Senria at the Invictus Games: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 16:24, 9 July 2022
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Senria at the Invictus Games | |
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IOC code | SEN |
NOC | Senrian Invictus Committee |
Medals |
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Summer appearances | |
1910, 1914, 1926, 1938, 1942, 1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1966, 1970, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018 | |
Winter appearances | |
1924, 1936, 1940, 1948, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1964, 1972, 1976, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020 |
Senria first participated in the Invictus Games in 1910, and has competed at almost every hosting of the Invictus since 1924. It did not attend any games between 1918 and 1923 on account of the Senrian Revolution and boycotted the 1968 Winter Invictus in Rongzhuo. The country has also hosted the Invictus five times - the Summer Invictus in 1958, 1970, and 1990, and the Winter Invictus in 1976 and 2000.
The country won its first Invictus medals in 1914 and its first gold medals in 1926. Senria typically fares well at both Summer and Winter Games, and is among the most successful countries at the games; Senrian athletes have traditionally done well in martial arts such as zuudou and wrestling, gymnastics, swimming, athletics, baseball, Aventine skiing, ski jumping, speed skating, and figure skating.
Hosted games
Senria has formally hosted the Invictus Games on five occasions.
Games | Type | Dates | Host city |
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1958 | Summer | XX September - XX October 1958 | Keisi |
1970 | Summer | XX November - XX December 1970 | Tosei |
1976 | Winter | XX July - XX August 1976 | Nobeoka |
1990 | Summer | XX September - XX October 1990 | Keisi |
2000 | Winter | XX-XX July 2000 | Ubeyama |
Senria was the first independent Coian country to host the Summer Invictus Games; while the games had been held in Coius before with the 1902 Adunis Summer Games, Tsabara was a Gaullican colony at the time.
Cancelled games
Games | Type | Planned dates | Host city |
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1946 | Summer | XX-XX October 1946 | Keisi |
Senria was awarded the 1946 Summer Invictus in 1940, becoming the first independent Coian country to be awarded hosting rights for the Invictus Games. However, the International Invictus Committee ultimately cancelled the 1946 games due to the outbreak of the Solarian War, which ended in the month that the games were supposed to be held. The Senrian government protested the cancellation of the games, and used the facilities constructed for the 1946 games for an event known as the Keisi International Athletic Exhibition. Some of the facilities in question were subsequently used for the 1958 Summer Games.
Unsuccessful bids
Games | Type | Host city | Winning bid |
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1950 | Summer | Keisi | Template:Country data Estmere St. Avelines, Estmere |
1954 | Summer | Keisi | File:Eldmark.png Hammarvik, Eldmark |
1968 | Winter | Tukayama | ![]() |
1984 | Winter | Ubeyama | ![]() |
2010 | Summer | Isikawa | ![]() |
Medal tables
Summer medal table
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Winter medal table
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Medals by summer sport
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Medals by winter sport
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Flagbearers
- Template:Country data Estmere 1910 Morwall – name
1914 Liberty City – name
1924 Sainte-Marie – name
1926 Wiesstadt – name
1936 tbd – name
1938 Nouvelle-Rayenne – name
1940 Verlois – name
1942 Vicalvi – name
1948 tbd – name
- Template:Country data Estmere 1950 St. Avelines – name
1952 tbd – name
- File:Eldmark.png 1954 Hammarvik – name
1956 tbd – name
1958 Keisi – name
1960 Lac-Éloïse – name
1962 Rémont – name
1964 Paltamo – name
1966 Patovatra – name
1970 Tosei – name
1972 Spálgleann – name
1974 Los Santos – name
1976 Nobeoka – name
1978 Westbrücken – name
1980 tbd – name
1982 Ogbei – name
1984 Helganes – name
1986 Sainte-Marie – name
1988 Bougainville – name
1990 Keisi – name
1992 Sangang – name
1994 Harimisaareke – name
1996 Benbaun – name
1998 San Alessandro – name
2000 Ubeyama – name
2002 Port Hope – name
2004 Shenkong – name
2006 Crescent Island City – name
2008 Barnier – name
2010 Baiqiao – name
2012 Rayenne – name
2014 Gatôn – name
2016 Linå – name
2018 Spálgleann – name
2020 Ulan Khol – name