in Beijing Tan's
Olympic medal made him the only Singaporean to have won a medal at all the major international games – the SEAP Games (predecessor of the
SEA Games), the
Asian Games, the
Commonwealth Games, and the
Olympic Games for 48 years. He also became the first weightlifter in the world to be awarded the
International Weightlifting Federation (national honour) Gold Award in 1984. In Singapore, Tan was the only athlete to be bestowed the
Pingat Jasa Gemilang (Meritorious Service Medal) at the
National Day awards in 1962. On 26 June 1996, a commemorative medallion set by the
Singapore Mint was launched to celebrate the
1996 Olympic Games at
Atlanta. It features Tan on one side of the medallion, showing him getting ready to lift weights. When the image is tilted to a certain angle, the picture would show him having lifted the weights.
Izzy, the official mascot of the Atlanta Olympics, is featured as a
three-dimensional image on the other side of the medallion. In 1999, Tan was nominated for the "Spirit of the Century" award. In the same year, he was also nominated for "Singapore's Greatest Athlete" award, but conceded the award to former
badminton champion,
Wong Peng Soon, who was a four-time winner in the
All England Open Badminton Championships in the 1950s. Tan was featured in
Time's "Millennium" series on Singapore sporting greats in 1999. In 2000,
McDonald's sponsored Tan's trip to the
2000 Olympic Games in
Sydney, where he joined the Singapore contingent and attended the weightlifting competition. McDonald's also donated S$10,000 with the aim to help revive the sport of weightlifting in Singapore. McDonald's also featured a two-minute special television commercial, titled "We Can Do It", featuring Tan's silver medal-winning feat at the 1960 Rome Olympics. The commercial re-enacts the different stages of Tan's life, from childhood to his triumph at the Olympics. Tan was given the honour of being the
flagbearer at the
closing ceremony of the
National Stadium on 30 June 2007. The
leotard and
belt which Tan wore during his 10-hour competition in Rome were put on display in a glass case in the Singapore Sports Council's Sports Museum at the National Stadium. At the
2008 Summer Olympics, Singapore's table tennis players
Feng Tianwei,
Li Jiawei, and
Wang Yuegu won the silver medal in the women's team category, ending Tan's 48-year status of being the sole Singaporean Olympic medalist. At the
2012 Summer Olympics, Feng's bronze medal in the women's singles table tennis event meant that Tan was no longer the only Singaporean with an individual Olympic medal. ==Achievements==