2007 Canada Winter Games Explained

2007 Canada Winter Games
Host City:Whitehorse, Yukon
Opening:23 February
Closing:10 March
Sprevious:2003 CWG

The 2007 Canada Winter Games were held in Whitehorse, Yukon, from Friday 23 February 2007 to Saturday 10 March 2007. These were the first Canada Games held North of 60 (in the northern territories). The games were held concurrent with the Inuit Games and Dene Games. The Games were televised by CBC, SRC, TSN, RDS, and APTN.

Opening Ceremonies

The opening ceremonies were held on Friday 23 February 2007, at ATCO Place, a temporary tent structure built adjacent to the Yukon River for the Games.[1] The ceremonies were aired on CBC and the First Nations Channel, broadcast in English, French, and Inuktituk. The national anthem was sung twice, first in T'chone and then in the usual mixed-language English and French (starting in English, then changing language verse by verse). The premiers of Yukon, Nunavut, Northwest Territories and Prime Minister Stephen Harper officially opened the games.

Closing Ceremonies

The closing ceremonies were conducted 10 March 2007 at ATCO Place with 3500 in attendance to watch entertainment and hear closing speeches. Jennifer Knight, a skier from the Yukon, handed a torch to Hilary Hansen, an athlete from Prince Edward Island, host province of the 2009 Canada Games.[2]

Sports Contested & Venues

See main article: Events at the 2007 Canada Games.

Medal standings

RankProvince/TerritoryGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 52 36 34 122
2 37 35 40 112
3 24 29 26 79
4 24 24 29 77
5 9 13 15 37
6 4 12 19 35
7 2 2 8 12
8 0 3 4 7
9 1 0 3 4
9 1 0 3 4
11 0 1 2 3
12 1 0 0 1
13 0 0 1 1

Records

No province or territory was denied a medal in the final standings, an unprecedented occurrence for the Canada Games.[2]

See also

External links

! colspan="3" style="background:#78FF78;" | Canada Games

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Canada Winter Games – 2007 Whitehorse, Yukon Territory . 10 March 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070328231000/http://www.yukoninfo.com/canadawintergames.htm#12 . 28 March 2007 . dead .
  2. http://www.cbc.ca/cp/sports/070310/s0310108A.html