Home » Paris Olympics day 15: men’s marathon, golf, basketball, athletics and more – live

Paris Olympics day 15: men’s marathon, golf, basketball, athletics and more – live

The latest medal table | Live schedule | Full resultsSign up for the Paris 2024 briefing | Email Megan

And speaking of medals, I’m keen to get your thoughts on this. We all know the Americans love to make the medal tally ranked on total medals rather than golds. Here in Australia we’re big fans of the status quo, as total medals would send us plummeting down the table faster than a 10m platform diver. But we’re also big fans of the ‘per capita’ argument, especially once the swimming finishes.

But a new contender has entered the arena via Robert C Duncan, a retired astrophysicist from the University of Texas, and Andrew Parece, a strategy consultant and vice-president of Charles River Associates in Boston, Massachusetts, who have come up with the Goldilocks method.

This ranks countries according to how improbable their medal counts would be if all people in competing countries worldwide had equal propensity per capita for winning medals. Therefore, the expected number of medals a nation is expected to win scales with population size. For instance, because the US population is about 13 times larger than Australia’s, the US is expected to win 13 times more medals at the Games.

Continue reading… The Guardian Read More The latest medal table | Live schedule | Full resultsSign up for the Paris 2024 briefing | Email MeganAnd speaking of medals, I’m keen to get your thoughts on this. We all know the Americans love to make the medal tally ranked on total medals rather than golds. Here in Australia we’re big fans of the status quo, as total medals would send us plummeting down the table faster than a 10m platform diver. But we’re also big fans of the ‘per capita’ argument, especially once the swimming finishes.But a new contender has entered the arena via Robert C Duncan, a retired astrophysicist from the University of Texas, and Andrew Parece, a strategy consultant and vice-president of Charles River Associates in Boston, Massachusetts, who have come up with the Goldilocks method.This ranks countries according to how improbable their medal counts would be if all people in competing countries worldwide had equal propensity per capita for winning medals. Therefore, the expected number of medals a nation is expected to win scales with population size. For instance, because the US population is about 13 times larger than Australia’s, the US is expected to win 13 times more medals at the Games. Continue reading…