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Indonesia at the Olympics

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Indonesia at the
Olympics
IOC codeINA
NOCIndonesian Olympic Committee
Websitewww.nocindonesia.id (in Indonesian)
Medals
Ranked 59th
Gold
8
Silver
14
Bronze
15
Total
37
Summer appearances

Indonesia first participated at the Olympic Games in 1952 and has sent athletes to compete in every Summer Olympic Games since then, except for 1964, due to controversy around the Games of the New Emerging Forces, and 1980, when they participated in the U.S.-led boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics. Indonesia is yet to participate in the Winter Olympic Games.

The National Olympic Committee for Indonesia was created in 1946 and recognized in 1952.

As of 2020, Indonesian athletes have won a total of 37 medals, twenty-one in badminton, fifteen in weightlifting and one in archery. Among countries in Southeast Asia, Indonesia ranks first in terms of the number of overall medals (37), and second in the number of gold medals (8), only behind Thailand which has 10 gold medals.

Archers Lilies Handayani, Nurfitriyana Saiman and Kusuma Wardhani gained the republic's first-ever podium finish, a silver medal, in the women's team event at the 1988 Seoul Olympics. Future married couple Susi Susanti and Alan Budikusuma won the nation's first two gold medals in the badminton women's and men's singles events respectively at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. Barcelona 1992 was also the only Games in which Indonesia won 2 gold medals. Since then, Indonesia has won a single gold medal at every subsequent Summer Olympics, all in badminton, except for the 2012 London Olympics.

The country's most recent gold medalists are Greysia Polii and Apriyani Rahayu, who won the women's doubles event of badminton.[1] Their victory made Indonesia the second country after China to have won gold medals in all five disciplines of badminton at the Olympics.[1][2] At 33 years and 356 days of age, Polii also became the oldest female badminton player to win an Olympic gold medal.[3]

Medals

Medals by sports

List of medalists

  •   Medalist of Demonstration & Exhibition Sports
Medals by gender
Gender 1st place, gold medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Total Percentage
Male 5 6 9 20 54.05%
Female 2 6 6 14 37.84%
Mixed 1 2 0 3 8.11%
Total 8 14 15 37 100%
Medal Name Games Sport Event
 Gold Rudy Hartono 1972 Munich Badminton Men's singles
 Gold Ade Chandra
Christian Hadinata
1972 Munich Badminton Men's doubles
 Silver Utami Dewi 1972 Munich Badminton Women's singles
 Bronze Christian Hadinata
Utami Dewi
1972 Munich Badminton Mixed doubles
 Silver Icuk Sugiarto 1988 Seoul Badminton Men's singles
 Silver Lilies Handayani
Nurfitriyana Saiman
Kusuma Wardhani
1988 Seoul Archery Women's team
 Silver Dirc Richard Talumewo 1992 Barcelona Taekwondo Men's Flyweight (50–54 kg)
 Silver Rahmi Kurnia 1992 Barcelona Taekwondo Women's Finweight (–43 kg)
 Silver Susilawati 1992 Barcelona Taekwondo Women's Lightweight (55–60 kg)
 Bronze Jefi Tri Aji 1992 Barcelona Taekwondo Men's Finweight (–50 kg)
 Gold Susi Susanti 1992 Barcelona Badminton Women's singles
 Gold Alan Budikusuma 1992 Barcelona Badminton Men's singles
 Silver Ardy Wiranata 1992 Barcelona Badminton Men's singles
 Silver Eddy Hartono
Rudy Gunawan
1992 Barcelona Badminton Men's doubles
 Bronze Hermawan Susanto 1992 Barcelona Badminton Men's singles
 Gold Rexy Mainaky
Ricky Subagja
1996 Atlanta Badminton Men's doubles
 Silver Mia Audina 1996 Atlanta Badminton Women's singles
 Bronze Susi Susanti 1996 Atlanta Badminton Women's singles
 Bronze Antonius Ariantho
Denny Kantono
1996 Atlanta Badminton Men's doubles
 Gold Tony Gunawan
Candra Wijaya
2000 Sydney Badminton Men's doubles
 Silver Raema Lisa Rumbewas 2000 Sydney Weightlifting Women's 48 kg
 Silver Tri Kusharjanto
Minarti Timur
2000 Sydney Badminton Mixed doubles
 Silver Hendrawan 2000 Sydney Badminton Men's singles
 Bronze Sri Indriyani 2000 Sydney Weightlifting Women's 48 kg
 Bronze Winarni Binti Slamet 2000 Sydney Weightlifting Women's 53 kg
 Gold Taufik Hidayat 2004 Athens Badminton Men's singles
 Silver Raema Lisa Rumbewas 2004 Athens Weightlifting Women's 53 kg
 Bronze Eng Hian
Flandy Limpele
2004 Athens Badminton Men's doubles
 Bronze Sony Dwi Kuncoro 2004 Athens Badminton Men's singles
 Bronze Susyana Tjhan 2008 Beijing Wushu Women's Taolu
 Gold Hendra Setiawan
Markis Kido
2008 Beijing Badminton Men's Doubles
 Silver Nova Widianto
Liliyana Natsir
2008 Beijing Badminton Mixed doubles
 Bronze Raema Lisa Rumbewas 2008 Beijing Weightlifting Women's 53 kg
 Bronze Eko Yuli Irawan 2008 Beijing Weightlifting Men's 56 kg
 Bronze Triyatno 2008 Beijing Weightlifting Men's 62 kg
 Bronze Maria Kristin Yulianti 2008 Beijing Badminton Women's singles
 Silver Citra Febrianti 2012 London Weightlifting Women's 53 kg
 Silver Triyatno 2012 London Weightlifting Men's 69 kg
 Bronze Eko Yuli Irawan 2012 London Weightlifting Men's 62 kg
 Gold Liliyana Natsir
Tontowi Ahmad
2016 Rio de Janeiro Badminton Mixed doubles
 Silver Sri Wahyuni Agustiani 2016 Rio de Janeiro Weightlifting Women's 48 kg
 Silver Eko Yuli Irawan 2016 Rio de Janeiro Weightlifting Men's 62 kg
 Gold Greysia Polii
Apriyani Rahayu
2020 Tokyo Badminton Women's doubles
 Silver Eko Yuli Irawan 2020 Tokyo Weightlifting Men's 61 kg
 Bronze Windy Cantika Aisah 2020 Tokyo Weightlifting Women's 49 kg
 Bronze Rahmat Erwin Abdullah 2020 Tokyo Weightlifting Men's 73 kg
 Bronze Anthony Sinisuka Ginting 2020 Tokyo Badminton Men's singles

Medals by individual

According to official data of the International Olympic Committee. This is a list of people who have won two or more Olympic medals for Indonesia.

Athlete Sport Years Games Gender 1st place, gold medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Total
Liliyana Natsir  Badminton 2008–2016 Summer Women 1 1 0 2
Susi Susanti  Badminton 1992–1996 Summer Women 1 0 1 2
Christian Hadinata  Badminton 1972–1988 Summer Men 1 0 1 2
Eko Yuli Irawan  Weightlifting 2008–2020 Summer Men 0 2 2 4
Raema Lisa Rumbewas  Weightlifting 2000–2008 Summer Women 0 2 1 3
Triyatno  Weightlifting 2008–2016 Summer Men 0 1 1 2
Utami Dewi  Badminton 1972–1988 Summer Women 0 1 1 2
  • People in bold are still active competitors
  •   Medalist of Demonstration & Exhibition Sports

Olympic participants

Summer Olympics

Sport Finland
1952
Australia
1956
Italy
1960
Mexico
1968
Germany
1972
Canada
1976
United States
1984
South Korea
1988
Spain
1992
United States
1996
Australia
2000
Greece
2004
China
2008
United Kingdom
2012
Brazil
2016
Japan
2020
France
2024
Athletes
 Archery Not Held 1 2 2 4 4 3 1 2 2 1 4 4 2 32
 Athletics 1 3 1 1 1 5 5 1 5 2 2 2 2 2 - 33
 Badminton Not Held 13 20 19 14 11 9 10 11 - 107
 Beach volleyball Not Held 4 4
 Boxing 3 2 2 3 2 2 4 2 1 21
 Canoeing 3 1 4
 Cycling 4 2 1 1 1 9
 Diving 1 3 4
 Fencing 1 4 2 2 1 10
 Football 21 21
 Gymnastics 1 1
 Judo Not Held 4 1 2 1 1 9
 Rowing 1 2 2 5
 Sailing 5 3 2 1 1 1 1 14
 Shooting 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 9
 Sport climbing Not Held 1 1
 Surfing Not Held 1 1
 Swimming 1 3 2 1 1 2 1 6 3 2 1 2 2 27
 Table tennis Not Held 1 3 2 2 8
 Taekwondo Not Held 1 2 3
 Tennis Not Held 3 5 2 2 2 14
 Weightlifting 1 1 2 3 1 1 3 5 4 1 3 6 5 6 7 5 54
 Wrestling 2 2
Total 3 30 22 6 6 7 16 29 42 40 47 38 24 22 28 28 5 393
Sport Finland
1952
Australia
1956
Italy
1960
Mexico
1968
Germany
1972
Canada
1976
United States
1984
South Korea
1988
Spain
1992
United States
1996
Australia
2000
Greece
2004
China
2008
United Kingdom
2012
Brazil
2016
Japan
2020
France
2024
Athletes

Flag bearers

Games Flag bearer Sport
1952 Helsinki Unknown
1956 Melbourne
1960 Rome
1964 Tokyo did not participate
1968 Mexico City Unknown
1972 Munich Wiem Gommies Boxing
1976 Montreal Donald Pandiangan Archery
1980 Moscow did not participate
1984 Los Angeles Lukman Niode Swimming
1988 Seoul Tonny Maringgi Table tennis
1992 Barcelona Christian Hadinata Badminton coach
1996 Atlanta Hendrik Simangunsong Boxing
2000 Sydney Rexy Mainaky Badminton
2004 Athens Christian Hadinata[a] Badminton coach
2008 Beijing I Gusti Made Oka Sulaksana Sailing
2012 London I Gede Siman Sudartawa Swimming
2016 Rio de Janeiro Maria Natalia Londa Athletics
2020 Tokyo Rio Waida[b] Surfing

Notes

  1. ^ Krisna Bayu was originally the flag bearer, however the role was later done by Christian Hadinata because Bayu was suffering from flu at the eve of opening ceremony.[4]
  2. ^ Originally, surfer Rio Waida and weightlifter Nurul Akmal were named as co-flagbearers for the parade of nations during the opening ceremony.[5] In fact, Rio eventually became the sole flagbearer.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Indonesia take shock gold in women's doubles badminton, People's Republic of China claim silver". International Olympic Committee. 2 August 2021. Archived from the original on 2 August 2021. Retrieved August 2, 2021.
  2. ^ "Kesabaran Greysia berbuah sejarah manis untuk bulu tangkis Indonesia" (in Indonesian). Antara (news agency). Retrieved August 2, 2021.
  3. ^ "Keren, Kak Greysia Polii Pebulu Tangkis Tertua Peraih Emas Olimpiade" (in Indonesian). Koran Sindo. Retrieved August 2, 2021.
  4. ^ "Krisna Bayu Kandas di Penyisihan". Detik (in Indonesian). 18 August 2004. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  5. ^ Ayudiana, Syofi; Khairany, Rr. Cornea (8 July 2021). "Rio Waida dan Nurul Akmal akan jadi pembawa bendera di Olimpiade Tokyo" [Rio Waida and Nurul Akmal will be flag bearers at the Tokyo Olympics]. Antara (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 23 July 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  6. ^ "Begini Tampilan Kontingen Indonesia dalam Upacara Pembukaan Olimpiade Tokyo". Tempo.co (in Indonesian). 23 July 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.