Winter Sports at the Olympic Games
The idea of including winter sports in the Olympic Games dates back to 1900, when organizers planned to include figure skating as part of the 1900 Games in Paris. Although it did not happen at the 1900 Games, figure skating exhibitions were held in October 1908 at the Olympic Games in London, won by Swedish skater Ulrich Salchow, originator of the jump that now bears his name.
In 1911, an International Olympic Committee (IOC) member suggested that winter events be included in the 1912 Games to be held in Stockholm, but failed to persuade the Swedish organizing committee, who saw this as a threat to their own Nordic Games. The Nordic Games dated back to 1901 and were held at different intervals until 1926. Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the modern Olympics, also had reservations about the inclusion of winter sports in the Olympics.
Figure skating and ice hockey were both included in the 1920 Olympic Games held in Antwerp, Belgium. The events were staged in April, several months before the regular (summer) events, in the Antwerp ice palace. The ice hockey tournament was won by the Canadian team, the Winnipeg Falcons, which was made up almost solely of players of Icelandic heritage. The team defeated Czechoslovakia 15–0, the United States 2–0, and Sweden 12–1 in the single-knockout tournament. The Falcons’ victory is considered the first Olympic gold medal in ice hockey.
Birth of the Olympic Winter Games
In 1921, despite the reservations of Pierre de Coubertin, the Olympic Congress voted that the IOC should arrange winter sports competitions in conjunction with the Olympic Games. In 1924, a separate "International Sports Week" was held during the winter in Chamonix, France, in celebration of the Paris Olympic Games later that year. The competitions were a great success and were retroactively named the first Olympic Winter Games.
Until 1992 the Olympic Summer Games and the Olympic Winter Games were held in the same year, but beginning in 1994 they were rescheduled so that they are held in alternate even-numbered years. For example, the Winter Games at Nagano, Japan, were held in 1998 and the Summer Games were held in 2000 in Sydney, Australia.
The Olympic Winter Games have grown significantly since 1924. While the 1924 Games in Chamonix featured 258 athletes from 16 nations competing in 16 events, the 2014 Games in Sochi, Russia, featured 2,781 athletes from 88 NOCs (National Olympics Committees) competing in 98 events. Team Canada has grown as well, from 12 athletes in 1924 to 222 athletes in 2014. Female participation has also increased dramatically, as more women’s events have been added to the Olympic Winter Games. While only one Canadian woman competed at the 1924 Games in Chamonix, 99 women vied for medals at the 2014 Games in Sochi — comprising nearly half the Canadian Olympic team.
Canada has won 199 medals at the Olympic Winter Games since 1924, and ranks fifth in the total number of medals won at the Games since 1924.
Canada at the Olympic Winter Games Medal Table
Note: Rank is based on the total number of medals won.
Games | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
Rank (Overall Medal Count) |
1924 Chamonix | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 9 |
1928 St. Moritz | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 6 (tied with France) |
1932 Lake Placid | 1 | 1 | 5 | 7 | 3 |
1936 Garmisch-Partenkirchen | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 9 |
1948 St. Moritz | 2 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 8 |
1952 Oslo | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 8 (tied with Italy) |
1956 Cortina d’Ampezzo | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 9 |
1960 Squaw Valley | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 8 |
1964 Innsbruck | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 10 |
1968 Grenoble | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 14 |
1972 Sapporo | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 17 |
1976 Innsbruck | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 11 |
1980 Lake Placid | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 13 |
1984 Sarajevo | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 9 (tied with West Germany) |
1988 Calgary | 0 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 12 |
1992 Albertville | 2 | 3 | 2 | 7 | 9 |
1994 Lillehammer | 3 | 6 | 4 | 13 | 6 |
1998 Nagano | 6 | 5 | 4 | 15 | 5 |
2002 Salt Lake City | 7 | 3 | 7 | 17 | 4 |
2006 Turin | 7 | 10 | 7 | 24 | 3 |
2010 Vancouver | 14 | 7 | 5 | 26 | 3 |
2014 Sochi | 10 | 10 | 5 | 25 | 4 |
2018 PyeongChang | 11 | 8 | 10 | 29 | 3 |
Total | 73 | 64 | 62 | 199 | 5 |
1924 Winter Olympic Games: Chamonix, France (January 25-February 5)
Finally, in 1921, over the objections of the founder of the modern Olympic movement Baron Pierre de Coubertin, who considered winter sports to be too closely associated with the upper classes, the IOC agreed to stage a separate "International Sports Week" during the winter in Chamonix, France, in 1924. The small town already had a ski jump and organizers added a bobsled run and ice stadium in the valley and ski trails. Of the 258 athletes from 16 nations who competed, 245 were men and 13 were women. These Games were a great success and were retroactively named the first Olympic Winter Games.
The first Winter Olympic gold medal was awarded to Charles Jewtraw of Lake Placid, New York, for the men's 500m speed skating event. Norwegian figure skater Sonja Henie made her debut at the age of 11. An accomplished ballerina, Henie introduced a new style of skating to the event that caught the attention of many judges and spectators. The Canadian ice-hockey team, comprised of Granite Club players from Toronto, won all five of its matches, outscoring its opponents 110 to 3. The closest contest was the gold-medal game, in which Canada defeated the United States 6–1.
Canada's Rank: 9th
Gold: Men's Hockey (demonstration)
1928 Winter Olympic Games: St Moritz, Switzerland (February 11-February 19)
The 1928 Winter Olympic Games at St Moritz, Switzerland, were the first to be held in a different country from the summer games (held in Amsterdam). Not for the last time, the Olympic site was blighted by rain and unseasonably warm weather. A third of the competitors in the 50 km cross-country ski race quit in frustration over a course mired in slush. Skeleton, a luge-like event in which an athlete rides a sled down the course head-first, was first introduced. Norwegian figure skater Sonja Henie, now aged 15, was the sensation, winning gold.
Canada was represented in ice hockey by the University of Toronto Grads. It was in fact a formidable team, having won the Allan Cup and being coached in Canada (though not at the Olympics) by Conn Smythe. The tournament organizers tried to arrange the tournament to provide some challenge to the Canadians, but the Grads still steamrolled the Swedes 11–0, Great Britain 14–0 and the host Swiss 13–0. After their gold medal performance the team toured Europe, introducing large crowds to their speedy play.
Canada's Rank: 6th
Gold: Men's Hockey
1932: Winter Olympic Games: Lake Placid, New York (February 4-February 15)
The first Olympics to be held outside Europe were opened at Lake Placid by then Governor of New York Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the future president of the United States. Sonja Henie defended her figure skating title. These Games marked a strong improvement by Canadian athletes as they came away with 13 performances in the top six. Three Canadian speed skaters won a total of five medals and Montgomery Wilson took bronze in the men's figure skating. Rules for speed skating were altered dramatically to benefit North American skaters and the great champion Clas Thunberg of Finland refused to even make the trip. While the Americans spent extravagantly on a new stadium and other facilities, they neglected others, such as the cross-country course, where skiers got lost skiing through the woods on ill-marked courses. For the first time in the history of the Olympic Games, sled-dog racing was included in the schedule of demonstration events. Canada and the United States competed.
Only four teams competed in ice hockey: Canada, the United States, Poland and Germany. The Winnipeg Hockey Club represented Canada. The Americans proved a tough opponent and were ahead deep into the third period of the deciding game until Romeo Rivers scored the tying goal, to the great relief "of nine million Canadians" as The Winnipeg Free Press reported. At the end of the third overtime the officials called a halt to the game and awarded the gold to Canada on the basis of a previous narrow victory over the Americans.
Canada's Rank: 3rd
Gold: Men's Hockey
Silver: Alexander Hurd, 1500m speed skating
Bronze: Montgomery Wilson, figure skating; Frank Stack, 10,000m speed skating; William Logan, 1500m and 5000m speed skating; and Alexander Hurd, 500m speed skating
1936 Winter Olympic Games: Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany (February 6-February 16)
The Olympic flame first burned at the 1936 Games at Garmisch-Partenkirchen in the Bavarian Alps, near the Austrian border. Some 500,000 spectators were bused to the events on the final day. Alpine events were held for the first time. Attempts to organize a world-wide boycott against the Nazi government failed and the Games went on. These Games also marked the beginning of a decades-long dispute on where to draw the line between eligible amateurs and professionals. The Austrians and Swiss boycotted the alpine events after their best skiers (who earned livings as ski instructors) were disqualified for being professionals.
Canadian skier Diana Gordon-Lennox struck a brave pose as she skied the course with one arm in a cast and only one pole (she finished 29th).
Canada had some difficulty mustering a hockey team as most of the Allan Cup champion Halifax Wolves had turned professional. The Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) organizers decided to send the runner-up Port Arthur Bear Cats but allowed two Canadian players, goalie James Foster and forward Alex Archer, to play for Great Britain, a team that already had many players who had been born in Britain but who had learned the game in Canada. The Canadians would regret this magnanimity when Foster stoned the Canadians in the first round. The Bear Cats were denied the opportunity to revenge the loss when Olympic organizers changed the format, meaning the one loss would give Great Britain the gold medal. Outraged Canadian official P.J. Mulqueen called it "one of the worst manipulations in sporting history."
Canada's Rank: 9th
Silver: Men's Hockey
1948: Winter Olympic Games: St Moritz, Switzerland (January 30-February 8)
Germany and Japan were barred from competing in the first Games held after the Second World War, again at St Moritz. For Canada the Games belonged to 19-year-old Canadian figure skater Barbara Ann Scott, who inherited Henie's crown as Olympic champion. On February 6, the biggest crowd since the fifth Olympic Winter Games opening ceremony packed the bleachers and perched on terraced cliffs to see Scott add the last great title to her skating honours. Skating on a surface chewed up by the hockey players, Scott won seven of the nine first-place votes and became the first North American woman to win gold in figure skating. In men's figure skating, American Dick Button performed the first double Axel in competition.
Still smarting from its dispute with the IHF over the 1936 fiasco, Canada did not have a hockey team until just 100 days before the start of the Games. Finally the Royal Canadian Air Force volunteered their team. The RCAF were not the favourites, but they prevailed over all, except the Czechs who held them to a 0–0 tie. In a final game against the home-town Swiss, even the local fans booed the biased refereeing. The ice conditions and the refereeing were so bad that at times the game threatened to develop into a farce. Nevertheless Canada survived, won the game 3–0 and took gold.
Canada's Rank: 8th
Gold: Barbara Ann Scott, figure skating; Men's Hockey
Bronze: Suzanne Morrow Francis and Wallace Diestelmeyer, figure skating pairs
1952: Winter Olympic Games: Oslo, Norway (February 14-February 25)
In the Games' return to Norway, the Olympic flame was ignited at Morgedal in the fireplace of skier Sondre Norheim, who is credited with the invention of the modern ski binding, and was conveyed by skiers to Oslo. Norwegian speed skater Hjallis Andersen was the star of these Games with three gold medals. It was the first time that cross-country ski events were held for women. In hockey Canada was represented by the Edmonton Mercurys , who had won the world ice hockey championship in 1950. The Mercs won the first three games by a combined score of 39–4, but were challenged by the Czechs and the Swedes. A 3–3 tie with the United States (who had lost to Sweden) was good enough for gold. It was the end of the era of Canadian dominance in amateur hockey. The Canadians would not win hockey Olympic gold again for 50 years.
Canada's Rank: 9th
Gold: Men's Hockey
Bronze: Gordon Audley, 500m speed skating
1956 Winter Olympic Games: Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy (January 26-February 5)
The 1956 Cortina Games were the first to be partially televised. They were also the first Games to be heavily subsidized by sponsors providing "official" products, such as Fiat automobiles. They also marked the dramatic appearance of a team from the Soviet Union. The Soviets came prepared as their speed skaters won three of the four events and the Soviet team finished first in the medals. Lucile Wheeler won Canada's first skiing medal with a bronze in the downhill race. Competition persevered despite lack of snow early in the Games, a later storm and then a major thaw.
The Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen breezed through their preliminary round in the hockey competition but lost 4–1 in the medal round to the US. CBC broadcaster Thom Benson likened the atmosphere after the loss to a funeral. On 5 February, the Canadians were cut down by the Soviets 2–0 and had to settle for bronze. Hence began a long complaint about the hypocritical rules that barred Canadian professionals but overlooked the government support of Soviet players.
Canada's Rank: 9th
Silver: Norris Robert Bowden and Frances Dafoe, figure skating pairs
Bronze: Men's Hockey; Lucile Wheeler, downhill skiing
1960 Winter Olympic Games: Squaw Valley, California (February 18-February 28)
Squaw Valley, California, won the bid for the 1960 Games despite the fact that it barely existed. The area went on a binge of construction over the next few years, building hotels, bridges, the first Olympic village, ski lifts and the first skating track with refrigeration. The organizers, however, refused to build a bobsled run, leaving these Games as the only ones not to include the sport. These were the first Games to use a computer to process results. Biathlon was added for the first time, as was women's speed skating. The flawless gold medal performance in pairs figure skating by Robert Paul and Barbara Wagner was highlighted by a breathtaking "death spiral" that won first-place votes from every judge. Anne Heggtveit finished well ahead of her rivals to become the first Canadian to win gold in alpine skiing. In ice hockey, the Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen returned and despite beating the Soviets lost the opportunity for gold in a previous 2–1 defeat by the Americans.
Canada's Rank: 8th
Gold: Robert Paul and Barbara Wagner, figure skating pairs; Anne Heggtveit, slalom
Silver: Men's Hockey
Bronze: Donald Jackson, figure skating
1964 Winter Olympic Games: Innsbruck, Austria (January 29-February 9)
The 1964 Games at Innsbruck, Austria, were threatened by a serious lack of snow. The Austrian army was pressed into service, carving out 20,000 ice blocks from a mountain and moving them to the bobsled and luge runs. Some 40,000 cubic metres of snow had to be carted to the site of the alpine skiing events. The debut of luge at the Olympics was also marred by the unfortunate death of a British athlete in a practice run. Soviet speed skater Lydia Skoblikova became the first athlete to win four gold medals at a single Winter Olympic Games. In figure skating the pair of Lyudmila Belousova and Oleg Protopopov won the first of successive pairs titles, inaugurating a Soviet (or Russian) dominance of that event that continues to this day. The Canadian four-man team won gold the first time that they competed in the bobsleigh competition, setting a course record on their first run.
In hockey the CAHA changed its approach and organized an Olympic hockey team from the best university and senior players. In a medal round game against the Czechs, Canada was leading 1–0 when goalie Seth Martin was injured. The Czechs put three goals past his replacement, went on to lose to the Soviets and reduced the Canadians to a fourth-place finish.
Canada's Rank: 10th
Gold: Doug Anakin, John Emery, Victor Emery and Peter Kirby, four-man bobsleigh
Silver: Guy Revell and Debbi Wilkes, figure skating pairs
Bronze: Petra Burka, figure skating
1968 Winter Olympic Games: Grenoble, France (February 6-February 18)
President Charles de Gaulle, a hatless figure towering above the crowd, opened the 10th Winter Olympic Games with the briefest of speeches ("I proclaim the opening of the 10th Winter Olympic Games at Grenoble."). In these dispersed Games, only the ice skating competition was held at Grenoble, with the other events farmed out to other villages up to 65 km away. The Games belonged to Jean-Claude Killy, who swept the men's alpine events. The victory was not without controversy as Killy's rival in one event was disqualified for missing gates when he saw a shadowy figure cross the slalom course. These were the first Games to include drug test and gender tests. No one failed.
Nancy Greene improved on her two previous Olympic finishes with gold in the giant slalom and silver in the slalom. She swept down the 1610m, 68-gate Chamrousse course in 1:51.97 to win by an incredible 2.64 seconds.
The Canadian amateur hockey team lost to the Soviets and Finland and finished with bronze. Canada's perceived fall from grace in hockey prompted Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau to commission a study on the gap that was opening between Canadian and international hockey — this despite the obvious explanation that Canada's best players were all professional and did not qualify for the Olympics.
Canada's Rank: 14th
Gold: Nancy Greene, giant slalom
Silver: Nancy Greene, slalom
Bronze: Men's Hockey
1972 Winter Olympic Games: Sapporo, Japan (February 3-February 13)
The 1972 Games were the first to be held outside Europe or North America. The enduring controversy over professionalism ignited before the Games as IOC president Avery Brundage banned Austrian ski superstar Karl Schranz because he had accepted money from sponsors. Meanwhile Brundage refused to apply the same standards to hockey players from the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. Canada refused to take part in the hockey competition to protest this continued hypocrisy of the eligibility rules. The Japanese ski jumping team won that country's first-ever gold medals, led by new national hero Yukio Kasaya. Canada earned a single medal, a silver by Karen Magnussen in figure skating.
Canada's Rank: 17th
Silver: Karen Magnussen, figure skating
1976 Winter Olympic Games: Innsbruck, Austria (February 4-February 15)
In 1976 the Winter Olympics were awarded to Denver, Colorado (to celebrate the American bicentennial), but in an unprecedented move the voters of Denver decided against the use of public funds for the Games. The Games were moved back to Innsbruck, Austria, which had maintained most of its facilities from the successful 1964 Winter Olympic Games. The Games were plagued by the vicissitudes of weather and a flu epidemic among the athletes. Eight-time Olympic medalist Galina Kulakova of the Soviet Union was disqualified from a race because she had used a nasal spray to fight off a cold. Canada's Kathy Kreiner won the giant slalom, a few hundredths of a second ahead of the great Rosi Mittermaier of Germany. The ice-dancing competition was held for the first time. Canada again boycotted the hockey competition, which was won by an increasingly proficient Soviet team.
Canada's Rank: 11th
Gold: Kathy Kreiner, giant slalom
Silver: Catherine Priestner, 500m speed skating
Bronze: Toller Cranston, figure skating
1980 Winter Olympic Games: Lake Placid, New York (February 13-February 24)
The 1980 Games in Lake Placid were an organizational disaster, with spectators stranded in the freezing weather when bus service failed, but they were a triumph for the home team. Eric Heiden won all five speed-skating events and the American hockey team, seeded 7th, won its "miracle on ice" by defeating the heavily favoured Soviet team and going on to win the gold medal. The Canadian team finished 6th. Swedish great Ingemar Stenmark, the most prolific World Cup winner in skiing history, won both the slalom and giant slalom. Highlights for Canada included a bronze in downhill by Steve Podborski and silver by Gaétan Boucher in speed skating.
Canada's Rank: 13th
Silver: Gaétan Boucher, 1000m speed skating
Bronze: Steve Podborski, downhill
1984 Winter Olympic Games: Sarajevo, Yugoslavia (February 8-February 19)
The only time the Games were held in a socialist country took place in 1984, when they were hosted in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. The highlight was generally held to be the free-dance "Bolero" performance of the English ice dancers Torvil and Dean, who received 12 perfect scores. But the Games also saw a silver medal for the home country by skier Jure Franko in the giant slalom. By 1992, fighting during the civil war had reduced the Olympic site to ruin.
For Canada, Brian Orser won a silver medal, the best-ever showing by a Canadian male figure skater. Gaétan Boucher turned in Canada's finest winter Olympic performance with two gold medals and a bronze in speed skating.
Canada's Rank: 9th
Gold: Gaétan Boucher, 1000m speed skating and 1500m speed skating
Silver: Brian Orser, figure skating
Bronze: Gaétan Boucher, 500m speed skating
1988 Winter Olympic Games: Calgary, Alberta (February 13-February 28)
The 1988 Calgary Olympics were popular among the athletes and spectators, though there were poor conditions at some of the venues. These Games were significantly expanded as alpine events added the super giant slalom (Super-G) and alpine combined. Nordic combined and ski jumping received their own team competitions. As at the Montreal Summer Olympics, Canada failed to win gold on its home turf, although the Canadian team finished with a record 19 top-eight finishes. The most deeply felt disappointment came when figure skater Brian Orser narrowly lost gold to American rival Brian Boitano. "I didn't win a gold medal in Canada at the Olympic Games," said Orser, who wept as he stepped atop the podium. Elizabeth Manley also won silver in figure skating, with a brilliant freestyle performance that included five triple jumps, and Tracy Wilson and Robert McCall a bronze medal in ice dancing. The Canadian hockey team again finished out of the medals. In the closing, IOC head Juan Antonio Samaranch declared that Calgary had staged the best-organized Games in the history of the Winter Olympics.
Canada's Rank: 12th
Silver: Brian Orser, figure skating; Elizabeth Manley, figure skating
Bronze: Robert McCall and Tracy Wilson, ice dancing; Karen Percy, Super-G skiing and downhill
1992 Winter Olympic Games: Albertville, France (February 8-February 23)
The 1992 Olympics in Albertville, France, were followed only 2 years later in Lillehammer, Norway. The change of timing was made so that the winter and summer games would take place in different years. The Albertville Games saw the introduction of freestyle skiing, short-track skating and women's biathlon. The Canadian hockey team returned to the medals with silver. Kerrin Lee-Gartner became the first Canadian ever to win an Olympic downhill gold, on the demanding course at Méribel. The Canadian team also won medals in the demonstration sports of curling and freestyle aerials.
Canada's Rank: 9th
Gold: Angela Cutrone, Sylvie Daigle, Nathalie Lambert and Annie Perreault, 3000m short-track skating relay; Kerrin Lee-Gartner, downhill
Silver: Men's Hockey; Frédéric Blackburn, 1000m short-track skating; Frédéric Blackburn, Laurent Daignault, Michel Daignault, Sylvain Gagnon and Mark Lackie, 5000m short track skating relay
Bronze: Myriam Bédard, 15 km biathlon; Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler, skating pairs
1994 Winter Olympic Games: Lillehammer, Norway (February 12-February 27)
The extremely successful Lillehammer Games were marred only by the media frenzy over the sordid Tonya Harding/Nancy Kerrigan scandal, in which Kerrigan was attacked before the Games but went on to win a silver medal. For the first time, former Soviet states such as Ukraine, Russia and Georgia competed as independent nations. The Canadian team, in its finest performance, earned 13 medals, highlighted by Myriam Bédard's two gold medals in biathlon. Elvis Stojko's Olympic performances in Lillehammer that year were clearly superior to the competitors', but the judges had not yet warmed to his artistic style and he had to settle for the silver medal. The men's hockey team won Canada's final medal of the Games, losing an emotional gold medal game in a shootout against Sweden.
Canada's Rank: 6th
Gold: Myriam Bédard, 15 km and 7.5 km biathlon; Jean-Luc Brassard, moguls
Silver: Men's Hockey; Susan Auch, 500m speed skating; Nathalie Lambert, 1000m short-track skating; Christine Boudrias, Isabelle Charest, Sylvie Daigle and Nathalie Lambert, 3000m short-track skating relay; Elvis Stojko, figure skating; Philippe Laroche, aerials
Bronze: Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler, pairs skating; Marc Gagnon, 1000m short-track skating; Edi Podivinsky, downhill; Lloyd Langlois, aerials
1998 Winter Olympic Games: Nagano, Japan (February 7-February 22)
The weather wreaked havoc with the skiing events at the 1998 Games in Nagano, Japan. These Games marked a dramatic change in the rules for hockey, as professionals (i.e., from the NHL) were allowed to participate and women's hockey was presented for the first time. Despite this long-anticipated development, the Canadian men's hockey team not only failed to dominate but finished out of the medals. Ross Rebagliati won the first-ever gold medal awarded for snowboarding, was disqualified for testing positive for marijuana but was reaffirmed on appeal. Canadian bobsledders Pierre Lueders and David MacEachern shared the first-ever tie for gold with an Italian pair.
Canada's Rank: 5th
Gold: Pierre Lueders and David MacEachern, two-man bobsleigh; Janice Betker, Marcia Gudereit, Atina Johnston, Joan Elizabeth McCusker and Sandra Schmirler, curling; Catriona Le May Doan, 500m speed skating; Éric Bédard, Derrick Campbell, François Drolet and Marc Gagnon, 5000m short track relay; Annie Perreault, 500m short track; Ross Rebagliati, Giant Slalom snowboard
Silver: Mike Harris, Richard Hart, George Karrys, Collin Mitchell and Paul Savage, curling; Susan Auch, 500m speed skating; Jeremy Wotherspoon, 500m speed skating; Elvis Stojko, figure skating
Bronze: Catriona Le May Doan, 1000m speed skating; Kevin Crockett, 500m speed skating; Éric Bédard, 1000m speed skating; Christine Boudrias, Isabelle Charest, Annie Perreault and Tania Vicent, 3000m short-track relay
2002 Winter Olympic Games: Salt Lake City (February 8-February 24)
The awarding of the 2002 Games to Salt Lake City was marred by the biggest scandal in Olympic history, as it was revealed that several IOC members had sold their votes to the highest bidder. For Canadian athletes, Salt Lake 2002 was the most successful Winter Games in Olympic history. Canada placed a record fourth in the medal standings behind Germany, the United States and Norway with a total of 17 medals. Canadian athletes won seven gold, three silver and seven bronze medals. The crowning achievement for Canada was the gold medal victories for both the women's and men's hockey teams. The men's victory did not come easily as the team, led by captain Mario Lemieux, got off to a poor start, losing to the Swedes 5–2 and tying the Czechs 3–3. In a close contest against the Americans, the Canadians prevailed 5–2 to win gold, 50 years to the day after the Edmonton Mercurys had last won gold.
Pairs figure skaters Jamie Salé and David Pelletier shared double gold medals with Russian skaters Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze after a controversial judging scandal. In the longest unbroken streak in Olympic history, for 10 straight Olympics, from 1964 in Innsbruck through 1998 in Nagano, Russians had captured gold in the figure skating pairs. Aerialists Veronica Brenner and Deidra Dionne became the first Canadian women to win Olympic medals in freestyle skiing, winning silver and bronze respectively. Canadian speed skaters were the most significant contributors to the total medal count, winning a total of 9 medals. Short-track speed skater Marc Gagnon became the most decorated Canadian Winter Olympian of all time when he won gold in the 500m, gold in the 5000m relay with teammates Éric Bédard, Jonathan Guilmette, François-Louis Tremblay and Mathieu Turcotte, and bronze in the 1500m. Gagnon's total of five Olympic medals from 1994 to 2002 exceeds Gaétan Boucher's record of four medals. Speed skater Clara Hughes won the honour of being the first Canadian athlete to win a medal at both the Summer and Winter Olympic Games. In 1996 at Atlanta, Hughes won two bronze medals for cycling.
Canada's Rank: 4th
Gold: Men's Hockey; Women's Hockey; Marc Gagnon, 500m short-track skating; Catriona Le May Doan, 500m speed skating; Éric Bédard, Marc Gagnon, Jonathan Guilmette, François-Louis Tremblay and Mathieu Turcotte, 5000m short-track relay; David Pelletier and Jamie Salé, pairs skating; Beckie Scott, cross-country skiing pursuit
Silver: Donald Bartlett, Kevin Martin, Carter Rycroft, Kenneth Tralnberg and Donald Walchuk, curling; Jonathan Guilmette, 500m short-track skating; Veronica Brenner, aerials
Bronze: Diane Dezura, Kelley Law, Cheryl Noble, Julie Skinner and Georgina Wheatcroft, curling; Marc Gagnon, 1500m short-track skating; Isabelle Charest, Marie-Eve Drôlet, Amélie Goulet-Nadon, Alanna Kraus and Tania Vicent, 3000m short-track skating relay; Mathieu Turcotte, 1000m short-track skating; Cindy Klassen, 3000m speed skating; Clara Hughes, 5000m speed skating; Deidra Dionne, aerials
2006 Winter Olympic Games: Torino (Turin), Italy (February 10-February 26)
Canada sent 196 athletes to Turin, Italy, and garnered a total of 24 medals. Jennifer Heil (freestyle skiing) won Canada's first medal on the first day, the first-ever medal for Canada in the women's moguls. Eight of the medals came in long track speed skating as Cindy Klassen became Canada's most decorated Olympian ever by winning five medals at these Games to add to her previous medal won in 2002. The Canadian women's hockey team successfully defended its gold medal from 2002. The men's hockey team, the cream of the NHL, players with more than 320 goals among them to that point in the season, suddenly lost their touch and direction and went out in the quarter final round. Former bobsledder Duff Gibson of Calgary became the oldest Olympic athlete (age 39) to win gold in an individual event (skeleton).
Canada's Rank: 3rd
Gold: Duff Gibson, skeleton; Mike Adam, Brad Gushue, Russ Howard, Jamie Korab and Mark Nichols, curling; Women's Hockey; Clara Hughes, 5000m speed skating; Cindy Klassen, 1500m speed skating; Chandra Crawford, cross-country skiing 1.5 km sprint; Jennifer Heil, moguls
Silver: Lascelles Brown and Pierre Lueders, bobsleigh; Jeff Pain, skeleton; Kristina Groves, 1500m speed skating; Alanna Kraus, Anouk Leblanc-Boucher, Amanda Overland, Kalyna Roberge and Tania Vicent, 3000m short-track skating relay; Arne Dankers, Steven Elm, Dennis Morrison, Jason Parker and Justin Warsylewicz, short track skating pursuit; Kristina Groves, Clara Hughes, Cindy Klassen, Christine Nesbitt, Shannon Rempel, short-track skating pursuit; Cindy Klassen, 1000m speed skating; Éric Bédard, Jonathan Guilmette, Charles Hamelin, François-Louis Tremblay and Mathieu Turcotte, 5000m short-track skating relay; François-Louis Tremblay, 500m short-track skating; Sara Renner and Beckie Scott, cross-country skiing team sprint
Bronze: Mellisa Hollingsworth, skeleton; Glenys Bakker, Sandra Jenkins, Christine Keshen, Shannon Kleibrink and Amy Nixon, curling; Jeffrey Buttle, figure skating; Cindy Klassen, 3000m and 5000m speed skating; Anouk Leblanc-Boucher, 500m short-track skating; Dominique Maltais, snowboard cross
2010 Winter Olympic Games: Vancouver, BC (February 12-February 28)
Canada's most successful Olympic Winter Games to date were held on home soil, though the Games began on a sombre note when Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili was killed during a practice run at the Whistler Sliding Centre just hours before the opening ceremonies. Canada had its largest team ever, consisting of 202 athletes, with Canadians ultimately securing a national record of 14 gold medals and 26 medals in total.
Alexandre Bilodeau became the first Winter Olympian to win gold on Canadian soil when he placed first in the men's moguls competition. Snowboarder Maëlle Ricker won the gold medal in the women's snowboard cross event, the first-ever Olympic gold medal in snowboarding for a Canadian woman. Ice dancers Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir won gold, becoming both the first and the youngest-ever Olympic winners in a sport dominated by European teams. Skier Ashleigh McIvor won the inaugural women's freestyle skicross event, and Canadian female bobsledders Kaillie Humphries and Heather Moyse, along with teammates Helen Upperton and Shelley-Ann Brown, won gold and silver medals respectively. The men's and women's hockey teams capped off the Games with gold medals against the US. Vancouver 2010 was also the first time the Olympics widely implemented social media networks such as Facebook and Twitter.
Canada's Rank: 3rd
Gold: Alexandre Bilodeau, freestyle skiing; Maëlle Ricker, snowboard cross; Christine Nesbitt, 1000m speed skating; Jon Montgomery, skeleton; Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, ice dancing; Ashleigh McIvor, freestyle skicross; Kaillie Humphries and Heather Moyse, bobsleigh; Charles Hamelin, 500m short-track speed skating; Jasey-Jay Anderson, snowboarding (parallel giant slalom); Charles Hamelin, François Hamelin, Olivier Jean and François-Louis Tremblay, 5000m short-track skating relay; Mathieu Giroux, Lucas Makowsky and Denny Morrison, speed skating team pursuit; Kevin Martin, John Morris, Marc Kennedy and Ben Hebert, curling; women's hockey; men's hockey
Silver: Jennifer Heil, freestyle skiing; Mike Robertson, snowboard cross; Marianne St Gelais, 500m short-track speed skating; Kristina Groves, 1500m speed skating; Jessica Gregg, Kalyna Roberge, Marianne St Gelais and Tania Vicent, 3000m speed skating relay; Helen Upperton and Shelley-Ann Brown, bobsleigh; Cheryl Bernard, Susan O'Connor, Carolyn Darbyshire, Cori Bartel and Kristie Moore, curling
Bronze: Kristina Groves, 3000m speed skating; Clara Hughes, 5000m speed skating; Joannie Rochette, figure skating; François-Louis Tremblay, 500m short-track speed skating; Lyndon Rush, Chris LeBihan, David Bissett and Lascelles Brown, four-man bobsleigh
2014 Winter Olympic Games: Sochi, Russia (February 7-23)
Canada sent 222 athletes to the 2014 Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia — 20 more athletes than had competed at the 2010 Games in Vancouver. The major reason for the increase was the International Olympic Committee’s decision to include the sports of slopestyle skiing, slopestyle snowboarding, halfpipe skiing and women’s ski jumping. Team Canada won a total of 25 medals at Sochi, making it the most successful Winter Games held outside Canada.
Canada had outstanding success in freestyle skiing, winning nine medals. Alexandre Bilodeau defended his gold medal in men’s moguls, while teammate Mikaël Kingsbury took the silver. Justine Dufour-Lapointe won gold in women’s moguls, with sister Chloé winning silver. Marielle Thompson and Kelsey Serwa took gold and silver in women’s ski cross and Dara Howell and Kim Lamarre took gold and bronze in women’s slopestyle skiing. Mike Riddle won silver in halfpipe skiing, which made its Olympic debut at Sochi.
For the second consecutive Olympic Winter Games, Charles Hamelin won an individual gold medal in short track speed skating (winning the men’s 1500m at Sochi after winning the 500m at Vancouver), while Kaillie Humphries and Heather Moyse successfully defended their Olympic gold medal in women’s bobsled.
For the first time, Canada won the gold medal in men’s and women’s curling and hockey at the same Olympic Winter Games. Canada beat Sweden 3–0 in the gold medal final in men’s hockey, and defeated the United States 3–2 in the gold medal final in women’s hockey. Team Canada also defeated Sweden 6–3 in the gold medal final in women’s curling and Great Britain 9–3 in the gold medal game in men’s curling.
Canada’s Rank: 4th (25 medals: 10 gold, 10 silver, 5 bronze)
Athletes: 222 (123 men, 99 women)
Justine Dufour-Lapointe |
Moguls (women) | Gold |
Charles Hamelin | 1500m short track speed skating (men) | Gold |
Alexandre Bilodeau | Moguls (men) | Gold |
Dara Howell | Slopestyle skiing (women) | Gold |
Kaillie Humphries Heather Moyse |
Two-man bobsleigh (women) | Gold |
Jennifer Jones Kaitlyn Lawes Dawn McEwen Jill Officer Kirsten Wall |
Curling | Gold |
Meghan Agosta-Marciano Rebecca Johnston Lauriane Rougeau Gillian Apps Charline Labonté Natalie Spooner Mélodie Daoust Geneviève Lacasse Shannon Szabados Laura Fortino Jocelyne Larocque Jenn Wakefield Jayna Hefford Meaghan Mikkelson Catherine Ward Haley Irwin Caroline Ouellette Tara Watchorn Brianne Jenner Marie-Philip Poulin Hayley Wickenheiser |
Ice hockey (women) | Gold |
Marielle Thompson | Ski cross (women) | Gold |
Caleb Flaxey Ryan Fry E.J. Harnden Ryan Harnden Brad Jacobs |
Curling (men) | Gold |
Jamie Benn Duncan Keith Mike Smith Patrice Bergeron Chris Kunitz Martin St. Louis Jay Bouwmeester Roberto Luongo P. K. Subban Jeff Carter Patrick Marleau John Tavares Sidney Crosby Rick Nash Jonathan Toews Drew Doughty Corey Perry Marc-Édouard Vlasic Matt Duchene Alex Pietrangelo Shea Weber Ryan Getzlaf Carey Price Dan Hamhuis Patrick Sharp |
Ice hockey (men) | Gold |
Chloé Dufour-Lapointe | Moguls (women) | Silver |
Patrick Chan Kevin Reynolds Kaetlyn Osmond Tessa Virtue Scott Moir Kirsten Moore-Towers Dylan Moscovitch Meagan Duhamel Eric Radford |
Team Event, Figure Skating | Silver |
Mikaël Kingsbury | Moguls (men) | Silver |
Denny Morrison | 1000m speed skating (men) | Silver |
Patrick Chan | Figure skating (men) | Silver |
Dominique Maltais | Snowboard cross (women) | Silver |
Scott Moir and Tessa Virtue | Ice dance | Silver |
Mike Riddle | Halfpipe skiing (men) | Silver |
Marie-Ève Drolet Jessica Hewitt Valérie Maltais Marianne St-Gelais |
3000m short track speed skating relay (women) | Silver |
Kelsey Serwa | Ski cross (women) | Silver |
Mark McMorris | Slopestyle snowboarding (men) | Bronze |
Kim Lamarre | Slopestyle skiing (women) | Bronze |
Denny Morrison | 1500m speed skating (men) | Bronze |
Jan Hudec | Super-G alpine skiing (men) | Bronze |
Charle Cournoyer | 500m short track speed skating (men) | Bronze |