Miquel Phelps won 13 individual gold medals at the last Rio Summer Olympics in 2016, breaking a record in the individual titles. The old rival Leonidas of Rhodes won 12 gold medals in 152 BC. More than 2,000 years ago, according to historian Bill Malone, Phelps is "the greatest Olympian of all time". He has a record of 23 medals, a huge record, but his moments of victory were not the only ones in the history of the Games.
1. Phelps was not the only one who captured the minds of people at the moment, According to Dr. Michael Goiner, one of the world's leading experts in fitness and human performance, American swimmer Katie Dasky is one of "the greatest athletes in her stamina," said Guinner. That her record in the eight hundred meters swimming was impressive.
2. Mikel Phelps dominated the swimming competitions at many Olympic Games, but the most influential were his eight gold medals at the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008.
3. The 14-year-old gymnast Nadia Komanchi in Montreal in 1976 got the final score on the scoreboard, which was impossible, and she did so six times in this tournament, giving her three gold medals, a bronze medal and a silver medal for her team.
4. There were a lot of memorable moments in Mexico City in 1968, but the most important moment was in the 1,500-mile high-altitude race where Cape Keino ended the race in three minutes and thirty-four seconds, leaving behind world champion Jim Reun by 15 to 20 meters.
5. Thirty-three years before the Games in 1968 was the world record of the long jump eight inches and a half, but broke American Bob Pimon that figure by a foot and 6.75 inches in one is still one of the most shocking moments in the history of sport, a number worthy of appreciation Guinner also said that "Pimun is at a level and everyone else level."
6. Bob Hayes bragged at the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games and was the only one to win the gold medal and the Super Bowl after linking the world record in the 100-meter race to a record in the 4x100m relay.
7. Czech runner Emile Zatobek was famous for winning the five-kilometer marathon and 10km in the 1952 Helenski Games, the first marathon he took part in.
8. Jesse Owens won four stunning track and field gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Games, an achievement not unlike Carl Lewis in 1984. Not only did he win the long jump, the 100m, 200m, He did so on anti-Hitler territory, but the Guardian notes that even after returning home he was not allowed to use the main door to enter the Waldorf Hotel to receive his honor.