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Team LGBTQ now tied for 7th in Paris Olympics total medal count

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Team LGBTQ is currently in 7th place in the 2024 Paris Olympics total medal count. That’s ahead of every single country that criminalizes being gay, and it’s tied with Italy.

Outsports tracks all of the publicly out LGBTQ athletes together as Team LGBTQ, as though the out athletes made up a country’s team of their own. At the Tokyo Olympics, the 186 out LGBTQ athletes would have finished seventh overall in the medal count, if they were their own country.

The medal count for Team LGBTQ is currently 9 gold medals, 11 silver medals and 10 bronze medals.

Outsports counts a team medal as one medal, just as other medal counts do. For example, there are at least four out women on the USA women’s rugby sevens team. That counts as one medal, for the entire team.

Currently with 195 out athletes and 30 overall medals, Team LGBTQ has the 14th most athletes of the “countries” competing at these Paris Olympics. Athletes are being added almost daily to the list of publicly out gay, lesbian, bi and trans athletes competing at these Olympics. So the size of Team LGBTQ’s contingent will increase as we learn of more athletes living their lives openly.

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At the Tokyo Olympics, with 186 athletes, Team LGBTQ finished 7th overall with 33 medals. The overall medal count should be higher in Paris.

With so many of the out athletes in team sports, many of the medals that Team LGBTQ will win will come in the second week of the Olympics. Team LGBTQ often starts off slowly.

Outsports is ranking Team LGBTQ based on total medals. Some publications and organizations rank teams based on number of gold medals first, then silver, then bronze. It’s an art, not a science.

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Lara Vadlau and her mixed-gender dinghy partner, Lukas Maehr, won the first gold medal of the Paris Olympics for Austria.

Kellie Harrington is back-to-back gold medalist as a woman for the first time in Ireland’s Olympic history.

Maria Perez won gold in the marathon walk relay, after earning a silver medal in the individual 20km event.

Svenja Brunckhorst is a professional basketball player in Germany and France who won gold for the German team.

Frederic Wandres earned gold in the team dressage event.

Amandine Buchard followed up her individual bronze medal with a mixed-team gold for France.

Alice Bellandi won Italy’s first Olympic gold in judo since 2008. It was her second Olympic Games.

Lauren Scruggs followed up her individual silver medal in women’s foil with a team gold medal, along with the woman who beat her for gold, Lee Kiefer.

Portia Woodman-Wickliffe won her second straight Olympic gold, and third Olympic medal, in rugby for New Zealand.

Marianne Vos won silver in the women’s road race. It’s her first Olympic medal since gold in 2012.

Cathrine Laudrup-Dufour helped Denmark earn the silver medal in team dressage.

After a bronze team medal in Tokyo, Michelle Kroppen earned silver in the mixed team event.

Sha’Carri Richardson won a silver medal in the 100-meter dash, three years after her crushing removal from Team USA.

Emma Twigg likely ended her Olympic career with a silver medal in single sculls.

Maria Perez won a silver medal in the 20k racewalk after finishing just off the medal podium in fourth at the Tokyo Olympics.

Raz Hershko followed up her mixed-team bronze medal in Tokyo with an individual silver medal in Paris, in the +78kg category.

Perris Benegas hadn’t won a medal on the international stage until her silver medal in Paris. She celebrated by kissing her girlfriend.

Canada’s silver medal in women’s rugby sevens was a surprise to Australia, whom they beat in the semifinals.

Tom Daley won his fifth medal at the Olympics — and his first silver — in the 10-meter platform synchro competition, with diving partner Noah Williams. It was a family affair for Daley.

Lauren Scruggs won a silver medal for the USA in what was the event’s first all-American final in women’s individual foil. Having entered the tournament ranked 11th in the world, Scruggs’ silver medal was a lovely turn of events. She competes at the college level for Harvard.

Cindy Ngamba became the first athlete from the Olympic Refugee Team to win a medal at the Olympics, taking bronze in women’s middleweight boxing after a loss in the semifinal to Atheyna Bylon of Panama.

Nesty Petecio won a bronze medal in what is likely her final Olympic Games.

Beatriz Ferreira won her second Olympic medal, taking bronze after a loss to Kellie Harrington in the semifinal of the 60kg category.

Carl Hester won his fourth Olympic medal, this time a bronze in team dressage.

Rafaela Silva didn’t earn an individual medal at these Olympics, but she was able to win a bronze in mixed-team judo.

Evy Leibfarth is the first American to compete in three canoe and kayak disciplines at an Olympic Games, coming away with a somewhat surprising bronze medal in the C1 canoe slalom.

Tabea Schendekehl had won two collegiate national titles in the United States before helping power the German quad sculls rowing team to a bronze.

Natalya Diehm won a bronze in BMX Freestyle, the first Olympic medal for Australia in the sport.

The United States earned its first-ever Olympic medal in rugby sevens, with some of the out athletes playing a major part.

Amandine Buchard followed up her individual silver medal in the 52kg category in Tokyo with a bronze medal in front of her home crowd. She broke down in tears after winning the medal.

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Outsports will be tracking the medal count for Team LGBTQ, and seeing where the team ranks against the participating nations, every day during the 2024 Olympics in Paris.

 

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