2004 Pekan Olahraga Nasional

Indonesian 16th National Sports Week
Pekan Olahraga Nasional XVI
Host cityPalembang, South Sumatra
MottoBersatu teguh
(Firmly united)
Athletes5,660
Events607 in 41 sports
Opening2 September
Closing14 September
Opened byMegawati Sukarnoputri
President of Indonesia
Torch lighterRidwan Gunawan
Ceremony venueGelora Sriwijaya Stadium, Palembang
← Surabaya 2000
Samarinda 2008 →

2004 Pekan Olahraga Nasional or the Pekan Olahraga Nasional XVI were a major multi-sport event in Indonesia which took place in Palembang, South Sumatra, from 2 September to 14 September 2004.[1][2] A total of 607 events in 41 sports were competed among more than 5,500 athletes from 30 provinces, with the newly created province of Riau Islands only as observer and did not send any athletes. The games also staged 8 paralympic sports.

Jakarta topped the medal table for the tenth time in the history of the games.

Sports

Medal table

2004 Pekan Olahraga Nasional medal table
Rank Province Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Jakarta 141 111 114 366
2 East Java 77 81 111 269
3 West Java 76 79 94 249
4 Central Java 56 59 64 179
5 South Sumatra 30 41 40 111
6 Jambi 27 28 15 70
7 Papua 23 13 19 55
8 Lampung 22 21 21 64
9 East Kalimantan 19 28 33 80
10 South Sulawesi 17 22 19 58
11 Riau 16 14 20 50
12 North Sumatra 15 15 26 56
13 North Sulawesi 14 14 13 41
14 Bali 11 12 18 41
15 Yogyakarta 10 13 21 44
16 South Kalimantan 10 12 10 32
17 Southeast Sulawesi 9 6 9 24
18 West Kalimantan 8 8 14 30
19 East Nusa Tenggara 8 4 4 16
20 Banten 7 9 31 47
21 West Sumatra 6 10 25 41
22 Aceh 6 2 5 13
23 West Nusa Tenggara 5 5 11 21
24 Central Kalimantan 5 3 15 23
25 Maluku 3 2 5 10
26 Bangka Belitung 2 4 6 12
27 Central Sulawesi 1 5 4 10
28 Bengkulu 1 4 6 11
29 North Maluku 0 0 4 4
30 Gorontalo 0 0 3 3
Total 625 625 780 2030

Preceded by
2000
Surabaya, East Java
Pekan Olahraga Nasional Succeeded by
2008
Samarinda, East Kalimantan

References

  1. ^ "Megawati Resmi Buka PON XVI". detiksport (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-02-18.
  2. ^ "Api PON XVI Mulai Dinyalakan". Tempo. 2004-08-20. Retrieved 2024-02-18.
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1 Cancelled because of 30 September Movement. 2 Originally set to held in 2020, postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.