Cameroon at the 2016 Summer Olympics

Cameroon at the
2016 Summer Olympics
IOC codeCMR
NOCCameroon Olympic and Sports Committee
Websitewww.cnosc.org (in French)
in Rio de Janeiro
Competitors24 in 6 sports
Flag bearer Wilfried Ntsengue[1]
Medals
Gold
0
Silver
0
Bronze
0
Total
0
Summer Olympics appearances (overview)

Cameroon competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from 5 to 21 August 2016. It was the nation's fourteenth consecutive appearance at the Summer Olympics.

Cameroon Olympic Sports Committee (French: Comité National Olympique et Sportif du Cameroun) sent a total of 24 athletes, 5 men and 19 women, to the Games, competing in six different sports. For the second straight time in history, Cameroon was represented by more female than male athletes due to its presence of the women's volleyball team.[2]

Notable athletes in the Cameroon team were professional boxers Mahaman Smaila and Hassan N'Dam N'Jikam, who both staged their Olympic comebacks in Rio de Janeiro for nearly a decade, and wrestler Annabelle Ali, who joined triple jumper and double gold medalist Françoise Mbango-Etone as the only Cameroonians to appear in three consecutive editions of the Games. Middleweight boxer Wilfried Ntsengue, the youngest member of the team (aged 18), was the nation's flag bearer in the opening ceremony.[1]

Cameroon left Rio de Janeiro without a single Olympic medal. Ali narrowly missed out of Cameroon's first medal of the Games, after losing the match to Russia's Ekaterina Bukina for the bronze in the women's 75 kg category.[3]

  1. ^ a b "Agé de 18 ans, le boxeur Wilfried Seyi désigné porte-étendard du Cameroun aux JO" [At age 18, boxer Wilfried Seyi assigned as Cameroons flag bearer at the Olympics] (in French). L'ouverture sur le Cameroun. 16 July 2016. Archived from the original on 17 July 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  2. ^ "Cameroun : 24 athlètes aux jeux Olympiques de Rio" [Cameroon: 24 athletes at the Rio Olympics] (in French). Camer Post. 22 July 2016. Archived from the original on 21 September 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  3. ^ Kaifa, David (18 August 2016). "JO 2016: tristes issues pour Annabel Laure Ali et Isabelle Sambou" [2016 Olympics: Sad exits for Isabelle Sambou and Annabel Laure Ali] (in French). Radio France Internationale. Retrieved 13 September 2016.