Tel Aviv 1968 Paralympic Games

Tel Aviv 1968 Paralympic GamesTel Aviv 1968 Paralympic Games
Host City: Tel Aviv, Israel
Dates: 5 - 14 November 1968
Events: 188 in 10 sports (10 disciplines)
Countries: 28
Athletes: 772 (578 men and 194 women)

Medal Standings
Rank NPC Total
1United States of America
USA Flag
USA
33273999
2Great Britain
GBR Flag
GBR
29202069
3Israel
ISR Flag
ISR
18212362
4Australia
AUS Flag
AUS
1516738
5France
FRA Flag
FRA
1310932
6West Germany
FRG Flag
FRG
12121135
7Italy
ITA Flag
ITA
12101739
8Netherlands
NED Flag
NED
124420
9Argentina
ARG Flag
ARG
10101030
10South Africa
RSA Flag
RSA
910726
11Rhodesia
RHO Flag
RHO
67720
12Canada
CAN Flag
CAN
66719
13Norway
NOR Flag
NOR
5319
14Jamaica
JAM Flag
JAM
3115
15Austria
AUT Flag
AUT
271019
16Japan
JPN Flag
JPN
22812
17Sweden
SWE Flag
SWE
16411
18New Zealand
NZL Flag
NZL
1214
19Ireland
IRL Flag
IRL
0459
20Belgium
BEL Flag
BEL
0336
21Spain
ESP Flag
ESP
0314
22Switzerland
SUI Flag
SUI
0268
Total 189 186 201 576

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.