Olympics Wiki
Advertisement

The 2010 Winter Olympic Games, officially known as the XXI Olympic Winter Games is a major international winter multi-sport event held in the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Vancouver is the province's largest city as well as Canada's third largest. The decision was made on July 2nd 2003 when the city was chosen and announced as the host city. 82 nations competed in the 7 sports divided into 86 events. Governor General Michaelle Jean declared the games open during the opening ceremony. Vancouver 2010 was the first Olympics to have the opening and closing ceremony indoors. It was also the first to have two Olympic cauldrons.

A joint project between the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC) and the International Olympic Committee (IOC), it is the third Olympic games held in the nation of Canada.

File:Vancouver-2010-Logo7.jpg

Vancouver 2010 logo


To get Canadian athletes ready to compete the program "own the podium" was put into place to help athletes step up to the challenge to get the first gold medals on canadian soil.

For the first time, the Winter Olympics will be held by the sea and some venues, such as the Richmond Olympic Oval, are at sea level. Vancouver is also the warmest city ever to host a Winter Olympics. In February, when the Games will be held, Vancouver has an average temperature of 4.8 degrees Celsius (40.6 degrees Fahrenheit). It was also the largest city to hold the Winter Games.

Before Vancouver Canada hosted the games twice. The first being the Montreal 1976 Summer Olympic Games and the Second being the 1988 Winter Olympic Games. To which Canada did not have a single gold medal in ether games. Canada Smashed the record for most golds on home soil during an Olympic games with 14.

Historic Events

  • Just before the competition started Georgian Luger Nodar Kumaritashvili was taking a practice run when his sled left the track and he hit a pole, losing his life. The Georgian team bravely entered the stadium during the opening ceremony wearing black armbands and then left immediately afterward.
  • Chile bravely attends the closing ceremony despite worry for their families after a massive earthquake ripped through Chile. A small black flag was attached to the Chilian flag when their flag bearer entered BC Place Stadium.
  • Canada's Joannie Rochette bravely skated herself to a figure skating bronze medal, after her mother Therese passed away only four days before. She was also one of the athletes to be awarded the Terry Fox award for her courage and was Canada's flag bearer for the closing ceremony.
  • Also in the figure skating competition Kim Yun-na blew away the competition with a spectacular performance to give South Korea their first ever Figure Skating gold.
  • The first North American Ice Dancers to win gold went to Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada who smashed the competition with a beautiful display of skill and talent.
  • After already clinching the gold, American snowboarder Shaun White landed a spectacular "Double McTwist 1260". This is the first time a double McTwist has been landed in competition
  • The first ever gold medal won on Canadian soil went to freestyle skier Alexandre Bilodeau in mens moguls.
  • Canada was the first team to receive gold in both men's and women's hockey on home ice, also the first to have a gold in hockey on home ice since Lake Placid 1980
  • Cayman Islands, Colombia, Ghana, Montenegro, Pakistan, Peru and Serbia all made their first ever winter Olympic appearance.

Mascots

Vancouver had three main mascots, Sumi, Miga and Quatchi. The fourth mascot, Mukmuk, was meant to only be on online mascot but people fell in love with the little guy and he became more of a demi mascot for the games.

Sumi was the major mascot for the paralympic winter games and played a major part in the paralympic opening ceremony at BC place. Sumi comes from the Salish word “Sumesh” which means "guardian spirit." He is an aboriginal spirit who wears the hat of the orca whale, flies with the wings of the thunderbird and runs with the furry legs of the blackbear. Sumi takes his home in Whistler and his favorite event is alpine skiing.

Miga also was created from the legends of the aboriginals tribes. Miga is a sea bear that lives just off the coast of Vancouver Island. Sea bears are basically part orca whale and part bear, they have the unique ability to morph between the two. She loves surfing but her favorite winter event is snowboarding.

Quatchi is a sasquatch who lives in the forests of British Columbia. The sasquatch or "big foot" is of course the legendary human like ape creature that many have claimed to have seen all over North American forests. He loves Canada's favorite game of ice hockey and wants to become a famous goalie, he's really good at it because he takes up a lot of the net!

Despite what most people think Mukmuk is not actually made to look like a beaver. He is actually made after the rare endangered Vancouver Island marmot. There is not much else known about him than that he is a friendly little guy who loves to cheer on his friends. His name comes from the Chinook Jargon word "muckamuck", meaning "food", due to his large appetite.

Medals

Canada took a very unique stand on the creation of the 2010 Olympic medals. For each of their medals they took an aboriginal artwork pattern and then took parts of the work and placed it on the front of each medals so every medal given out during the Olympics were completely unique. Each medal winning athlete also got a cloth picture of the artwork so they can find where their medal fits in. Each medal also got a few bends in it to make the medals truly different from anything given out before.

Canada came in third with 14 gold, 7 silver and 5 bronze, which was a major accomplishment for Canada because they had their highest winter games total ever as well as getting their first gold medals ever on Canadian soil.

Medal Totals

  1. United States 9 Gold, 15 Silver and 13 Bronze. 37 Total
  2. Germany 10 Gold, 13 Silver and 7 Bronze. 30 Total
  3. Canada 14 Gold, 7 Silver and 5 Bronze. 26 Total
  4. Norway 9 Gold, 8 Silver and 6 Bronze. 23 Total
  5. Austria 4 Gold, 6 Silver and 6 Bronze. 16 Total
  6. Russia 3 Gold, 5 Silver and 7 Bronze. 15 Total
  7. South Korea 6 Gold, 6 Silver and 2 Bronze. 14 Total
  8. China 5 Gold, 2 Silver and 4 Bronze. 11 Total
  9. Sweden 5 Gold, 2 Silver and 4 Bronze. 11 Total
  10. France 2 Gold, 3 Silver and 6 Bronze. 11 Total
  11. Switzerland 6 Gold and 3 Bronze. 9 Total
  12. Netherlands 4 Gold, 1 Silver and 3 Bronze. 8 Total
  13. Czech Republic 2 Gold and 4 Bronze. 6 Total
  14. Poland 1 Gold, 3 Silver and 2 Bronze. 6 Total
  15. Italy 1 Gold, 1 Silver and 3 Bronze. 5 Total
  16. Japan 3 Silver and 2 Bronze. 5 Total
  17. Finland 1 Silver and 4 Bronze. 5 Total
  18. Australia 2 Gold and 1 Silver. 3 Total
  19. Belarus 1 Gold, 1 Silver and 1 Bronze. 3 Total
  20. Slovakia 1 Gold, 1 Silver and 1 Bronze. 3 Total
  21. Croatia 2 Silver and 1 Bronze. 3 Total
  22. Slovenia 2 Silver and 1 Bronze. 3 Total
  23. Latvia 2 Silver. 2 Total
  24. Great Britain 1 Gold. 1 Total
  25. Estonia 1 Silver. 1 Total
  26. Kazakhstan 1 Silver. 1 Total

Torch

Much like the rest of the games Canada created a very unique torch to go with their games. Canada took the longest torch relay ever in Olympic history. After being lit in Olympia, Greece, it went by plane all the way Victoria BC, and then traveled across the Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut. It then traveled to Saint Johns, Newfoundland and Labrador, and then followed across Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and then finished back in Vancouver British Columbia where the two torches were lit. The indoor one at BC Place and the one down at the waterfront. In every major city in Canada, a small cauldron was lit, and there would be a major celebration before the torch continued on it's way to Vancouver. The whole torch run went from October 30, 2009 to February 12, 2010, and took a total of 106 days to complete.

Venues

The Olympic winter venues were placed all over the Vancouver area to take advantage of the wide range of land.

Vancouver

  • BC Place Stadium (location of the opening and closing ceremonies as well as medal persentations for most events
  • Canada Hockey Place, aka GM Place (Main Ice hockey arena)
  • Hillcrest Park (Curling)
  • Pacific Coliseum (Figure skating and short track speedskating)
  • Vancouver Convention and Exhibition Center (Media centre)
  • Vancouver olympic village

University of British Columbia

  • UBC Winter sports center (secondary ice hockey arena)
  • UBC Thunderbird Arena (Sledge hockey arena)

Richmond

  • Richmond olympic oval (long track speedskating)

West Vancouver

  • Cypress Mountain Resort (Freestyle Skiing and snowboarding)

Whistler

  • Whistler Olympic and paralympic village
  • Whistler creekside (alpine skiing)
  • Whistler Olympic park in Callaghan valley (biathlon, cross country skiing and ski jumping)
  • Whistler Sliding Center (bobsled, luge and skeleton)

See Also

  • Logos - A collection of logos featuring this event.
  • Mascots - The official mascots of this Olympics'.
  • Torch - Information about this Olympics' torch.

Links

Preceded by
Beijing 2008
Olympics
2010
Succeeded by
London 2012
Preceded by
Torino 2006
Winter Olympics
2010
Succeeded by
Sochi 2014
Olympic Games
Summer Olympic Games
Athens 1896Paris 1900St. Louis 1904Athens 1906 (Intercalated Games)London 1908Stockholm 1912Berlin 1916Antwerp 1920Paris 1924Amsterdam 1928Los Angeles 1932Berlin 1936London 1948Helsinki 1952Melbourne 1956Rome 1960Tokyo 1964Mexico City 1968Munich 1972Montreal 1976Moscow 1980Los Angeles 1984Seoul 1988Barcelona 1992Atlanta 1996Sydney 2000Athens 2004Beijing 2008London 2012Rio de Janeiro 2016Tokyo 2020Paris 2024Los Angeles 2028Brisbane 2032
Winter Olympic Games
Chamonix 1924St. Moritz 1928Lake Placid 1932Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1936St. Moritz 1948Oslo 1952Cortina d'Ampezzo 1956Squaw Valley 1960Innsbruck 1964Grenoble 1968Sapporo 1972Innsbruck 1976Lake Placid 1980Sarajevo 1984Calgary 1988Albertville 1992Lillehammer 1994Nagano 1998Salt Lake City 2002Torino 2006Vancouver 2010Sochi 2014Pyeongchang 2018Beijing 2022Milan-Cortina d'Ampezzo 2026
Advertisement