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・ Mexico at the 1988 Summer Paralympics
・ Mexico at the 1988 Winter Olympics
・ Mexico at the 1991 Pan American Games
・ Mexico at the 1992 Summer Olympics
・ Mexico at the 1992 Summer Paralympics
・ Mexico at the 1992 Winter Olympics
・ Mexico at the 1994 Winter Olympics
・ Mexico at the 1995 Pan American Games
・ Mexico at the 1996 Summer Olympics
・ Mexico at the 1996 Summer Paralympics
・ Mexico at the 1999 Pan American Games
・ Mexico at the 2000 Summer Olympics
・ Mexico at the 2000 Summer Paralympics
・ Mexico at the 2002 Winter Olympics
・ Mexico at the 2003 Pan American Games
Mexico at the 2004 Summer Olympics
・ Mexico at the 2004 Summer Paralympics
・ Mexico at the 2006 UCI Road World Championships
・ Mexico at the 2006 Winter Paralympics
・ Mexico at the 2007 Pan American Games
・ Mexico at the 2007 UCI Road World Championships
・ Mexico at the 2008 Summer Olympics
・ Mexico at the 2008 Summer Paralympics
・ Mexico at the 2008 UCI Road World Championships
・ Mexico at the 2009 UCI Road World Championships
・ Mexico at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics
・ Mexico at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games
・ Mexico at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics
・ Mexico at the 2010 UCI Road World Championships
・ Mexico at the 2010 Winter Olympics


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Mexico at the 2004 Summer Olympics : ウィキペディア英語版
Mexico at the 2004 Summer Olympics

Mexico competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, from 13 to 29 August 2004. This was the nation's eighteenth appearance at the Olympics, since its debut in 1900. Comité Olímpico Mexicano sent the nation's largest delegation to the Games since 1992. A total of 109 athletes, 59 men and 50 women, competed in 20 sports. Football was the only team-based sport in which Mexico had its representation in these Olympic Games. There was only a single competitor in fencing, shooting, and weightlifting.
The Mexican team featured three Olympic medalists from Sydney: race walker Noé Hernández, taekwondo jin Víctor Estrada, and diver Fernando Platas, who reprised his role to carry the national flag for the second time in the opening ceremony, after winning the silver in men's springboard. Along with Platas, race walkers Miguel Ángel Rodríguez and Germán Sánchez officially made their fourth Olympic appearance as the most experienced members of the team. Meanwhile, show jumper Gerardo Tazzer, who helped the Mexicans claim the bronze at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, sought his fourth Olympic bid in Athens after a sixteen-year absence, and was also the oldest athlete of the team at age 52.
Mexico left Athens with a total of four medals (three silver and one bronze), failing to win a gold for the first time since 1992. Half of these medals were awarded to the athletes in taekwondo. Sprinter Ana Guevara set the nation's historical milestone as the first ever female Mexican to claim an Olympic silver medal in track and field. Meanwhile, Belem Guerrero claimed a silver for the first time in the nation's Olympic cycling history, since the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, since José Youshimatz took home the bronze in the men's points race.
==Medalists==


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