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2011 Military World Games
Sports Event
Sports Event
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 2011 Military World Games |
| logo | Rio 2011Military Games.png |
| size | 220px |
| host_city | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
| motto | The Peace Games! |
| (*Os Jogos da Paz!*) | |
| nations | 108 |
| athletes | 4,900 |
| events | 195 in 20 sports |
| opening | |
| closing | |
| opened_by | President Dilma Rousseff |
| athlete_oath | SN Isabel Swan |
| judge_oath | Sgt Marcelo de Lima Henrique |
| stadium | João Havelange Olympic Stadium |
| SpreviousS | [Hyderabad 2007](2007-military-world-games) |
| SnextS | [Mungyeong 2015](2015-military-world-games) |
| Sprevious | [Aosta Valley 2010](2010-winter-military-world-games) |
| Snext | [Annecy 2013](2013-winter-military-world-games) |
(Os Jogos da Paz!)
The 2011 Military World Games (), officially known as the 5th CISM Military World Games (), was hosted from July 15–24, 2011 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
The 5th Military World Games was the largest military sports event ever held in Brazil, with approximately 4,900 athletes from 108 countries competing in 20 sports. The Games were organized by the Military Sports Commission of Brazil (CDMB) and the military commands (Army, Navy and Air Force), in accordance with CISM regulations and the rules of the International Sports Federations.
Organization
Bidding process
Brazil was chosen to host the 5th Military World Games during a meeting of the International Military Sports Council held in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, on May 25, 2007. Brazil won, by means of a ballot, the race against Turkey to host the 2011 games. Representatives from over 75 countries took part in the poll. Rio's existing sports infrastructure, the Brazilian expertise at hosting major events, and the support granted to the project by the local authorities were decisive for the Brazilian victory.
Infrastructure and budget
The athletes participating in the 5th Military World Games were accommodated in three athlete's villages (Green, Blue and White), all located in Rio de Janeiro. The Green Village was located in the neighborhood of Deodoro, the Blue Village in Campo dos Afonsos and the White Village in the district of Campo Grande. The villages were built to be a functional and diverse center, vital to the operations of the Military World Games. The three villages comprise 106 buildings, 1,206 apartments and 4,824 rooms, with capacity to accommodate about 6,000 athletes and 2,000 officials. The budget used for the construction of the three villages is of R$400 million.
Venues
Twenty-seven competition venues were used during the 5th Military World Games, the majority located within Rio de Janeiro.
- 26th Parachutist Infantry Battalion – fencing and military pentathlon
- Air Force University – aeronautical pentathlon, football and judo
- CCEFx – football
- CEFAN – naval pentathlon and taekwondo
- CIAGA – football
- CIAMPA – boxing
- Copacabana Beach (Posto 2) – beach volleyball
- Copacabana Beach (Posto 6) – triathlon
- Flamengo Park – marathon
- Gericinó Instruction Center – military pentathlon
- João Havelange Olympic Stadium – athletics and football
- Maracanãzinho Arena – volleyball
- Maria Lenk Aquatic Center – swimming
- Modern Pentathlon National Center – modern pentathlon, military pentathlon
- National Equestrian Center – equestrian
- National Shooting Center – shooting, aeronautical pentathlon, and military pentathlon
- Navy Academy – sailing
- Rio Arena – basketball
- Rio de Janeiro Military School – volleyball
- Santa Cruz Air Force Base – military pentathlon (flying)
- São Januário Stadium – football
The venues located outside the city of Rio de Janeiro were the Resende Airport and the Academia Militar das Agulhas Negras located in Resende, the Avelar Instruction Center located in Paty do Alferes, the Mario Xavier National Forest located in Seropédica, and the Giulite Coutinho Stadium belonging to América Football Club located in Mesquita.
Media coverage
- : Band, BandSports, ESPN Brasil, Esporte Interativo, Rede Globo, SporTV and TV Brasil
Participating nations
| List of Participating Nations |
|---|
Sports
The competition comprised 20 sports, some of them appearing for the first time in military world games, such as beach volleyball.
- [[File:Tanguage2.jpg|13px|Aeronautical pentathlon]] Aeronautical pentathlon (details)
- [[File:Modern pentathlon pictogram (pre-2025).svg|20px|Military pentathlon]] Military pentathlon (details)
- [[File:Canoeing (flatwater) pictogram.svg|20px|Naval pentathlon]] Naval pentathlon (details)
- [[File:Pictogram Orienteering.png|20px|Orienteering]] Orienteering (details)
- [[File:Air sports pictogram.jpg|20px|Parachuting]] Parachuting (details)
Games schedule
Medal table
The nations by number of gold medals are listed below. The host nation, Brazil, is highlighted.
References
References
- link. (August 25, 2011 Rio 2011 Official Website. Retrieved on 2011-07-16.)
- link. (2011-08-25 Rio 2011 Official Website. Retrieved on 2011-07-16.)
- link. (2011-07-17 Rio 2011 Official Website. Retrieved on 2011-07-17.)
- link. (2011-08-25 Rio 2011 Official Website. Retrieved on 2011-07-16.)
- [http://www.rio2011.mil.br/results/ENG/ZZ/ZZE100A_@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ENG.htm CDM Related Information] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-07-18 Rio 2011 Official Website. Retrieved on 2011-07-14.)
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20130718101007/http://www.rio2011.mil.br/results/ENG/ZZ/ZZM195A_%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40%40ENG.htm Detailed Medal Standings] Rio 2011 Official Website. Archived from [http://www.rio2011.mil.br/results/ENG/ZZ/ZZM195A_@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ENG.htm the original] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-07-15 on 2013-07-18. Retrieved on 2011-07-17.)
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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