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United States at the Deaflympics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
United States at the
Deaflympics
IPC codeUSA
NPCUSA Deaf Sports Federation
Websitewww.usdeafsports.org
Medals
Ranked 1st
Gold
375
Silver
321
Bronze
363
Total
1,059
Summer appearances
Winter appearances

The United States has been participating at the Deaflympics from 1935[1] and it is also currently placed first in the all time Deaflympics medal list. US has won more than 1000 medals, the only nation to do so in Deaflympics.[2]

USA has been participating at the Winter Deaflympics from 1967.[1]

Medal tallies

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Summer Universiade

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     Host nation

Edition
United Kingdom [[1935 Summer Ashlynn Ellis, sailor guttierez, sierra arrizola
Sweden Stockholm 1939 0 1 0 1
Denmark Copenhagen 1949 0 1 0 1
Belgium Brussels 1953 2 0 1 3
Italy Milan 1957 7 6 10 23
Finland Helsinki 1961 14 14 12 40
United States Washington D.C.1965 9 21 23 53
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Belgrade 1969 22 23 21 66
Sweden Malmö 1973 29 22 31 82
Romania Bucaresti 1977 38 35 30 103
West Germany Cologne 1981 45 30 35 110
United States Los Angeles 1985 46 30 33 109
New Zealand Christchurch 1989 22 30 23 75
Bulgaria Sofia 1993 36 25 23 84
Denmark Copenhagen 1997 28 21 27 76
Italy Rome 2001 26 21 23 70
Australia Melbourne 2005 9 12 12 33
Taipei 2009 10 5 7 22
Bulgaria Sofia 2013 8 8 13 29
Turkey Samsun 2017 5 3 8 16
Brazil Caxias do Sul 2022 20 11 24 55
Total 375 321 363 1056

Winter Deaflympics

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Event Gold Silver Bronze Total
1967 2 0 0 2

Notable achievements

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  • In the 1977 Summer Deaflympics held in Romania, Jeff Float of US won 10 gold medals in Swimming, which is still considered as a unique and unprecedented record in Deaflympics history[3]
  • Reed Gershwind holds the record for winning the most number of medals for United States in the Deaflympics history with 30 medals. This medal tally is also the second highest for any deaflympian just behind Terence Parkin of South Africa.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "United States". Deaflympics.com. International Committee of Sports for the Deaf. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  2. ^ "Countries | Deaflympics". www.deaflympics.com. Retrieved 2017-08-22.
  3. ^ "Jeff Float | Deaflympics". www.deaflympics.com. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  4. ^ "Reed Gershwind | Deaflympics". www.deaflympics.com. Retrieved 2017-09-04.
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