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📊 Olympics
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📊 Olympics

The Olympics are all the rage right now. How up to par are Latin America's teams?

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Latinometrics
Aug 01, 2024
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📊 Olympics
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Welcome to Latinometrics. We bring you Latin American insights and trends through concise, thought-provoking data visualizations.

Sports 🏅

This week marked Olympics history.

And don’t worry, this isn’t the millionth story about Snoop Dogg, LeBron James, US gymnastics drama, or the mayor of Paris swimming in the Seine.

No, we had our eyes on 29-year old Adriana Ruano Oliva, a Guatemalan sports shooter who just earned her country its first ever gold medal at the Summer Olympics held in France. What’s crazy is that this wasn’t even her initial sports dream: thirteen years ago, she was training as an Olympic gymnast when a back injury ended her career preemptively and she took up shooting as a sports backup.

Today, this young woman from Guatemala City makes her whole country, her whole region, proud.

Latin America’s most Olympic countries

Latin American countries may not get the attention that peers like Japan, China, or the United States do at the Olympics. But don’t count out the region for a second.

Big Latin American countries like Brazil and Argentina may send quite a few athletes to the Olympics, but proportionally speaking it’s much smaller players like Puerto Rico, Uruguay, and the Dominican Republic which impress the most. In the case of Puerto Rico, the small US territory has a staggering 15 people headed to Paris for each million of its citizens—far ahead of the competition.

But the Caribbean is not just on fire when it comes to athletic prowess. In taking home medals, too, Latin America’s island nations may surprise you.

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