(Updated) Paris Olympics Medal Tally 2024, Day 14: Who is leading the Total Medal Count? Check Here

2024 Olympic Games Medal Table: The Republic of China ranks first with 31 gold medals, the United States and Australia rank second and third with 30 and 18 gold medals respectively.

Digging deeper into what happened on Day 14, the Dutch hockey team tied Germany 1-1 in the final before eventually winning 3-1 on penalties to take home the men’s gold medal.

This was the first gold medal won by the Netherlands in 24 years in men’s hockey at the 2024 Olympics. India won a silver medal in the javelin event at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Pakistani javelin thrower Arshad Nadeem set an Olympic record of 92.97 meters, which is a great achievement for Pakistan.

Likewise, Tara Davis-Woodhall won gold in the women’s long jump with a jump of 7.10m on her fourth attempt, with defending champion Malaika Mihambo of Germany coming in second with a jump of 6.98m. Davis-Woodhall’s teammate Jasmine Moore was third.

Noah Lyles, who set the record for the fastest athlete in the world, won the bronze medal in the 200m final. In addition, Japan’s Akari Fujinami defeated Colombia’s Lucia Yepez with her technical advantage. She won the gold medal in the women’s freestyle 53kg final.

Paris 2024 Olympics – Medal Table (Top 10 Countries and India)

The United States continues to lead the medal table. Here is the medal table:

Order

National Olympic Committee

gold medal

silver medal

bronze medal

Total Medals

1

People’s Republic of China

31

XXV

20

76

2

USA

thirty

XXXVIII

XXXV

103

3

Australia

18

15

14

Chapter 47

4

France

14

19

twenty two

55

5

U.K.

14

17

twenty one

52

6

Japan

Thirteen

8

Thirteen

XXXIV

7

South Korea

Thirteen

8

7

XXVIII

8

Netherlands

11

6

8

XXV

9

Italy

10

11

9

thirty

10

Germany

10

9

6

XXV

64

India

0

1

4

5

Paris 2024: Day 13 highlights

sports:

(Men’s 200m final)

  • Gold Medal: Letsile Tebogo of Botswana (19.46)
  • Silver Medal: Kenneth Bednarek of the United States (19.62)
  • Bronze Medal: Noah Lyles, United States (19.70)

(Men’s 110m hurdles final)

  • Gold Medal: Grant Holloway, United States (12.99)
  • Silver Medal: Daniel Roberts of the United States (13.085)
  • Bronze Medal: Rashid Broadbear of Jamaica (13.088)

(Women’s 400m Hurdles Final)

  • Gold Medal: Sydney McLaughlin-Levron of the United States (50.37)
  • Silver: Anna Cockrell of the United States (51.87)
  • Bronze medal: Femke Boll of the Netherlands (52.15)

Taekwondo

(Women’s 57kg bronze medal match 235, 237)

  • Bronze Medal: Skylar Park of Canada (Game 235)
  • She defeated Leicester’s Leticia Aoun 4-2.
  • Bronze Medal: Alizadeh Kimia of Bulgaria (match 237)
  • She defeated Luo Zongshi of China 6-5.

(Women’s 57kg gold medal match, match 239)

  • South Korean player Kim Yu-jin eventually defeated Nahid Kiani Chand 9-0 to win the gold medal.

(Men: 68kg gold medal match, 238th match)

  • Uzbekistan’s Ulugbek Rashitov eventually defeated Jordan’s Zeid Karim 3-1 to win the gold medal.

boxing

(Men’s 51kg – Final)

  • Uzbekistan’s Hasanboy Dusmatov won the gold medal by defeating France’s Bilal Bennama 5-0.

(Women 54 kg – Final)

  • China’s Chang Yuan defeated Turkey’s Akbas Hatis 5-0 to win the gold medal.

Marathon swimming

(Men’s 10km results)

Gold Medal: Kristof Lasovsky of Hungary (1:50:52.7)

Silver Medal: Klemette Oliver of Germany (1:50:54.8)

Bronze Medal: Betlehem David of Hungary (1:51:09.0)

Table Tennis (Bronze Medal Match)

  • French players Gauzy Simon and Le Brun Alexis eventually defeated Japanese players Hiroto Shinozuka and Shunsuke Togami 3-2 to win the bronze medal.

sailboat

(Men’s Kite Finals)

  • Gold Medal: Bontus Valentin of Austria
  • Silver Medal: Pianosi Ricciardo of Italy
  • Bronze Medal: Maeder Maximilian of Singapore

Sport climbing

(Men’s Bouldering and Lead, Final)

  • Gold Medal: Roberts Tobey of Great Britain (155.2)
  • Silver Medal: Anraku Sorato of Japan (145.4)
  • Bronze Medal: Schubert Jacob of Austria (139.6)

Kayak Sprint

(Women’s Double Canoe 500m Final Group A)

  • Gold Medal: Xu Shixiao/Sun Mengya of China (1:52.81)
  • Silver Medal: Luzan Liudmyla / Rybachok Anastasiia of Ukraine (1:54.30)
  • Bronze Medal: Mackenzie Sloan/Vincent Katie of Canada (1:54.36)

(Women’s Double Kayak 500m Final Group A)

  • Gold Medal: Lisa Carrington/Alicia Hoskins of New Zealand (1:37.28)
  • Silver Medal: Tamara Sipes/Gazo Alida Dora of Hungary (1:39.39)
  • Bronze Medal: Paszek Paulina/Hake Jule Marie of Germany (1:39.46)
  • Bronze Medal: Pupp Noemi/Fojt Sara of Hungary (1:39.46)

(Men’s Double Kayak 500m Final Group A)

  • Gold Medal: Schopf Jacob / Lemke Max of Germany (1:26.87)
  • Silver Medal: Nadas Bens/Totka Sandor of Hungary (1:27.15)
  • Bronze Medal: Van Der Westhuyzen Jean / Green Tom (1:27.29)

(Men’s Single Canoe 1000m Final Group B)

  • Gold Medal: Fuksa Martin of the Czech Republic (3:43.16)
  • Silver Medal: Queiroz Issaquias of Brazil (3:44.33)
  • Bronze Medal: Tarnovschi Serghei of Moldova (3:44.68)

hockey

(Women’s Bronze Medal Match)

  • Argentina defeated Belgium 2-2 to win the bronze medal.

diving

(Women’s 3m springboard final)

  • Gold Medal: Chen Yiwen of China (376)
  • Silver: Gini Maddison of Australia (343.10)
  • Bronze Medal: Chang Yani of China (318.75)

break in

(B-Girls Qualifying Showdown)

  • The Indian team of the Netherlands won the qualifying round by defeating the Refugee Olympic team Tarrasch 3-0.

Which countries lead in total medals?

The Republic of China topped the medal table with 79 medals, 31 of which were gold. The United States followed with a total of 103 medals, including 30 gold. The competition between the two countries for the top spot was very intense and was closely watched by sports fans around the world. Australia ranked third with a total of 46 medals, 18 of which were gold.

Which athlete has won the most medals so far at the Paris 2024 Olympics?

rank

athlete

nation

sports

Total Medals

1

Zhang Yufei

China

swim

6 (1 silver, 5 bronze)

T-2

Leon Marchand

France

swim

5 (4 gold, 1 bronze)

T-2

Tori Husker

USA

swim

5 (3 gold, 2 silver)

T-2

Molly O’Callaghan

Australia

swim

5 (3 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze)

T-2

Reagan Smith

USA

swim

5 (2 gold, 3 silver)

T-2

Kelly McKeon

Australia

swim

5 (2 gold, 1 silver, 2 bronze)

T-7

Summer McIntosh

Canada

swim

4 (3 gold, 1 silver)

T-7

Simone Biles

USA

gymnastics

4 (3 gold, 1 silver)

T-7

Oka Shinnosuke

Japan

gymnastics

4 (3 gold, 1 bronze)

T-7

Aliana Titmuss

Australia

swim

4 (2 gold, 2 silver)

T-7

Kate Douglas

USA

swim

4 (2 gold, 2 silver)

T-7

Gretchen Walsh

USA

swim

4 (2 gold, 2 silver)

T-7

Katie Ledecky

USA

swim

4 (2 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze)

T-7

Rebecca Andrade

Brazil

gymnastics

4 (1 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze)

T-7

Yang Junxuan

China

swim

4 (1 silver, 3 bronze)