing), which was entirely new, or they might think of cricket, which was last in the Olympics in 1900 and is slated for 2028. The most notable Paris 2024 addition was breaking.

 

86. In the 1904 St. Louis Olympics marathon, the original “winner” was disqualified. Why?

The 1904 marathon is the most chaotic event in Olympic history. The real story involves a car, rat poison, and a dog.

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Fred Lorz of the U.S. was caught having ridden in a car for about 11 miles of the race after suffering cramps. He jogged across the finish line and was nearly awarded the gold before being exposed. The actual winner, Thomas Hicks, was given doses of strychnine (a rat poison used as a stimulant) and brandy by his handlers during the race and nearly died. Another competitor, Félix Carvajal, stopped to eat apples from an orchard and got stomach cramps. A South African runner was chased a mile off course by a dog.

 

87. How many Olympic sports are contested entirely by women with no male equivalent?

People assume the answer is zero, that everything has a male counterpart. They’re close to right but not quite.

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Rhythmic gymnastics and artistic swimming (formerly synchronized swimming) are the two Olympic sports with no men’s events. There have been ongoing discussions about adding men’s divisions in both.

 

88. What is the heaviest Olympic medal ever produced?

Each host city designs its own medals, and some have gotten creative. The 2020 Tokyo medals had a special twist, too.

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The Tokyo 2020 medals were notably heavy at around 556 grams for gold, but the heaviest were the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics medals at approximately 529 grams. The Tokyo 2020 medals were unique because they were made entirely from recycled electronic devices donated by the Japanese public , about 78,985 tons of devices were collected.

 

89. Which athlete won Olympic gold medals 12 years apart in the same individual event?

Longevity in Olympic sport is almost impossible. To be the best in the world at something, leave, and come back over a decade later to be the best again requires something beyond talent.

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Several athletes have done this, but one notable example is Al Oerter, who won discus gold at four consecutive Olympics (1956, 1960, 1964, 1968) , spanning 12 years. More recently, Usain Bolt won the 100m in 2008 and 2016, though he also won in 2012.

 

90. The 2008 Beijing Olympics opening ceremony was directed by which famous filmmaker?

It remains one of the most visually spectacular events in television history. The director’s background in epic filmmaking made perfect sense.

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Zhang Yimou, the acclaimed Chinese director known for films like “Hero” and “House of Flying Daggers.” He also directed the closing ceremony of the 2004 Athens Games and the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics ceremonies.

 

The Final Stretch

91. What is the only country to have won at least one gold medal at every Summer Olympics it has attended?

This is harder than it sounds. You need consistent excellence across every single Games, including the early ones.

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Great Britain is the only country to have won at least one gold medal at every Summer Olympics in which it has participated (all of them since 1896).

 

92. What is “artistic swimming” previously known as?

The name change happened recently enough that most people still use the old name. And honestly, the old name was more descriptive.

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Synchronized swimming. It was renamed to “artistic swimming” by FINA (now World Aquatics) in 2017.

 

93. Eric “The Eel” Moussambani became famous at the 2000 Sydney Olympics. What happened?

This is the most joyful Olympic story I know. The crowd’s reaction tells you everything about what the Olympics are supposed to be.

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Moussambani, representing Equatorial Guinea, swam the 100m freestyle in a time of 1:52.72 , nearly twice the world record. He had only learned to swim eight months earlier and had never seen an Olympic-sized pool before arriving in Sydney. His two competitors were disqualified for false starts, so he swam alone. The crowd cheered him on like he was winning gold. He finished, and the ovation was enormous.

 

94. Which modern pentathlon event was replaced starting with the 2028 Olympics, and what replaced it?

The modern pentathlon has been trying to stay relevant for decades. The latest change is either brilliant or absurd, depending on who you ask.

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Show jumping (horse riding) was replaced by obstacle course racing, following a controversial incident at the 2020 Tokyo Games where a German coach punched a horse that refused to jump. The sport now consists of fencing, swimming, obstacle racing, and a combined laser-run event.

 

95. What does the phrase “Faster, Higher, Stronger , Together” have to do with a Dominican priest?

The origin of the Olympic motto is one of those details that makes you see the whole movement differently.

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The original Latin motto “Citius, Altius, Fortius” was coined by Father Henri Didon, a Dominican priest and educator, during a school sports event in 1891. Pierre de Coubertin, who was present, adopted it for the Olympics. A priest gave the world’s biggest sporting event its mission statement.

 

96. In 1992, the “Dream Team” lost an Olympic basketball game. True or false?

I’ve watched tables of sports fans tear themselves apart over this one. Their memories are vivid and completely wrong.

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False. The 1992 Dream Team went 8-0, winning every game by an average of 43.8 points. Their closest game was a 32-point victory over Croatia in the gold medal game. No NBA-era U.S. men’s basketball team lost an Olympic game until 2004 in Athens.

 

97. What country is the only one to have competed at every Winter Olympics?

People guess Norway or Canada. The actual answer is satisfying because it makes perfect sense once you hear it.

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Only France and Great Britain have competed at every Winter Olympics since the first one in 1924. Many people are surprised that traditional winter sports powerhouses like Norway have also been ever-present, which they have. The distinction is less clear-cut than for the Summer Games.

 

98. At the 2016 Rio Olympics, which tiny country won its first-ever Olympic medal of any color?

We mentioned Fiji’s rugby gold earlier. But another small nation had a breakthrough in Rio that got less attention and deserves more.

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Several small nations won their first medals in Rio, including Kosovo (gold in judo through Majlinda Kelmendi, competing in only their second Olympics as an independent nation), Jordan, Vietnam, and others. Kosovo’s story is particularly remarkable given the country’s recent history.

 

99. Simone Biles withdrew from multiple events at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics citing “the twisties.” What are “the twisties”?

This question changed how the world talks about mental health in sports. The answer is scarier than most people realize.

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“The twisties” is a phenomenon where a gymnast loses their sense of spatial awareness while twisting and flipping in the air. It’s not a mental health issue in the traditional sense , it’s a disconnect between the body and the brain’s spatial processing during aerial maneuvers. It’s genuinely dangerous because a gymnast performing high-difficulty skills without knowing where they are in the air can land on their head or neck. Biles returned at the 2024 Paris Olympics and won three gold medals and a silver.

 

100. The ancient Olympic Games were held for over 1,000 years before being abolished. Who abolished them, and why?

I save this one for last because it connects the beginning to the end. The ancient Games ran from 776 BC for over a millennium. They survived wars, plagues, political upheaval, and the rise and fall of empires. And then one man ended them with a decree. The reason tells you something about how civilizations decide what matters and what doesn’t. It tells you that the things we think are permanent almost never are. And it makes you wonder what future civilizations will think about our version of the Games, with their corporate sponsors and doping scandals and athletes who learned to swim eight months before competing. Whether they’ll see what we see when we watch. Whether they’ll understand why any of it mattered at all.

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Roman Emperor Theodosius I abolished the ancient Olympic Games in 393 AD as part of a campaign to impose Christianity as the state religion and suppress pagan festivals. The Games at Olympia were considered a pagan religious celebration honoring Zeus. Over a thousand years of continuous competition ended not because of war or decline, but because a new belief system decided the old one had to go.

 

Rebecca Nelson, Sports Media Cert.
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