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2023 Winter Deaflympics

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20th Winter Deaflympics
Host cityErzurum
 Turkey
Nations34
Athletes534 (314 men and 220 women)
Events34 in 6 sports
Opening2 March 2024
Closing12 March 2024
Opened byMustafa Çiftçi
Winter
Summer

The 2023 Winter Deaflympics, officially known as the 20th Winter Deaflympics or XX Winter Deaflympics, was the 20th edition of the Winter Deaflympics, and took place between 2–12 March 2024 in Erzurum in Turkey.[1][2]

The multi-sport event was originally planned to be held in 2023, but the event was pushed towards the early part of March 2024 due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2023 edition of the Winter Deaflympics was the third largest international sporting event to be held in Erzurum after the city had previously hosted the 2011 Winter Universiade and 2017 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival.[3] United States, Sweden, Canada and Finland withdrawn to send their delegations to the games due to security concerns and geopolitical tensions surrounding West Asia.[4] Israel also withdrew from the competition due to Turkey's souring diplomatic relations with Israel over the Israel-Gaza tensions.[2]

Six sports were included in the final list of games programme including alpine skiing, chess, cross-country skiing, curling, futsal, and snowboarding. Futsal made its debut at the 2024 Winter Deaflympics.[5] Ice hockey, which was initially slotted by the organizers in the draft plan of the games, had to be scrapped from the agenda of action items due to the withdrawal of the United States of America, Sweden, Canada, and Finland.[4]

Approximately 534 athletes from 34 countries competed at the games and a total of 34 events in 6 sports.[3] Eight countries including Algeria, Greece, Iran, Ireland, Latvia, Kuwait, Serbia and Thailand made their debuts at the Winter Deaflympics during the course of the multi-sport event.[3] Ukraine topped the medal table with a haul of 10 gold medals and a total of 19 medals.[6]

Bidding

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Reports surfaced in 2018 over the formal launch of bidding processes by the International Committee of Sports for the Deaf to choose the official host cities for both 2021 Summer Deaflympics and 2023 Winter Deaflympics.[7] ICSD marked 1 July 2019 as the deadline for the bidding proposals to be submitted by the interested nations in order to finalise the host cities for both 2021 Summer Deaflympics and 2023 Winter Deaflympics.[7]

The International Committee of Sports for the Deaf revealed that their bidding process to both events had been formulated in line with the core principles used by the International Olympic Committee’s Agenda 2020+5.[7]

Participating nations

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In a press conference some days before the Games,the Erzurum Governor Mustafa Çiftçi confirmed that the USA, Canada, Sweden and Finland had withdrawn from taking part at the 20th Winter Deaflympics owing to the Israel-Palestinian conflict in the Middle East region and due to the political stance of the USA on Israel-Gaza tensions.This situation led to the cancellation of the ice hockey tournament, as the four countries along Turkey and Ukraine had registered their delegations for the event.[4][8]

Sports

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The 2024 Winter Deaflympics featured a total of 34 finals in 6 sports were held, two less than 5 years before in the Province of Sondrio.Although originally planned, the men's ice hockey tournament and the mixed relay in the cross-country skiing ended up being canceled due to the lack of registered teams.Futsal made its debut,at the same time as the curling mixed doubles event,the mixed teams in chess and the parallel events at the alpine skiing,replacing the downhill events.Another drastic change happened in snowboarding with the reduction in the number of events from 10 to 6. Thus, border cross, big air and slopestyle were removed from the program because of Erzurum's infrastructure.In its place, two events were added in the banked slalom.[9].This was the last edition in which Chess was part of the sports program, as in September 2022, CISS decided that the sport from 2029 onwards will be relocated to the Summer Games.[10]

Calendar[3]

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OC Opening ceremony Event competitions 1 Gold medal events CC Closing ceremony
February/March 29th
Thu
1st
Fri
2nd
Sat
3rd
Sun
4th
Mon
5th
Tue
6th
Wed
7th
Thu
8th
Fri
9th
Sat
10st
Sun
11th
Mon
12th
Tue
Events
Ceremonies OC CC
Alpine skiing 2 2 2 2 2 10
Chess 2 1 2 5
Cross-country skiing 2 2 2 2 8
Curling 1 2 2
Futsal 1 1 1
Snowboarding 2 2 2 6
Daily medal events 6 2 6 2 4 2 4 0 5 3 34
Cumulative total 6 8 14 16 20 22 26 26 31 34 34
February/March 29th
Thu
1st
Fri
2nd
Sat
3rd
Sun
4th
Mon
5th
Tue
6th
Wed
7th
Thu
8th
Fri
9th
Sat
10st
Sun
11th
Mon
12th
Tue
Events

Medal table:[11]

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  *   Host nation (Turkey)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Ukraine (UKR)105419
2 China (CHN)77620
3 Austria (AUT)61310
4 Poland (POL)5409
5 Italy (ITA)1326
6 France (FRA)1258
7 Croatia (CRO)1102
8 Iran (IRI)1001
 Latvia (LAT)1001
 Spain (ESP)1001
11 Japan (JPN)0437
12 Germany (GER)0325
13 South Korea (KOR)0224
14 Hungary (HUN)0123
15 Brazil (BRA)0112
16 Kazakhstan (KAZ)0011
 Serbia (SRB)0011
 Slovakia (SVK)0011
 Switzerland (SUI)0011
Totals (19 entries)343434102

References

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  1. ^ "Winter Deaflympics 2024". www.deaflympics.com. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  2. ^ a b AA, Daily Sabah with (2024-02-16). "Turkish deaf sports ring in excitement for hosting 20th Deaflympics". Daily Sabah. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  3. ^ a b c "Ukraine tops the medals table at the 20th Winter Deaflympics in Turkey". Inside the Games. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  4. ^ a b c Minute, Turkish (2024-01-25). "US, 3 others skip Olympics for deaf athletes in eastern Turkey due to security concerns". Turkish Minute. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  5. ^ "Croatia wins first medal at Winter Deaflympics in Turkey". Croatia Week. 2024-03-04. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  6. ^ "Ukraine wins the Winter Deaflympics for the first time in history, winning a record 19 medals | УНН". unn.ua. 2024-11-20. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  7. ^ a b c "Cities invited to bid for 2021 Summer and 2023 Winter Deaflympics". Inside the Games. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  8. ^ "Erzurum 2024". www.deaflympics.com. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  9. ^ Итоги Эрзурума (deafnet.ru) (in Russian)
  10. ^ [1] (deaf.be)
  11. ^ [2]