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Chronological summary of the 2012 Summer Olympics

This article contains a chronological summary of major events from the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.

All times are in British Summer Time ().

Calendar

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All times and dates use British Summer Time (UTC+1)

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Day-by-day summaries

25 July

Football

  • The first competitions of the Games started at 16:00. The first events were women's football matches, with six preliminary round matches held.
  • Cristiane of Brazil scored her 11th Olympic goal, setting the women's record for most goals in the Olympics.
  • A mistake occurred at the North Korea v. Colombia women's football match, as organisers mistakenly displayed the South Korean flag for the North Korean players. The North Korean team refused to take the field for nearly an hour. The organisers corrected the error and apologised.

26 July

Football

  • The competitions started at 12:00. The events at the men's football matches included eight preliminary round matches held.

27 July

Archery

  • The ranking round for men began at 9:00; for women at 13:00.
  • In the men's competition, Im Dong-Hyun of South Korea set an individual world record of 699 points for 72 arrows. The South Korean team also set a new world record for a 216 arrow total, with 2,087 points.

Opening ceremony

Day 1: 28 July

Archery

  • Italy won the men's team final, defeating the United States, 219–218.

Cycling

Fencing

Judo

Rowing

Shooting

Swimming

Weightlifting

Day 2: 29 July

Archery

  • South Korea defeated China, 210–209, in the women's team final, while Japan defeated Russia for bronze, 209–207.

Cycling

Diving

Fencing

Gymnastics

Judo

Shooting

Swimming

Weightlifting

Day 3: 30 July

Diving

Fencing

Gymnastics

  • China won gold in the men's artistic team all-around; with Japan earning the silver medal; and Great Britain taking the bronze, the host nation's first Olympic team gymnastics medal in a century. An appeal and a video review overturned an initial ruling on Kōhei Uchimura's dismount off the pommel horse, raising Japan's score from fourth to the silver medal position, and dropping Ukraine out of the medals.

Judo

Shooting

Swimming

Weightlifting

  • China's Li Xueying set new Olympic records in the snatch with 108&nbsp;kg and in total weight lift with 246&nbsp;kg en route to claiming the gold medal in the women's 58 kg final.
  • Kim Un-Guk of North Korea lifted an Olympic record 153&nbsp;kg in the snatch, as well as a new world record of 327&nbsp;kg total, to win gold in the men's 62 kg final. Colombian silver medalist Óscar Figueroa also broke a clean and jerk Olympic record when he lifted 177&nbsp;kg.

Day 4: 31 July

Badminton

  • Officials of the Badminton World Federation charged eight players of trying to deliberately lose their last group stage matches in order to draw favourable matchups in the knockout stage of the women's doubles.

Canoeing

Diving

Equestrian

Fencing

Gymnastics

Judo

Shooting

Swimming

Weightlifting

Day 5: 1 August

Badminton

  • All four women doubles team accused of throwing badminton matches the prior day were disqualified. They were the Indonesian team, both teams from South Korea, and the world champion team from China.

Boxing

  • In the men's bantamweight round of 16, Azerbaijan's Magomed Abdulhamidov was given the win over Japan's Satoshi Shimizu despite having been knocked down five times in the last round. Japan filed an appeal which overturned the win. The referee from Turkmenistan was subsequently expelled from the games.
  • In the men's heavyweight round of 16, Iran's Ali Mazaheri was disqualified because he received three penalties for holding giving Cuba's José Larduet the win. The referee from Germany subsequently received a five-day suspension for questionable judgement.

Canoeing

Cycling

Diving

Fencing

Gymnastics

Judo

Rowing

Shooting

Swimming

Table tennis

Weightlifting

Day 6: 2 August

Archery

Canoeing

Cycling

  • In the women's team sprint, the world record was beaten by Great Britain, and subsequently by China, in the qualification, before China improved the record further in the first round. Germany won the gold medal after Britain were relegated in the first round, and China in the final, both for exchange of riders outside the designated area. China took the silver medals, and Australia the bronze.
  • Great Britain won the men's team sprint, having set world records in both the first round and the final, allowing Chris Hoy to equal Steve Redgrave's British record of five Olympic gold medals. France finished second, with Germany third. A minor controversy erupted when German-born Philip Hindes of the gold medal British team told the BBC that the team had pre-planned a crash in case they did not start fast enough. British Cycling suggested Hindes' comments were "lost in translation".
  • In the men's team pursuit, Great Britain set a world record of 3:52.499 in the qualification round.

Fencing

  • Italy won the women's team foil final, defeating Russia 45–31. South Korea was victorious against France, 45–32, in the bronze medal match.

Gymnastics

Judo

Rowing

Shooting

Swimming

Table tennis

Day 7: 3 August

Archery

Athletics

Badminton

Boxing

  • The AIBA Olympic Compliance Committee expelled international technical official Aghajan Abiyev of Azerbaijan "for breaching the governing body's code of conduct by communicating with others about the competition – especially persons from one's own country or national federation".

Cycling

  • Great Britain won the men's team pursuit in a new world record time of 3:51.659, beating Australia in the final to defend the title they won at the 2008 Games. New Zealand won the bronze.
  • Victoria Pendleton of Great Britain took gold in the first Olympic women's keirin, China's Guo Shuang was second and Lee Wai-sze of Hong Kong, who only reached the second round via a repechage, won bronze.

Fencing

  • South Korea won gold in the men's team sabre with Romania taking the silver and Italy earning the bronze.

Gymnastics

Judo

Rowing

Shooting

Swimming

Weightlifting

Day 8: 4 August

Athletics

Badminton

Cycling

Fencing

  • Third seeds China won the women's team épée, beating South Korea in the final. United States won the bronze after beating Russia in overtime.

Gymnastics

Rowing

Shooting

Swimming

Tennis

Triathlon

Weightlifting

  • Kazakhstan's Ilya Ilin took gold in the men's&nbsp;94 kg setting a new world record of 233&nbsp;kg in the clean and jerk and 418&nbsp;kg in total weight.

Day 9: 5 August

Athletics

Badminton

Boxing

  • Women's boxing made its début at the Olympic Games, with Russia's Elena Savelyeva and North Korea's Kim Hye-Song facing each other in the first bout of the flyweight event.

Cycling

Diving

Fencing

  • Italy took gold in the men's team foil with Japan taking silver and Germany winning bronze.

Gymnastics

Sailing

Shooting

Tennis

Weightlifting

  • China's Zhou Lulu took gold in the women's +75&nbsp;kg setting a new world record of 333&nbsp;kg in the total weight, as well as an Olympic record of 187&nbsp;kg in clean and jerk. Second placed Tatiana Kashirina of Russia set a new world record of 151&nbsp;kg in the snatch.

Wrestling

Day 10: 6 August

Athletics

Cycling

Equestrian

Gymnastics

Sailing

Shooting

Weightlifting

Wrestling

Day 11: 7 August

Athletics

Cycling

Diving

Equestrian

Gymnastics

Sailing

Synchronized swimming

Table tennis

Triathlon

Weightlifting

Wrestling

Day 12: 8 August

Athletics

Canoeing

Equestrian

Sailing

Table tennis

Taekwondo

Volleyball

Wrestling

Day 13: 9 August

Athletics

Boxing

Canoeing

Diving

Equestrian

Football

Swimming

Taekwondo

Volleyball

Water polo

  • The United States won the gold medal in the women's event after an 8–5 victory over Spain in the final.

Wrestling

Day 14: 10 August

Athletics

Cycling

Field hockey

Football

Sailing

Swimming

Synchronized swimming

Taekwondo

Wrestling

Day 15: 11 August

Athletics

Basketball

Boxing

Canoeing

Cycling

Diving

Field hockey

Football

  • Mexico win the gold medal in the men's football tournament for the very first time after beating Brazil 2–1 in the final which saw the fastast goal scored in Men's Olympic Final history when Oribe Peralta scored in the opening minute and also went on to score the winning goal.

Gymnastics

Handball

Modern pentathlon

Sailing

Taekwondo

Volleyball

Wrestling

Day 16: 12 August

Athletics

Basketball

Boxing

Closing ceremony

  • Commencing at 21:00.

Cycling

Gymnastics

Handball

Modern pentathlon

Volleyball

Water polo

Wrestling

References

External links