Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Commonwealth Games


The Commonwealth Games is an international, multi-sport event involving athletes from theCommonwealth of Nations.
As well as many Olympic sports, the Games also include some sports that are played mainly in Commonwealth countries, such as lawn bowlsrugby sevens and netball.[1] The Games are overseen by the Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF), which also controls the sporting programme and selects the host cities. The host city is selected from across the Commonwealth, with eighteen cities in seven countries having hosted it.
The event was first held in 1930 under the title of the British Empire Games in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The event was renamed as the British Empire and Commonwealth Gamesin 1954, the British Commonwealth Games in 1970, and gained its current title in 1978. Only six teams have attended every Commonwealth Games: AustraliaCanadaEnglandNew ZealandScotland and WalesAustralia has been the highest achieving team for eleven games,England for seven and Canada for one.
There are currently 54 members of the Commonwealth of Nations, and 71 teams participate in the Games. The four Home Nations of the United Kingdom – EnglandScotlandWales andNorthern Ireland – send separate teams to the Commonwealth Games, and individual teams are also sent from the British Crown dependencies of GuernseyJersey and the Isle of Man (unlike at the Olympic Games, where the combined "Great Britain" team represents all four home nations and the Crown dependencies). Many of theBritish overseas territories also send their own teams. The Australian external territory of Norfolk Island also sends its own team, as do theCook Islands and Niue, two states in free association with New Zealand. It was reported that Tokelau, another dependency of New Zealandwould be sending a team to the 2010 Games in New DelhiIndia. In the end, however, they did not.

Contents

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[edit]History

Flag of the
British Commonwealth Games
A sporting competition bringing together the members of the British Empire was first proposed by the Reverend Astley Cooper in 1891 when he wrote an article in The Times suggesting a "Pan-Britannic-Pan-Anglican Contest and Festival every four years as a means of increasing the goodwill and good understanding of the British Empire".
In 1911, the Festival of the Empire was held in London to celebrate the coronation of King George V. As part of the festival an Inter-Empire Championships was held in which teams from Australia, Canada, South Africa and the United Kingdom competed in events such as boxing, wrestling, swimming and athletics.
In 1928, Melville Marks Robinson of Canada was asked to organise the first British Empire Games. The first Games were held in 1930 in HamiltonOntarioCanada. The name changed toBritish Empire and Commonwealth Games in 1954, to British Commonwealth Games in 1970 and assumed the current name of the Commonwealth Games in 1978.[2]
At the 1930 games, women competed in the swimming events only.[3] From 1934, women also competed in some athletics events[citation needed].
The Empire Games flag was donated in 1931 by the British Empire Games Association of Canada. The year and location of subsequent games were added until the 1950 games. The name of the event was changed to the British Empire and Commonwealth Games and the flag was retired as a result.

[edit]Traditions

[[File:Queens Baton Relay - The 2006 relay passing through Wagga Wagga, Australia]]
  • From 1930 until 1950, the parade of nations was led by a single flagbearer carrying the Union Flag.
  • Since 1958, the Queen's Baton Relay has taken place, in which athletes carry a baton from Buckingham Palace to the games opening ceremony. This baton has within it Queen Elizabeth II's message of greeting to the athletes. The baton's final bearer is usually a famous sporting personage of the host nation.
  • All other nations march in English alphabetical order, except that the first nation marching in the Parade of Athletes is the host nation of the previous games, and the host nation of the current games marches last. In 2006 countries marched in alphabetical order in geographical regions.
The Big helium aerostat with traditional Indian Rajasthani puppets attached, during the 2010 Commonwealth Games opening ceremony
  • Three national flags fly from the stadium on the poles that are used for medal ceremonies: Previous host nation, Current host nation, Next host nation.
  • The military is more active in the Opening Ceremony than in the Olympic Games. This is to honour the British Military traditions of the Old Empire

[edit]Editions

Locations of the games, and participating countries
      Countries which have hosted, or plan to host, the event
      Other countries which enter the games
      Countries which have entered the games but no longer do so
 Host cities and year of games
The first edition of the event was the 1930 British Empire Games and eleven nations took part. The quadrennial schedule of the games was interrupted by World War II and the 1942 Games (set to be held in MontrealCanada) and the 1946 Games were abandoned.[4] The games were continued in 1950 and underwent a name change four years later with the first British Empire and Commonwealth Games in 1954.[2] Over 1000 athletes participated in the 1958 Games as over thirty teams took part for the first time.[5]
The event was briefly known as the British Commonwealth Games for the 1970 and 1974 editions and the 1978 Games, held in Edmonton, Canada, were the first to be held under the title of the "Commonwealth Games".[2] The Edmonton event marked a new high as almost 1500 athletes from 46 countries took part.[5]
Participation at the 1986 Games was affected by a boycott by some African and Caribbean nations in protest to the participation of New Zealand, following the All Blacks Rugby tour of Apartheid era South Africa in 1985, but the Games rebounded and continued to grow thereafter. The 1998 Commonwealth Games inKuala LumpurMalaysia saw the sporting programme grow from 10 to 15 sports as team sports were allowed for the first time.[2] Participation also reached new levels as over 3500 athletes represented 70 teams at the event. At the most recent Games (in MelbourneAustralia in 2006), over 4000 athletes took part in sporting competitions.[5]
The three nations to have hosted the games the most number of times are Australia (4), Canada (4) and New Zealand (3). Furthermore, five editions have taken place in the countries within the United Kingdom (Scotland 2, England 2 and Wales 1). Two cities have held the games on multiple occasions: Auckland (1950 and 1990), and Edinburgh (1970 and 1986).
GamesYearHostDatesSportsEventsNationsCompetitorsOfficials
Total
British Empire Games
I1930Canada HamiltonOntarioCanada16 – 23 August65911
II1934England LondonEngland4 – 11 August66816
III1938Australia SydneyNew South WalesAustralia5 – 12 February77115
IV1950New Zealand AucklandNew Zealand4 – 11 February98812
British Empire and Commonwealth Games
V1954Canada VancouverBritish ColumbiaCanada30 July – 7 August99124
VI1958Wales CardiffWales18 – 26 July99436
VII1962Australia PerthWestern AustraliaAustralia22 November – 1 December910435
VIII1966Jamaica KingstonJamaica4 – 13 August911034
British Commonwealth Games
IX1970Scotland EdinburghScotland16 – 25 July912142
X1974New Zealand ChristchurchCanterburyNew Zealand24 January – 2 February912138
Commonwealth Games
XI1978Canada EdmontonAlbertaCanada3 – 12 August1012846
XII1982Australia BrisbaneQueenslandAustralia30 September — 9 October1014246
XIII1986Scotland EdinburghScotland24 July – 2 August1016326
XIV1990New Zealand AucklandNew Zealand24 January – 3 February1020455
XV1994Canada VictoriaBritish ColumbiaCanada18 – 28 August1021763
XVI1998Malaysia Kuala LumpurMalaysia11 – 21 September1521370
XVII2002England ManchesterEngland25 July – 4 August17128172
XVIII2006Australia MelbourneVictoriaAustralia15 – 26 March16224571
XIX2010India DelhiIndia3 – 14 October1727271
XX2014Scotland GlasgowScotland23 July – 3 August
XXI2018Australia Gold CoastQueenslandAustralia or
Sri Lanka HambantotaSri Lanka
To be decided

Notes
1Includes 3 team sports 2Includes 4 team sports

[edit]Approved sports

There are a total of 21 sports (with two multi-disciplinary sports) and a further 7 para-sports which are approved by the Commonwealth Games Federation. They are categorised into three types. Core sports must be included on each programme. A number of optional sports may be picked by the host nation, which may include some team sports such as basketball. Recognised sports are sports which have been approved by the CGF but which are deemed to need expansion; host nations may not pick these sports for their programme until the CGF's requirements are fulfilled.[6]
Sport↓Type↓Years↓
ArcheryOptional1982, 2010
AthleticsCore1930–present
BadmintonCore1966–present
BasketballOptional2006
BilliardsRecognisedNever
BoxingCore1930–present
CanoeingRecognisedNever[7]
CricketRecognised1998
CyclingOptional1934–present
DivingOptional1930–present
FencingRecognised1950–1970
GolfRecognisedNever
Gymnastics
(Artistic and Rhythmic)
Optional1978, 1990–present
HandballRecognised1930
HockeyCore1998–present
JudoOptional1990, 2002, 2014
Lawn bowlsCore1930–present (except 1966)
Life savingRecognisedNever
Sport↓Type↓Years↓
NetballCore1998–present
RowingOptional1930, 1938–62, 1986
Rugby sevensCore1998–present
SailingRecognisedNever
ShootingOptional1966, 1974–present
SoftballRecognisedNever
SquashCore1998–present
SwimmingCore1930–present
Synchronized swimmingOptional1986, 2006
Table tennisOptional2002–present
TaekwondoOptionalNever
TennisOptional2010
Tenpin bowlingRecognised1998
TriathlonOptional2002, 2006, 2014
VolleyballRecognisedNever
Water poloRecognised1950
WeightliftingCore1950–present
WrestlingOptional1930–present (except 1990,1998 and 2006)

[edit]Participation

[edit]Nations/dependencies that have competed

Only six teams have attended every Commonwealth Games: Australia, Canada, England, New Zealand, Scotland and Wales. Australia has been the highest scoring team for ten games, England for seven and Canada for one.
Notes:
1: Aden became South Arabia which left the Commonwealth in 1968.
2: Became Guyana in 1966.
3: Became Belize in 1973.
4: Became Sri Lanka in 1972.
5: Became Ghana in 1957.
6: Left the Commonwealth when handed over to China in 1997.
7: Ireland was represented as a team from the whole of Ireland in 1930, and from the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland in 1934. The Irish Free State, renamed Irelandin 1937 (but also known by its name in the Irish Éire) formally left the Commonwealth when it declared that it was a Republic on 1 January 1949.
8: MalayaNorth BorneoSarawak and Singapore federated as Malaysia in 1963. Singapore left the federation in 1965.
9: Joined Canada in 1949.
10: Southern Rhodesia and Northern Rhodesia federated with Nyasaland from 1953 as Rhodesia and Nyasaland which lasted till 1963.
11: Divided into Southern Rhodesia and Northern Rhodesia in 1953.
12: Competed from 1958–1962 as part of Rhodesia and Nyasaland.
13: Zanzibar and Tanganyika federated to form Tanzania in 1964.
14: Withdrew from the Commonwealth in 2003.
15: Suspended from the Commonwealth and Games in 2009.[8]

[edit]Commonwealth nations/dependencies/disputed territories yet to send teams

Very few Commonwealth dependencies and nations have yet to take part:
  • Cornwall, represented by the Cornwall Commonwealth Games Association (CCGA), sent a bid for participation in the 2006 Commonwealth Games, however, their application was rejected by the CGF, who stated that the Constitutional status of Cornwall was not an issue that should be resolved through this medium. However, in 2010, the CCGA sought to launch a legal challenge to the decision of the CGF, stating that the Cornish bid of 2006 fulfilled the entire criterion of the CGF, and by rejecting the bid, the CGF had violated their own code, failing to follow their own criteria for participation. The Cornwall team will therefore seek competition in the 2014 games.[9]

[edit]Notable competitors

Lawn bowler Willie Wood from Scotland is the first competitor to have competed in seven Commonwealth Games, from 1974 to 2002. Also,Greg Yelavich, a sports shooter from New Zealand, has won 12 medals in seven games from 1986 to 2010.

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