Wheelchair Basketball at the Stoke Mandeville & New York 1984 Paralympic Games

Stoke Mandeville & New York 1984 Paralympic GamesStoke Mandeville & New York 1984 Paralympic Games
Host City: Stoke Mandeville, Great Britain & New York, United States of America
Dates:
Events: 2
Countries: 1
Athletes: 12 (all men) [details]
- Youngest: n/a
- Oldest: n/a
Most Medals
- Athlete: 12 athletes with 1 medal
- Country: 6 NPCs with 1 medal

Medal Standings (top 10)
Rank NPC
1
FRA Flag
FRA
100
FRG Flag
FRG
100
3
ISR Flag
ISR
010
NED Flag
NED
010
5
JPN Flag
JPN
001
SWE Flag
SWE
001
[show full table]

Wheelchair Basketball - Events & Medallists
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's Tournament
FRA Flag
France (FRA)
NED Flag
Netherlands (NED)
SWE Flag
Sweden (SWE)
BERGLUND Gunnar
ENGBUSK Sven
JANGBRING Gunnar
JOHANSSON Bengt-Gosta
JOHANSSON Rolf
LINDHOLM Jan
LOFSTROM Lars
NYSTROM Bengt-Gosta
OLSSON Tommy
ARKESTEDT Lars
ANDERSSON Lars-Gunnar
ANDER Nils
Women's Tournament
FRG Flag
West Germany (FRG)
ISR Flag
Israel (ISR)
JPN Flag
Japan (JPN)

Disclaimer

The results data of the IPC Historical Results Archive is based on information contained/ sourced in the original hardcopy final results publications. Some information from earlier Paralympic Games (i.e. 1960-1988) such as relay and team members are not presented in these source. Therefore, final results, medal standings and derived statistics may not be complete. If you encounter any inaccuracies or errors, please do not hesitate to send a message to sdmsadmin[at]paralympic[dot]org with the details and proving materials.

Important note on the definition of participants: Only athletes that appear in the official results books in the section of final results are included in the database and counted towards participant statistics. Data since 2014 are accurate. Statistics for previous Games editions are under review.

Important note on competition partners: Competition partners eligible for medals are included in the combined participant statistics until 2000 (concerning pilots in tandem cycling). Statistics for 2008 and beyond consider athletes with an impairment and their competition partners separately.