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・ New Zealand at the 1992 Winter Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 1992 Winter Paralympics
・ New Zealand at the 1994 Commonwealth Games
・ New Zealand at the 1994 Winter Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 1994 Winter Paralympics
・ New Zealand at the 1996 Summer Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 1996 Summer Paralympics
・ New Zealand at the 1998 Commonwealth Games
・ New Zealand at the 1998 Winter Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 1998 Winter Paralympics
・ New Zealand at the 2000 Summer Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 2000 Summer Paralympics
・ New Zealand at the 2002 Commonwealth Games
・ New Zealand at the 2002 Winter Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 2002 Winter Paralympics
New Zealand at the 2004 Summer Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 2004 Summer Paralympics
・ New Zealand at the 2006 Commonwealth Games
・ New Zealand at the 2006 UCI Road World Championships
・ New Zealand at the 2006 Winter Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 2006 Winter Paralympics
・ New Zealand at the 2007 UCI Road World Championships
・ New Zealand at the 2007 World Championships in Athletics
・ New Zealand at the 2008 Summer Olympics
・ New Zealand at the 2008 Summer Paralympics
・ New Zealand at the 2008 UCI Road World Championships
・ New Zealand at the 2009 UCI Road World Championships
・ New Zealand at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics
・ New Zealand at the 2010 Commonwealth Games
・ New Zealand at the 2010 Pan Pacific Swimming Championships


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

New Zealand competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, from 13 to 29 August 2004. This was the nation's twenty-second appearance at the Olympics since its debut in 1908 as part of Australasia. The New Zealand Olympic Committee sent a total of 148 athletes, 81 men, and 67 women to the Games to compete in 18 sports, surpassing a single athlete short of the record from Sydney four years earlier. Basketball and field hockey were the only team-based sports in which New Zealand had its representation at these Olympic Games. There was only a single competitor in archery, boxing, and fencing.
Thirty-four athletes from the New Zealand team had previously competed in Sydney, including Olympic bronze medalist Barbara Kendall in women's Mistral windsurfing, equestrian eventing rider Blyth Tait, sprint kayaker and former breaststroke swimmer Steven Ferguson, table tennis sisters Chunli and Karen Li, and discus thrower Beatrice Faumuina, who was appointed by the committee to carry the New Zealand flag in the opening ceremony. Tait's compatriot Andrew Nicholson participated in his fifth Olympic appearance since the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles (except 2000, in which he was not chosen), as the most experienced athlete. While Tait shared the same age with Nicholson at 43, and served as the oldest member of the team by a month difference, breaststroke swimmer Annabelle Carey, aged 15, was the youngest ever New Zealand athlete to compete at the Olympics since 1976.
New Zealand left Athens with a total of five Olympic medals, three golds and two silver, finishing twenty-fourth in the overall medal count.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=2004 Athens: Medal Tally )〕 Four New Zealand athletes won Olympic gold medals for the first time in history: Hamish Carter in men's triathlon,
track cyclist Sarah Ulmer in women's individual pursuit, and twin sisters and rowers Caroline and Georgina Evers-Swindell in women's double sculls.
==Medalists==


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