Games of the XXX Olympiad

07 27, 2012 Blog, We Are ENA Comments Off   Print this blog

It’s that time again. This year the Summer Olympics are being held in London, and they start today, July 27th. The event will go on until August 12th and will feature 302 events spanning 26 different sports with 204 nations participating.

The United States has 530 competitors (269 women and 261 men) who will compete in 25 of the 26 sports (handball being the 26th sport in which the U.S. is not participating). In 2008, the U.S. had 596 competitors competing in 27 out of 28 sports (handball, again, being the only sport in which the U.S. did not participate), and they won 36 gold medals, 38 silver and 36 bronze.

A few quick facts:

  • This is the first Olympics in which the U.S. has more women competing than men.
  • The youngest U.S. competitor this year is 15, and the oldest is 54.
  • The Olympic symbol (the Olympic rings), consist of five intertwined rings to represent the unity of the five inhabited continents of the world (America, Africa, Asia, Australia and Europe).
  • The modern day Olympics are based on the ancient  Greek Olympic Games (held in Olympia, Greece), the civilization that gave us democracy.

ENA will be posting weekly updates about the United States, so keep an eye out here or on Facebook and Twitter!

Images courtesy of stock.xchng.

Share this Post!

avatar

About Chris Willis | Follow @ENA_Chris

Chris is currently ENA’s Social Media and Event Marketing Specialist, and he’s been with ENA since May of 2012. Prior to that, he was a student at MTSU studying English. He’s written numerous screenplays, and has turned many of them into films made with colleague Jordan Bennett. When he’s not writing for pleasure or ENA, he finds himself in a number of roles. Sometimes he’s a bass player in a local rock band. Other times he’s a rock climber you can find at Climb Nashville. If he isn’t in any of those roles though, he’s probably driving a race car somewhere. Oh, yeah. Did I forget to mention he’s been a race car driver for nearly a decade? ENA employees are anything but ordinary and boring.


Comments are closed.