Early years The
1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, would have been The Gambia's inaugural competition but it joined 28 countries in
a boycott (most of which were also African). This boycott was to protest the IOC's decision to allow
New Zealand to compete at the games, despite its rugby union team
breaking the
international sporting boycott of South Africa earlier in the year. The Gambia was also invited to the Moscow
1980 Summer Olympics, but declined the invitation and joined the American-led
boycott. The country finally made its debut at the Los Angeles
1984 Summer Olympics, sending
ten athletes (six men and four women) who all competed
in running.
Amie N'Dow was the only Gambian to progress past the first heats, reaching the quarter-finals of the
women's 200 metres. At the Seoul
1988 Summer Olympics, the Gambia sent six athletes – three athletes (two men and one woman) and three wrestlers (all male). Flagbearer
Dawda Jallow made the quarter-finals of the
men's 400 metres.
1990s - Opening Ceremony - Beijing, China (pictured in 2011) ran for The Gambia at the Athens
2004 Summer Olympics, but later switched nationalities and competed for Norway in 2008, 2012 and 2016. At the
1992 Summer Olympics, the Gambian delegation (consisting of five athletes) was all-male for the first and only time. It again consisted entirely of runners, four of whom ran the
men's 4 × 100 metres relay. Bangladesh and San Marino were the only countries to record slower times in the event. The Atlanta
1996 Summer Olympics saw the Gambian delegation increase to nine athletes, although the only woman was
Adama Njie.
Ousman Sallah (a long jumper) was the only non-runner, while Dawda Jallow was flag-bearer for a third consecutive occasion, and became the only Gambian to compete in four games. There was no increase in the size of the delegation for the
2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, with Njie returning for a third games and being joined by
Jaysuma Saidy Ndure, who was made the flag-bearer. Ndure, aged 20, reached the quarter-finals of both the
100 metres and the
200 metres, but later transferred nationalities and competed for
Norway. The
2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing saw the Gambia send three athletes (two men and one woman), including the country's first Olympic boxer,
Badou Jack, who was made the flag-bearer. He lost to India's
Vijender Singh in the opening round, while neither of the other two athletes (runners
Suwaibou Sanneh and
Fatou Tiyana made it past their first heats.
2010s The Gambian delegation for the London
2012 Summer Olympics was of two track and field athletes, Suwaibou Sanneh and
Saruba Colley. Colley failed to progress past the first round of the
women's 100 metres, but Sanneh made the semi-finals of the
men's 100 metres, running a national record time of 10.18 seconds. For the Rio
2016 Summer Olympics, the Gambia sent its largest delegation since 1996, and its first to contain athletes from more than two sports.
Adama Jammeh and
Gina Bass (the flag-bearer and only woman on the team) ran in the respective 200 metres events, while
Faye Njie and
Pap Jonga became the first Gambians to compete in Olympic judo and Olympic swimming, respectively. == Medal table ==