
Major sporting events such as the Summer Olympics are pretty much the peak of any athlete’s career.
This is what all the training has been for. This has been the goal – to time your preparations so that you can deliver a personal best performance and hopefully win gold.
There’s a lot of focus, a lot of determination – everyone is pumped and ready for action. The testosterone is flowing.
While all of that energy hopefully translates into smashing world records and being recognised as a champion, we couldn’t help but wonder whether the athletes’ village is also a bit of a hotbed of sexual tension.
Just how much man-on-man sex are these Olympic athletes having?

Crunching the numbers on gay athlete sex
There’s around 11,000 athletes competing in the Tokyo Summer Olympics. According to official figures, the gender split is about 51% male and 49% female.
There’s not really any definitive statistics on what proportion of men are gay or bisexual, but recent studies indicate that around 7-8% of men report that they’ve had some same-sex sexual experience and identify as not being completely straight.
So, if we do a bit of maths, we could assume that somewhere around 450 guys in the athletes’ village at the Tokyo Summer Olympics would be up for a bit of man-on-man action.
Outsports estimates that there are at least 168 LGBTQ athletes taking part in this Summer Olympics. However, most of those are women – about 40 of the names on the list are representing their countries in women’s football.
Some of the notable gay men competing in Tokyo include diver Tom Daley, swimmer Markus Thormeyer, equestrian riders and boyfriends Edward Gal and Hans Peter Minderhoud, and trampoline gymnast Dominic Clarke.
How much action are they getting?

Sex between athletes happens
There’s no rule against athletes having sex with each other.
Since 1988, organisers of the Olympics have issued condoms to everyone in the athletes’ village.
At the Summer Olympics in Seoul, organisers did ban the athletes from having sex outdoors – they were finding a lot of used condoms on the roof of the athletes’ accommodation.
At the Sydney Olympics, organisers had to send out for extra condoms, because the athletes were getting through them faster than anticipated. They started with 70,000 condoms and had to bring in an extra 20,000 to meet demand.
While the number of athletes that take part in an Olympic games hasn’t increased exponentially over the years, the number of condoms that they’re getting through has. In 2012, athletes at the London Olympics got through 150,000 condoms. In 2016, athletes at the Rio Olympics got through 450,000 condoms.

Fuelling our athletic porn fantasies
There’s something about fit men in lycra that definitely gets us working up a sweat.
We’ve been following the coverage of the Olympics fairly closely, and letting our imagination fill in the blanks.
To help with your porn video fantasy, here’s some of the match-ups that we’d like to think are going down in the athletes’ village in Tokyo.
Rhys McClenaghan and Taha Akgül
Rhys is a gymnast from Ireland. He caught our attention when he took to TikTok to debunk the story that the beds in the athletes’ village weren’t sturdy enough to have sex in.
We’d like to see that test in action with a match up with Taha Akgül. Taha is a giant of a man from Turkey – he’s a wrestler.
Tom Daley and Matty Lee
They’ve already won gold together in the synchro diving. We know they’re close, but we want to see just how close.
Johnny Hooper and Max Irving
They’re teammates on the US water polo squad. We want to see what happens in the showers.