European Games

The European Games is a continental multi-sport event in the Olympic tradition contested by athletes from European nations and several transcontinental countries. The Games were envisioned and are governed by the European Olympic Committees (EOC), which announced their launch at its 41st General Assembly in Rome, on 8 December 2012.[1]

European Games
Games
Sports
Organisations
Other EOC Games

History

The 2015 European Games, the first edition of the event, took place in Baku, Azerbaijan in June 2015, and further editions are planned every four years thereafter. The 2019 edition was held in Minsk, Belarus from 21 to 30 June. The 2023 edition will be held in Kraków, Poland.

The European Games are the 5th continental Games in the Olympic tradition to be initiated, after the Asian Games, Pan American Games, Pacific Games and African Games. As of 2015, every sporting continent[2] has a continental games.[3]

The European Games are not related to the European Championships, a separate multi-sport event organised by individual European sports federations, bringing together the individual European Championships of athletics, swimming, artistic gymnastics, cycling, rowing, golf, and triathlon under a single 'brand' on a four-year cycle beginning in 2018, and broadcast by agreement with the EBU.[4]

List of European Games

Host cities of the European Games
Edition Year Host City Host Nation Opened by Start Date End Date Nations Competitors Sports Events Top Placed Team Ref.
I 2015 Baku  Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev 12 June 28 June 50 5,898 21 253  Russia (RUS) [5]
II 2019 Minsk  Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko 21 June 30 June 50 4,082 15 200  Russia (RUS) [6]
III 2023 Kraków-Małopolska  Poland President Andrzej Duda (expected) 21 June 2 July 48 (expected) 7,000 (expected) 26 (expected) TBD TBD [7]
IV 2027 TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD

Sports

The 2019 Minsk European Games Sports Programme included 15 sports, 23 disciplines, 10 qualifying sports to Tokyo 2020, 4 Sports European Championship, for a total of 4082 competitors in 201 medal events.

The figures in each cell indicate the number of events for each sport contested at the respective Games.

Sport (Discipline) Body 2015 2019 2023
World Europe
 
Artistic swimming FINA LEN 408
Diving 8013
Swimming 4200
Water polo 200
 
Archery WA WAE 588
Athletics IAAF EAA 11037
Badminton BWF BE 555
Basketball (3x3) FIBA FIBAE 222
Beach handball IHF EHF 002
Beach soccer FIFA UEFA 112
Boxing AIBA EBC 151513
Breaking WDSF 002
Canoe sprint ICF ECA 1516
 
BMX UCI UEC 202
Mountain biking 202
Road cycling 440
Track cycling 0200
 
Fencing FIE EFC 12012
 
Acrobatic gymnastics FIG UEG 660
Aerobic gymnastics 220
Artistic gymnastics 14120
Rhythmic gymnastics 880
Trampoline 440
 
Judo IJF EJU 18151
Karate WKF EKF 121212
Sambo (martial art) FIAS ESF 8180
Shooting ISSF ESC 191930
Table tennis ITTF ETTU 455
Taekwondo WTF ETU 8016
Triathlon ITU ETU 203
 
Beach volleyball FIVB CEV 200
Volleyball 200
 
Wrestling UWW CELA 24180
 
Total events 253200253

Medal table

European Games medal table
RankNOCGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia (RUS)1236486273
2 Belarus (BLR)332751111
3 Azerbaijan (AZE)26253384
4 Ukraine (UKR)24314398
5 Great Britain (GBR)24202670
6 Italy (ITA)23412488
7 Germany (GER)23234692
8 France (FRA)18223171
9 Netherlands (NED)17251658
10 Spain (ESP)13131743
11–44Remaining129162249540
Totals (44 entries)4534536221528
Source: [8]

See also

References

  1. "EOC LAUNCHES EUROPEAN GAMES". eurolympic.org. 8 December 2012. Archived from the original on 12 June 2015. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  2. Although the Pacific Games takes in all of Oceania/Australasia, the two largest countries in the region, Australia and New Zealand, did not participate because of the danger they would, though their wealth and size relative to other members, excessively dominate the event. They were however provisionally admitted to the Games in 4 sports in which other nations were consistently competitive - rugby sevens, weightlifting, sailing and taekwondo - in 2014.
  3. "Baku 2015 at a glance". baku2015.org. 1 June 2015. Archived from the original on April 20, 2015. Retrieved 4 September 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. Scotland to host 2018 European Sports Championships
  5. "1st EG Baku 2015". EOC. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  6. "2nd EG Minsk 2019". EOC. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  7. "Malopolska region and the city of Krakow to host 3rd European Games in 2023". The European Games. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  8. "Curtain comes down on 17 glorious days of sport". Organising Committee responsible for the inaugural European Games in Baku. Archived from the original on 19 April 2018. Retrieved 28 June 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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