The 2000 Summer Olympics, officially the Games of the XXVII Olympiad, officially branded as Sydney 2000, and also known as the Games of the New Millennium, were an international multi-sport event held from 15 September to 1 October 2000 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It marked the second time the Summer Olympics were held in Australia, and in the Southern Hemisphere, the first being in Melbourne, in 1956.

Teams from 199 countries participated in the 2000 Games, which were the first to feature at least 300 events in its official sports program. The Games were estimated to have cost A$6.6 billion. These were the final Olympic Games under the IOC presidency of Juan Antonio Samaranch before the arrival of his successor Jacques Rogge.

The final medal tally at the 2000 Summer Olympics was led by the United States, followed by Russia and China with host Australia in fourth place overall. Cameroon, Colombia, Latvia, Mozambique, and Slovenia won a gold medal for the first time in their Olympic histories, while Barbados, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Macedonia, Saudi Arabia, and Vietnam won their first-ever Olympic medals.

The 2000 Games received universal acclaim, with the organisation, volunteers, sportsmanship, and Australian public being lauded in the international media. Bill Bryson of The Times called the Sydney Games "one of the most successful events on the world stage", saying that they "couldn't be better". James Mossop of the Electronic Telegraph called the Games "such a success that any city considering bidding for future Olympics must be wondering how it can reach the standards set by Sydney", while Jack Todd of the Montreal Gazette suggested that the "IOC should quit while it's ahead. Admit there can never be a better Olympic Games, and be done with it," as "Sydney was both exceptional and the best". These Games would provide the inspiration for London's winning bid for the 2012 Olympic Games in 2005; in preparing for the 2012 Games, Lord Coe declared the 2000 Games the "benchmark for the spirit of the Games, unquestionably", admitting that the London organizing committee "attempted in several ways to emulate what the Sydney Organising Committee did." This is also the first Olympics to take place fully in Australia because the 1956 Melbourne Olympics had equestrian events take place in Stockholm because of Australia's strict quarantine regulations.

Australia will host the Summer Olympics in Brisbane in 2032, making it the first Asia-Pacific country to host the Summer Olympics three times.

Host city selection

Sydney won the right to host the Games on 24 September 1993, after being selected over Beijing, Berlin, Istanbul, and Manchester in four rounds of voting, at the 101st IOC Session in Monte Carlo, Monaco.

2000 Summer Olympics bidding results
CityCountryRound
1234
SydneyAustralia30303745
BeijingChina32374043
ManchesterGreat Britain111311
BerlinGermany99
IstanbulTurkey7

Beijing would later be selected to host the 2008 Summer Olympics eight years later on 13 July 2001 and the 2022 Winter Olympics twenty-two years later on 31 July 2015.

Brasília, Milan, and Tashkent made bids before deciding to withdraw during the bidding process. Milan would later be selected to host the 2026 Winter Olympics along with Cortina d'Ampezzo twenty-six years later on 24 June 2019.

The Games

Costs

The Oxford Olympics Study 2016 estimates the outturn cost of the Sydney 2000 Summer Olympics at US$5 billion in 2015 dollars and cost overrun at 90% in real terms. This includes sports-related costs only; that is, (i) operational costs incurred by the organising committee to stage the Games, e.g., expenditures for technology, transportation, workforce, administration, security, catering, ceremonies, and medical services, and (ii) direct capital costs incurred by the host city and country or private investors to build; e.g., the competition venues, the Olympic village, international broadcast centre, and media and press centre, which are required to host the Games. Indirect capital costs are not included, such as for road, rail, airport infrastructure, hotel upgrades, or other business investments incurred in preparation for the Games but not directly related to staging the Games. The cost for Sydney 2000 compares with a cost of US$4.6 billion for Rio 2016, US$40‍–‍44 billion for Beijing 2008, and US$51 billion for Sochi 2014, the most expensive Olympics in history. The average cost for the Summer Games since 1960 is US$5.2 billion, average cost overrun is 176%.

In 2000, the Auditor-General of New South Wales reported that the Sydney Games cost A$6.6 billion, with a net cost to the public between A$1.7 and A$2.4 billion. In the years leading up to the Games, funds were shifted from education and health programs to cover Olympic expenses.

It has been estimated that the economic impact of the 2000 Olympics was that A$2.1 billion has been shaved from public consumption. Economic growth was not stimulated to a net benefit, and, in the years after 2000, foreign tourism to NSW grew by less than tourism to Australia as a whole. A "multiplier" effect on broader economic development was not realised, as a simple "multiplier" analysis fails to capture that resources have to be redirected from elsewhere: the building of a stadium is at the expense of other public works such as extensions to hospitals. Building sporting venues does not add to the aggregate stock of productive capital in the years following the Games: "Equestrian centers, softball compounds, and man-made rapids are not particularly useful beyond their immediate function."

Many venues that were constructed in Sydney Olympic Park failed financially in the years immediately following the Olympics to meet the expected bookings to meet upkeep expenses. It was only the 2003 Rugby World Cup that reconnected the park back to citizens. In recent years,[when?] infrastructure costs for some facilities have been of growing concern to the NSW Government, especially facilities in Western Sydney. Proposed metro and light rail links from Olympic Park to Parramatta have been estimated to cost in the same order of magnitude as the public expenditure on the Games.[citation needed] Stadium Australia had been considered for demolition in 2017 by then NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian, citing that the stadium was "built for an Olympics" but not for modern spectators. The plan was scrapped in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Dunc Gray Velodrome has also struggled to keep up its $500,000-per-year maintenance costs, although it is still used for track cycling events.

Chronological summary of the 2000 Summer Olympics

Although the Opening Ceremony was not scheduled until 15 September, the football competitions began with preliminary matches on 13 September. Among the pre-ceremony fixtures, host nation Australia lost 1‍–‍0 to Italy at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, which was the main stadium for the 1956 Melbourne Olympics.

Day 1: 15 September

Cultural display highlights

The 2000 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony at Stadium Australia, 15 September 2000

The opening ceremony began with a tribute to the pastoral heritage of the Australian stockmen and the importance of the stock horse in Australia's heritage. It was produced and filmed by the Sydney Olympic Broadcasting Organisation and the home nation broadcaster Seven Network. This was introduced by lone rider Steve Jefferys and his rearing Australian stock horse "Ammo". At the cracking of Jefferys' stockwhip, a further 120 riders entered the stadium, their stock horses performing intricate steps, including forming the five Olympic Rings, sounded by a new version of the song that Bruce Rowland had previously composed for the 1982 film The Man from Snowy River.

The Australian National Anthem was sung in the first verse by Human Nature and the second by Julie Anthony.

The cultural segments of the event take place with many aspects of the land and its people: the affinity of the mainly coastal-dwelling Australians with the sea that surrounds the Island Continent. The indigenous inhabitation of the land, the coming of the First Fleet, the continued immigration from many nations, and the rural industry on which the economy of the nation was built, including a display representing the harshness of rural life based on the paintings of Sir Sidney Nolan. Two memorable scenes were the representation of the heart of the country by 200 Aboriginal women from Central Australia who danced up "the mighty spirit of god to protect the Games" and the overwhelmingly noisy representation of the construction industry by hundreds of tap-dancing teenagers.[citation needed]

Because the wife of then-IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch was seriously ill and unable to accompany her husband to the Olympics, Dawn Fraser, former Australian Olympic Champion swimmer and member of the Parliament of New South Wales, accompanied Samaranch during the Australian cultural segments, explaining to him some of the cultural references that are unfamiliar for the people from outside Australia.

Formal presentation

A record 199 nations entered the stadium, with a record 80 of them winning at least one medal. The only missing IOC member was Afghanistan, which was banned due to the extremist rule of the Taliban's oppression of women and its prohibition of sports. The ceremony featured a unified entrance by the athletes of North and South Korea, using a specially designed unification flag: a white background flag with a blue map of the Korean Peninsula. Four athletes from East Timor also marched in the parade of nations as individual Olympic athletes and marched directly before the host country. Although the country-to-be had no National Olympic Committee then, they were allowed to compete under the Olympic Flag with country code IOA. The Governor-General, Sir William Deane, opened the games.

The Olympic Flag was carried around the arena by eight former Australian Olympic champions: Bill Roycroft, Murray Rose, Liane Tooth, Gillian Rolton, Marjorie Jackson, Lorraine Crapp, Michael Wenden and Nick Green. During the raising of the Olympics Flag, the Olympic Hymn was sung by the Millennium Choir of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia in Greek. Following this, Tina Arena sang a purpose-written pop song, The Flame.

The opening ceremony concluded with the lighting of the Olympic Flame, which was brought into the stadium by former Australian Olympic champion Herb Elliott. Then, celebrating one hundred years of women's participation in the Olympic Games, former Australian women Olympic medalists Betty Cuthbert and Raelene Boyle, Dawn Fraser, Shirley Strickland (later Shirley Strickland de la Hunty), Shane Gould and Debbie Flintoff-King brought the torch through the stadium, handing it over to Cathy Freeman, who lit the flame in the cauldron within a circle of fire. The choice of Freeman, an Aboriginal woman, to light the flame was notable given the history of human rights abuses against Aboriginal people in Australia. Following her lighting, Freeman was the subject of racial abuse from some Australians. The planned spectacular climax to the ceremony was delayed by the technical glitch of a computer switch which malfunctioned, causing the sequence to shut down by giving a false reading. This meant that the Olympic flame was suspended in mid-air for about four minutes rather than immediately rising up a water-covered ramp to the top of the stadium. When the cause of the problem was discovered, the program was overridden and the cauldron continued its course, and the ceremony concluded with a fireworks display.

Day 2: 16 September

Gold medallist Nancy Johnson (centre) of the U.S., raises her hands with silver medallist Kang Cho-hyun (left), of South Korea, and bronze winner Gao Jing (right), of China, during the first medal ceremony of the 2000 Olympic Games.

The first medals of the Games were awarded in the women's 10-metre air rifle competition, which was won by Nancy Johnson of the United States.

The triathlon made its Olympic debut with the women's race. Set in the surroundings of the Sydney Opera House, Brigitte McMahon representing Switzerland swam, cycled and ran to the first gold medal in the sport, beating the favoured home athletes such as Michelie Jones who won silver. McMahon only passed Jones in sight of the finish line.

The first star of the Games was 17-year-old Australian Ian Thorpe, who first set a new world record in the 400-metre freestyle final before competing in an exciting 4 × 100 m freestyle final. Swimming the last leg, Thorpe passed the leading American team and arrived in a new world record time, two-tenths of a second ahead of the Americans. In the same event for women, the Americans also broke the world record, finishing ahead of the Netherlands and Sweden.

Samaranch had to leave for home, as his wife was severely ill. Upon arrival, his wife had already died. Samaranch returned to Sydney four days later. The Olympic flag was flown at half-staff during the period as a sign of respect to Samaranch's wife.

Day 3: 17 September

Canadian Simon Whitfield sprinted away in the last 100 metres of the men's triathlon, becoming the inaugural winner in the event.

On the cycling track, Robert Bartko beat fellow German Jens Lehmann in the individual pursuit, setting a new Olympic Record. Leontien Zijlaard-van Moorsel set a world record in the semi-finals the same event for women.

In the swimming pool, American Tom Dolan beat the world record in the 400-metre medley, successfully defending the title he won in Atlanta four years prior. Dutchwoman Inge de Bruijn also clocked a new world record, beating her own time in the 100 m butterfly final to win by more than a second.

Day 4: 18 September

The main event for the Australians on the fourth day of the Games was the 200 m freestyle. Dutchman Pieter van den Hoogenband had broken the world record in the semi-finals, taking it from the new Australian hero Ian Thorpe, who came close to the world record in his semi-final heat. As the final race finished, Van den Hoogenband's time was exactly the same as in the semi-finals, finishing ahead of Thorpe by half a second.

China won the gold medal in the men's team all-around gymnastics competition after being the runner-up in the previous two Olympics. The other medals were taken by Ukraine and Russia, respectively.

Zijlaard-van Moorsel lived up to the expectations set by her world record in cycling in the semis by winning the gold medal.

Day 7: 21 September

During the Women's Gymnastics All-Around, female athletes suffered damning scores and injuries due to improperly installed gymnastics equipment. Gymnasts performing on the vault gave uncharacteristically poor performances and fell. Officials blamed the series of falls and low scores on performance anxiety. It was not until Australian gymnast Allana Slater and her coach, Peggy Liddick, voiced concerns about the equipment that officials discovered the apparatus was five centimetres, or almost two inches, lower than it should have been. While athletes were given the opportunity to perform again, for some of them, the damage to their mental or physical health caused by the vault was irreparable. Chinese gymnast Kui Yuanyuan and American gymnast Kristen Maloney both injured their legs while attempting to stick their landings, with Kui needing to be carried to an examination area and Maloney damaging a titanium rod that had recently been implanted in her shin. Romanian gymnast Andreea Răducan ultimately took gold while her teammates, Simona Amânar and Maria Olaru took silver and bronze, respectively.

Day 9: 23 September

By rowing in the winning coxless four, Steve Redgrave of Great Britain became a member of a select group who had won gold medals at five consecutive Olympics.

The swimming 4 x 100-metre medley relay of B.J. Bedford, Megan Quann (Jendrick), Jenny Thompson and Dara Torres became the first women's relay team to finish in under four minutes, swimming 3:58 and setting a world record, claiming the gold medal for the United States.

Day 10: 24 September

Rulon Gardner, never an NCAA champion or a world medalist, beat Alexander Karelin of Russia to win gold in the super heavyweight class, Greco-Roman wrestling. Karelin had won gold in Seoul, Barcelona and Atlanta. Before this fight, he had never lost in international competition, had been unbeaten in all competitions in thirteen years, and had not surrendered a point in a decade.

Day 11: 25 September

Cathy Freeman after the 400-metre final

Australian Cathy Freeman won the 400-metre final in front of a jubilant Sydney crowd at the Olympic Stadium, ahead of Lorraine Graham of Jamaica and Katharine Merry of Great Britain. Freeman's win made her the first competitor in Olympic Games history to light the Olympic Flame and then go on to win a gold medal. The attendance at the stadium was 112,524 – the largest attendance for any sport in Olympic Games history.

In a men's basketball pool match between the United States and France, the USA's Vince Carter made one of the most famous dunks in basketball history. After getting the ball off a steal, the 6'6"/1.98 m Carter drove to the basket, with 7'2"/2.18 m centre Frédéric Weis in his way. Carter jumped, spread his legs in midair, scraped Weis' head on the way up, and dunked. The French media dubbed the feat le dunk de la mort ("the dunk of death").

Day 14: 28 September

The Canadian flag at the athletes' village was lowered to half-mast, as Canadian athletes paid tribute to the former prime minister Pierre Trudeau after hearing of his death in Montreal (because of the time zone difference, it was 29 September in Sydney when Trudeau died). The Canadian flag was flown at half-mast for the remainder of the Olympics, on orders from both IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch and Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy. The state funeral took place on 3 October, two days after the closing ceremony, allowing enough time for those concerned to head back to Canada after the Games and attend his funeral.[citation needed]

Day 16: 30 September

Cameroon won a historic gold medal over Spain in the Men's Olympic Football Final at the Olympic Stadium. The game went to a penalty shootout, which was won by Cameroon 5‍–‍3.

Day 17: 1 October

Olympic colours on the Sydney Harbour Bridge

The last event of the Games was the Men's Marathon, contested on a course that started in North Sydney. The event was won by Ethiopian Gezahegne Abera, with Kenyan Erick Wainaina second, and Tesfaye Tola, also of Ethiopia, third. It was the first time since the 1968 Olympics that an Ethiopian won the gold medal in this event.

The closing ceremony commenced with Christine Anu performing her version of the Warumpi Band's song "My Island Home", with several Aboriginal dancers atop the Geodome Stage in the middle of the stadium, around which several hundred umbrella and lamp box kids created an image of Aboriginal Dreamtime. The Geodome Stage was used throughout the ceremony, which was a flat stage mechanically raised into the shape of a geode.

IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch declared at the Closing Ceremony,

I am proud and happy to proclaim that you have presented to the world the best Olympic Games ever.

Subsequent Summer Olympics held in Athens, Beijing and London have been described by Samaranch's successor Jacques Rogge as "unforgettable, dream Games", "truly exceptional" and "happy and glorious games", respectively – the practice of declaring games the "best ever" having been retired after the 2000 Games.

Sports

The 2000 Summer Olympic program featured 300 events in the following 28 sports:

2000 Summer Olympics Sports Program
Aquatics Diving (8) Swimming (32) Synchronized swimming (2) Water polo (2) Archery (4) Athletics (46) Badminton (5) Baseball (1) Basketball (2) Boxing (12) Canoeing Sprint (12) Slalom (4) Cycling Road (4) Track (12) Mountain biking (2) Equestrian Dressage (2) Eventing (2) Show jumping (2) Fencing (10) Field hockey (2) Football (2) Gymnastics Artistic (14) Rhythmic (2) Trampoline (2) Handball (2) Judo (14) Modern pentathlon (2) Rowing (14) Sailing (11) Shooting (17) Softball (1) Table tennis (4) Taekwondo (8) Tennis (4) Triathlon (2) Volleyball Volleyball (2) Beach volleyball (2) Weightlifting (15) Wrestling Freestyle (8) Greco-Roman (8)
Aquatics Diving (8) Swimming (32) Synchronized swimming (2) Water polo (2) Archery (4) Athletics (46) Badminton (5) Baseball (1) Basketball (2) Boxing (12)Canoeing Sprint (12) Slalom (4) Cycling Road (4) Track (12) Mountain biking (2) Equestrian Dressage (2) Eventing (2) Show jumping (2) Fencing (10)Field hockey (2) Football (2) Gymnastics Artistic (14) Rhythmic (2) Trampoline (2) Handball (2) Judo (14) Modern pentathlon (2) Rowing (14) Sailing (11) Shooting (17)Softball (1) Table tennis (4) Taekwondo (8) Tennis (4) Triathlon (2) Volleyball Volleyball (2) Beach volleyball (2) Weightlifting (15) Wrestling Freestyle (8) Greco-Roman (8)

Although demonstration sports were abolished following the 1992 Summer Olympics, the Sydney Olympics featured wheelchair racing as exhibition events on the athletics schedule.

Special quarantine conditions were introduced to allow entry of horses into Australia to participate in equestrian events, avoiding the need for such events to take place elsewhere as had happened at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne.

Calendar

All dates are in AEDST (UTC+11); the other two cities, Adelaide uses ACST (UTC+9:30) and Brisbane uses AEST (UTC+10)

OCOpening ceremonyEvent competitions1Gold medal eventsCCClosing ceremony
September/October 2000SeptemberOctEvents
13th Wed14th Thu15th Fri16th Sat17th Sun18th Mon19th Tue20th Wed21st Thu22nd Fri23rd Sat24th Sun25th Mon26th Tue27th Wed28th Thu29th Fri30th Sat1st Sun
CeremoniesOCCC—N/a
AquaticsDiving2113144
Swimming44444444
Synchronised swimming11
Water polo11
Archery11114
Athletics23597658146
Badminton2125
Baseball/Softball
Baseball12
Softball1
Basketball112
Boxing6612
CanoeingSlalom2216
Sprint66
CyclingRoad cycling11218
Track cycling221133
Mountain biking11
Equestrian1111116
Fencing11111211110
Field hockey112
Football112
GymnasticsArtistic11115518
Rhythmic11
Trampolining11
Handball112
Judo222222214
Modern pentathlon112
Rowing7714
Sailing3122311
Shooting222232217
Table tennis11114
Taekwondo22228
Tennis224
Triathlon112
VolleyballBeach volleyball114
Indoor volleyball11
Weightlifting122222111115
Wrestling444416
Daily medal events13141515181818262518111717114024300
Cumulative total132742577593111137162180191208225236276300
September/October 200013th Wed14th Thu15th Fri16th Sat17th Sun18th Mon19th Tue20th Wed21st Thu22nd Fri23rd Sat24th Sun25th Mon26th Tue27th Wed28th Thu29th Fri30th Sat1st SunTotal events
SeptemberOct

Participating National Olympic Committees

Participating countries
Number of athletes

199 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) participated in the Sydney Games, two more than in the 1996 Summer Olympics; in addition, there were four Timorese Individual Olympic Athletes. Eritrea, the Federated States of Micronesia and Palau made their Olympic debut this year.

Democratic Republic of the Congo was once again designated under that name, after it participated as Zaire from 1984 to 1996.

Afghanistan was the only 1996 participant (and the only existing NOC) that did not participate in the 2000 Olympics, having been banned due to the Taliban's totalitarian rule in Afghanistan, their oppression of women, and its prohibition of sports.

Participating National Olympic Committees
Albania (4) Algeria (47) American Samoa (4) Andorra (5) Angola (30) Antigua and Barbuda (3) Argentina (143) Armenia (25) Aruba (5) Australia (617) (host) Austria (92) Azerbaijan (31) Bahamas (25) Bahrain (4) Bangladesh (5) Barbados (18) Belarus (139) Belgium (68) Belize (2) Benin (4) Bermuda (6) Bhutan (2) Bolivia (5) Bosnia and Herzegovina (9) Botswana (7) Brazil (198) British Virgin Islands (1) Brunei (2) Bulgaria (91) Burkina Faso (4) Burundi (6) Cambodia (4) Cameroon (34) Canada (294) Cape Verde (2) Cayman Islands (3) Central African Republic (3) Chad (2) Chile (50) China (271) Colombia (44) Comoros (2) Republic of the Congo (5) Cook Islands (2) Costa Rica (7) Croatia (88) Cuba (229) Cyprus (22) Czech Republic (119) Democratic Republic of the Congo (2) Denmark (97) Djibouti (2) Dominica (4) Dominican Republic (13) Ecuador (10) Egypt (89) El Salvador (8) Equatorial Guinea (4) Eritrea (3) Estonia (33) Ethiopia (26) Federated States of Micronesia (5) Fiji (7) Finland (70) France (336) Gabon (5) The Gambia (2) Georgia (36) Germany (422) Ghana (22) Great Britain (310) Greece (140) Grenada (3) Guam (7) Guatemala (15) Guinea (6) Guinea-Bissau (3) Guyana (4) Haiti (5) Honduras (20) Hong Kong (31) Hungary (178) Iceland (18) India (65) Individual Olympic Athletes (4) Indonesia (47) Iran (33) Iraq (4) Ireland (64) Israel (39) Italy (361) Ivory Coast (14) Jamaica (48) Japan (266) Jordan (8) Kazakhstan (130) Kenya (56) Kuwait (29) Kyrgyzstan (48) Laos (3) Latvia (45) Lebanon (6) Lesotho (6) Liberia (8) Libya (3) Liechtenstein (2) Lithuania (61) Luxembourg (7) Macedonia (10) Madagascar (11) Malawi (2) Malaysia (40) Maldives (4) Mali (5) Malta (7) Mauritania (2) Mauritius (20) Mexico (78) Moldova (34) Monaco (4) Mongolia (20) Morocco (55) Mozambique (5) Myanmar (7) Namibia (11) Nauru (2) Nepal (5) Netherlands (231) Netherlands Antilles (7) New Zealand (147) Nicaragua (6) Niger (4) Nigeria (83) North Korea (31) Norway (93) Oman (6) Pakistan (27) Palau (5) Palestine (2) Panama (6) Papua New Guinea (5) Paraguay (5) Peru (21) Philippines (20) Poland (187) Portugal (61) Puerto Rico (29) Qatar (17) Romania (145) Russia (435) Rwanda (5) Saint Kitts and Nevis (2) Saint Lucia (5) Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (4) Samoa (5) San Marino (4) São Tomé and Príncipe (2) Saudi Arabia (18) Senegal (26) Seychelles (9) Sierra Leone (3) Singapore (14) Slovakia (108) Slovenia (74) Solomon Islands (2) Somalia (2) South Africa (127) South Korea (281) Spain (321) Sri Lanka (18) Sudan (3) Suriname (4) Swaziland (6) Sweden (150) Switzerland (102) Syria Syria (8) Chinese Taipei (55) Tajikistan (4) Tanzania (4) Thailand (52) Togo (3) Tonga (3) Trinidad and Tobago (19) Tunisia (47) Turkey (57) Turkmenistan (8) Uganda (13) Ukraine (230) United Arab Emirates (4) United States (586) Uruguay (15) Uzbekistan (70) Vanuatu (3) Venezuela (50) Vietnam (7) Virgin Islands (9) Yemen (2) FR Yugoslavia (109) Zambia (8) Zimbabwe (16)

Number of athletes by National Olympic Committee

10,647 athletes from 199 NOCs participated in the 2000 Summer Olympics.

IOC Letter CodeCountryAthletes
ALBAlbania4
ALGAlgeria47
ASAAmerican Samoa4
ANDAndorra5
ANGAngola30
ANTAntigua and Barbuda3
ARGArgentina143
ARMArmenia25
ARUAruba5
AUSAustralia617
AUTAustria92
AZEAzerbaijan31
BAHBahamas25
BRNBahrain4
BANBangladesh5
BARBarbados18
BLRBelarus139
BELBelgium68
BIZBelize2
BENBenin4
BERBermuda6
BHUBhutan2
BOLBolivia5
BIHBosnia and Herzegovina9
BOTBotswana7
BRABrazil198
IVBBritish Virgin Islands1
BRUBrunei2
BULBulgaria91
BURBurkina Faso4
BDIBurundi6
CAMCambodia4
CMRCameroon34
CANCanada294
CPVCape Verde2
CAYCayman Islands3
CAFCentral African Republic3
CHAChad2
CHIChile50
CHNChina271
COLColombia44
COMComoros2
CGORepublic of the Congo5
COKCook Islands2
CRCCosta Rica7
CROCroatia88
CUBCuba229
CYPCyprus22
CZECzech Republic119
CODDemocratic Republic of the Congo2
DENDenmark97
DJIDjibouti2
DMADominica4
DOMDominican Republic13
ECUEcuador10
EGYEgypt89
ESAEl Salvador8
GEQEquatorial Guinea4
ERIEritrea3
ESTEstonia33
ETHEthiopia26
FSMFederated States of Micronesia5
FIJFiji7
FINFinland70
FRAFrance336
GABGabon5
GAMThe Gambia2
GEOGeorgia36
GERGermany422
GHAGhana22
GBRGreat Britain310
GREGreece140
GRNGrenada3
GUMGuam7
GUAGuatemala15
GUIGuinea6
GBSGuinea-Bissau3
GUYGuyana4
HAIHaiti5
HONHonduras20
HKGHong Kong31
HUNHungary178
ISLIceland18
INDIndia65
IOAIndividual Olympic Athletes4
INAIndonesia47
IRIIran33
IRQIraq4
IRLIreland64
ISRIsrael39
ITAItaly361
CIVIvory Coast14
JAMJamaica48
JPNJapan266
JORJordan8
KAZKazakhstan130
KENKenya56
KUWKuwait29
KGZKyrgyzstan48
LAOLaos3
LATLatvia45
LIBLebanon6
LESLesotho6
LBRLiberia8
LBALibya3
LIELiechtenstein2
LTULithuania61
LUXLuxembourg7
MKDMacedonia10
MADMadagascar11
MAWMalawi2
MASMalaysia40
MDVMaldives4
MLIMali5
MLTMalta7
MTNMauritania2
MRIMauritius20
MEXMexico78
MDAMoldova34
MONMonaco4
MGLMongolia20
MARMorocco55
MOZMozambique5
MYAMyanmar7
NAMNamibia11
NRUNauru2
NEPNepal5
NEDNetherlands231
AHONetherlands Antilles7
NZLNew Zealand147
NCANicaragua6
NIGNiger4
NGRNigeria83
PRKNorth Korea31
NORNorway93
OMAOman6
PAKPakistan27
PLWPalau5
PLEPalestine2
PANPanama6
PNGPapua New Guinea5
PARParaguay5
PERPeru21
PHIPhilippines20
POLPoland187
PORPortugal61
PURPuerto Rico29
QATQatar17
ROURomania145
RUSRussia435
RWARwanda5
SKNSaint Kitts and Nevis2
LCASaint Lucia5
VINSaint Vincent and the Grenadines4
SAMSamoa5
SMRSan Marino4
STPSão Tomé and Príncipe2
KSASaudi Arabia18
SENSenegal26
SEYSeychelles9
SLESierra Leone3
SINSingapore14
SVKSlovakia108
SLOSlovenia74
SOLSolomon Islands2
SOMSomalia2
RSASouth Africa127
KORSouth Korea281
ESPSpain321
SRISri Lanka18
SUDSudan3
SURSuriname4
SWZSwaziland6
SWESweden150
SUISwitzerland102
SYRSyria8
TPEChinese Taipei55
TJKTajikistan4
TANTanzania4
THAThailand52
TOGTogo3
TGATonga3
TRITrinidad and Tobago19
TUNTunisia47
TURTurkey57
TKMTurkmenistan8
UGAUganda13
UKRUkraine230
UAEUnited Arab Emirates4
USAUnited States586
URUUruguay15
UZBUzbekistan70
VANVanuatu3
VENVenezuela50
VIEVietnam7
ISVVirgin Islands9
YEMYemen2
YUGFR Yugoslavia109
ZAMZambia8
ZIMZimbabwe16

Medal table

These are the top ten nations that won medals in the 2000 Games.

The ranking in this table is based on information provided by the International Olympic Committee. Some other sources may be inconsistent due to not taking into account all later doping cases.

Key

‡ Changes in medal standings (see here)

* Host nation (Australia)

2000 Summer Olympics medal table
RankNOCGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1United States37243293
2Russia32282989
3China28161458
4Australia*16251758
5Germany13172656
6France13141138
7Italy1381334
8Netherlands129425
9Cuba1111729
10Great Britain1110728
11–80Remaining NOCs114138167419
Totals (80 entries)300300327927

Organisation

SOCOG organisational structure circa 1998 – five groups and 33 divisions reporting to the CEO are organised primarily along functional lines with only a limited number of divisions (e.g. Interstate Football and Villages) anticipating a venue focussed design.
SOCOG organisational structure circa 1999 – functional divisions and precinct/venue streams are organised in a matrix structure linked to the Main Operations Centre (MOC). Some functions such as Project Management (in the Games Coordination group) continue to exist largely outside this matrix structure.

Organisations responsible for the Olympics

A number of quasi-government bodies were responsible for the construction, organisation and execution of the Sydney Games. These included:

  • the Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (SOCOG) and the Sydney Paralympic Organising Committee (SPOC), primarily responsibles for the staging of the Games
  • Olympic Coordination Authority (OCA), primarily responsible for construction and oversight
  • Olympic Roads & Transport Authority (ORTA)
  • Olympic Security Command Centre (OSCC)
  • Olympic Intelligence Centre (OIC)
  • JTF Gold, the Australian Defence Force Joint Taskforce Gold
  • Sydney Olympic Broadcasting Organisation (nominally part of SOCOG)
  • IBM, provider of technology and the Technical Command Centre
  • Telstra, provider of telecommunications
  • Great Big Events, event management and marketing

These organisations worked closely together and with other bodies such as:

These bodies are often collectively referred to as the "Olympic Family".

Organisation of the Paralympics

The organisation of the 2000 Summer Paralympics was the responsibility of the Sydney Paralympic Organising Committee (SPOC). However, much of the planning and operation of the Paralympic Games was outsourced to SOCOG such that most operational programmes planned both the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

Other Olympic events

The organisation of the Games included not only the actual sporting events, but also the management (and sometimes construction) of the sporting venues and surrounding precincts, the Olympic torch relay, which began in Greece and travelled to Australia via numerous Oceania island nations, and the Sydney Olympic Arts Festival.

Phases of the Olympic project

The staging of the Olympics were treated as a project on a vast scale, broken into several broad phases:

  • 1993 to 1996 – positioning
  • 1997 – going operational
  • 1998 – procurement/venuisation
  • 1999 – testing/refinement
  • 2000 – implementation
  • 2001 – post-implementation and wind-down

SOCOG organisational design

The internal organisation of SOCOG evolved over the phases of the project and changed, sometimes radically, several times.

In late 1998, the design was principally functional. The top two tiers below the CEO Sandy Hollway consisted of five groups (managed by Group General Managers and the Deputy CEO) and twenty divisions (managed by divisional General Managers), which in turn were further broken up into programmes and sub-programmes or projects.

In 1999, functional areas (FAs) broke up into geographic precinct and venue teams (managed by Precinct Managers and Venue Managers) with functional area staff reporting to both the FA manager and the venue manager. SOCOG moved to a matrix structure. The Interstate Football division extant in 1998 was the first of these geographically based venue teams.

Volunteer program

The origins of the volunteer program for Sydney 2000 dates back to the bid, as early as 1992.

On 17 December 1992, a group of Sydney citizens interested in the prospect of hosting the 2000 Olympic and Paralympic Games gathered for a meeting at Sports House at Wentworth Park in Sydney.

In the period leading up to 1999, after Sydney had won the bid, the small group of volunteers grew from approximately 42 to around 500. These volunteers became known as Pioneer Volunteers. The Pioneer Volunteer program was managed internally by SOCOG's Volunteer Services Department in consultation with prominent peak groups like The Centre for Volunteering (Volunteering and TAFE. Some of the Pioneer Volunteers still meet every four months, an unseen legacy of the Games which brought together a community spirit not seen before.

During the Olympic games, tens of thousands of volunteers (the official figure placed at 46,967) helped everywhere at the Olympic venues and elsewhere in the city. They were honoured with a parade like the athletes had a few days before.

Venues

Sydney Olympic Park

Stadium Australia
Sydney Olympic Park Aquatic Centre
State Hockey Centre

Sydney

Dunc Gray Velodrome

Outside Sydney

Sydney Olympic Arts Festival

The original festivals in Olympia celebrated both cultural events and physical feats. The tradition continued with the first modern Olympics in 1896, and since then various cultural events have accompanied the sporting competition. Starting with the 1996 Summer Olympics, a cycle of four arts festivals have been staged by each host country. The Sydney Olympic Arts Festival was an arts festival that ran before and during the Olympics. The festival event coordinator was David Gallen.

The first of the four festivals was the first edition of the Festival of the Dreaming, which was founded by artistic director Rhoda Roberts (who later co-directed segments of the Opening Ceremony), was held in 1997, as the first of four leading up to the Sydney Olympics. Some events were held at the Sydney Opera House, and the festival included an Aboriginal cast performing Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, as well as Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot performed in the Bundjalung language.

The second festival was "A Sea Change", in which artists and companies from Australia and Oceania explored "the influence of the sea on Australian life as a means to explore the changing political and cultural climates in Australia".

The third festival, "Reaching the World" took the form of an international tour, from November 1998 until January 2000, travelling to all five regions represented by the Olympic rings (Europe, Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Oceania) and showcasing Australian culture by means of exhibitions, performances, and various media.

The fourth and final festival, while featuring many international artists and companies, served as a showcase for the diversity and depth of the arts in Australia. Opening four weeks before the Olympic Games, the Sydney 2000 Olympics Arts Festival ran until the last day of athletic competition, from 18 August to 1 October 2000. Starting with an all-day Aboriginal welcoming ceremony, Tubowgule ("the Meeting of the Waters"), choreographed by Stephen Page, began at La Perouse beach near Botany Bay, and concluded at Bennelong Point, in the forecourt of Sydney Opera House. There, contemporary Indigenous dance company Bangarra Dance Theatre performed Energy of Australia. The gala opening event for the festival was the musically pyrotechnical "Symphony of a Thousand" by Mahler at the Sydney SuperDome. The festival included many performing arts events, mostly presented at the Sydney Opera House. Concerts were performed by many orchestras, including Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra Filarmonica della Scala, the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, the Australian Chamber Orchestra, the Asian Youth Orchestra, and the Australian Youth Orchestra, and operas were presented. There were also dance, singing, and drama performances, staged mainly at the Opera House but also at Her Majesty's Theatre and the Capitol Theatre.

Marketing

Emblem

The overall branding of the Games was designed by Melbourne-based FHA Image Design; the emblem—nicknamed the "Millennium Man"—consists of a stylised, multi-coloured depiction of a torch-bearer in motion, with arms and legs resembling boomerangs, and a smoke trail resembling the roof of the Sydney Opera House (a motif that had also been used in the logo for Sydney's bid). The firm's then-creative director Richard Henderson explained that they aimed for the emblem be simple enough for a child to draw, avoid "quaint", overused imagery such as kangaroos and koalas, and "engender [the] pride in Australian creative quality and optimism for the new millennium that the Games would herald".

Mascots

The official Olympic mascots chosen for the 2000 Summer Games were Syd the platypus, Millie the echidna, and Olly the kookaburra, designed by Matthew Hattan and Jozef Szekeres and named by Philip Sheldon of agency Weekes Morris Osborn in response to the original SOCOG recommendation of Murray, Margery, and Dawn after famous Australian athletes.

An unofficial alternate mascot—Fatso the Fat-Arsed Wombat—was created by Australian comedians Roy and HG for their miniseries during the Games, The Dream; the character was conceived as a satire of the increasing commercialisation of the Olympics, with the duo often being critical of the official mascots (whom they jokingly nicknamed "Olly, Millie and Dickhead"). Only two plush toys of Fatso were made, one of which was placed in the Olympic Village; the plush was controversially smuggled into a medal ceremony by the Australian men's 4 × 200-metre relay team. The character achieved a cult following, with some Australians preferring Fatso to the actual mascots. One of the Fatso plushes was auctioned for charity following the Games (being sold to Kerry Stokes, an executive of the Seven Network, for A$80,450), while a figure of Fatso was included in an display outside Stadium Australia that commemorated the Games' volunteers.

Sponsors

Sponsors of the 2000 Summer Olympics
Worldwide Olympic Partners Coca-Cola IBM John Hancock Financial Kodak McDonald's Panasonic Samsung Electronics Sports Illustrated United Parcel Service Visa Inc. Xerox
Coca-Cola IBM John Hancock FinancialKodak McDonald's Panasonic Samsung ElectronicsSports Illustrated United Parcel Service Visa Inc. Xerox
Australian Partners AMP Limited Ansett Australia BHP EnergyAustralia Holden News Corp Australia Pacific Dunlop Seven Network Swatch Telstra University of Fairfax Westfield Group Westpac
AMP Limited Ansett Australia BHP EnergyAustraliaHolden News Corp Australia Pacific Dunlop Seven Network SwatchTelstra University of Fairfax Westfield Group Westpac
Supporters 2UE Adecco Bonds Bonlac Boral Carlton & United Breweries ClubsNSW Goodman Fielder Nike, Inc. Olex Cables Perth Mint Robert Timms Coffee Royal Australian Mint Shell plc Sleepmaker TAFE NSW Traveland Tyco International
2UE Adecco Bonds Bonlac Boral Carlton & United BreweriesClubsNSW Goodman Fielder Nike, Inc. Olex Cables Perth Mint Robert Timms CoffeeRoyal Australian Mint Shell plc Sleepmaker TAFE NSW Traveland Tyco International
Providers Avis Car Rental Berkley Challenge Housekeeping Services Buspak Cadbury Citysearch Cleanevent Clipsal Crown Equipment Corporation DB Schenker Diamond Press Frazer Nash Garret Metal Detectors General Electric Generale Location George Weston Foods Great White Shark Enterprises Hamiltons Laboratories Harley-Davidson Lifeminders.com Lindeman's Linfox LookSmart Mistral New South Wales Department of Information Technology & Management Pacific Waste Management Ramler Furniture Rogen Salomon Brothers Saunders Design Showpower Sonic Healthcare Speedo Val Morgan Visy Waste Services NSW Woolcott Research Woolmark
Avis Car Rental Berkley Challenge Housekeeping Services Buspak Cadbury Citysearch Cleanevent Clipsal Crown Equipment Corporation DB Schenker Diamond Press Frazer Nash Garret Metal Detectors General ElectricGenerale Location George Weston Foods Great White Shark Enterprises Hamiltons Laboratories Harley-Davidson Lifeminders.com Lindeman's Linfox LookSmart Mistral New South Wales Department of Information Technology & Management Pacific Waste ManagementRamler Furniture Rogen Salomon Brothers Saunders Design Showpower Sonic Healthcare Speedo Val Morgan Visy Waste Services NSW Woolcott Research Woolmark

Medals and bouquets

Gold, silver, and bronze medals from the 2000 Summer Olympics
Plaque at Manly NSW dedicated to 2000 Olympics

A total of 750 gold, 750 silver and 780 bronze medals were minted for the Games. The gold and silver medals contained 99.99 percent of pure silver. The bronze medals were 99 percent bronze with one percent silver, they were made by melting down Australian one-cent and two-cent coins, which had been removed from circulation from 1992 onward.

The bouquets handed to medal recipients incorporated foliage from the Grevillea baileyana, also known as the white oak.

Awards and commendations

The International Olympic Committee awarded Sydney and its inhabitants with the "Pierre de Coubertin Trophy" in recognition of the collaboration and happiness shown by the people of Sydney during the event to all the athletes and visitors around the world.

After the Games had ended, the New South Wales Police Force was granted use of the Olympic Rings in a new commendation and citation as the IOC consideration after having staged the "safest" Games ever.

Mo Awards

The Australian Entertainment Mo Awards (commonly known informally as the Mo Awards), were annual Australian entertainment industry awards. They recognise achievements in live entertainment in Australia from 1975 to 2016.

YearNominee / workAwardResult (wins only)
2000 SummerOlympic Games Opening CeremonySpecial Event of the YearWon

In popular culture

  • The Games was an ABC mockumentary television series that ran in 1998 and 2000. The series satirised corruption and cronyism in the Olympic movement, bureaucratic ineptness in the New South Wales public service, and unethical behaviour within politics and the media. An unusual feature of the show was that the characters shared the same name as the actors who played them.
  • In the universe of the Cyberpunk tabletop role-playing game, the 2000 Olympics were never held due to bankruptcy and a boycott by nations supporting Aboriginal land claims.

See also

Notes

External links

  • . Olympics.com. International Olympic Committee.
  • Official Report , ,
  • . Archived from on 9 November 2000.
  • 9 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine – information and audio files
  • . Archived from on 18 April 2004.
  • – Website maintained by and for Sydney 2000 Volunteer Alumni
  • – Official 10th Anniversary Volunteers Website
Summer Olympics
Preceded byAtlantaXXVII Olympiad Sydney 2000Succeeded byAthens