Great Britain at the 2014 Winter Olympics - Biblioteka.sk

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Great Britain at the 2014 Winter Olympics
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Great Britain at the
2014 Winter Olympics
IOC codeGBR
NOCBritish Olympic Association
in Sochi
Competitors56 in 10 sports
Flag bearers Jon Eley (opening)[1][2]
Lizzy Yarnold (closing)[3]
Medals
Ranked 19th
Gold
1
Silver
1
Bronze
3
Total
5
Winter Olympics appearances (overview)

Great Britain, represented by the British Olympic Association (BOA), competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, from 7 to 23 February 2014. The British team was made up of athletes from the whole United Kingdom including Northern Ireland, whose athletes may have elected to hold Irish citizenship, allowing them to represent either Great Britain or Ireland. Additionally some British overseas territories competed separately from Britain in Olympic competition. A total of 56 athletes competed in 11 sports making it the biggest contingent that Great Britain had sent to a Winter Olympic Games for twenty-six years.

On 9 February 2014, Jenny Jones won Great Britain's first medal on snow in their Winter Olympic history after finishing third in the women's slopestyle.[4]

On 14 February 2014, Lizzy Yarnold won gold in the skeleton. She became the second Briton to win the gold in the event, taking the title from previous Great Britain champion Amy Williams. She was elected to be the flag bearer for the closing ceremony.

On 20 February 2014, the women's curling team won their bronze medal match against Switzerland 6–5. In doing so, they ensured that Great Britain met its UK Sport medal target of three medals from the Games.

On 19 February 2014, the men's curling team won their semifinal against Sweden 6–5 and on 21 February 2014, they won the silver medal after being defeated by Canada in the gold medal match 9–3, but the result still confirmed Great Britain's most successful Olympics for ninety years by equaling the medal count of the 1924 Winter Olympics.

In November 2017, the Russian Bobsleigh teams that came first and fourth in the Four-man event were disqualified. This meant that Great Britain (who originally finished 5th) would move up into the bronze medal position.[5] The IOC requested that the IBSF modify the results, and the medals were redistributed accordingly.[6]

Records

Olympic records

On 11 February Great Britain matched an Olympic scoreline record by beating USA 12–3 in women's curling.[7] They also set a new Olympic record by scoring seven points in a single end.[8] On 14 February they equalled the scoreline record again, this time beating Japan 12–3.[9]

Medallists

Medals by date
Day Date 1st place, gold medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Total
Day 1 8 February 0 0 0 0
Day 2 9 February 0 0 1 1
Day 3 10 February 0 0 0 0
Day 4 11 February 0 0 0 0
Day 5 12 February 0 0 0 0
Day 6 13 February 0 0 0 0
Day 7 14 February 1 0 0 1
Day 8 15 February 0 0 0 0
Day 9 16 February 0 0 0 0
Day 10 17 February 0 0 0 0
Day 11 18 February 0 0 0 0
Day 12 19 February 0 0 0 0
Day 13 20 February 0 0 1 1
Day 14 21 February 0 1 0 1
Day 15 22 February 0 0 0 0
Day 16 23 February 0 0 1 1
Total 1 1 3 5
Medal Name Sport Event Date
 Gold Lizzy Yarnold Skeleton Women's 14 February
 Silver David Murdoch
Greg Drummond
Scott Andrews
Michael Goodfellow
Tom Brewster
Curling Men's curling 21 February
 Bronze Jenny Jones Snowboarding Women's slopestyle 9 February
 Bronze Eve Muirhead
Anna Sloan
Vicki Adams
Claire Hamilton
Lauren Gray
Curling Women's curling 20 February
 Bronze John Jackson
Bruce Tasker
Stuart Benson
Joel Fearon
Bobsleigh Four Man 23 February
Medals by sport
Sport 1st place, gold medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Total
Skeleton 1 0 0 1
Curling 0 1 1 2
Snowboarding 0 0 1 1
Bobsleigh 0 0 1 1
Total 1 1 3 5

Medal and performance targets

On 16 January 2014, the funding body UK Sport announced their medal targets for Team GB at the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi with the target to win three medals with the best chance of success with the ladies skeleton events. Although the target was set at three medals the funding body predicted that Great Britain had the potential to win as many as seven medals, although this total was not widely expected to be reached. Other realistic chances of medal success were with the bobsleigh and curling events.

The games proved to be highly successful for Team GB, exceeding the initial target of three medals and achieving all of the targets for each of the winter sports that were set.

Key Red XN Target missed Green tickY Target met
Sport Medal target set Non medal target Medals or result Performance relative to target range
Bobsleigh 0–1 4th–6th (m), 4th–8th (w) 1 Green tickY
Curling 1–2 2 Green tickY
Figure skating 0 Top ten Tenth Green tickY
Skeleton 1 1 Green tickY
Speed skating 0–1 2x top eight 4 x top eight Green tickY
Ski and snowboard 1–2 1 Green tickY
Total 3–7 n/a 5 Green tickY
Total gold n/a n/a 1 n/a

UK Sport funding

In the Winter Olympic Cycle running from 2010 to 2014 the UK government body UK Sport allocated a then record budget of over £13 million to fund Team GB for the individual athletes as well as the bobsleigh and curling teams for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. The sports receiving the highest funding were bobsleigh, curling and skeleton, whilst speed skating, ski and snowboard, and figure skating also received funding, but all other winter sports where British athletes were competing did not receive any funding from the body.

Sport Funding
Bobsleigh £3,304,250
Curling £2,055,100
Figure skating £174,338
Speed skating £2,593,400
Skeleton £3,447,600
Ski and snowboard £1,509,950
Total £13,444,638

Alpine skiing

According to the quota allocation released on 27 January 2014, Great Britain qualified two athletes in alpine skiing.[10]

Athlete Event Run 1 Run 2 Total Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Great_Britain_at_the_2014_Winter_Olympics
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