Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

All you must know about Gold Coast CWG

April 02, 2018 20:20 IST

Facts on the Commonwealth Games to be held in Australia's Gold Coast:

CWG

IMAGE: Dancers perform during the Team Australia welcome ceremony at the Athletes Village ahead of the 2018 Commonwealth Games. Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images

WHEN

April 4-15, 2018

WHERE

The majority of the events will be held in three clusters on the Gold Coast, with the opening and closing ceremonies and athletics at the Carrara Stadium.

 

Track cycling and the shooting competitions will be held in Brisbane.

 

Preliminary round games in the basketball competition will be held in Townsville and Cairns, in the far-North of Queensland.

BY THE NUMBERS

CWG

IMAGE: A general view of Carrara Stadium is seen ahead of the 2018 Commonwealth Games. Photograph: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images
 

18 sports; seven para-sports

 

10 core sports -- athletics, badminton, boxing, hockey, lawn bowls, netball, rugby sevens, squash, swimming, weightlifting.

 

Eight optional sports -- basketball, beach volleyball, cycling, gymnastics, shooting, table tennis, triathlon, wrestling.

 

275 gold medals

 

6,600-plus athletes

 

71 nations and territories

COMMONWEALTH GAMES

CWG

IMAGE: Two young girls have their photograph taken with a statue of Borobi, the official mascot of the Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games. Photograph: Mark Kolbe/Getty Images
 

First contested in 1930 as The Empire Games (a title that lasted until in 1950) in Hamilton, Ontario. Just 400 athletes from 11 countries attended.

 

Contested every four years, except for 1942 and 1946 due to World War Two, until 1950. Was renamed as the British Empire and Commonwealth Games in 1952 with the 1954 event in Vancouver the first to use the title.

 

The last BE&C Games were held in Kingston in 1966, the first time they had been held outside of Britain, Australia, Canada or New Zealand.

 

Renamed the Commonwealth Games for the 1978 Edmonton event.

 

Kuala Lumpur becomes the first Asian city to host the Games in 1998.

 

Questions raised over the future of the Games after the 2010 event in Delhi is blighted by construction delays, budget over-runs, poor living conditions at the athletes' village, a number of high-profile withdrawals and low spectator numbers.

 

Only one city, South Africa's Durban, bid for the 2022 event, with the bid rubber-stamped at Commonwealth Games Federation meeting in Auckland in 2015 giving Africa its first Games.

 

The coastal city, however, was stripped of the event last March after a failure to meet promises contained in its bid, with the 2022 event awarded to Birmingham.

THE GOLD COAST GAMES

CWG

IMAGE: Australian boxer Caitlin Parker exchanges gifts with Yugambeh Elders and members of the Yugambeh Language Group during a pre games ceremony ahead of the 2018 Commonwealth Games. Photograph: Mark Kolbe/Getty Images

Bid was initiated by the Queensland state premier Anna Bligh in 2008.

 

Was the only bidder until Sri Lankan city Hambantota entered the race in 2010.

 

Awarded the 2018 event on Nov. 11, 2011, becoming the fifth Ausralian city to host the Commonwealth Games (Sydney, 1938; Perth, 1962; Brisbane, 1982; Melbourne 2006)

 

More than 80 percent of the venues had already been built prior to the bid being awarded.

 

State and local government invested more than A$1 billion ($767.80 million) in upgrading the public transport system, with an extension to the light rail tram network connecting key venues.

 

The mascot Borobi is a blue koala with indigenous markings on its body. Borobi is an Aboriginal term for koala.

 

Beach volleyball and women's sevens are making their debut.

Source: REUTERS
© Copyright 2024 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.