2018 Summer Youth Olympics Explained

Host City:Buenos Aires, Argentina
Motto:Feel the future
(Spanish: Viví el futuro)[1]
Nations:206
Athletes:3,997
Events:239 in 32 sports
Opening:6 October
Closing:18 October
Opened By:President Mauricio Macri
Cauldron:Santiago Lange
and Paula Pareto
Stadium:Parque Polideportivo Roca
Website:buenosaires2018.com
Summer Prev:2014 Nanjing
Summer Next:2026 Dakar
Winter Prev:2016 Lillehammer
Winter Next:2020 Lausanne

The 2018 Summer Youth Olympics (Spanish; Castilian: Juegos Olímpicos de la Juventud de 2018), officially known as the III Summer Youth Olympic Games, and commonly known as Buenos Aires 2018, were an international sports, cultural, and educational event held from 6 to 18 October 2018 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. They were the first Youth Olympic Games held outside of Eurasia, and the first Summer Games held outside of Asia and the first to be held in the Western and Southern hemispheres. It was the second Olympic Games held in South America after the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Bidding

See main article: Bids for the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics.

Six bids were initially submitted for the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics. Buenos Aires confirmed their bid in September 2011.[2] On 13 February 2013, the IOC selected Buenos Aires as one of the three Candidate Cities for the 2018 Summer Youth Olympic Games. The other two candidate cities were Glasgow and Medellín. Guadalajara and Rotterdam failed to become candidates. Poznań withdrew their bid before the candidate cities were selected.[3]

The host city election vote was held at an IOC Session in Lausanne. The results were as follows:[4]

2018 Summer Youth Olympics bidding results
CityNationRound 1Round 2
Buenos Aires Argentina4049
Medellín Colombia3239
Glasgow United Kingdom13

Development and preparation

Organisation

In October 2013, International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach appointed Namibian sprinter and four-time Olympic silver medalist Frank Fredericks as Chairman of the Coordination Commission for the 3rd Summer Youth Olympic Games — Buenos Aires 2018.[5] Fredericks was heading the six-person IOC Coordination Commission made up of several Olympians including Danka Bartekova, the youngest IOC Member and Young Ambassador from the inaugural Youth Olympic Games in Singapore in 2010. This commission was completed by two other IOC members, China's Li Lingwei, winner of three World Badminton Championships, and Barry Maister, a member of New Zealand's hockey team that won the Olympic gold medals at 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal; and Adham Sharara, Canadian President of the International Table Tennis Federation, and Henry Nuñez, head of the National Olympic Committee of Costa Rica.[6] Working along with them there was the Buenos Aires Youth Olympic Games Organising Committee (BAYOGOC), that includes member of the Argentine Olympic Committee (AOC), the local government and the national government, and which CEO was Leandro Larrosa. The local organising committee involves young people in all levels of the organization; including an 'Athlete Commission' and a newly established 'Youth Commission' – a group of young consultants chosen by the AOC from local schools and universities – and the employees within BAYOGOC from junior to director level.[7] The first Coordination Commission meeting took place in Buenos Aires on 27–28 September 2014.

During June 2015 a small delegation from Nanjing Youth Olympic Games Organizing Committee (NYOGOC) visited Buenos Aires for a series of debriefing workshops and seminars to pass on their expertise focusing on strategic decisions to be made in the early stages such as legacy, the use of the YOG to impact youth and sport, and benefits of the YOG to engage communities. The CEOs of Singapore 2010, Lillehammer 2016 and Innsbruck 2012 also took part of these meetings that were presided over by Frank Fredericks.[8]

Football player and Olympic gold medalist Lionel Messi, originally not from Buenos Aires but from Rosario, was named as an ambassador of the 2018 YOG in March 2014,[9] and he delivered a video welcoming message for the young athletes to Buenos Aires during the closing ceremony of the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics.[10] In December 2015, the four-time Olympic medalist Luciana Aymar was also named as an ambassador of Buenos Aires 2018.[11] In July 2017, Olympic gold medalist Luis Scola was named ambassador of the 2018 YOG.[12]

Joining the Olympic programme for the first time at Buenos Aires 2018 were BMX freestyle, kitesurfing, cross country running, beach handball, sport climbing, karate, breakdancing,[13] and roller sports;[14] and the event programme saw an increased gender balance.[15] FIFA also decided to replace football with futsal at the Buenos Aires Youth Olympics,[16] while other sports such as skateboarding were being considered for the programme.[17] Roller speed skating was added to the Olympic programme on 17 March 2017.[18]

Three years before the event, a survey showed that public support had reached 82.3 per cent in favour of the Youth Olympic games in Buenos Aires. During the second visit of the International Olympic Committee's Coordination Commission to the city, on 13 and 14 August 2015, Mr. Fredericks highlighted the implementation of 13 of the recommendation of the Agenda 2020 by BAYOGOC.[19]

Venues

The original plan was based on the bid for the 2004 Summer Olympics, in which a 15 km long Olympic Corridor would have worked instead of a more concentrated Olympic Park.[20] For the Buenos Aires bid for the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics the Olympic Corridor was adapted into a Green Corridor, one of the two main sports zones as the primary sites of the Games in Buenos Aires 2018, being the other one Parque Roca, to the south of the city.[21] The Green Corridor and the Olympic Corridor shared River Plate Stadium, Tiro Federal, Gimnasia y Esgrima de Buenos Aires, Parque Tres de Febrero, La Bombonera, La Rural and CeNARD as venues.

In order to group the sports in a more compact framework, in September 2014 a new four-clusters concept was revealed, dropping out venues such as La Rural.[7] [22] It was announced then that each cluster would include an area called YOG FEST where sporting experiences, family entertainment and cultural activities would take place. But at the 129th IOC Session, in August 2016, a new venues masterplan was presented, including two new stand-alone venues, adding La Rural once again and replacing Parque Sarmiento with Tecnópolis.

The International Olympic Committee members stayed at the Sheraton Hotel, located in the district of Retiro and close to Retiro railway station, one of the most important transportation hubs in Buenos Aires.

After numerous changes, in February 2018, the definitive venues plan was presented.[23]

The Opening Ceremony was held at the Obelisco de Buenos Aires.[24]

A. Green Park

Adjacent to downtown Buenos Aires and stretching three kilometres along the scenic banks of the River Plate, this area was distinguished by swathes of parks. It included the barrios of Núñez and Palermo. The Palermo Woods, a highly popular retreat for porteños and visitors alike, was the triathlon and cycling venue.

Venues located in Núñez can be reached by Belgrano Norte Line (at Ciudad Universitaria railway station) or by nearby Mitre Line (at Núñez Station) or Buenos Aires underground Line D (at Congreso de Tucumán Station). Venues located in Palermo can be reached by Mitre Line (Tres de Febrero and Lisandro de la Torre station).

VenueLocationSportsType
Parque Tres de FebreroPalermoTriathlon
Cycling (Road / Cross-country)
Beach Volley
Existing, no permanent works required
Argentine Equestrian ClubNúñezEquestrian
Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis ClubPalermoTennis
CeNARDNúñezFutsal
La RuralPalermoInternational Broadcast Centre

B. Olympic Park

Located to the South of Buenos Aires, Roca Park is a vast area of 200 hectares in the district of Villa Soldati, a neighborhood that has been targeted by the local Government in need of urban development.[25] One of the greenest areas in the metropolis, it is adjacent to the City Park and the Buenos Aires Automotive Racetrack. The Park, inaugurated in the 1980s, has many sports venues and recreational facilities, including the iconic Roca Park Athletics Stadium and the Roca Park Tennis Stadium. This area was also the site of the Youth Olympic Village (YOV), from where 65 per cent of the athletes were able to walk to their competition venues,[26] and after the event it would become the new location for the CeNARD.

The Parque Polideportivo Roca was fully renovated before the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics in order to be used as main Olympic Park. Six pavilions were built: Asia Pavilion (judo and wrestling), Africa Pavilion (fencing and modern pentathlon), Europe Pavilion (karate and weightlifting), Oceania Pavilion (boxing and taekwondo), America Pavilion (gymnastics) and natatorium. The complex also includes hockey and athletics fields.

Olympic Park can be reached by Premetro tram at Cecilia Grierson station, or by the southern Metrobus line.

VenueLocationSportsType
Roca Park StadiumVilla SoldatiTraining and logisticsExisting, no permanent works required
Youth Olympic ParkAthleticsExisting, permanent works required
Youth Olympic ParkAquatics (Swimming;— Diving)
Field Hockey
Modern Pentathlon (shooting, running, fencing and swimming)
Boxing
Gymnastics (Artistics — Rhythmic — Trampoline)
Judo
Taekwondo
Weightlifting
Karate
Wrestling
Fencing
Permanent venue to be built
Youth Olympic VillageClosing Ceremony[27] Permanent venue to be built

C. Urban Park

Located to the east of the city, this cluster occupies a significant portion of the Río de la Plata riverbank and includes the old Puerto Madero docks as venue for water sports. Rowing competitions were held over 500 metres rather than the usual 2,000 metres.

This area can be reached by Buenos Aires Underground lines A, B, D and E.

VenueLocationSportsType
Dock 3Puerto MaderoRowing
Canoeing
Existing, no permanent works required
Parque Mujeres ArgentinasPuerto MaderoBasketball (3 on 3)
Cycling (BMX Freestyle)
Sport climbing
Dancesport

D. Techno Park

Located west of the city and next to the General Paz Avenue which marks the limit of Buenos Aires city, the 50 hectares science, technology, industry and art mega exhibition Tecnópolis was inaugurated in 2011 and was the venue for four sports competitions. This area can be accessed by Mitre Line Railway at Migueletes station or by Belgrano Norte Line at Saavedra or Padilla stations.

VenueLocationSportsType
TecnópolisVilla MartelliTable Tennis
Futsal
Badminton
Existing, no permanent works required
Parque SarmientoSaavedraShooting
Archery
Beach Handball

E. Stand-alone venues

VenueLocationSportsType
Paseo de la CostaVicente LópezCycling (BMX Racing)
Roller speed skating
Existing, no permanent works required
Club Náutico San IsidroSan IsidroSailing
Club Atlético de San IsidroSan IsidroRugby sevens
Hurlingham ClubHurlinghamGolf

The Games

Torch Relay

See main article: List of Olympic torch relays. Athens (Greece) - La Plata (Buenos Aires) - Parana (Entre Rios) - Santa Fe (Santa Fe) - Iguazu (Misiones) - Corrientes (Corrientes) - Jujuy (Jujuy) - Salta (Salta) - Tucuman (Tucuman) - Catamarca (Catamarca) - La Rioja (La Rioja) - Mendoza (Mendoza) - San Juan (San Juan) - Cordoba (Cordoba) - Neuquen (Neuquen) - Bariloche (Rio Negro) - Ushuaia (Tierra del Fuego) - Buenos Aires (Federal Capital) (Argentina)

Opening ceremony

The opening ceremony of the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics was held at the Obelisco de Buenos Aires on 6 October 2018 at 20:00 (8 PM) Argentina Time.

Sports

The 2018 Summer Youth Olympics featured 239 events in 32 sports. There were 12 mixed team events (Mixed-NOCs), 9 mixed team events (NOCs), 1 open event (Equestrian), 113 men's events, and 102 women's events.

Demonstration sports

These were the demonstration sports in the games:[28] [29]

Participating National Olympic Committees

Number of athletes by National Olympic Committee

Schedule

The schedule for the 2018 Summer Youth Olympic Games was released on 9 May 2018, exactly 150 days before the starting of the games on its official website.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: "Viví el futuro", el lema de Buenos Aires 2018. buenosaires2018.com. buenosaires2018.com. 9 April 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180409235836/https://www.buenosaires2018.com/es/noticias/vivi-el-futuro-el-lema-de-buenos-aires-2018. 9 April 2018. es.
  2. Web site: Buenos Aires, Argentina to bid for 2018 Youth Olympic Games . GamesBids.com . 2011-09-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120106175649/http://www.gamesbids.com/eng/youth_olympic_bids/1216135867.html . 6 January 2012.
  3. Web site: IOC shortlists three Candidate Cities for 2018 Summer Youth Olympic Games . Olympic.org . 2013-02-13 . 2014-05-29.
  4. Web site: Buenos Aires elected as Host City for 2018 Youth Olympic Games . Olympic.org . 2014-05-29.
  5. Web site: IOC announces composition of Tokyo 2020 and Buenos Aires 2018 Coordination Commissions . Olympic.org . 2013-10-16.
  6. Web site: Fredericks appointed head of Buenos Aires 2018 IOC Coordination Commission . 16 October 2013 . Duncan Mackay . 2013-10-16.
  7. Web site: Buenos Aires 2018 vows to bring sport to the inner city . Olympic.org . 2014-09-28.
  8. Web site: Nanjing 2014 hands over the baton to Buenos Aires 2018 . Olympic.org . 2015-06-25.
  9. Web site: Messi to be official face of 2018 Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires . 15 March 2014 . Inside the Games . 2014-03-15.
  10. Web site: Lionel Messi invitó al mundo para los próximos Juegos Olímpicos de la Juventud en 2018. Canchallena.com. 2014-08-28. 27 June 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150627024901/http://canchallena.lanacion.com.ar/1722403-lionel-messi-invito-al-mundo-para-los-proximos-juegos-olimpicos-de-la-juventud-en-2018. dead.
  11. Web site: Hockey legend Luciana Aymar announced as an Ambassador for Buenos Aires 2018 . Olympic.org. 2015-12-07.
  12. News: Olympic basketball champion Scola named Buenos Aires 2018 ambassador.
  13. Web site: Three new sports to join Buenos Aires 2018 YOG programme . Olympic.org . 2016-12-07.
  14. Web site: Roller speed added to the Buenos Aires 2018 event programme! . Olympic.org . 2017-03-17. 2017-03-18.
  15. Web site: Innovation and increased gender balance at the Buenos Aires 2018 Youth Olympic Games . Olympic.org . 2015-07-31.
  16. Web site: FIFA executive vows to improve governance and boost female participation in football. https://web.archive.org/web/20150925230552/http://www.fifa.com/about-fifa/news/y=2015/m=9/news=fifa-executive-vows-to-improve-governance-and-boost-female-participati-2696406.html. dead. 25 September 2015. FIFA.com. 25 September 2015.
  17. Web site: Liam Morgan. Exclusive: Skateboarding among sports being considered for inclusion at Buenos Aires 2018. Inside the Games. 21 February 2016. 2018-11-18.
  18. Web site: A new sport was added to Buenos Aires 2018 event programme: Roller Speed. Buenos Aires 2018 on Twitter. 17 March 2017.
  19. Web site: Youth engagement and innovation at the heart of Buenos Aires 2018 preparations . Olympic.org . 2015-08-14.
  20. Web site: Cesar R. Torres . Stymied Expectations Buenos Aires' Persistent Efforts to Host Olympic Games . State University of New York . 2007-01-01. 2016-06-01.
  21. Web site: Rodrigo Quiroga . Buenos Aires Sede de los Juegos Olímpicos de la Juventud 2018 . Jojba2018.org . 2014-05-29 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140512132709/http://www.jojba2018.org/programa_deportivo.php . 12 May 2014 .
  22. Web site: Venues . Guillermo Dietrich . 2014-09-28.
  23. Web site: Twenty-nine sport venues for the Olympic dreams of almost 4,000 athlete . Buenos Aires 2018 . 2018-02-02 . 2018-02-02 . 5 February 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180205131406/https://www.buenosaires2018.com/en/news/twenty-nine-sport-venues-olympic-dreams-almost-4000-athlete . dead .
  24. Web site: #UNITEDBY THE FLAME: BUENOS AIRES 2018 REVEALS YOUTH OLYMPIC FLAME LIGHTING DATE AND JOURNEY OF THE TORCH TOUR . 6 July 2018 . olympic.org.
  25. Web site: Emily Goddard . Buenos Aires 2018 vows to bring sport to 2.6 million young people in city . 28 September 2014 . Inside the Games . 2014-09-28.
  26. Web site: Rodrigo Quiroga . Buenos Aires Sede de los Juegos Olímpicos de la Juventud 2018 . Jojba2018.org . 2014-05-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130701195735/http://www.jojba2018.org/villa_olimpica.php . 1 July 2013 . dead .
  27. Web site: Buenos Aires 2018 reveals details of "first inclusive" Opening Ceremony in Olympic history . Etchells . Daniel . 13 July 2018 . Inside the Games.
  28. Web site: Squash and polo confirmed as showcased sports at Buenos Aires 2018 Summer Youth Olympic Games. 6 July 2017 . 13 October 2018. Inside the Games.
  29. Web site: El karting será Olímpico en Buenos Aires 2018. Fefo. Camps. 9 August 2018.
  30. News: Bhaker leads Indian contingent as Youth Olympic Games opens . The Times of India . 7 October 2018 . TOI . 12 October 2018.