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Chronological summary of the 2008 Summer Olympics

This article contains a chronological summary of major events from the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China.

Calendar

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All dates are Beijing Time ()

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Day-by-day summaries

6 August

Football

  • The first competitions of the Games started at 5:00pm CST (UTC+8). The first events were women's football (soccer) matches. The day was devoted to women's football.

7 August

Football

  • The first football (soccer) matches for men began on this day. The day was devoted to men's football matches.

8 August

Opening Ceremony: Starting at 8:00 pm CST (UTC+8), the four-hour opening ceremony was attended by 91,000 spectators, including more than 100 world leaders. The spectacle was directed by filmmaker Zhang Yimou, and the Olympic Cauldron was lit by former Chinese gymnast Li Ning.

Equestrian

Day 1: 9 August

Archery

Boxing

Fencing

Judo

Shooting

Swimming

Weightlifting

Day 2: 10 August

Archery:
  • South Korea set a world record for a 24-arrow team match, in their victory over Italy in the quarter finals of the women's team archery event. They went on to win the gold medal, stretching the country's winning streak to 20 years over 6 Olympic games.
Basketball:
  • The USA men's basketball team beat hosts China 101–70 in the first game in the basketball event.
Shooting:
Swimming:
Weightlifting:

Day 3: 11 August

Swimming
Shooting
  • Entering the finals of the men's 10 m air rifle in fourth place, Abhinav Bindra won the first ever individual Olympic gold medal for India, and India's first gold medal in any Olympic event since 1980.
Judo:

Day 4: 12 August

Swimming:
Shooting:
Canoeing:

Day 5: 13 August

Wrestling:
Swimming:
Gymnastics:
  • The Chinese women's gymnastic team won its first ever team gold medal.
Weightlifting:

Day 6: 14 August

Swimming:
Archery:
  • Zhang Juanjuan of China won the women's individual archery competition by beating the top three ranked archers in the event.
Judo:
Wrestling:
  • Ara Abrahamian won a bronze medal in the 84-kilogram Greco-Roman wrestling, but during the medal ceremony stepped off of the podium and laid his medal down on the mat. Abrahamian had lost a 3-1 decision to Andrea Minguzzi in the semi-finals in a disputed decision and started shouting at referees and officials after the match. The IOC later decided to officially strip him of his medal.

Day 7: 15 August

Athletics:
Gymnastics:
Table tennis:
  • Singapore qualified for the final in the women's team event, thus ensuring that the country would win its first Olympic medal, in any event, since 1960.
Judo:
  • Down a yuko and with only 16 seconds left, world champion China's Tong Wen managed to throw defending Olympic champion Japan's Maki Tsukada for the gold in women's +78 kg.
Tennis:

Day 8: 16 August

General
  • New Zealand experienced their most successful day at an Olympics (with two gold, one silver, and two bronze medals), beating their previous best of four bronze medals in the 1988 Seoul Olympics.
Athletics:
Badminton:
Rowing:
  • The British team of Tom James, Steve Williams, Pete Reed and Andrew Triggs Hodge won the men's coxless fours, the third time in a row that Great Britain had won gold in this event.
  • New Zealand's Caroline and Georgina Evers-Swindell successfully defended their 2004 title in the women's double sculls by beating Germany by 0.01 seconds.
  • Georgeta Andrunache of Romania won gold in the final women's coxless pair race, her fifth career gold, and her third consecutive Olympic gold in that event.
Swimming:
Tennis:
Weightlifting:
  • Jang Mi-Ran of South Korea won the unlimited (+75&nbsp;kg) division of women's weightlifting by breaking world records five times: once in snatch, twice in clean-and-jerk, and twice in total.
Wrestling:
  • Carol Huynh of Canada won the first medal of the games for Canada and became the first gold medalist in women's wrestling for Canada.

Day 9: 17 August

General:
  • China won its 33rd gold medal of the Beijing games by beating Singapore in the table tennis women's team event, surpassing its 32 golds of the Athens games and making this the most successful Olympiad ever for China.
Athletics:
Cycling:
  • Britain's Rebecca Romero won a cycling gold to become one of the few athletes with medals in two distinct disciplines, the 2008 medal being added to her 2004 rowing silver.
Diving:
Gymnastics:
Rowing:
Sailing:
Shooting:
  • Matthew Emmons finished fourth in the men's 50 m rifle three positions event having held the lead with one shot remaining: four years earlier he had fallen from first to eighth in the last shot of the event. China's Qiu Jian, who had entered the final in fourth position, shot the highest score in the final round to win the gold medal.
Swimming:
Table Tennis:
  • China won the inaugural women's team event by winning all ten of its singles and all five of its doubles matches in the tournament.
Tennis:
  • Rafael Nadal of Spain defeated Chile's Fernando González 6–3, 7-6 (7–2), 6–3 to win the men's singles, Spain's first ever Olympic gold medal in tennis. Gonzalez's medal was his third, making him Chile's most successful athlete at the Olympics.
Wrestling

Day 10: 18 August

Athletics:
Table Tennis:
  • Like the women, the Chinese men won the team competition without losing a match, winning all ten singles and all five doubles matches.
Weightlifting:
  • Andrei Aramnau of Belarus broke three world records, for the snatch, clean and jerk, and total, on the way to winning the men's 105 kg event.

Day 11: 19 August

Athletics:
Cycling:
  • Chris Hoy won his third gold medal of the Beijing games in the men's sprint event, becoming the first British athlete in 100 years to win three gold medals in a single Olympiad.
  • Victoria Pendelton added gold to the Great British track cycling medal total giving Great Britain victory in seven out of the ten track cycling titles. The team won 12 medals including 7 gold, 3 silver and 2 bronze to dominate the track events.
Football:
  • Argentina defeated tournament favourite and longtime rival Brazil 3–0 in the semifinal of the men's football.

Day 12: 20 August

Athletics:
  • Usain Bolt won the men's 200 m in a new world record time of 19.30 seconds to become the first sprinter since Carl Lewis in 1984 to win both the 100 m and 200 m events in a single Olympiad, and the first sprinter since Don Quarrie in 1976 to hold the world records for both events simultaneously.
  • In the men's 200 m, United States' Wallace Spearmon, who finished third in 19.85s, was disqualified for stepping out of his lane. Later, Netherlands Antilles' Churandy Martina, who finished second in 19.82s, was also disqualified for stepping out of his lane.
Swimming:
  • After a race lasting nearly two hours, Russia's Larisa Ilchenko beat Keri-Anne Payne of Great Britain by 1.5 seconds to win the women's 10 km marathon. Payne and fellow British swimmer Cassandra Patten, who took bronze, had shared the lead for almost the entire race before being overtaken by Ilchenko with 50 metres remaining.
  • Natalie du Toit of South Africa became the first amputee to compete in the Olympic Games since George Eyser in 1904, finishing 16th in the women's 10&nbsp;km marathon.
Sailing:
Taekwondo:

Day 13: 21 August

Athletics:
Softball:
  • Japan defeated the United States 3–1 in the final of the women's softball tournament.
Volleyball:

Day 14: 22 August

Athletics:
Cycling:
Table tennis:
  • China won all three medals in the women's singles, with Zhang Yining defending her Olympic gold medal, Wang Nan taking silver, and Guo Yue bronze, leaving a competitor from Singapore in fourth place for the third consecutive Olympics.

Day 15: 23 August

Athletics:
Baseball:
Boxing:
Diving:
  • Australia's Matthew Mitcham won the men's 10 m platform gold medal with his final dive, preventing the Chinese team from winning every the diving event, and achieving the highest score for an individual dive in Olympic history.
Rhythmic Gymnastics:
  • Almudena Cid of Spain retired after her fourth Olympic games finals, and was the only rhythmic gymnast to compete in more than two.
  • Evgenia Kanaeva of Russia finished first in every apparatus.
Table tennis:
  • The Chinese men followed the achievement of the women by taking all three medals, with Ma Lin winning the gold, Wang Hao winning the silver for the second successive Olympics, and Wang Liqin taking the bronze medal in the men's singles. China became the first country to win all the medals for which they are eligible in table tennis: gold, silver and bronze in the men's and women's singles, and gold in the men's and women's team tournaments.
Taekwondo:
  • South Korea won the gold medal in the men's 80&nbsp;kg, with all four Korean athletes sent to Beijing taking gold.
  • Ángel Matos of Cuba received a lifetime ban from taekwondo for assaulting the referee in the men's +80 kg event. Matos had been disqualified from his bronze medal bout for taking too long to return to the action after being injured.

Day 16: 24 August

General
Water polo:
  • Hungary won a third consecutive gold medal in men's water polo .
Basketball:
Boxing:
Handball:
  • France won the 302nd and last gold medal of the Beijing Olympics, beating Iceland in the final of the men's handball.
Closing ceremony
The Closing Ceremony began at 8:00 pm China Standard Time (UTC+8). The number 8 is associated with prosperity and confidence in Chinese culture. The Closing Ceremony concluded at 9:55 pm CST.

See also

References

External links