Senior Olympics Explained

Senior Olympics (NSGA)
Level:National
Type:Masters athletics
Colour:blue
Organisers:National Senior Games Association
Host City:Des Moines (2025)
Start Date:July 24
End Date:August 4

The National Senior Games (Senior Olympics) are a sports competition for senior citizens in the United States. It is conducted by the National Senior Games Association (NSGA) once every two years. Akin to the Summer Olympics, it is a multi-sport event devoted to adults above the age of 50. It consists of regional competitions held yearly in all states of the US.

History

The games were founded by Warren Blaney.[1] In 1969, the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Commission approved the 1970 meet.[2] In June 1970 the first Senior Olympics took place at the Los Angeles Coliseum (1970 known as Senior Sports International Meet).[3] The games continued in the 1970s and 1980s in the Los Angeles and Orange County, California.[4] Today the meet is known as the Senior Games (or Senior Olympics). The Senior Games are now held in every state in the USA.[5] In 1985 National Senior Olympics Organization (NSOO) was formed, and in 1990 NSGA took over control of the Senior Games.[6]

A 1987 version attracted 2,500 people. Recent attendance (Louisville, 2007) had over 10,000 competitors and 20,000 spectators, with oldest competitors being over 100 years old.[7]

In 2021 there are currently five regions under NSGA: Great Lakes, Northeast, Pacific, Southeast, and West.[8] These national games are supported by the National Senior Games Association.[9]

The Huntsman World Senior Games is an international senior sports competition begun in 1987. The 27 athletic events held in Southern Utah begin with the torch lighting in traditional Olympic fashion during the Opening Ceremonies.[10]

Summary

Summer

The Senior Summer Olympics are conducted from 1970 the present day.[11]

!Number!Year!Host City!Number of Sports!Number of Athletes
11987St. Louis152,500
21989St. Louis163,400
31991Syracuse183,400
41993Baton Rouge187,200
51995San Antonio188,200
61997Tucson1010,300
71999Orlando1212,000
82001Baton Rouge188,700
92003Hampton Roads1810,700
102005Pittsburgh1811,100
112007Louisville1812,000
122009Palo Alto1810,000
132011Houston1810,100
142013Cleveland1910,881
152015Bloomington-Minneapolis-St.Paul199,989
162017Birmingham1910,530
172019Albuquerque2013,882
182021 (postponed to 2022)Fort Lauderdale2111,938
192023Pittsburgh2111,681
202025Des MoinesTBDTBD

Winter

The Senior Winter Olympics were held from 2000 to 2011.[12]

NumberYearHost CityNumber of Athletes
12000Lake Placid265
22002Lake Placid240
32003Buffalo640
42004Blaine560
52005Blaine440
62006Blaine500
72007Blaine420
82008Providence500
92009Fort Lauderdale410
102010Rochester260
112011Rochester250

State Games Regions

NSGA State Regions:[13]

  1. Northeast (12): Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, D.C.
  2. Southeast (12): Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia
  3. Great Lakes (8): Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, Wisconsin
  4. West (9): Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Wyoming
  5. Pacific (10): Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington

Senior State Games

Source:[14]

Empire State Senior Games

USOC Festivals

The USOC Sports Festivals were in the 80s. Teams of North, East, South and West competed in a domestic Olympics.

Many states have held and still hold Sports Festivals.
Master and Senior Games

NSGA Qualifying Games

Veterans Games

Canada Games

Sports

Individual Sports Competitions in the Senior Games:

Team Sports Competitions:

Non-Ambulatory Sports Competitions:

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Austin American-Statesman, Austin, TX, Mar 10, 1975. https://www.newspapers.com/image/362087695/?terms=Warren%20Blaney&match=1// Retrieved Oct. 29, 2020
  2. Coliseum Commission 1969; via LA84 Library. https://digital.la84.org/digital/collection/p17103coll13/id/4250/rec/1// Retrieved Oct. 29, 2020
  3. San Bernardino County Sun, June 23, 1970. https://www.newspapers.com/image/61274678/?terms=Los%20Angeles%20Coliseum&match=1// Retrieved Oct. 29, 2020
  4. MastersHistory. http://mastershistory.org/senior-sports-international-meet/// Retrieved Oct. 29, 2020
  5. NSGA. https://nsga.com// Retrieved Oct. 29, 2020
  6. NSGA 1987. https://nsga.com/history/// Retrieved Jan 18, 2021
  7. NSGA 1987. https://nsga.com/history/// Retrieved Jan 18, 2021
  8. NSGA Jan 18, 2021. https://nsga.com/nsga-regions/// Retrieved Jan 18, 2021
  9. NSGA. https://nsga.com/30timeline/// Retrieved Oct. 29, 2020
  10. World Senior Games. https://seniorgames.net/history// Retrieved Oct. 29, 2020
  11. https://nsga.com/history/
  12. https://nsga.com/wintergames/
  13. https://nsga.com/nsga-regions/
  14. https://nsga.com/state-games-information/