6 Olympic gold medals. The most titled Olympic champions in history. Egorova Lyubov, cross-country skiing

Winning an Olympic medal is the highest achievement in the career of every athlete. To do this, he is ready to work for decades, attend training three times a day, adhere to proper nutrition, and even get injured. All this for the sake of one single title, which will bring him worldwide fame and respect and put his name in history. The Olympic gold medal is especially valuable, but there are also athletes who managed to win it not once, but several times. So, below will be presented Olympians who have ascended to the highest step of the podium at least 8 times. They are representatives of different countries and sports disciplines, but their successes are equally worthy of honor and admiration.

Michael Phelps is the most decorated Olympic champion

The only Olympian to win more than 10 Games gold medals in his career was Michael Phelps. This truly most titled Olympic champion has 23 awards of the highest standard, which he began to receive back in Athens. An athlete performs in a swimming pool, and he is given almost all disciplines in this location: freestyle swimming, butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke, not to mention relay races. Phelps represents Team USA.


The swimmer got into the big sport by accident: he came to the pool to maintain general physical fitness and restore health, but discovered that he had real talent and excellent data. At the age of 15, Phelps was first entrusted with representing the country at the Olympic Games, but then he took only fifth place. But after 4 years, he conquered most of the disciplines, adding 6 gold and 2 bronze medals to his treasury. At the next Games in 2008, Michael became the champion in absolutely all categories in which he competed. No one has yet managed to break this record.


Michael Phelps is a legendary athlete, the pride of the United States, 50-time national champion and 3-time world champion. Everyone who is at least somehow interested in modern sports knows him. The swimmer appears on advertising posters, participates in all sorts of promotions and television shows, earning millions of dollars annually from these campaigns.


Until 2012, Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina was the absolute champion in terms of the number of medals won at the Olympics. Her arsenal included 9 gold, 5 silver and 4 bronze awards received in all existing disciplines of artistic gymnastics: exercises on uneven bars and balance beam, vault, all-around, floor exercises. At the Olympic Games in London, this figure was surpassed by Michael Phelps, who has not yet completed his career and continues to replenish his Olympic treasury.

The championship in the number of awards in athletics belongs to the Finnish marathon runner Paavo Nurmi, who has 9 gold and 3 silver medals. The athlete’s path was not easy: having excellent physical characteristics for long-distance running, Nurmi at a very young age was forced to stop training and go to work, since his father died and his family needed money.


Later, he returned to the sport and began hard training, the results of which were noticeable already at the age of 16, when the Finn showed himself in official competitions and ran a 3 km cross-country race in 10 minutes 6 seconds.

After serving in the army, Nurmi began his Olympic career. First, Antwerp submitted to him, bringing 3 awards of the highest standard, then Paris, which resulted in 5 gold medals, and then Amsterdam, which added 1 gold and 2 silver. After the third Olympics, Paavo realized that age was taking its toll and wanted to triumphantly end his career at the 1932 Games, but the IOC suspended him from participation as soon as it learned that the marathon runner was participating in non-professional races and receiving considerable sums for it.


Nurmi was honored with a monument erected in his homeland and the right to carry the Olympic torch in 1952 in Helsinki. He became a folk hero, whose fame has not yet dissipated.


Another legend of American swimming is Mark Spitz, who won 9 gold, 1 silver and 1 bronze medals in just two Olympics, 1968 and 1972. The first performance at a competition of this scale brought the swimmer 2 golds, won as part of the national team. Just 4 years later, in all disciplines where Spitz was entered, he became the undisputed champion, earning 7 gold medals and becoming the most titled American at the Games in Munich.

American Carl Lewis holds the lead in the number of athletics disciplines in which he was entered at the Olympic Games. By the end of his sports career, he had 9 gold and 1 silver awards. The first Olympics in which the athlete took part was the 1984 Olympics, held in Los Angeles. Lewis did not make it to Moscow in 1980, since the United States ignored competitions in the USSR for well-known political reasons.


The athlete became a champion in events such as the 100-meter run, long jump, relay races and others. He was a member of the US team at the Games in Seoul, Barcelona, ​​and Atlanta, where he showed himself to be a real fighter and a true winner. But still, one top medal went to Karl after the results were announced: Canadian Ben Jones, who finished first in the 100-meter race, was later removed from the competition for doping, and his championship went to Lewis.


The end of the sports career of the universal athlete occurred in 1997. By this time, he managed to become a member of the basketball and football leagues due to his incredible popularity, although he never played these sports professionally.


One of the most famous athletes of our time is Usain Bolt, whose number of Olympic gold medals reaches 9. Since the Games held in Beijing, Bolt has consistently become a champion in three categories: in the 100-meter and 200-meter distances, as well as in the 4 x relay 100 m. The sprinter competes for Jamaica, which, thanks to him, performs well in cross-country sports. However, one of Usain's medals is in question: at the 2008 Olympics, Nest Carter was part of the Jamaican relay team, who was later found to have doping in his blood. If the court decides to deprive this athlete of his medals, Bolt will become an eight-time Olympic champion.

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Her record for the most Olympic medals won by one person stood for 48 years. Only this year, a swimming machine named “Michael Phelps” was able to collect more Olympic medals than our gymnast (he has 24, Latynina has 18). However, Phelps’ achievement cannot change Larisa Semyonovna’s title alone: ​​she is the strongest Olympian of the 20th century, he is the strongest of the 21st. Gymnasts and swimmers are happy people, because their sports allow them to bring back a dozen medals from one championship or Olympics, something that a wrestler or boxer cannot even dream of. Therefore, in order to give other athletes a place in our symbolic Hall of Fame, we have placed only one representative of gymnastics here. Although, of course, we remember Nikolai Andrianov, and Boris Shakhlin, and Alexei Nemov, and many others.

2.

One of the two greatest swimmers of our country - Alexander Popov and Vladimir Salnikov each have 4 Olympic medals.

But Popov takes other titles: he is a 6-time world champion and a 21-time (!) European champion.

Even Phelps, with all his greatness, announced his retirement at 27, while Alexander won his last gold at 33.

3.

According to Isinbayeva, today her main dream is family and children.

But perhaps the records set by Elena will last until the time when her own children will have their own weddings.

Lena's 27th world record - 5.06 m - is approximately 25-30 cm higher than the best results of her competitors.

4.

Foreign experts compiling lists of the most famous athletes of all time are reluctant to include ours, but there are names that simply cannot be ignored. Karelin is just such a case. For 13 years, Alexander the Great remained undefeated in Greco-Roman wrestling, and for 6 years in a row he did not concede a single point to his opponents.

5.

15 years have passed since Bubka finished competing, but his records (6.14 m outdoors and 6.15 m indoors) have still not been broken. Moreover, when the Japanese calculated on a computer at what height above the bar Sergei flew at the championship in Tokyo, it turned out that that jump was enough to overcome 6.37 m - no matter how sports medicine and technology develop, this milestone will not be achieved in the near future Not a single person on Earth can overcome it.

6.

In five years of absolute domination in the barbell, this heavyweight with his own hands raised the world record in triathlon total by 70 kg. Vlasov finished his first Olympics with four records and walked through Rome from the stadium to the Olympic village on foot, followed by a crowd chanting the name of the champion. In total, Vlasov set 31 records.

7.

The first half of the 60s in speed skating was marked by Skoblikova; she climbed to the highest step of the Olympic podium 6 times. In 1964, she won all 4 distances of the Games. Plus, Lidia Pavlovna is a 2-time absolute world champion in classical all-around and a multiple world champion in individual distances.

8.

Shares with Skoblikova the world record for the number of gold medals at the Winter Games. In addition to the 6 highest in Egorova’s track record, there are also 3 silver Olympic awards. However, it is difficult to choose the greatest skier of the USSR/Russia, since both Larisa Lazutina (11-time world champion, 5 highest Olympic medals) and Raisa Smetanina, who won 10 medals at 5 Olympics (made her debut at the Games) can claim this title. 1976, the last time she stood on the podium in Albertville 1992).

9.

If you can argue about who was the best field hockey player of all time, then there is no doubt about who the best goalkeeper is. Three-time Olympic champion, ten-time world champion, best goalkeeper of the 1974, 1979, 1981, 1983 world championships. In 1990, 6 years after retiring, he was invited to the NHL, offering any money, but he refused - he did not want to be weaker than his former self: “I’ve been earning my name all my life.” In 2000, the International Hockey Federation and the Russian Hockey Federation proclaimed Tretiak the best player of the 20th century, and this despite the fact that Vyacheslav Fetisov has more titles (except for Soviet and international awards in the collection of the famous defender - 2 Stanley Cups won).

10.

This fragile girl is the embodiment of Russia's absolute superiority in synchronized swimming: 5-time Olympic champion, 13-time world champion, 7-time European champion. After the Games in London, Davydova ended her career, which lasted 12 years. She is the best synchronized swimmer of the decade 2000-2009.

Aug 20, 2016 Sep 8, 2017 by vaulter

The history of the modern Olympic Games goes back 120 years. It was in 1894 that the decision was made in Paris to revive the Olympic Games. Over its long history, the Olympic movement has transformed from chaotic and unpopular competitions into the main sports festival of the planet. Hundreds of athletes have become famous and great thanks to their success at the Olympic Games. Thousands of athletes were awarded the titles of Olympic champions and medalists. However, in the history of the Games there are also those who, with their awards and dedication to sport, made the greatest contribution to the development of the Olympic Games.

We present to your attention the ten most titled Olympic champions from 1894 to 2016.

The 10 athletes who are presented below are determined by the number of gold medals, and not by the total number of awards won!!! Silver and bronze medals are of secondary importance. This is exactly the approach used in the unofficial team competition at the Olympic Games.

And immediately a certificate. Where's Bolt? The fastest man on the planet, Usain Bolt, won 3 gold medals at three Olympic Games. From the Games in Beijing to the Olympics in Rio, Bolt always won at distances of 100 and 200 meters, and also won gold in the 4 x 100 m relay as part of the Jamaican national team. Unfortunately, Bolt was deprived of one gold medal. A prohibited substance was found in the doping test of Bolt’s national team colleague, Nest Carter, who was a participant in the relay in 2008, and the Jamaican team was deprived of Beijing gold, and Bolt became an eight-time Olympic champion. In terms of the number of medals, Bolt is not in the TOP 10.

10-9 places. Jenny Thompson and Saavo Kato

Ninth and tenth places were shared between Jenny Thompson and Japanese Saavo Kato. The athletes won 8 gold medals. But Thompson won them in the swimming competition, and Kato won the Olympic gymnastics competition 8 times. In addition, the athletes have 3 silvers and one bronze.

Can rightfully be called a “team player”. Since the athlete won almost all her medals in relay races. Thompson's first Olympic triumph came at the Olympic Games in Barcelona, ​​where the swimmer won 2 gold medals in two 4x100 m relay races (freestyle and medley). Also in Catalonia, the American became second in the 100 m freestyle. In Atlanta in 1996, the swimmer not only repeated the achievement of four years ago, but also increased it. Jenny Tomposn won 3 gold medals in three relay races: 4x100 m and 4x200 m freestyle, combined 4x100 m. In Sydney Olympics, the athlete, as if a carbon copy, again wins 3 gold medals in relay races. At the same time, he enhances his success with a personal bronze medal in the 100 m freestyle swim. However, this was not enough for her. The 31-year-old swimmer took part in the 2004 Games, where she won two more silver medals in relays.

- one of the most outstanding gymnasts in history. He has 12 medals, 8 of which are of the highest value. The gymnast first became an Olympic champion in Mexico City in 1968, where he was the best in the absolute championship, floor exercise and with the team. In exercises on rings, Kato showed the third result. In 1972, the Japanese again won 3 medals. And again Saavo Kato is the best in the absolute and team championships. Also, the gymnast had no equal on the uneven bars. On the pommel horse and horizontal bar, the gymnast was second. The last Olympic Games of a Japanese person were the 1976 Games in Montreal. And here the athlete did not make a mistake. The 30-year-old gymnast won 2 golds: uneven bars and team championship. Silver in the overall championship.

Overall result: 12 medals. 8 gold, 3 silver, 1 bronze.

7-8 places.

Seventh and eighth places were shared between representatives of summer and winter sports. Birgit Fischer is the most titled representative of kayaking. And Bjorn Daly had no equal in cross-country skiing.

ranks second among women (after Larisa Latynina) in the number of Olympic awards. The period during which the athlete managed to win numerous medals is also impressive. Fischer won her first Olympic gold back in 1980 in Moscow. The last Olympic triumph occurred with a German woman 24 years later at the Olympic Games in Athens. Oh, if it weren’t for the boycott of 1984, who knows how many medals the phenomenal rower would have won. In 1980, the German woman won gold in the 500 m single sculls. In Seoul 1988, the gold double in the double and quadruple, and Fischer was second in the single. In Barcelona, ​​the German is again the best in singles. The second athlete was in the four. In Atlanta 1996, gold again. This time in four. The second Fischer was in two. In Sydney, Birgit Fischer wins 2 golds - in two and four. But this was not enough for the insatiable German woman. In 2004, the 42-year-old rower went to the Games in Athens where her experience brought gold to the German four, and silver to the two. Only after this did the athlete calm down and leave the sport.


- the best skier of all time. The Norwegian ranks second in the number of gold medals after the legendary Bjoerndalen. The athlete won all his Olympic awards evenly. From each Games from 1992 to 1998, a skier took home 4 medals. It’s only in Albertville and Nagano that the Norwegian managed to win 3 gold medals each, and in 1994 in Lillehammer Daly won 2 medals of the highest value. To be fair, it should be noted that Daly was in a period when the Winter Olympic Games were held not once every 4 years, but once every 2 years - in 1992 and 1994, respectively. This is due to the decision of the IOC that the summer and winter Games be held two years apart. The Norwegian also has 4 silver medals.

Overall result: 12 medals. 8 gold, 4 silver.

6th place. .

Ole Bjoerndalen- the king of biathlon. Also, the legendary Norwegian takes absolute first place in the number of Olympic awards among representatives of winter sports. The Norwegian began collecting medals in 1988, when in Nagano he won gold in the 10 km sprint and silver in the 4x7.5 km relay. The 2002 Games were held under the leadership of the king. In Salt Lake City, Bjoerndalen won 4 gold medals. In 2006, out of three medals, none was gold, but the Norwegian biathlete did not give up and was able to win gold in Vancouver and 2 gold medals in Sochi. Read more about the famous biathlete in our article

Overall result: 13 medals. 8 gold, 4 silver, 1 bronze.

5th place. .

Total result: 10 medals. 9 gold, 1 silver.

4th place. .

Overall result: 11 medals. 9 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze.

3rd place. .

Overall result: 12 medals. 9 gold, 3 silver.

2. .

Overall result: 18 medals. 9 gold, 5 silver, 4 bronze.

1. .

Overall result: 26 medals. 22 gold, 2 silver, 2 bronze.

Becoming an Olympic champion at least once in your life is an unattainable dream for many athletes. But some lucky ones manage to win gold, silver and bronze medals not once, not twice, but ten or more times.

We present to you a list of the most titled Olympic champions in the history of sports.

10. Birgit Fischer, Germany

Total medals - 12.
Of these, 8 are gold, 4 are silver, and 0 are bronze.

Here is a photo of the only woman who managed to win at least two medals at five Olympics.

Fischer was 42 when she took gold in the 500m quad and silver in the 500m pair, making her the oldest Olympic champion to compete in canoeing and kayaking.

It’s funny that at the same time, Fischer is also the youngest champion, since she won her first gold in 1980, at the age of 18.

9. Paavo Nurmi, Finland


Total medals - 12.

Of these, 9 are gold, 3 are silver, and 0 are bronze.

This runner was part of a group of athletes from Finland who were called the “Flying Finns.” He quickly gained worldwide fame when he began his career at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics. His smooth and mechanical step at the beginning of the journey gave way to a furious jerk when only a few meters remained to the finish line.

Nurmi set 22 official world records at distances ranging from 1,500 meters to 20 kilometers. He is considered the greatest track and field athlete of all time.

8. Ole Einar Bjoerndalen, Norway


Total medals - 13.

Of these, 8 are gold, 4 are silver, 1 is bronze.

At the 2012 Winter Olympics, Björndalen did not leave his opponents a single chance, winning 4 victories out of 4 possible. He was the first in the world to become an absolute Olympic champion in biathlon.

However, Björndalen received his personal gold medal only 12 years after his finest hour in Salt Lake City. This happened in Sochi in 2014. Then the pride of the Norwegian team managed to beat their nearest rival by a little more than a second, despite one mistake at the start. That year, Björndalen became the oldest winner of an individual biathlon race in the history of the Olympic Games.

More recently, in 2018, the Norwegian athlete announced the end of his sports career.

7. Takashi Ono, Japan


Total medals - 13.

Of these, 5 are gold, 4 are silver, and 4 are bronze.

This Japanese gymnast is one of three Olympians who managed to win at least 4 medals of each value. In addition, he became the first Olympic champion from Japan in artistic gymnastics.

At the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympics in 1964, Takashi Ono was given the honor of reciting the Olympic oath on behalf of all athletes. At the same Olympics, he won his last fifth gold medal.

6. Edoardo Mangiarotti, Italy


Total medals - 13.

Of these, 6 are gold, 5 are silver, and 2 are bronze.

When it comes to fencing, no one comes close to Italian maestro Edoardo Mangiarotti, who has proven to be the most prolific winner at the Olympics and World Championships.

Fencing talent literally runs through the veins of the Mangiarotti family. Edoardo's father was a 17-time Italian champion in epee fencing. He advised his son to become left-handed (although he was naturally right-handed) in order to gain an advantage in sports. Edoardo's fencing style was inconvenient for his opponents.

Mangiarotti began taking fencing lessons at the age of 8. He trained alongside his brother Dario, who is also an accomplished swordsman. And Edoardo won his first gold medal at the age of 17.

5. Boris Shakhlin, USSR


Total medals - 13.

Of these, 7 are gold, 4 are silver, and 2 are bronze.

The top five Olympic athletes who won the largest number of medals included two gymnasts and one gymnast from the USSR. Shahlin is the first of this trio.

Being an orphan, without patronage from above, he managed to reach the sports Olympus, largely thanks to the support of his first coach V.A. Porfiryev, who taught the boy to fight to the last.

For his calm and confident manner during sports competitions, foreign journalists called Shakhlin a “Russian bear.”

4. Marit Bjorgen, Norway


Total medals - 15.

Of these, 8 are gold, 4 are silver, and 3 are bronze.

Although Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina has more Olympic medals than Bjorgen, the Norwegian skier is the most decorated athlete in the Winter Olympics. She is considered the strongest female skier in modern history.

However, the name Marit Bjørgen is also associated with high-profile scandals. In 2009, she received permission from the FIS to use asthma medications that contained doping substances, including formoterol. This displeased many other athletes. For example, Polish skier Justyna Kowalczyk said that without the help of drugs, Bjorgen would not have been able to achieve her current stunning results.

3. Nikolay Andrianov, USSR


Total medals - 15.

Of these, 7 are gold, 5 are silver, and 3 are bronze.

His first coach, Nikolai Tolkachev, played a huge role in Adrianov’s brilliant career. He persuaded the boy not to quit gymnastics, and even helped him with homework and attended parent-teacher meetings. And Tolkachev’s efforts paid off handsomely. His student became a multiple world, USSR and European champion.

Until 2008, this Soviet athlete held the title of absolute record holder for the number of Olympic medals, until American Michael Phelps received his 16th medal.

2. Larisa Latynina, USSR


Total medals - 18.

Of these, 9 are gold, 5 are silver, and 4 are bronze.

This multiple Olympic champion helped establish the Soviet Union as the dominant force in gymnastics.

Although Michael Phelps beat her in total medals, Latynina's record for the most medals received in individual events (14) remains unsurpassed.

Latynina was so devoted to the sport that she competed at the 1958 World Championships in Moscow while four months pregnant. Her performances combined the grace and spectacle of dance with the stability and skill of an experienced athlete.

In 1966, Latynina became the coach of the USSR national artistic gymnastics team. Her team won gold three times during the 1968, 1972 and 1976 Olympic Games.

1. Michael Phelps, USA


Total medals - 28.

Of these, 23 are gold, 3 are silver, and 2 are bronze.

The clear winner in the ranking of the most decorated Olympic champions is American swimmer Michael Phelps. He boasts both the most Olympic gold medals and the most medals overall. He has been called "the greatest Olympian of all time."

“The Baltimore Bullet” (this is one of Phelps’ nicknames) became the only 23-time Olympic champion in sports history. However, other Olympians have a chance to surpass this achievement, since after the Rio Olympics in 2016, Phelps announced his final retirement from the sport.

Why is he so good?

Michael Phelps' advantages are his height, weight, and the length of his arms and legs. Its long torso and short legs reduce resistance to body movement in the water and allow it to swim forward as quickly as possible. However, he wears size 47 shoes.

Phelps has an arm span of 203 cm and a height of 193 cm. While still a schoolboy, he could hug five classmates in one fell swoop. Noticing this feature, useful for a swimmer, coach Bob Bowman invited the young man to the swimming section.

If ordinary people are 80% water, then Phelps is 90%. He even got into the Guinness Book of Records as an athlete who can drink more liquid than he weighs - 91 liters.

And his heart is able to pump about 30 liters of blood per minute. Thanks to this, the most titled athlete in history quickly recovered from intense swims.



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