On Tuesday, one country at the Olympics had a particularly good day.
Its womenâs gymnasts won the team event in a rout. The womenâs rugby team took an unexpected bronze medal and went viral. The swimmers won four of a possible five medals in two individual races and a relay.
Several of the countryâs rowers got through their heats and remained in medal contention. Several of the teamâs tennis players won their matches, and the BMX freestylers strutted their stuff in qualifiers. The menâs volleyball team remained unbeaten, the menâs water polo team got a bounce-back win, and the menâs soccer team stormed into the knockout rounds. The country isnât known for table tennis, but its players improved their record in Paris to 5-1.
For most countries, thatâs a great day.
At the Olympics though, the US is not most countries.
US fans arenât used to looking up at South Korea, France, Australia, China and Japan in the medal table. Though 3×3 basketball is a relatively new Olympic sport, theyâre not used to seeing the women and men lose on the same day to Germany and Serbia, respectively. And theyâre a little puzzled to see a menâs surfing competition in which no US men are into the quarter-finals.
On one hand, the medal count that showed the USA in sixth place at noon Paris time on Wednesday (the sheer number of events means positions may have changed slightly by the time you read this) is the version that sorts the table by gold medals. But, as is the custom in the US, the table is sorted by total medals, the Americans were top by a wide margin, with 26 medals to Franceâs 18 and Chinaâs 14, at the start of Wednesdayâs events.
Out of the 206 Olympic teams in the Games, maybe 200 of them will celebrate any medal as a massive achievement. Itâs mostly in the United States in which the reaction to a silver or bronze medal is often, âoh, thatâs too bad.â And the debate over whether to sort the medal table by gold medals or total medals is a hot topic in much of the world on social media, though most US residents and fans simply shrug.
(To be completely pedantic, the best way to gauge overall strength would be a sliding scale with five points per gold, three per silver and one per bronze. Through Day 4, the USA led with 64 points to Franceâs 56, Chinaâs 50, Japanâs 45, Australiaâs 43 and Great Britainâs 38. Or someone can rank countries by the top eight in each event â in fact, veteran Olympic sports journalist Rich Perelman does that now.)
For the most part, USAâs results arenât a surprise. Multiple projections before the Olympics had the Americans far ahead in total medals but in a close race in gold medals, with China most likely to be out in front early thanks to diving and shooting. Track and field, where Team USA usually dominated, starts around the halfway point of the Games.
Yes, the US swimmers seem unlikely to repeat their performance from Tokyo, when they claimed 11 gold medals. But theyâre only a couple of gold medals behind the most reasonable projections. No one should be surprised that Summer McIntosh, LĂ©on Marchand and Ariarne Titmus are winning gold medals that the USA had claimed in past years.
So far, no US athletes have missed out on gold medals in events they were clearly favored to win. Ryan Murphy was one of the favorites in the 100m backstroke, having won in Rio eight years ago, but his bronze medal wasnât a shock. Carson Foster had good credentials in the menâs 400m individual medley, but no one was beating Marchand in that final. Even the mighty Katie Ledecky wasnât the favorite in the womenâs 400m freestyle.
The gold medals Team USA have won, aside from womenâs team gymnastics, were mild to moderate surprises. The US menâs 4Ă100m freestyle relay improved from bronze at last yearâs world championships to gold this year. Last year, Torri Huske and Gretchen Walsh were third and eighth in the womenâs 100m butterfly; this year, they took gold and silver. Lee Kiefer was the defending champion in womenâs foil fencing, but only two fencers in Olympic history had pulled off back-to-back gold medals in the event. Yet, she delivered.
Among the USAâs 26 medals through Tuesday, many may not have been shocks but were far from certain. Kassidy Cook and Sarah Bacon in synchronized diving. Haley Batten in mountain biking. The menâs gymnastics team. The womenâs rugby sevens team. Lauren Scruggs, the runner-up to Kiefer in fencing.
Other athletes lived up to lofty expectations. Jagger Eaton and Nyjah Huston in menâs street skateboarding. ChloĂ© Dygert in the crash-filled womenâs cycling time trial. In swimming, despite taking âonlyâ two gold medals, the US team has 15 medals â more than every countryâs entire Olympic contingents through day four aside from the hosts, France.
None of this is to suggest that US fans should be overjoyed by overachievement across the board. Whatever boxing judges are looking for, the US men arenât delivering. US shooters are having a down year. Coco Gauff and Jessica Pegula bowed out of womenâs tennis singles far too soon, though theyâve teamed up on one of the five US doubles teams that have posted a combined 6-0 record so far. The heralded, experienced 3×3 basketball teams looked befuddled in their debuts Tuesday. Everyone in the USA is suddenly a surfing expert, dissecting why John John Florence and Griffin Colapinto are out.
But weâre still not looking at enough data to suggest that the USA will fall far short of expectations in Paris â if there are widespread US failures in track and field and in teams sports like basketball then maybe we need to reassess. And most countries would be celebrating both the continued achievement of their veterans (Ledecky, Murphy, Eaton) along with a lot of newly emerging Olympic stars â Batten, Scruggs, Cook and Bacon, Stephen Nedoroscik, Fred Richard, Alex Sedrick, Taryn Kloth and Kristen Nuss. In most countries, the rest of the world wouldnât be eagerly waiting for them to âfailâ by taking âonlyâ a silver or bronze.
But, in the Olympics, the US is not most countries.