From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bosnia and Herzegovina at the
Olympics
IOC codeBIH
NOC Olympic Committee of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Website www.okbih.ba (in Bosnian, Serbian, and Croatian)
Medals
Gold
0
Silver
0
Bronze
0
Total
0
Summer appearances
Winter appearances
Other related appearances
  Yugoslavia (1920–1992 W)

Bosnia and Herzegovina sent athletes to the Summer Olympic Games under its own flag for the first time in 1992. Bosnian athletes competed under the Yugoslav flag (see Yugoslavia at the Olympics) until the breakup of that country. Along with Albania, Andorra and Monaco, Bosnia and Herzegovina is one of four current European participants that have never won an Olympic medal.

The Olympic Committee of Bosnia and Herzegovina was formed in 1992 and recognized in 1993.

Medal tables

Competitors by sport

The following is a list of the total number of competitors by sport in the Games.

Summer

Sport Men Women Total
Athletics 15 8 23
Canoeing 3 0 3
Judo 5 3 8
Shooting 6 3 9
Swimming 9 5 14
Table Tennis 2 0 2
Taekwondo 2 0 2
Tennis 2 1 3
Weightlifting 1 0 1
Wrestling 1 0 1
Total 46 20 66

Winter

Sport Men Women Total
Alpine skiing 10 9 19
Biathlon 1 3 4
Bobsleigh 10 0 10
Cross-country skiing 6 5 11
Luge 3 1 4
Total 30 18 48

Flagbearers

Pre-1992 Yugoslavian medalists from Bosnia-Herzegovina

Bosnian-Herzegovinian athletes have won medals on many occasions in different sports as part of teams and one as individual competitors (boxing) representing Yugoslavia. [1] [2]

Association Football

Medal Games Team Names
 Silver United Kingdom 1948 London Men Miroslav Brozović
 Silver Australia 1956 Melbourne Men Ibrahim Biogradlić and Muhamed Mujić
 Gold Italy 1960 Rome Men Tomislav Knez and Velimir Sombolac
 Bronze United States 1984 Los Angeles Men Mehmed Baždarević, Mirsad Baljić, Vlado Čapljić, Admir Smajić

Basketball

Medal Games Team Names
 Gold Soviet Union 1980 Moscow Men Mirza Delibašić, Dražen Dalipagić, Ratko Radovanović
 Bronze Soviet Union 1980 Moscow Women Mersada Bećirspahić, Vera Đurašković
 Bronze United States 1984 Los Angeles Men Dražen Dalipagić, Emir Mutapčić, Ratko Radovanović, Sabit Hadžić
 Silver South Korea 1988 Seoul Women Razija Mujanović, Mara Lakić, Slađana Golić, Vesna Bajkuša

Boxing

Medal Games Team Names
 Gold United States 1984 Los Angeles Men Anton Josipović

Handball

Medal Games Team Names
 Gold West Germany 1972 Munich Men Abaz Arslanagić, Milorad Karalić, Đorđe Lavrnić, Dobrivoj Selec
 Gold United States 1984 Los Angeles Women Svetlana Kitić, Jasna Kolar-Merdan
 Gold United States 1984 Los Angeles Men Zlatan Arnautović, Jovica Elezović, Zdravko Rađenović, Branko Štrbac, Zdravko Zovko
 Bronze South Korea 1988 Seoul Men Iztok Puc, Zlatko Saračević, Irfan Smajlagić, Ermin Velić, Muhamed Memić

See also

References

  1. ^ Besalet Kazazovic. "PARTICIPATION OF THE BH. ATHLETES IN ASSERTION OF THE OLYMPIC MOVEMENT" (in English and Bosnian). Olympic Committee of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Archived from the original on 1 February 2015. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  2. ^ Sports-Reference.com. "Žarko Varajić Biography and Olympic Results | Olympics at Sports-Reference.com". Sports-Reference.com. Archived from the original on 2 November 2012. Retrieved 7 August 2012.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bosnia and Herzegovina at the
Olympics
IOC codeBIH
NOC Olympic Committee of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Website www.okbih.ba (in Bosnian, Serbian, and Croatian)
Medals
Gold
0
Silver
0
Bronze
0
Total
0
Summer appearances
Winter appearances
Other related appearances
  Yugoslavia (1920–1992 W)

Bosnia and Herzegovina sent athletes to the Summer Olympic Games under its own flag for the first time in 1992. Bosnian athletes competed under the Yugoslav flag (see Yugoslavia at the Olympics) until the breakup of that country. Along with Albania, Andorra and Monaco, Bosnia and Herzegovina is one of four current European participants that have never won an Olympic medal.

The Olympic Committee of Bosnia and Herzegovina was formed in 1992 and recognized in 1993.

Medal tables

Competitors by sport

The following is a list of the total number of competitors by sport in the Games.

Summer

Sport Men Women Total
Athletics 15 8 23
Canoeing 3 0 3
Judo 5 3 8
Shooting 6 3 9
Swimming 9 5 14
Table Tennis 2 0 2
Taekwondo 2 0 2
Tennis 2 1 3
Weightlifting 1 0 1
Wrestling 1 0 1
Total 46 20 66

Winter

Sport Men Women Total
Alpine skiing 10 9 19
Biathlon 1 3 4
Bobsleigh 10 0 10
Cross-country skiing 6 5 11
Luge 3 1 4
Total 30 18 48

Flagbearers

Pre-1992 Yugoslavian medalists from Bosnia-Herzegovina

Bosnian-Herzegovinian athletes have won medals on many occasions in different sports as part of teams and one as individual competitors (boxing) representing Yugoslavia. [1] [2]

Association Football

Medal Games Team Names
 Silver United Kingdom 1948 London Men Miroslav Brozović
 Silver Australia 1956 Melbourne Men Ibrahim Biogradlić and Muhamed Mujić
 Gold Italy 1960 Rome Men Tomislav Knez and Velimir Sombolac
 Bronze United States 1984 Los Angeles Men Mehmed Baždarević, Mirsad Baljić, Vlado Čapljić, Admir Smajić

Basketball

Medal Games Team Names
 Gold Soviet Union 1980 Moscow Men Mirza Delibašić, Dražen Dalipagić, Ratko Radovanović
 Bronze Soviet Union 1980 Moscow Women Mersada Bećirspahić, Vera Đurašković
 Bronze United States 1984 Los Angeles Men Dražen Dalipagić, Emir Mutapčić, Ratko Radovanović, Sabit Hadžić
 Silver South Korea 1988 Seoul Women Razija Mujanović, Mara Lakić, Slađana Golić, Vesna Bajkuša

Boxing

Medal Games Team Names
 Gold United States 1984 Los Angeles Men Anton Josipović

Handball

Medal Games Team Names
 Gold West Germany 1972 Munich Men Abaz Arslanagić, Milorad Karalić, Đorđe Lavrnić, Dobrivoj Selec
 Gold United States 1984 Los Angeles Women Svetlana Kitić, Jasna Kolar-Merdan
 Gold United States 1984 Los Angeles Men Zlatan Arnautović, Jovica Elezović, Zdravko Rađenović, Branko Štrbac, Zdravko Zovko
 Bronze South Korea 1988 Seoul Men Iztok Puc, Zlatko Saračević, Irfan Smajlagić, Ermin Velić, Muhamed Memić

See also

References

  1. ^ Besalet Kazazovic. "PARTICIPATION OF THE BH. ATHLETES IN ASSERTION OF THE OLYMPIC MOVEMENT" (in English and Bosnian). Olympic Committee of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Archived from the original on 1 February 2015. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  2. ^ Sports-Reference.com. "Žarko Varajić Biography and Olympic Results | Olympics at Sports-Reference.com". Sports-Reference.com. Archived from the original on 2 November 2012. Retrieved 7 August 2012.

External links


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