It's a bit hard for China. All 300 medals divided by their 1344 millions, is 0.22. Those charts will always favour the smaller nations because whilst you may have more people to choose from, you can only enter the same number of events as everybody else.
Yes of course. I totted up the medals last night (and got 427) and even if they'd have won every single medal they would still only be 21st on medals per person :P Will do it again tonight and see if it changes, which it could well do if a small country gets even 1 medal
EDIT: Obviously they wouldn't be 21st if they'd got all the medals, they'd be 1st, but you know what I mean :P
The game is allready done, so it won't interfer
I am not sure if I will be able to watch the sprint. The internet is cocking up bad, and the telly is dying, so... meh!
Keep me updated!
Yes, I know what you mean. It occurred to me that someone would reply that everybody else's ratio would be 0.00, as I typed that.
I based the 300 on a single google search so you may be right, but regards it's a start that needs to be taken with a large pinch of salt.
Do you cheat at work? do you hide your own mistakes, or blame others for them? Do you claim credit for stuff that was nothing to do with you? Would you deliberately do bad work on a project to ensure it reflects badly on the project lead?
This has got nothing to do with Intrepid's argument.
Several athletes come to the games under pressure to win gold at the risk of losing what little sponsorship they have managed to find. That's why they drug themselves, that's why they try and find shortcuts to ensure they get the best possible result.
Your workplace analogy would more accurately represent Intrepid's arguments had you posed the following question: "would you cheat at work to ensure your bosses are happy with the results, if you knew that you'd risk being left unemployed for the next four years if you failed to fulfill their expectations", to which the most common answer would be "yes".