Olympic Medal Table Showing Team EU In First Place Is Really Managing To Rile Brits

They won't be able to do this in four year's time.
The EU medal table didn't go down as planned
The EU medal table didn't go down as planned
Dan Kitwood via Getty Images

A picture of the final Olympics medal table showing ‘Team EU’ taking first place has riled tempers a day after the competition came to an end.

It was posted on Twitter by the European Parliament, and showed that if all the EU’s constituent nations competed as one country in the Rio games they would come out on top.

‘Team EU’ would have earned 325 medals, they said - well over double the United States’ 121 and 70 taken home by China.

The post failed to mention that, of those 325, a fifth belong to Team GB.

Huge congratulations to all the European winners and participants at #Rio2016, you did brilliantly! 🎖 pic.twitter.com/vPTjkedjXD

— European Parliament (@Europarl_EN) August 22, 2016

But the graphic clearly managed to anger people, with some taking great joy in reminding it it would not be able to Team GB’s cohort in its tally at the Tokyo 2020 games, assuming Brexit has happened by then.

The EU really doesn't help itself https://t.co/ICi9PJJ4X4

— Sebastian Payne (@SebastianEPayne) August 22, 2016

"The EU has no aspiration to a nation or federal state." https://t.co/1dH3cWn4e8

— Tom Harris (@MrTCHarris) August 22, 2016

Hmmm still including the Brexited medals in their stats here... https://t.co/YYXmg352TH

— Vincent McAviney (@VinnyITV) August 22, 2016

@Europarl_EN Nice to see the EU trying to cash in on the UKs success. Make the most of it. Won't be using us at the next Olympics.

— Stu (@TheHanz1976) August 22, 2016

Disingenuity like this is one reason many Europeans have voted & will vote to leave the EU. @Europarl_EN https://t.co/EvG3uMSXT6

— Christopher MiIler (@GristoMill) August 22, 2016

@europarl_en you win the gold for cross country piss boiling

— Philip K. Dingus (@_SLABS_) August 22, 2016

Delete your account. https://t.co/QIoH8Yd9MZ

— Tom Nuttall (@tom_nuttall) August 22, 2016

Others called the post “embarassing” and said it was proof of the EU’s aspirations to become a ‘superstate’.

@Europarl_EN Is this a parody account?

— Rob Laird (@rob_laird1) August 22, 2016

@Europarl_EN I think I speak for a majority of people in 2nd place GREAT BRITAIN when I say.... pic.twitter.com/46TlCuNp2Z

— Nick Spalding (@NickSpalding) August 22, 2016

@Europarl_EN The "European Union" were NOT participants in #Olympics at #Rio2016 so stop pretending you were part of it @UKIP @Nigel_Farage

— Horatio (@ThisSepticIsle) August 22, 2016

How embarrassing... https://t.co/BRXTPyDY6J

— Philip Cowley (@philipjcowley) August 22, 2016

Can anyone honestly deny these people have ambitions of statehood? YOU ARE NOT A COUNTRY. https://t.co/WAsHHNziF1

— So-calledPiglet (@MaraudingWinger) August 22, 2016

Creeping nationalism? https://t.co/vzc90Uoxf0

— Neil (@LibertyNeil) August 22, 2016

It comes after a medal table showing the EU as “winning” the Olympics also managed to anger people last week.

German communications company Euro Informationen, whose clients include the European Commission and the European Parliament, produced the medal table which imagined a games where all the countries of the European Union compete under one flag.

It prompted similar outrage.

But it’s not only the advocates of Britain’s remaining in the EU that have come under fire for politicising the Olympics.

Brexit campaign Leave.EU was threatened by the British Olympics Association to stop using images of Team GB athletes on its social media accounts or face legal action.

The same group was also slammed by cyclist Callum Skinner, who told it to stop using his picture and name to “promote your campaign”.

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