Papua New Guinea at the Commonwealth Games

Papua New Guinea made its Commonwealth Games début in the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Perth, Western Australia. The country has competed in 15 editions of the Games, as of 2022

Papua New Guinea at the
Commonwealth Games
CGF codePNG
CGAPapua New Guinea Olympic Committee
Websitepngolympic.org
Medals
Ranked 27th
Gold
5
Silver
8
Bronze
2
Total
15
Commonwealth Games appearances (overview)

Since 1962, Papua New Guinea have won a total of 14 medals in 5 sports. Weightlifting has been the most successful sport with 7 medals followed by Boxing with 3, Lawn bowls with 2, Swimming with 2, and Shooting with 1 medal.[1]

Medals edit

After the 2018 Commonwealth Games, Papua New Guinea ranks 26th on the All-time Commonwealth Games medal table.

                        Total
  Papua New Guinea 5 8 2 15

List of gold medallists edit

Medal Name Games Sport Event
  Gold Geua Tau 1990 Auckland Lawn Bowls Singles-Women
  Gold Ryan Pini 2006 Melbourne Swimming Men's 100 metres butterfly
  Gold Dika Toua 2014 Glasgow Weightlifting Women's 53 kg
  Gold Steven Kari 2014 Glasgow Weightlifting Men's 94 kg
2018 Gold Coast Weightlifting Men's 94 kg

Games Summary edit

Games Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank Competitors Officials Flag Bearer Opening Flag Bearer Closing
  1962 Perth 0 0 1 1 17
  1966 Kingston 0 1 0 1 20
  1970 Edinburgh 0 0 0 0 -
  1974 Christchurch 0 0 0 0 -
  1978 Edmonton 0 1 0 1 18
  1982 Brisbane 0 0 0 0 -
  1990 Auckland 1 0 0 1 19
  1994 Victoria 0 1 0 1 20
  1998 Kuala Lumpur 0 0 1 1 32
  2002 Manchester 0 0 0 0 -
  2006 Melbourne 1 1 0 2 18
  2010 Delhi 0 1 0 1 29 Barbara Stubbings
  2014 Glasgow 2 0 0 2 16 Steven Kari
  2018 Gold Coast 1 2 0 3 22 Vero Nime
  2022 Birmingham 0 1 0 1 35 Rellie Kaputin and
John Ume
Total 5 8 2 14 26

Notable achievements edit

First medal
First gold medal
Most gold medals
Most medals
  • Dika Toua is the country's most decorated athlete at the Commonwealth games with 3 medals (1 gold and 2 silvers) in Weightlifting. The weightlifter won gold in 2014 and silver medals 1 in 2006 and the other in 2018.

References edit

  1. ^ "Papua New Guinea". Commonwealth Games Federation. Retrieved 22 July 2020.

External links edit