HOME INTERNATIONAL GAMES MONTHLY NEWS NEWS BY NATIONS EDITORIALS ENCYCLOPEDIA OF INTERNATIONAL GAMES
 2006 GAMES SCHEDULE GAMES WEB SITES LINKS TIMELINE  BOOK REVIEWS

Torino Olympic Winter Games Timeline

February 4, 2006 - The Olympic torch arrives in Sestriere, site of one of the Olympic villages for the games.  

January 31, 2006 - The three Olympic villages for the games, in Torino, Bardonecchia, and Sestriere are officially opened to welcome athletes. 

January 26, 2006 - The Olympic Torch arrives in Cortina d'Ampezzo for the 50th anniversary of the 1956 Winter Games there, The Cortina Games took place, January 22- February 5, 1956.

January 25, 2006 - Germany drops three officials from its Winter Olympics team on Wednesday because of ties to the former East Germany's secret police.

January 13, 2006 - Work is completed on the 57 meter (180 foot) tall Olympic cauldron that will host the Olympic flame at the Olympic Stadium.

Finance police from Italy search TOROC offices looking for information on consultant contracts.  International Games Archive

January 11, 2006 - Government and trade unions reach a 'social truce' with unions agreeing not to strike from January 31 to March 23, a time period encompassing both the Olympic and Paralympic Games.
 
December 19, 2005 - Authorities announce that Italy's strict anti-doping laws will remain in effect during the games. Police will be allowed into the Olympic Village if necessary to investigate any issues related to drugs at the games. Athletes could then be charged with a crime under Italian law.  The IOC would strike the results and take away medals, but under IOC rules there are no criminal penalties. 

Under IOC rules, athletes can be disqualified and stripped of their medals, but not be charged with a crime.

December 14, 2005 - New York Yankees manager Joe Torre carries the Olympic torch, in Florence. Torre's mother was born in Patina, near Naples.

December 9-11, 2005 - World Cup speed skating races at Oval Lingotto.

December 8, 2005 - Pope Benedict XVI blesses the Olympic in St. Peter's Square saying "May this flame remind everybody of the values of peace and brotherhood that are at the basis of the Olympics." Pope Benedict stood at a window overlooking the square, while a Swiss Guard held the flame up in front of the Pope. 

The day began with Athens marathon gold medallist, Italian Stefano Baldini carrying the torch, and ended with the flame lighting a cauldron at Campidoglio -designed by Michelangelo -  the same location where the relay began for the Rome Olympic Games in 1960. International Games Archive

December 5, 2005 - Adidas agrees to remove its three-stripes from the sides of it's Olympic uniforms for the games after Nike, Puma, Reebok and other manufacturers say that the traditional three stripes give Adidas an advantage.  Rules during the Olympic Games require that sponsors uniform logos be no larger than 20 square centimeters. International Games Archive

Adidas has devised a new logo, using the number 3, for the games.

December 6, 2005 - Italy accepts the Olympic flame from Greece.  The flame was lit on November 27th  in Olympia, and relayed around Greece for ten days. 

December 2, 2005 - IOC president Jacques Rogge, Italian legislators, and president of the European Olympic Committees (EOC) Italian Mario Pescante meet to discuss the unresolved issue of doping penalties at the games. 

Pescante wants Italy's criminal penalties for sports doping suspended during the games. Italian legislators are still in opposition to that proposal. 

November 30, 2005 - Raimund Bethge, Germany's bobsled coach is hit by a bobsled during practice at the Cesana Pariol track, sustaining head and leg injuries. 

November 11, 2005 - Organizers announced that the main Olympic Stadium, the refurbished Stadio Comunale, will be known as "Stadio Olimpico" during the games, and renamed after the games to "Grande Torino." to memorialize the Turin soccer team of the same name that was killed in an airplane crash in Turin in 1949.

With the names Stadio Olimpico, and Grande Torino, the stadium will have had four names.  The stadium was originally built by Benito Mussolini and called Stadio Mussolini. International Games Archive

November 7-12, 2005 - Men's and women's hockey test events at Torino Esposizioni and Palasport Olimpico.

November 3, 2005 - Italy presents the Olympic Truce resolution to the United Nations in New York. 190 nations pass the resolution by consensus.

Organizers announce that security agents from outside Italy will not be allowed to carry firearms, with the exception of agents protecting VIPs.

November 2, 2005 - 100 days to the Opening Ceremony.

July 31, 2005 - Italian Communist party of the Piedmont Regional Council protests that Olympic Security measures must not be an "opportunity to violate the basic rights guaranteed by our Constitution".

The complaint specifically claims that Americans are planning to fly AWACs planes over Turin during the games. International Games Archive

July 1, 2005 - Eutelsat signs a contract with Japanese television broadcaster NHK to lease a full transponder on Eutelsat's Atlantic Bird 3 satellite for the duration of the Turin Winter Olympics in February 2006.

May 8, 2005 - Final day for nations to accept their invitations to the games.

March 9, 2005 - In an attempt to solve managerial problems, Turin organizers shuffle several management positions. CEO Paolo Rota was replaced by Cesare Vaciago while deputy chief executive Marcello Pochettino was replaced by Luciano Barra.

February 23, 2005 - March 1, 2005 - From Riefenstahl to Ichikawa, an Unobstructed Gaze, a cultural event celebrating several films created during past Olympic Games is shown at the Massimo 3 Cinema and Centre Culturel Francais de Turin. International Games Archive

Among the films shown are "13 Jours en France" by Claude Lelouch ; "Tokyo Olympiad" by Kon Ichikawa; "Olympia" by Leni Riefensthal "La Bataille de Marathon" by Jacques Tourneur; "Chariots of Fire" by Hugh Hudson, and "Cool Runnings" by John Turteltaub.

February 16, 2005 - December 31, 2005 - The exhibition, "The corridor of art for Sport and Peace" is displayed at the Turin Provincial Council.

February 15 - June 5, 2005 - Mountains on the Front Cover. From Reality to Illustration and the Great Winter Ball, an exhibit of mountain climbing exploits of the last century, on display at the Duca degli Abruzzi National Mountain Museum.

February 10, 2005 - One year to go. IOC President Jacques Rogge personally signs the invitations for Austria, San Marino, Slovenia and Switzerland and Italy.

February 9, 2005 - March 2006 - An exhibition, Torino 2006, Looking forward to the Olympics" begins at the Atrium Torino - Piazza Solferino. 

The exhibit will run through the end of the games, and focuses on all aspects of the games, with interactive exhibits featuring the sports, organization, and venues.

February 9, 2005 - Italian TV workers walk off the job, in a unannounced strike, postponing for one day the World Championship men's giant slalom from Bormio. "We could have certainly done without this, " says Italian Olympic Committee president Gianni Petrucci.

In 1985, at the World Championships in Bormio, there had also been a strike.

February 4, 2005 - World Cup luge at Cesana Pariol. 

January 30, 2005 - Renato Mizoguchi, from Japan competing for Brazil, was badly hurt during luge practice at the Cesana-Pariol luge track. 

Mizoguchi is one of five luge athletes hurt seriously enough to be hospitalized during the first month of training at the track.

January 27, 2005 - Workers from Fiat protest outsourcing of jobs to other countries, during the European Figure Skating Championships outside the Palavela ice arena. International Games Archive 

January 24-30, 2005 - European Figure skating Championships at the Palavela ice arena.

January 11-20, 2005 - The first tests for the bobsled, skeleton and luge track at Cesana Pariol, with a total of 1,500 runs the first week. 

World Cup Skeleton races are held on the track January 20, with World Cup Luge races January 21.

Jan. 14-15, 2005 - European short-track speed skating championships.

December 17, 2004 -  IOC President Jacques Rogge tells Turin to speed up its games preparations and to find more sponsors to ease budget difficulties for the games. International Games Archive

November 30, 2004 - Nike, Puma, and Reebok protest to the IOC that Adidas should no longer be able to run its trademark three stripes down the side of its uniforms.  The three stripes are the Adidas logo, and Olympic rules state that logos must fit in a 20 square centimeter space.

Currently adidas is allowed to place the three stripes on the side of uniforms as they are a "design element" and not a logo.

November 27, 2004 - April 25, 2005 -  The Impressionists And Snow - France And Europe ( Gli Impressionisti E La Neve - La Francia E L'Europa) and exhibition of paintings by as Claude Monet, Paul Gauguin and Joseph Turner opens at the Parco del Valentino. International Games Archive
 
Some 150 works are on loan from 100 different museums, galleries and private collections from around the world. 

November 27, 2004 - Finance police raid TOROC offices, furthering their investigation into supposed financial improprieties. Some media sources report the raids are simply politically motivated attacks against the organizers.

November 11, 2004 - Valentino Castellani withdraws his threatened resignation. 

After meetings with Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, and IOC President Jacques Rogge, Castellani is satisfied that the division of organizations powers has been more clearly defined.

November 5, 2004 - Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi calls a meeting to be held the following week, to mediate and clarify the roles that Castellani and Pescante have in the organization of the games. 

November 4, 2004 - Valentino Castellani, President of the Organizing Committee of the Winter Olympics (TOROC) announces his intention to resign from the position, at the next TOROC executive board meeting..
 
Castellani is upset that Mario Pescante has been appointed "supervisor" of the Torino preparations. 

November 5, 2004 - 4000 tickets purchased on the first day that tickets were available. 

October 26, 2004 -Turin mayor Sergio Chiamparino orders an immediate audit of the 2006 Winter Games financial accounts.  Chiamparino calls the current situation a financial dead end.

September 28, 2004 - 500 days to go to the games, Neve and Gliz, are announced as the mascots of the games. 

August 8, 2004 - IOC President Jacques Rogge again urges Torino to speed up the pace in preparation for Winter Games on Sunday saying "Italy has not embraced the organization of the games as they should." 

May 12, 2004 - Italian jewelry producer Ottaviani International is chosen to produce the medals for the Games, and becomes and official sponsor and supplier.  

35,000 Olympic medals; 1,756 gold, silver and bronze award medals, 6,000 participation medals and some 27,000 commemorative medals will be produced for the games. International Games Archive

March 16, 2004 - The Openvillage promotional tour begins throughout Italy. Openvillage will communicate the values, emotions and spirit of the Games and promote the awareness of winter sports among the Italian public 

February 10, 2004 - Two years to go to the games

January 26, 2004 - Italy's Undersecretary of Education, Maria Grazia Siliquini, announces that Olympic education kits will be presented to schools to familiarize students with the spirit and values of the Olympic Games.

January 22, 2004 - Organizers begin campaign to recruit 20,000 volunteers for both the Turin Olympic Winter Games and the Winter Paralympic Games.

January 18-25, 2004 - Italy hosts the Winter World Transplant Games in Bormio.

December 23, 2003 - Turin 2006 Directorate Committee announces that 1.325 billion euro will be given to support Olympic preparations in the Torino region.

December 17, 2003 - French satellite operator Eutelsat signs an agreement with TOROC to provide 10 million euros to launch 20 satellite channels to broadcast the games. The games will be the first to be broadcast completely via satellite.

June 20, 2003 - IOC coordination commission has both concern and praise for the progress of preparations citing the enormous task of venue and road construction needed in the next 18 months

Jean Claude Killy, the French IOC member heading the commission said: "Our overriding feeling after our two days here is one of being optimistic and strongly encouraged by the progress".

May 26 2003  - Sanpaolo IMI and Fiat two local Torino companies, sign agreements as "Chief Sponsors" of the games with TOROC for 45 and 40 million Euros.

May 23, 2003 - Fontanafredda wine company becomes an Official Supplier of Torino 2006 for wines and sparkling wines.

February 10, 2003 -Three years to go.

January 16-26, 2003 - Winter World University Games held in Tarvisio, Italy.

January 16, 2003 - Valentino Castellani, President of the Torino Olympics Organizing Committee, says "The Salt Lake City Games have been the greatest Winter Olympics in history," but says that Turin will be better. "We are right on schedule and we did not have to face any emergencies."

January 15, 2003 - Torino named as the host of the 2007 Winter World University Games.  This will be the first time that a city has hosted an Olympic Winter Games, and a Universiade in successive years.

December 13-14 2002 - IOC Coordination Committee meetings Bardonecchia. 

July 22, 2002 - Turin Mayor Sergio Chiamparino and tourism official Ettore Racchelli quibble over  extra funds necessary to pay workers at Olympic building sites. 

June 12-13, 2002 - The IOC Coordination Commission meets again with TOROC and concludes at the times that things are running smoothly and good progress is being made.

February 25, 2002 - Valentino Castellani, head of the Turin Olympic Organizing Committee (TOROC), leaves Salt Lake City stating, "We have learned a lot here...." "But we will only use the essentials, we won't be copying anything."

February 23, 2002 - Mrs. Evelina Christillin, deputy president of the 2006 Winter Olympics organizing committee, says there will be no scandals in Torino, like their were in Salt Lake

"In my country such things cannot happen, because Italy does not consider itself as a great power in politics or sports, and it has no intention of dictating its will or customs to other participants," (Ed. overlooking the long jump medals scandal in the 1987 World Track and Field Championships held in Rome.)

February 24, 2002 - Artists and performers from Torino give a six minute presentation showcasing Italian culture at the closing ceremony of the Salt Lake City Olympic Winter Games. 

September 5-6, 2001 - The IOC Coordination Commission meets with TOROC.

October 23-24, 2000 - The IOC Coordination Commission meets for the first time with the Torino organizing committee (TOROC.)

June 20, 1999 -  The Swiss Federal Council issues a rare governmental statement expressing "disappointment" that the 2006 games were not awarded to Sion, Switzerland.

IOC President Samaranch calls for calm on the last day of the IOC Session in Seoul.

June, 19, 1999 - Turin elected as host City for the Olympic Winter Games in 2006 during the IOC session in Seoul, Korea.

SEA Games medals may change slightly

February 2, 2006

A banned diuretic in some herbal tea is being blamed for a positive drug test for a female Philippine taekwondo winner from December's SEA Games.

The second test has yet to be confirmed. The athlete has admitted to using the tea in attempt to meet weight requirements.

February 2006, Olympic Winter Games and more

February 1, 2006

Italy and New Zealand will be busy in the next two months. New Zealand hosts three Masters Games in succession, the New Zealand Masters Games in Dunedin, February 4-12, the South Pacific Masters Games in Hamilton, February 11-19 and in March, the Trans Tasman Masters Games in Auckland, March 11-18.

Italy of course will be busy with the Olympic Winter Games in Turin, February 10-26, and next month the Winter Paralympic Games March 10-19.

In March of 2005, Motti Tichauer, the Sports Director of the European Maccabi Confederation wrote that the Maccabi World Union was hoping to revive the tradition of the Maccabi Winter Games in February 2006. It's now February 2006. No news yet on whether the MWU has been successful at organizing any events. The games were to be held in Poland. Work continues on confirming these events.

Last month we noted the brief historical mentions of the Commonwealth Winter Games, some from coaching and athlete resumes.

Word comes from both the Commonwealth Games Federation, and the Olympic Hall of Fame and Museum in Calgary, Canada that very small, and very unofficial Commonwealth Winter Games were held in St. Moritz Switzerland, in 1958, 1962 and 1966. Basically, tourists and ski enthusiasts, including the Ski Club of Great Britain, held small competitions, and informally called them the "Commonwealth Winter Games." The festivities were not sanctioned by the Commonwealth Games Federation.

Paralympic TV next month

February 1, 2006

The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has announced the launch of a web site www.paralympicsport.tv. that will carry footage of the upcoming Paralympic Games from Turin.

Coverage will be around the clock, and live on demand. The website paralympicsport.tv contains just a brief note on the future broadcasts.

Are X Gamers now cool with the Olympic Games?

January 28, 2006

For most of the history of the X Games,  from the time they began as the Extreme Games back in 1995, X Games athletes have had a decidedly anti-Olympic bent, priding themselves on not being part of the overly-commercial Olympic Games machinery.

When snowboarding was first admitted into the Olympic Games in 1998, Norway's Terje Haakanson, considered at the time by many to be able to rightfully claim the title of best snowboarder in the world, decided to "boycott" the games, telling the Verdens Gang newspaper,  the International Olympic Committee organizers, are far removed from understanding the sport or its athletes and said "the big-wigs ride in limousines and stay in fancy hotels while the athletes live in barracks in the woods."

In 1997, Samantha Stevenson wondered in the New York Times if X Games athletes would "ever make it past the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games..." 

Chris Edwards, the bronze medallist in men's in-line vert at the 1997 X Games, told Stevenson "if it became an Olympic sport I wouldn't compete."  In 1997 Tony Hawk had concluded "we are already bigger than most athletes in the Olympics."

That was 1997.  Today, ESPN's coverage of the tenth X Games from Aspen was rampant with mentions of "Olympic," "Olympian" and "Torino." During the six minute segment of the men's boarder-x final, the announcers uttered those words no less than 10 times, with another graphic for good measure. 

Summer athletes may still feel differently about the issue, as the summer X Games events have still not been included in the summer Olympic Games, But winter games athletes have changed their tune.  Last year snowboarder Keir Dillon told the Colorado Springs Gazette "The X Games are rad and the X Games are special and everything," Dillon said, but "they're 9 years old." "The Olympics are the Olympics. There's nothing that can touch it."

Danny Kass told the same paper,  "It's definitely a great thing," Kass said. "The whole Olympic experience was a big eye-opener and a shock." "The Opening Ceremony, kind of realizing you're here with all these other countries, kind of meant something," he said. "And then, it was just more of a cool world event than like a normal competition we had been doing."

Some 30 X games participants are said to be part of their Olympic teams this year, and will be heading to Torino after their X Games events are over. Snowboarder X, a downhill type mass race has been added to the Olympic Games schedule this year. 

Some athletes are being cautious with their X Games chances. Several pulled out of this weeks X Games with slight injuries to save themselves and their Olympic medal chances. 

If you are concerned that there's just too much games activity going on, and much too close to the Olympic Games, you aren't the first. Organizers of the Winter Gravity Games cancelled their 2006 event claiming the schedule was already full, though those games had only been held twice in the past six years.  

The International Olympic Committee, over fifty years ago, tried to address the issue of too many competitions too close together.  One of the "Rules for Regional Games" that was proposed, was that other regional games " must not be held within the period of twelve months following or preceding the Olympic Games," a rule which was later rescinded.

El Salvador will not participate in the Central American Games

January 28, 2006

The National Olympic Committee of El Salvador notified ORDECA (Organizacion Deportiva Centroamericanos) last week, that it will not be sending athletes to the Central American Games, scheduled to begin a short five weeks from now.

El Salvador was originally to serve as a co-host for the games, with Guatemala, in 2005. Those plans were cancelled when hurricanes devastated the area last summer, and the games were first cancelled, then re-instated to March of this year.

ORDECA then parceled out the events, in a unique solution, planning to have six of the seven countries (excluding El Salvador) host a few events each. 

Now questions over security, transportation and housing have come up.

With El Salvador announcing it will not participate, the number of teams entered in some sports has been reduced, and those sports may be in danger of being fropped from the games., means that other sports may not be held for lack of entries.

Despite the extraordinary efforts of ORDECA to make arrangements there is concern that the games will simply collapse.

ORDECA still plans to open the games on March 3rd.

ESPN and Aspen sign Winter X Games Extension to 2010

January 27, 2006

The Winter X Games will stay in Aspen, Colorado for another three years, with the announcement today of the signing of an agreement between Aspen Skiing Co. and ESPN. 

The current agreement had the games in Aspen until 2007. The three year extension means that ESPN intends to keep the games in Aspen until 2010. 

ESPN reportedly had offers from ski resorts in California, Canada and Europe, but chose to stay with Aspen.  The games have never been held outside the United States, with this years event being the tenth edition.  The games have been hosted in Aspen since 2002.

CBC finally announces Commonwealth Games Coverage

January 21, 2006

The Canadian Broadcasting Company and organizers of the Melbourne Commonwealth Games have finally reached an agreement that will provide at least some coverage of the Games in March, to Canadian television viewers.  

The coverage will be minimal, only a one hour highlights package each day, which will be played twice per day. 

CBC has complained of a tight schedule, with the Paralympics, curling and other sporting events conflicting with the Commonwealth Games schedule. 

In November, Fox Sports announced that TV viewers in the United States would also be able to see a daily highlights package, and some live coverage, of the Commonwealth Games from Australia.

Doha Asian Games relay will be longest in history

January 19, 2006 by Daniel Bell

Doha Asian Games organizers have announced the most extensive torch relay in Asian Games history, an unprecedented route that will take the games flame to visit every former Asian Games host city.

Some form of the torch relay has featured in every Asian Games except one, but the relays have always been, with a few exceptions, relatively simple affairs.

The first Asian Games flame was lit in 1951 in Delhi, next to Delhi’s Red Fort.  The torch was lit using the sun’s rays, on the day of the Opening Ceremony, and relayed 11.4 miles (about 18 kilometers) by  44 runners until it arrived at Delhi’s Main Stadium. 

In between the first and second games, the International Olympic Committee passed “Rules for Regional Games” during its IOC session at the Olympic Games in Helsinki. One of the rules proclaimed “there must be no torch relay or flame used” at regional games.

Following this rule, there was no torch or flame at the second Asian Games in Manila in May of 1954.

However, as the games were going on in Manila, the IOC was meeting, in Athens. The minutes of the IOC Session read “The President proposes to omit the phrase in article 10 which forbids the use of a Flame at the Regional Games.”   The change was eventually adopted in time for a torch relay for the 1958 Asian Games in Tokyo.

The 1958 torch relay, paying homage to the 1954 games, was lit on April 22, 1958 in Manila at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum.  The flame was relayed through Manila that day, then flown to Okinawa, and then mainland Japan where it was relayed around for 26 days, until the Opening Ceremony on May 24th.

For the 1962 Asian Games in Jakarta, Indonesia, the flame was lit near Madjakerta, Indonesia where “fire has been coming out of the ground since the olden days, and has never gone out (according to the 1970 Asian Games Official Report).  The torch was lit on August 20th, and relayed to Jakarta over four days time, with 700 runners, over a distance of about 360 kilometers.

The torch relays for the 1966 and 1970 Asian Games, both held in Bangkok, were both begun by His Majesty, King Phumiphol Adulyadej (as spelled in the official report, now different).  In 1966 the flame was lit on December 8, next to Chitrlada Palace and carried in a procession about halfway to the stadium where it stayed overnight. The torch was relayed to the stadium by runners the next day for the Opening Ceremony.

In 1970, a similar protocol was followed, with one exception. Two typhoons hit the area in the week before the games.  Organizers had the King light a flame from the sun's rays ahead of time so that they would have one prepared, in case the sun did not shine the day of the ceremony. The flame ceremony was held one day before the games opening, and the flame relayed the next day to the stadium for the opening ceremony.

In 1974, for the games in Tehran, once again, the torch relay was very short. The torch was lit the day before the Opening ceremony with the assistance of then Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi. The torch was then carried to the Shahyad monument, a monument honoring the monarchy, Shahyad loosely translated " remembrance of the king".  The name was changed to Azadi Tower after the Islamic revolution, Azadi meaning freedom, that freedom from the Shah.

After spending the night at the Shahyad Monument, the torch was relayed the next day to the stadium and the ceremonial flame lit at the stadium by Ali Bagbanbashi, winner of the gold medal in the 5,000 meters at the first Asian Games in Delhi in 1951, silver medallist in the steeplechase at those same games, and bronze medallist in the 5,000 and 10,000 meters at the Asian Games in Tokyo.

No documentation has been uncovered yet detailing the 1978 game's torch relay, when the games once again returned to Bangkok. Based on the consistency of the 1966 and 1970 and 1998 ceremonies and relays, one might reasonably assume so far, that the 1978 ceremonies were similar.

In 1982, when the games returned to Delhi, the torch relay remained a rather small production.  The games' flame was lit at the national stadium, on the location where the flame for the 1951 games was extinguished.

Prime Minister Indira Ghandi lit the torch, using the sun's rays, and it was relayed a very short 4.5 kilometers to Jawaharlal Nehru stadium, that same day.

Sri Ram Singh, Olympic Games 800 meter finalist in 1976, and Asian Games 800 meter gold medal winner in 1974 and 1978 received the torch from Prime Minister Gandhi to begin the relay. 

Games organizers had planned together with the Prime Minister that the flame would be lit by a man-woman team. Balbir Singh, India's three time field hockey gold medallist (1948, 1952, 1956), and Diana Simes (Indian track and field athlete) were chosen as the final torch bearers.

Up to this time most of the relays had lasted just a day or two, with the 1962 Indonesian relay at four days, and the 1958 Japanese relay at 33 days being the longest.

Torch relays began to be far more complex in 1986, for the games held in Seoul, South Korea. 

The 1986 Asian Games Torch relay had three routes, covered 4,175 kilometers, and involved 16,566 runners (counting escorts) dwarfing any previous Asian Games relay in terms of the number of participants. The relay took just eight days however, with the torch lit on September 12, 1986 and the opening ceremony on September 20th.

At each stop on all three routes, the torch was met with planned events and festivals.  The three routes were designated as the "route of harmony", "route of onward" and "route of prosperity."

The young woman who lit the flame from the sun's rays, Lee Hee-jong, said that she had postponed her marriage until after the games so that she would not lose the honor of lighting the torch. Evidently, marriage would have disqualified her from the role.

The 1990 Asian Games torch relay grew more involved. With the addition of a fourth route, the games' torch was relayed through all 31 provinces in China. The torch was lit by a fifteen year- old Tibetan girl named Dawayangzong on August 7, 1990, at the foot of Nianquing Tanggula Peak.

The four routes were begun in Urumqi, in the NW corner of China, Lhasa in the Southwest, Harbin in the Northeast, and the Shenzhen/Hong Kong area in the South.

The relays took 45 days, with the Beijing Asian Games opening ceremony on September 21st. The various routes took the games' flame to the Great Wall, The Marco Polo Bridge, the Straits of Taiwan and the Yellow River before arriving at the Summer Palace in Beijing.

Reports of the 1994 Asian Games flame seem to indicate a possibly more subdued role for the flame.  The flame was a combination of two flames, one, the "Flame of Asia" was lit in Beijing on September 7th, and the other, the "Flame of Peace" lit in Hiroshima on September 11th. The two flames were combined into one that same day in a cauldron in Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima.

The commemorative book from the games does not mention details of a relay, but the games did not open until October 2nd.

Up until this time, the origination of the games' flame was up to the host, and the Asian Games flame had originated in many different places, unlike the Olympic Games torch which is lit in Olympia on each occasion.

New Delhi offered itself as permanent host for the Asian Games' flame, and on December 14, 1997 a permanent flame was ignited in Delhi's National Stadium.  The intent was that every Asian Games torch relay should begin from this flame from now on.

However, one short year later, this flame was not used to light the torch for the next games.  

For the 1998 edition, back in Bangkok, King Phumiphol Adulyadej (now Bhumipol), the same King who lit the games' flame over thirty years ago in 1966 and again in 1970, once again took over the duties once again next to Chitrlada Palace.  The flame was taken to Sanam Luang park, where it remained for two days. On December 6th, it was relayed 100 kilometers around the city by 216 runners until it reached the stadium that evening for the opening ceremony.

Organizers of the 2002 Asian Games in Busan lit two torches: one at Mount Paekdu in North Korea, and the other at South Korea’s Mount Halla.

The torches were brought together at Unification Hill, next to the Korean border at Imjinkak. The Korean relay would take 23 days, and cover 4,300 kilometers.

Meanwhile, flame lighting ceremonies were being held in each of the 44 other Asian nations that participate in the games. Each nation was instructed to light a flame in its own country and bring it with them to the games.  These flames would then all be combined into one at the Busan Opening Ceremony.

The Doha Asian Games organizers have said the relay will begin on October 8, 2006 and take 50 days until the games open on December 1st.

Organizers intend to light the games torch in Doha, then travel to New Delhi, and on to every other former Asian Games host city, making this the longest Asian Games torch relay in history.

(Asian Games Official Reports from 1958, 1962, 1966, 1970, 1974, 1982, 1986, 1990 were used as sources for the above information)  

Daniel Bell is the author of the Encyclopedia of International Games and the forthcoming History of the Asian Games (Fall 2006).

2011 Asian Winter Games confirmation

January 9, 2006

Kazakhstan's KAZINFORM news service is confirming that Almaty, Kazakhstan has been awarded the rights to host the 2011 Asian Winter Games.

Official contracts between the Olympic Council of Asia, the Kazakhstan National Olympic Committee and Almaty's Organizing Committee are due to be signed in March.

Preliminary dates for the games are January 30-February 6, 2011.

Almaty (formerly known as Alma-Ata) sits in the midst of Kazakhstan's prime apple producing territory, and the word variously translated into English (depending on the source) as  “apple abundance” "A city of apples",  "Grand father of apple" "full of apple-trees" "apple abundance” or "The Place of Apples".   Any way you slice it, its plain, Almaty and apples go together.  

This recalls the slogan of the 2003 Asian Winter Games host, Aomori, Japan, "Aomori is apples, and apples are Aomori."

Almaty is more famous in the sporting world for its high altitude skating rink, Medeo.

The rink gained almost mythical status as it was reserved almost exclusively for the use of skaters from the Soviet Union and East Germany who set scores of world records at the venue (with a little help from the Norwegians) from as early as 1951 until 1986 when indoor skating arenas began to take precedence.

It would be fascinating to see the 2011 Asian Winter Games take place at the venue, which has not been kept in good repair the past decade, and possible the 2014 Olympic Winter Games, of which Almaty is a candidate.

Pink and Carey Hart Married

January 8, 2006

Various news sources are reporting that singer Pink (Alecia Moore) and Freestyle Motocross star Carey Hart, an item since 2001, got married in Costa Rica this past weekend. That part we'll assume is factual.

However, sources are also reporting that the pair met at the 2001 X Games in Las Vegas. That part we know can't be true.

The 2001 Summer X Games were in Philadelphia, the winter version for good measure, in Mt. Snow, Vermont.

Hart, a Las Vegas native, in an ESPN chat transcript from the summer of 2002, recalls that the pair met at the X Games, and then met up again three months later in Las Vegas where things started to take off.

Winter Commonwealth Games: Past or Future, Fact or Fantasy?

January 7, 2006

Two years ago this month, Indian Olympic Association (IOA) president Suresh Kalmadi announced that India would be seeking to promote winter sports and possibly hosting winter SAF Games and Commonwealth Winter Games.

The new year brings announcements from India that the Kashmir Region has been selected to host Commonwealth Winter Games in 2010, with several news sources quoting Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad as the source of the announcement.

However, no other official sources or channels are confirming the news, most notably, the Commonwealth Games Federation, and no one is stating who made the award for the rights for the games. India has stated that they hope to develop areas in the Himalayas as world class ski resorts.

As for a future Commonwealth Winter Games, 2010 is a strange choice, other than India is already hosting the summer edition of the Commonwealth Games that same year. Holding games in January or February would conflict with the 2010 Olympic Games, and holding 2010 Commonwealth Winter Games after the 2010 Olympic Winter Games would probably diminish participation in the Commonwealth version of the games. Holding the games in December 2010 might work.

No written documentation such as programs or official reports are known to exist that would confirm that Commonwealth Winter Games have ever been held, but there are one or two mentions in athletes and coaching biographies (one from the Canadian Ski Museum), one calendar listing in Olympic Review, and medals imprinted with Commonwealth Winter Games have been spotted on eBay. Research continues.....

Alaska's Arctic Winter Games gets budget boost

January 6, 2006

With just under sixty days to go until the opening of the 2006 Arctic Winter Games, games organizers on the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska are smiling with the news that one of their state Senators, Ted Stevens, has found a way to work half a million dollars worth of funding for the games into a newly passed defense spending bill.  The money is supposed to be earmarked for security and communications for the games, and frees up other money to be used elsewhere in the games budget.

Last month, pleas from organizers for more sponsorship brought in almost $200,000 in cash and services from Avis Alaska, Marathon Oil Corp., Agrium Inc. Shell Oil, and the Canadian consulate.

Senator Stevens will also be guest of honor Jan. 13 at an Arctic Winter Games fundraiser in Anchorage.

Organizers are also selling products at the Arctic Games Web site to supplement their games budget.

Announcement on 2011 Asian Winter Games host next week?

December 31, 2005

Agence France Presse is reporting that Imangali Tasmagambetov, the former Primer Minister of Kazakhstan, now Mayor of Almaty (Alma-Ata) has announced that Almaty will be awarded the right to host the Asian Winter Games of 2011.

The report stated that the official announcement will be made next week at the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) offices in Kuwait.

Confusion over the status of Asian Winter Games scheduled for 2009 has been addressed by the report of the 24th OCA General Assembly Guangzhou from September of this year, despite the fact that the Lebanese Olympic Committee web site still prominently displays the news that they will be holding the Asian Winter Games in 2009 and other spurious sources stating that Beirut will hold those games in 2011.

The OCA confirmed in September that the future schedule of Asian events would be:

  • 15th Asian Games  Doha  December 2006
  • 6th Winter Asian Games  Changchun  Jan/Feb 2007
  • 2nd Asian Indoor Games  Macao  2007
  • 1st Asian Beach Games  Bali, Indonesia  2008
  • 3rd Asian Indoor Games  Vietnam  2009
  • 16th Asian Games  Guangzhou, China  2010
  • 7th Winter Asian Games  2011
  • 2nd Beach Games  2012
  • 4th Asian Indoor Games  2013
  • 17th Asian Games  2014

The majority of those events had been previously announced.

In December of 2003 the Olympic Council of Asia announced that it was considering withdrawing the 2009 Asian Winter Games from Beirut (rights that had been awarded in 2002) because Lebanon had "not adhered to the council’s constitution and the host city contract.”  It looks like this has been finalized, though there did not seem to be any announcement from the OCA as to when this occurred. 

The OCA had also decided at the time to change the scheduling of the Asian Winter Games to one year before the summer version of the games, rather than the year after.  For the last several editions of the games, the summer versions have occurred in the latter half of the year, while the winter versions just months after in the winter of the next year.

Putting the winter games in the preceding year would put the winter version some 18-22 months before the summer games, as opposed to 3-6 months after the summer games, and would help with scheduling and planning for the games. 

Returning to Asian Winter Games to 2011 would once again place those games just a few months after the summer games.  The 2010 Asian Games are scheduled to be held in Guanzhou, China in November 2010.

2005 sees smallest international games ever

December 29, 2005

Daniel Bell - International Games Archive

2005 closes another intriguing year in international games with the Unity Games (a competition restricted to members of the Shia Ithnasheri Islamic sect) being held in Dubai from December 24-31. That brings the total of announced international multisport competitions in 2005 to 179, one more than 2004.

2005 also saw what can be verifiably regarded as the smallest international games ever held, in terms of number of competitors. 

In October, Shanghai, China held the Shanghai Gravity Games at the new SMP Skatepark with just 19 competitors from six nations.

Dubai went one better in December with just 14 competitors from six countries in the Dubai X Games.   

In Shanghai the events were billed as competitions, and medals awarded.  The Dubai event, while advertised as games, had more of an air of exhibition. 

Curiously, in both events, there were no athletes entered from the host nation, another first in international games history.

The 1948 Stoke Mandeville games had only 16 competitors.  However that event (a precursor to multisport Stoke Mandeville Games and later the Paralympic Games) was neither multisport or international.  The only sport was archery, and the only nation, England.

The 1949 Winter World Games for the Deaf in Seefeld, Austria had 33 participants from 3 nations in 2 sports.

The 1948 Stoke Mandeville Games fail to reach the threshold of  international and multisport, and the Dubai X Games were an exhibition. This would leave the Shanghai SMP Skatepark Gravity Games as the smallest international multisport competition held to date.

Games

Host City

Host Nation

Year

Total

Shanghai SMP Gravity Games

Shanghai

China

2005

19

Winter World Games for the Deaf

Seefeld

Austria

1949

33

Singapore Sports Council for the Handicapped - Regional Sports Meet

Singapore

Singapore

1973

36

Winter World Games for the Deaf

Oslo

Norway

1953

43

Winter Can-Am Police-Fire Games

Mt. Bachelor

USA

1989

50

Winter World Games for the Deaf

Are

Sweden

1963

53

Pan-American Games for Patients with Asthma

River Plate

Argentina

2000

54

Winter World Games for the Deaf

Montana-Vermala

Switzerland

1959

56

Winter World Games for the Deaf

Oberammergau

Germany

1955

57

GCC Cerebral Palsy Games

Kuwait City

Kuwait

1996

58

Western Asiatic Games

Delhi-Patalia

India

1934

82

University Sports Week Winter (FISU)

Oberammergau

Germany

1957

83

Winter World Games for the Deaf

Berchtesgaden

Germany

1967

86

Winter World Transplant Games

Pra-Loup

France

1996

89

Winter World Games for the Deaf

Adelboden

Switzerland

1971

92

University Sports Week Winter (FISU)

Mt. Jahorina

Yugoslavia

1955

92

International Women's Games

Gothenburg

Sweden

1926

92

Winter World Games for the Deaf

Meribel

France

1979

94

Winter Pan-American Games

Las Lenas

Argentina

1990

97

World Transplant Games

Portsmouth

England

1978

99

No Great Outdoor Games for 2006

December 20, 2005

ESPN announced yesterday that the Great Outdoor Games will not be held in 2006.

Vice president and general manager of ESPN Outdoors Christine Godleski said the plan for now is to "take a break and assess what we need to do to make the Great Outdoors Games bigger and better than ever."

During the process ESPN will evaluate how it chooses sites for the games, decide the best time of year for the games, and what events to include in the games.

The games have been held annually beginning in Lake Placid from 2001 until 2003, the games were then held in Reno, NV; Madison, WI and last summer in Orlando, FL at the Disney Wide World of Sports complex.

With the cancellation also comes the cancellation of dozens of qualifying events, as well as contests by sponsors Dodge, Stihl and ESPN that were giving away trips to the 2006 games (but had not named the destination).

On the same day that ESPN announced it would not be holding the games in 2006, SportsTravel magazine announced that the 2004 edition of the Great Outdoor Games had been named the Best Professional Multi-Sport or Multi-Discipline Event award for the year, in a vote by its readers.

The event unfortunately was not met with complete acceptance by the residents of Madison, mostly over the use of guns in the games, and the event did not return to Madison a second time.

The Great Outdoor Games has also won Emmy Awards for television sports coverage.

Preliminary 2006 schedule information

Preliminary 2007 schedule information

International Games News Archive

 

"The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part, just as the most important thing in life is not the triumph but the struggle. The essential thing is not to have conquered but to have fought well."
- Baron Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the Modern Olympic Movement."

 

International Games News Archives

International Games Archives - Information on over 200  International Multisport Competitions and Regional Games. 

 

Links to Games Webs

Other Relevant Links to International Games

Ongoing Research: The latest Games being researched by the IGA

The International Games Archive exists to preserve the rich history of international and multisport competitions and disseminate current information about all international games. The archive focuses on international multisport competitions other than the Olympic Games and actively collects written and audiovisual materials related to these competitions. 

For Questions and correspondence please contact 

Daniel Bell - Founder International Games Archive

at

igarchive at mindspring.com

 

© International Games Archive, 1998-2006