Zambia at the Olympics

Zambia participated for the first time at the Olympic Games under the current name in 1968, and has since taken part in every Summer Olympic Games with the exception of 1976. Previously, it competed as Northern Rhodesia in 1964 and under the banner of Rhodesia in 1960. Zambia has never sent athletes to compete in the Winter Olympic Games.

Zambia at the
Olympics
IOC codeZAM
NOCNational Olympic Committee of Zambia
Websitewww.nocz.co.zm
Medals
Gold
0
Silver
1
Bronze
1
Total
2
Summer appearances
Other related appearances
 Rhodesia (1960)

Zambian athletes have won two medals in two sports. Boxer Keith Mwila won the country's first Olympic medal, a bronze, in the light flyweight category at the 1984 Summer Olympics, and twelve years later, Samuel Matete secured the silver medal in the men's 400 metres hurdles.

The National Olympic Committee of Zambia (NOCZ) was created in 1951 and recognised by the International Olympic Committee in 1963.

Medal tables

Medals by Games

Games Athletes Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank
1960 Romeas part of  Rhodesia (RHO)
1964 Tokyo120000
1968 Mexico City70000
1972 Munich140000
1976 Montrealdid not participate
1980 Moscow400000
1984 Los Angeles16001143
1988 Seoul310000
1992 Barcelona90000
1996 Atlanta8010161
2000 Sydney80000
2004 Athens60000
2008 Beijing80000
2012 London70000
2016 Rio de Janeiro70000
2020 Tokyofuture event
2024 Paris
2028 Los Angeles
Total0112124

Medals by sport

SportGoldSilverBronzeTotal
Athletics0101
Boxing0011
Totals (2 sports)0112

List of medalists

Medal Name Games Sport Event
 SilverSamuel Matete 1996 Atlanta AthleticsMen's 400 metres hurdles
 BronzeKeith Mwila 1984 Los Angeles BoxingLight flyweight (–48 kg)

See also

  • "Zambia". International Olympic Committee.
  • "Results and Medalists—Zambia". Olympic.org. International Olympic Committee.
  • "Olympic Medal Winners". International Olympic Committee.
  • "Zambia". Sports-Reference.com. Archived from the original on 2020-04-17.
  • "Digital Library Collection – Official Olympic Reports". la84.org. LA84 Foundation. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
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