bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man
0 sources
bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man
Summary
bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man is an Olympic sporting event[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of olympic_sporting_event entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's instance of is recorded as Olympic sporting event[3].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's follows is recorded as bobsleigh at the 1984 Winter Olympics – two-man[4].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's followed by is recorded as bobsleigh at the 1992 Winter Olympics – two-man[5].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's location is recorded as Canada Olympic Park bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton track[6].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's part of is recorded as bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics[7].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's point in time is recorded as +1988-00-00T00:00:00Z[8].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's sport is recorded as bobsleigh[9].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's number of participants is recorded as {'amount': '+92'}[10].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's participating team is recorded as Soviet Union at the 1988 Winter Olympics[11].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's participating team is recorded as East Germany at the 1988 Winter Olympics[12].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's participating team is recorded as East Germany at the 1988 Winter Olympics[13].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/121rpx2p[14].
- bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man's Olympedia event ID is recorded as 389[15].
Why It Matters
bobsleigh at the 1988 Winter Olympics – two-man ranks in the top 3% of olympic_sporting_event entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (8 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[16]