1983 Summer Universiade Explained

XII Summer Universiade
XII Universiade d'été
Host City:Edmonton, Canada
Nations:73
Athletes:2,400
Events:118 in 10 sports
Opening:July 1, 1983
Closing:July 12, 1983
Opened By:Charles, Prince of Wales
Torch Lighter:Jeanna Suzanne-Genrisson
Stadium:Commonwealth Stadium
Previous:1981 Bucharest

The 1983 Summer Universiade, also known as the 1983 World University Games or XII Summer Universiade, took place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada between July 1 and 12, 1983. Over 2400 athletes from 73 countries participated. It was the first time Canada hosted these Games. Edmonton also hosted the 1978 Commonwealth Games.

The event was marred by tragedy from the death of Soviet diver Sergei Chalibashvili when he died eight days after hitting his head on the 10 m diving platform in competition while attempting a reverse 3½ in the tuck position. The official mascot of the event was Wugie the Owl; his name is an acronym of World University Games in Edmonton, and the Owl is the provincial bird of Alberta.

The Prince of Wales (now Charles III) opened the Universiade accompanied by the Princess of Wales (Diana), and other dignitaries and celebrities also visited.[1]

In October 2005, Edmonton was selected as a potential bid candidate to host the 2011 Summer Universiade by the Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS).[2]

Sports

Venues

VenueEventsCapacityStatus
Commonwealth StadiumAthletics60,081Active
Northlands Coliseum17,498Defunct
Argyll VelodromeTrack CyclingActive
Hawrelak ParkRoad cyclingActive
Universiade PavilionBasketball5,500Active

Participating nations

Around 2,400 athletes from 73 nations took part.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Highlights from Edmonton's Sport History . 2014-10-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140104072613/http://www.unitedcycle.com/images/about/EdmontonSportHistory.pdf . 2014-01-04 . dead .
  2. Web site: International Programs - Canadian Interuniversity Sport . 2007-06-11 . 2007-10-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071008035134/http://www.cisport.ca/e/international/story_detail.cfm?id=486 . dead .