Panam Sports Explained

Panam Sports
Map:Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) members.svg
Mcaption:Member countries are in green
Type:Continental Sports Organization
Full Name:Pan American Sports OrganizationOrganización Deportiva Panamericana
Headquarters:Mexico City, Mexico
Location City:Santiago
Location Country:Chile
Location City2:Miami, Florida
Location Country2:U.S.
Membership:41 National Olympic Committees
Leader Title:President
Leader Name:Neven Ilic
Language:English, Spanish

Panam Sports (officially English: Pan American Sports Organization and Spanish; Castilian: '''Organización Deportiva Panamericana'''|link=no; Portuguese: Organização Desportiva Pan-Americana|link=no; French: Organisation sportive panaméricaine|link=no)[1] [2] is an international organization which represents the current 41 National Olympic Committees of the American continent.

It is affiliated with the International Olympic Committee and its affiliated bodies, including ANOC, the Association of National Olympic Committees, and serves as the continental association of the American Continent.

The organization's flagship event is the quadrennial Pan American Games, held since 1951. The Parapan American Games were inaugurated in 1999 for disabled athletes and are held alongside the able-bodied Pan American Games. The Pan American Winter Games, for winter sports, were held only once in 1990. The Pan American Sports Festival was inaugurated in 2014 as a developmental event for the region's athletes.

Affiliated organizations

There are four regional entities affiliated with Panam Sports, they are:

Official Languages

The organization's official languages are English and Spanish.[3] [4]

Flag

Just like the International Olympic Committee, Panam Sports has its own flag. In 2017, Panam Sports underwent a complete rebranding of the organization, including changes to its commercial name (now Panam Sports), brand and flag. The modern design emphasizes the unity of Panam Sports' 41 member nations, displaying the entire continent within a seal that features the new commercial name 'Panam Sports' at the top and 'Organization' at the bottom. The Olympic Rings reside below the seal, symbolizing the continental organization's close relationship with the IOC and the Olympic Games. The seal and accompanying rings are centered on the white background of the flag.

The original flag of PASO-ODEPA contained organization's motto "AMÉRICA, ESPÍRITO, SPORT, FRATERNITÉ", each respectively in Spanish, Portuguese, English and French. The original flag also displayed a torch along with the Olympic Rings and five circles with the official colors of the Olympics on a white background. Finally, the words PASO and ODEPA were written to indicate the organization the flag represents.

Member nations

In the following table, the year in which the NOC was recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is also given if it is different from the year in which the NOC was created.

Nation President Created/Recognised IOC memberSubregion
Antigua and BarbudaANTAntigua and Barbuda National Olympic CommitteeE.P. Chet Greene1966/1976Caribbean
ArgentinaARGArgentine Olympic CommitteeMario Moccia1923South America
ArubaARUAruban Olympic CommitteeWanda Broeksema1985/1986Caribbean/South America
BahamasBAHBahamas Olympic CommitteeRomell Knowles1952Caribbean
BarbadosBARBarbados Olympic AssociationSandra Osborne1955Caribbean
BelizeBIZBelize Olympic and Commonwealth Games AssociationHilberto Martínez1967Central America/Caribbean
BermudaBERBermuda Olympic AssociationPeter Dunne1935/1936Northern America
BOLBolivian Olympic CommitteeMarco Antonio Arze Mendoza1932/1936South America/Bolivarian
BrazilBRABrazilian Olympic CommitteePaulo Wanderley Teixeira1914/1935South America
IVBBritish Virgin Islands Olympic CommitteeEphraim Penn1980/1982Caribbean
CanadaCANCanadian Olympic CommitteeTricia Smith1904/1907Northern America
Cayman IslandsCAYCayman Islands Olympic CommitteeLorette Powell (acting)1973/1976Caribbean
ChileCHIChilean Olympic CommitteeMiguel Ángel Mujica1934South America/Bolivarian
ColombiaCOLColombian Olympic CommitteeCiro Solano Hurtado1936/1948South America/Caribbean/Bolivarian
Costa RicaCRCCosta Rican Olympic CommitteeAlexánder Zamora Gomez1953/1954Central America/Caribbean
CubaCUBCuban Olympic CommitteeRoberto León Richards Aguiar1926/1954Caribbean
DominicaDMADominica Olympic CommitteeBilly Doctrove1987/1993Caribbean
Dominican RepublicDOMDominican Republic Olympic CommitteeAntonio Acosta Corletto1946/1962Caribbean/Bolivarian
EcuadorECUEcuadorian National Olympic CommitteeCap. Jorge Delgado Panchana1948/1959South America/Bolivarian
El SalvadorESAEl Salvador Olympic CommitteeJose Armando Bruni Ochoa1949/1962Central America/Bolivarian
GrenadaGRNGrenada Olympic CommitteeCheney Joseph1984Caribbean
GuatemalaGUAGuatemalan Olympic CommitteeGerardo Aguirre1947Central America/Caribbean/Bolivarian
GuyanaGUYGuyana Olympic AssociationKalam Azad Juman-Yassin1935/1948South America
HaitiHAIHaitian Olympic CommitteeHans Larsen1914/1924Caribbean
HondurasHONHonduran Olympic CommitteeSalvador Jiménez Cáceres1956Central America/Caribbean
JamaicaJAMJamaica Olympic AssociationChristopher Samuda1936Caribbean
MexicoMEXMexican Olympic CommitteeMaría José Alcalá1923Central America/Caribbean
NicaraguaNCANicaraguan Olympic CommitteeEmmett Lang Salmerón1959Central America/Caribbean
PanamaPANPanama Olympic CommitteeCamilo Amado1934/1947Central America/Caribbean/South America/Bolivarian
ParaguayPARParaguayan Olympic CommitteeCamilo Pérez López Moreira1970South America/Bolivarian
PeruPERPeruvian Olympic CommitteeRenzo Manyari1924/1936South America/Bolivarian
Puerto RicoPURPuerto Rico Olympic CommitteeSara Rosario1948Caribbean
Saint Kitts and NevisSKNSt. Kitts and Nevis Olympic CommitteeAlphonso Bridgewater1986/1993Caribbean
Saint LuciaLCASaint Lucia Olympic CommitteeAlfred Emmanuel1987/1993Caribbean
Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesVINSaint Vincent and the Grenadines Olympic CommitteeGeorge Trevor Bailey1982/1987Caribbean
SurinameSURSuriname Olympic CommitteeRamon Tjon-A-Fat1959South America
Trinidad and TobagoTTOTrinidad and Tobago Olympic CommitteeDiane Henderson1946/1948Caribbean
United StatesUSAUnited States Olympic & Paralympic CommitteeGene Sykes1894Northern America
UruguayURUUruguayan Olympic CommitteeJulio César Maglione1923South America
VENVenezuelan Olympic CommitteeEduardo Álvarez Camacho1935South America/Caribbean/Bolivarian
ISVVirgin Islands Olympic CommitteeAngel L. Morales1967Caribbean

Former member: Netherlands Antilles Olympic Committee

There are some nations which are not members of the Panam Sports because they are not independent countries:

Presidents

S. No.NameCountryTenure
1.Avery Brundage1948–1951[8] [9]
2.José de Jesús Clark Flores Mexico1951–1955
3.Doug Roby1955–1959
4.José de Jesús Clark Flores Mexico1959–1971
5.Sylvio de Magalhaes Padilha Brazil1971–1971
6.José Beracasa1971–1975
7.Mario Vázquez Raña Mexico1975–2015
8.Ivar Sisniega Mexico2015–2015
9.Julio César Maglione Uruguay2015–2017
10.Neven Ilic Chile2017–present
Served as acting president for two months until new election.

Athlete Commission

In 2011, a new Panam Sports Athlete Commission was formed. Former Canadian rhythmic gymnast and three-time Pan American Games gold medalist Alexandra Orlando was selected the president of the commission. The commission will be made up of seven athletes (five current and two former) with two being reserved for non-Olympic sports.[10] [11]

MemberCountry Since Pan American Games Participation
Alexandra Orlando2011 2003–2007
Mijaín López Cuba2011 2003–2019
Samyr Lainé Haiti2011 2003–2011
Andrea Estrada Guatemala2011 2011
Guillermo Perez2011 2011
Pedro Causil2011 2011
Shannon Nishi2011 2011

Debut of countries per Games

GamesHostYearDebuting CountriesTotal
1951,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . 20
1955,,,, . 5
Chicago1959. 1
1963. 1
1967,,, . 4
19710
1975. 1
1979. 1
1983, . 2
1987,, . 3
1991. 1
1995,, . 3
19990
20030
20070
20110
20150
2019-0
2023-0
XX Lima 2027Future -
XXI -2031Future -

Exclusion of indigenous sports

Despite criticisms that Ulama, the Mesoamerican Ballgame and Lacrosse[12] [13] are not included in the program of the Pan American Games, the number of countries practicing the sport is too small for the sports to be added to the program. As of 2023, there are 19 national federations in the Americas affiliated with World Lacrosse with a minimum number of Panam Sports recognition being 14 (Argentina, Barbados, Bermuda, Canada, United States, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Jamaica, Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico, Chile, Ecuador, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Panama, and the United States Virgin Islands). However, the Iroquois nation is not recognized as a National Olympic Committee by Panam Sports or the IOC.[14] Thus, there are at this time 14 regional member nations of World Lacrosse, enough for the sport to be included in the Pan Am Games as early as 2027.Lacrosse is recognized by the Global Association of International Sports Federations and by the International Olympic Committee and will be played in a six-a-side format at the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, but the number of National Federations have to grown to sport to be added at the Pan-An Games program. However, this is not the case with ulama, which inhibits its participation in the Pan American Games. It is a possibility that lacrosse will be included in the program of the Games in the future.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2020 . Constitution of the Pan American Sports Organization . 2023-10-23 . Pan American Sports Organization . 2 f.
  2. Web site: 2020 . Estatuto de la Organización Deportiva Panamericana . 2023-10-23 . Organización Deportiva Panamericana . 2 f . es.
  3. Web site: 2020 . Constitution of the Pan American Sports Organization . 2023-10-23 . Pan American Sports Organization . 6.
  4. Web site: 2020 . Estatuto de la Organización Deportiva Panamericana . 2023-10-23 . Organización Deportiva Panamericana . 6 . es.
  5. Web site: Curtain comes down on 123rd IOC Session . Olympic.org . . 11 July 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120815031443/http://www.olympic.org/ioc?articlenewsgroup=-1&articleid=133159 . 2012-08-15.
  6. Web site: Buenos Aires 1951. 2009-11-26. QuadrodeMedalhas.com. 2012-03-16. https://web.archive.org/web/20120316182112/http://www.quadrodemedalhas.com/jogos-pan-americanos/jogos-pan-americanos-1951-buenos-aires.htm. live.
  7. Web site: Santo Domingo 2003. 2019-08-19. QuadrodeMedalhas.com. 2019-12-25. https://web.archive.org/web/20191225185444/http://www.quadrodemedalhas.com/jogos-pan-americanos/jogos-pan-americanos-2003-santo-domingo.htm. live.
  8. Web site: 2023-08-10 . 75 years Promoting, developing and uniting Sports in the Americas : ANOC . 2023-10-23 . . en-US.
  9. Web site: History . 2023-10-23 . Panam Sports . en-US.
  10. Web site: Alexandra Orlando elected president of PASO Athletes' Commission. March 8, 2012. September 11, 2012. September 18, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120918210536/http://olympic.ca/news/committee/alexandra-orlando-elected-president-of-paso-athletes-commission. live.
  11. Web site: Athlete's commission. https://web.archive.org/web/20200717191350/http://www.rollersportscan.files.wordpress.com/2010/01/2012-03-pag-athlete.docx&ei=wZ1OUKWpJbSA0AGEnYCIDw&usg=AFQjCNEiEPuaKazywJFi8snVJica0208oQ&sig2=r0UHNQl26sh7_P8L_-hIIg. dead. 2020-07-17.
  12. Web site: Aboriginal pavilion will tell "our story" our way. Nahwegahbow. Barb. 2014. AMMSA. 2015-08-07. 2020-07-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20200719191310/https://www.ammsa.com/publications/windspeaker/aboriginal-pavilion-will-tell-%E2%80%9Cour-story%E2%80%9D-our-way. live.
  13. Web site: Six Nations announces participation in Pan-Am Games. Windle. Jim. February 4, 2015. The Two Rows Times. August 7, 2015. August 11, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200811023310/https://tworowtimes.com/news/regional/six-nations-announces-participation-pan-games/. live.
  14. Web site: Haiti Voted in as FIL's 55th Member. filacrosse.com. 12 April 2018. 16 February 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180216084535/https://filacrosse.com/haiti-voted-in-as-fils-55th-member/. live.