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Olympics

London Games

Was it really the ‘Women’s Olympics’?

Some hailed it as “The Women’s Olympics,” as the 2012 London Games marked the first time in history that all participating nations allowed women to compete.

But a new study co-authored by a USC postdoctoral fellow shows that male athletes still far outnumbered female athletes at the Olympics last summer.

Of the athletes who competed for medals, 6,068 were men and 4,835 were women, according to a new report co-authored by researchers at USC and the University of Toronto’s Centre for Sport Policy Studies.

The London Olympics also included 30 more medal events for men where there was no matching event for female athletes, including race-walking, canoe/kayak, rowing, shooting, boxing and wrestling.

In 11 of 26 sports, international rules more severely limited the number of female competitors who were allowed to compete.

In boxing, as many as 250 male boxers were allowed to compete, but the number of female competitors was capped at 36. In water polo, up to 156 men could compete as compared to 104 women. Judo allowed for up to 221 male competitors and 145 female competitors.

“The perceptions of equality that led to London being called ‘the Women’s Olympics’ by some commentators are inaccurate,” said Michele Donnelly, a postdoctoral fellow in sociology at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. “The focus is almost always on medal counts and success stories, but it’s important to point out that the experience of men and women athletes is still substantially different. Following the celebration associated with women’s involvement in all sports for the first time at the London 2012 Olympics, it is now time for those sports to more equitably represent men and women competitors.”

The authors credit the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for the progress to date, especially in the last 15 years, but they argue that the organization can still do more.

“The IOC is ideally located to be the moral leader in taking these final steps towards gender equality and to persuade the international federations that only gender-equal events will be permitted at the Games,” said Peter Donnelly, director of the Centre for Sport Policy Studies. “We have called on the IOC, as the gatekeepers of the Olympics, to make a final commitment to gender equality at the Games in terms of an equal number of events for men and women, and near equivalence in the number of participants.”

April 10, 2013

USC Olympic Champions Day celebrated at City Hall

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Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa joined Councilwoman Jan Perry and other council members in declaring Nov. 9 “USC Olympic Champions Day” in the city of Los Angeles during a ceremony at City Hall.

November 9, 2012

Olympics expert looks back at London Games

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The athletes weren't the only people working hard and setting records during the London Olympic Games. Lecturer Alan Abrahamson also put in long hours in the British capital.

August 29, 2012

Trojans dominate at London Olympics

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Quite simply, this was the greatest Olympic Games in USC history. USC’s overall medal count of 25 marks the most ever won by the university in a single Olympics.

August 13, 2012

Mellouli takes Marathon 10K gold

Olympics Day 14 - Swimming

Ous Mellouli of Tunisia won the Marathon 10K in Hyde Park to become the first Olympian to win indoor and open water medals in the same games.

August 10, 2012

Women of Troy win water polo gold

water polo Trojans

Team USA’s water polo Trojan trio of Tumua Anae, Kami Craig and Lauren Wenger were adorned in gold after an 8-5 win over Spain.

August 9, 2012

Anderson claims silver in Marathon 10K

Olympics Day 13 - Swimming

USC senior Haley Anderson became the first American to win an Olympic medal in the Marathon 10K with a second-place finish in the London Olympics.

August 9, 2012

Felix makes it five

Allyson Felix takes gold

After settling for silver in the last two Olympics, USC alumna Allyson Felix ’08 finally got her golden moment at the London Olympics.

August 8, 2012

Silver in the sand

Former Trojans Jennifer Kessy and April Ross took home silver medals following a loss in the beach volleyball final to fellow Americans Kerri Walsh Jennings and Misty May-Treanor

August 8, 2012