Commonwealth Games Medals: Medal Tally Ends; India in Fifth, Canada in Third, England on Top (+Table)

Commonwealth Games Medals: Medal Tally Ends; India in Fifth, Canada in Third, England on Top (+Table)
Gold medalist Joseph Joyce of England, second from left, with silver medalist Joseph Goodall of Australia and bronze medalists Mike Sekabembe of Uganda and Efe Ajagba of Nigeria during the medal ceremony for the Men's Super Heavyweight in the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, Scotland, Saturday Aug. 2, 2014. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)
Zachary Stieber
8/3/2014
Updated:
8/3/2014

The final medal tally for the 2014 Commonwealth Games has England on top, Australia in second, Canada in third, and host Scotland in fourth.

India, with its better overall medal count than Scotland but fewer gold medals, ended in fifth.

New Zealand, South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, and Jamaica rounded out the top 10.

England ended with 174 total medals, including 58 golds. Athletes earned medals across disciplines, including many from athletics, swimming, and hockey.

Australia has 137 medals, 49 of which are golds. Australia earned a number of medals in swimming, rugby sevens, and netball.

Canada has 82 medals, including 32 golds. Canada’s medals also came across many disciplines, primarily athletics.

Scotland has 53 overall medals, including 19 golds. Scotland’s medals came from sports including judo, lawn bowls, and swimming.

India has more overall medals--64--than Scotland, but only managed to secure 15 golds. Gold medals are worth more in the standings than other medals. India’s medals are from disciplines including shooting, hockey, and boxing. Curiously, India had no athlete get more than one medal.

37 countries in total earned at least one medal.

medals

The first gold Sunday went to cyclist Lizzie Armistead in the road race, and the English added another in badminton later in the day to increase its total to 58, nine clear of second-place Australia.

It marked the first time since 1990 that Australia, which won four events on the last day, hadn’t led the gold race at the Commonwealth Games. Athletes from Down Under will have a chance to return to first place when the Gold Coast in Queensland state hosts the games in 2018.

The closing ceremony was scheduled for Sunday night in Glasgow, with Australian pop singer Kylie Minogue among the headline acts. Head of ceremonies David Zolkwer promised a party atmosphere: “The show is called ‘All Back To Ours.’ The title reflects a personal, spontaneous ‘we don’t want this moment to end’ feeling.”

Armitstead, who finished second in the London Olympics road race and at the 2010 Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, led an England one-two finish in the 98-kilometer (61-mile) race on the wet streets of Glasgow.

“Now I can call myself a champ, not a runner-up,” Armitstead said. “It was special, something I’ve always dreamed about.”

She finished the seven-lap course in 2 hours, 38 minutes, 43 seconds. Her teammate Emma Pooley, the silver medalist in the time trial on Thursday and who said she plans to retire from cycling, was 25 seconds behind.

Ashleigh Pasio of South Africa took the bronze in a photo finish with Australia’s Tiffany Cromwell. Both finished 1:11 behind Armitstead.

Linda Villumsen of New Zealand, the gold medalist in the time trial, was fifth.

“It was a great course,” Armitstead said. “I won the national championships here last year, so I was prepared. I definitely had an advantage knowing the track.”

And the rain, which hit the course on several occasions to make conditions slippery for the riders, helped Armitstead.

“As soon as it started to rain, I knew that was an advantage, because when you’re solo you can keep going fast in the wet,” she said.

Gold medallist Vikas Shive Gowda of India poses on the podium during the medal ceremony for the Men’s Discus Throw at Hampden Park during day eight of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games on July 31, 2014 in Glasgow, United Kingdom. (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

Gold medallist Vikas Shive Gowda of India poses on the podium during the medal ceremony for the Men’s Discus Throw at Hampden Park during day eight of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games on July 31, 2014 in Glasgow, United Kingdom. (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

In the 12-lap, 168-kilometer (104-mile) men’s race held through mostly steady rain, Geraint Thomas of Wales, who won bronze in the time trial here and was 22nd in this year’s Tour de France, overcame a punctured tire with just under seven kilometers (4.3 miles) remaining to win gold.

Thomas, who led by about 50 seconds when his tire needed to be replaced by his crew, finished in 4 hours, 13 minutes, 5 seconds. Jack Bauer of New Zealand and Scott Thwaites of England had a sprint finish for second, with Bauer edging ahead on the line for silver. Both Bauer and Thwaites were 1:21 behind Thomas.

“It was such a grim day, I felt terrible at the start,” Thomas said. “And when I had that puncture, I thought, ‘what do I have to do’? But I had a decent enough gap to stay out in front.”

Elsewhere on the final day:

AUSTRALIA STREAK: Australia beat India 4-0 to win its fifth consecutive men’s field hockey gold. England beat New Zealand 4-2 in a penalty shootout to take the bronze medal after the teams were level 3-3 after regulation time ended. Australia has won 29 of its 30 matches at theCommonwealth Games, only losing a pool match against South Africa 3-2 in 1998.

NETBALL GOLD: Australia easily beat defending champions New Zealand 58-40 for gold in netball; Jamaica beat England 52-48 for bronze.

FAMILY FIRST: In the all-England mixed team badminton final, the husband-and-wife team of Chris and Gabrielle Adcock won the gold medal, beating Chris Langridge and Heather Olver. Michelle Li of Canada won the women’s singles gold, beating Kirsty Gilmour of Scotland. Kashyap Parupalli of India won gold in men’s singles, beating Derek Wong of Singapore.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.