Soravia at the Invictus Games: Difference between revisions
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The '''[[Soravia|Soravian Republic]]''' has competed continuously at the Invictus Games since the 1984 Winter Invictus Games in [[Scovern]], and previously competed under different NICs, mainly the [[ | The '''[[Soravia|Soravian Republic]]''' has competed continuously at the Invictus Games since the 1984 Winter Invictus Games in [[Scovern]], and previously competed under different NICs, mainly the [[UPSR]]. Soravia was one of the inaugural participants in the first modern Invictus Games in [[Solaria]] in 1898. Since then, it has only missed the 1980 Winter and 1982 Summer Invictus Games, where Soravian athletes competed under the neutral Invictus flag. The Soravian government has historically placed great emphasis on the promotion of sports domestically, and as such Soravia is one of the competition's most successful nations. | ||
The modern Soravian Invictus Committee was founded in 1983, and sent a reduced number of athletes to participate at Helganes 1984, before returning to Sainte-Marie 1986 with a full lineup. Soravia is typically successful in both the Summer and Winter Games, though its main successes are found in {{wp|athletics}}, {{wp|gymnastics}}, {{wp|swimming}}, {{wp|weightlifting}} and {{wp|wrestling}}. | The modern Soravian Invictus Committee was founded in 1983, and sent a reduced number of athletes to participate at Helganes 1984, before returning to Sainte-Marie 1986 with a full lineup. Soravia is typically successful in both the Summer and Winter Games, though its main successes are found in {{wp|athletics}}, {{wp|gymnastics}}, {{wp|swimming}}, {{wp|weightlifting}} and {{wp|wrestling}}. | ||
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! Games !! Host city !! Dates !! Type !! Athletes | ! Games !! Host city !! Dates !! Type !! Athletes | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Soravia|1964]] || [[Palkule]], [[Kantemosha|Kantemoshan FSR]], [[ | | [[Soravia|1964]] || [[Palkule]], [[Kantemosha|Kantemoshan FSR]], [[UPSR]] || December 1{{ndash}}17 || Winter || 1,766 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Soravia|1966]] || [[Patovatra]], [[Provinces of Soravia|Pavatrian FSR]], [[ | | [[Soravia|1966]] || [[Patovatra]], [[Provinces of Soravia|Pavatrian FSR]], [[UPSR]] || June 28{{ndash}}July 14 || Summer || 4,191 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[2020 Winter Invictus Games|2020]] || [[Ulan Khol]], [[Soravia]] || February 7{{ndash}}23 || Winter || 2,884 | | [[2020 Winter Invictus Games|2020]] || [[Ulan Khol]], [[Soravia]] || February 7{{ndash}}23 || Winter || 2,884 | ||
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| align=center | [[Etruria|1898]]{{snd}}[[Gaullica|1926]] || colspan=6| ''As part of the {{flagicon|Soravia}} [[Soravia|Soravian First Republic]]'' | | align=center | [[Etruria|1898]]{{snd}}[[Gaullica|1926]] || colspan=6| ''As part of the {{flagicon|Soravia}} [[Soravia|Soravian First Republic]]'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| align=center | [[Cassier|1938]]{{snd}}[[Kirenia|1978]] || colspan=6| ''As part of the {{flagicon|Soravia|ZDR}} [[ | | align=center | [[Cassier|1938]]{{snd}}[[Kirenia|1978]] || colspan=6| ''As part of the {{flagicon|Soravia|ZDR}} [[UPSR|All-Soravian Union of Republics]]'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| align=center | [[Werania|1982]] || colspan=6| ''Did not participate''<sup>a</sup> | | align=center | [[Werania|1982]] || colspan=6| ''Did not participate''<sup>a</sup> | ||
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|} | |} | ||
{{col-break}} | {{col-break}} | ||
=== Winter medal table === | === Winter medal table === | ||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%;" | {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%;" | ||
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| align=center | [[Etruria|1920]]{{snd}}[[Cassier|1924]] || colspan=6| ''As part of the {{flagicon|Soravia}} [[Soravia|Soravian First Republic]]'' | | align=center | [[Etruria|1920]]{{snd}}[[Cassier|1924]] || colspan=6| ''As part of the {{flagicon|Soravia}} [[Soravia|Soravian First Republic]]'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| align=center | [[Chistovodia|1936]]{{snd}}[[Senria|1976]] || colspan=6| ''As part of the {{flagicon|Soravia|ZDR}} [[ | | align=center | [[Chistovodia|1936]]{{snd}}[[Senria|1976]] || colspan=6| ''As part of the {{flagicon|Soravia|ZDR}} [[UPSR|All-Soravian Union of Republics]]'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| align=center | [[Kirenia|1980]] || colspan=6|''Did not participate'' | | align=center | [[Kirenia|1980]] || colspan=6|''Did not participate'' | ||
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*{{flagicon|Soravia}} [[2020 Winter Invictus Games|2020 Ulan Khol]]{{snd}}[[Soravia|Vasily Bogomazov]] | *{{flagicon|Soravia}} [[2020 Winter Invictus Games|2020 Ulan Khol]]{{snd}}[[Soravia|Vasily Bogomazov]] | ||
{{Nations at the Invictus Games}} | |||
[[Category:Nations at the Invictus Games]] | |||
[[Category:Sports in Soravia]] | [[Category:Sports in Soravia]] |
Latest revision as of 07:45, 16 July 2022
Soravia at the Invictus Games | |
---|---|
IOC code | SOR |
NOC | Soravian Invictus Committee |
Medals |
|
Summer appearances | |
1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018 | |
Winter appearances | |
1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, 2020 |
The Soravian Republic has competed continuously at the Invictus Games since the 1984 Winter Invictus Games in Scovern, and previously competed under different NICs, mainly the UPSR. Soravia was one of the inaugural participants in the first modern Invictus Games in Solaria in 1898. Since then, it has only missed the 1980 Winter and 1982 Summer Invictus Games, where Soravian athletes competed under the neutral Invictus flag. The Soravian government has historically placed great emphasis on the promotion of sports domestically, and as such Soravia is one of the competition's most successful nations.
The modern Soravian Invictus Committee was founded in 1983, and sent a reduced number of athletes to participate at Helganes 1984, before returning to Sainte-Marie 1986 with a full lineup. Soravia is typically successful in both the Summer and Winter Games, though its main successes are found in athletics, gymnastics, swimming, weightlifting and wrestling.
Since 1984, Soravia has won 734 medals – 247 golds, 236 silvers and 251 bronzes – one of the highest tallies of any nation.
Hosted games
Soravia and its predecessor states have hosted the games three times, though they have only geographically been held twice in Soravia.
Games | Host city | Dates | Type | Athletes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1964 | Palkule, Kantemoshan FSR, UPSR | December 1–17 | Winter | 1,766 |
1966 | Patovatra, Pavatrian FSR, UPSR | June 28–July 14 | Summer | 4,191 |
2020 | Ulan Khol, Soravia | February 7–23 | Winter | 2,884 |
Medal tables
Summer medal table
|
Winter medal table
|
Notes:
- a: No Soravian Invictus Committee participated at the games, but some Soravian athletes participated under the neutral Invictus Flag as Invictus Athletes from Soravia (AIS; Athlètes Invictus de Soravie)
Flag-bearers
- 1984 Helganes – Valerian Palyulin
- 1986 Sainte-Marie – Viktor Kirsanov
- 1988 Bougainville – Nadia Tausheva
- 1990 Keisi – Rodion Korshunov
- 1992 Sangang – Gerasim Gribkov
- 1994 Crescent Island City – Karolina Malysheva
- 1996 Benbaun – Yevgeniy Maksimushkin
- 1998 San Alessandro – Igor Khmelnov
- 2000 Ubeyama – Oleksandr Kulagin
- 2002 Verlois – Inessa Tsyrkunova
- 2004 Shenkong – Vaniamin Starodubov
- 2006 Baiqiao – Tatiana Zolotova
- 2008 Barnier – Andrei Roshchin
- 2010 Vicalvi – Valentin Onegin
- 2012 Rayenne – Lana Knyazeva
- 2014 Gaton – Sergei Kruglikov
- 2016 Linå – Ilya Balsunov
- 2018 Spalgleann – Anna Lipina
- 2020 Ulan Khol – Vasily Bogomazov