2003 Special Olympics World Summer Games


The [County Tipperary|]2003 Special Olympics World Summer Games were hosted in Dublin, Ireland, with participants staying in various host towns around the island of Ireland in the lead up to the games before moving to Dublin for the events. Events were held from 21 to 29 June 2003 at many venues including Morton Stadium, the Royal Dublin Society, the National Basketball Arena, all in Dublin. Croke Park served as the central stadium for the opening and closing ceremonies, even though no actual competitions took place there. Belfast, Northern Ireland was the venue for roller skating events, as well as the Special Olympics Scientific Symposium.

The Games

The 2003 World Games were the first to be held outside of the United States. This was the largest sporting event held in 2003.

Opening ceremony

The opening ceremony was held in Croke Park and featured an array of stars and was hosted by comedian Patrick Kielty. The band U2 were a major feature, and Nelson Mandela officially opened the games. Other performances included The Corrs and the largest Riverdance troupe ever assembled on one stage. 75,000 athletes and spectators were in attendance at the opening ceremonies. Irish and international celebrities such as Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jon Bon Jovi walked with the athletes, with Muhammad Ali as a special guest and Manchester United and Republic of Ireland football player Roy Keane taking the athletes oath with one of the Special Olympians.
The Games Flame was lit at the culmination of the Law Enforcement Torch Run, which more than 2,000 members of the Garda Síochána and the Police Service of Northern Ireland took part in. This was a series of relays carrying the Special Olympics Torch, the "Flame of Hope", from Europe to the Games' official opening.
The ceremony was officially opened by President of Ireland Mary McAleese and attended by Taoiseach Bertie Ahern.

Organisation

The organising committee, which was formed in 1999 following the success of the bid, was chaired by entrepreneur Denis O'Brien. The chief executive was Mary Davis.
The 2003 games were the first to have their opening and closing schemes broadcast on live television, and Radio Telefís Éireann provided extensive coverage of the events through their 'Voice of the Games' radio station which replaced RTÉ Radio 1 on Medium Wave for the duration of the event. There was also a nightly television highlight programme.
Among the activities carried out during the Games were thorough medical checks on the athletes, some of whom had previously undiagnosed conditions uncovered, as some of the athletes came from countries with limited medical facilities or had difficulty communicating their symptoms.
A daily newspaper, the Games Gazette was published for each day of the games.
Among the contributors to the Games was the Irish Prison Service. Prisoners in Mountjoy Prison, Midlands Prison, Wheatfield Prison and Arbour Hill Prison who constructed podiums and made flags, towels, signs, benches and other equipment.

Volunteer programme

30,000 volunteer officials and support staff assisted in the running of the games, including 900 staff of the Bank of Ireland who coordinated the host town programme, and 800 members of the Irish Defence Forces who maintained the radio communication network, and provided support for bridge building, security duties, VIP drivers, standard bearers for ceremonial events. The Irish Red Cross, Order of Malta and St. John Ambulance Brigade of Ireland provided emergency medical teams at the event sites. Approximately 1,300 members of both Scouting Ireland (CSI) and Scouting Ireland SAI staffed the Awards Teams for all the disciplines throughout the games. 165 volunteers from the then 15 countries of the EU took part in a European Volunteer Project, the first ever to be organized in event-related mode. The volunteers are commemorated by having their names on a series of plaques situated in Dublin Castle, just outside the Chester Beatty Library.

Participating teams

Approximately 6500 athletes from 166 countries competed in the games in 18 official disciplines, and three exhibition sports. The participants from Kosovo were the region's first team at an international sporting event.- A 12-member team from Iraq received special permission to attend the games, despite ongoing war in their home nation. Ireland was represented by an all-island team with athletes from both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. Athletes from Taiwan competed under the name "Chinese Taipei". Athletes from the United States were grouped into eight regional teams; Great Lakes, Mid Atlantic, New England, North Central, North West, South Central, South East, South West.
Ireland's Department of Health has initially bared athletes from areas affected by the 2002–2004 SARS outbreak. This affected athletes from parts of China, Hong Kong, Philippines, Singapore and Taiwan; as well as Toronto in Canada. However no country was ultimate banned from participating with Hong Kong and Taiwan's athletes undergoing quarantine.
The following teams participated, grouped by Special Olympics regions:
;Africa
;Asia Pacific
;East Asia
;Europe and Eurasia
;Latin America
;Middle East and North Africa
;North America
*

Host town programme

177 towns, cities and villages and the Aran Islands hosted national delegations in the run up to the games. Each town ran programmes to educate the local community about the customs of the country they would host and provided facilities for the teams to acclimatise. Newbridge, County Kildare, host to the Japan delegation won the award for best host town.
NoVisiting CountryHost TownCounty of Host Town
1AlbaniaLoughreaGalway
2AlgeriaBallinrobe and ClonburMayo and Galway
3American SamoaDunlavinWicklow
4AndoraAntrim BoroughAntrim
5Antigua and BarbudaBangorDown
6ArgentinaDerryLondonderry
7ArmeniaEnnistymonClare
8ArubaMallowCork
9AustraliaArmaghArmagh
10AustriaLimerickLimerick
11AzerbaijanShannonClare
12DungarvanWaterford
13BahrainRathdrumWicklow
14BangladeshAshbourneMeath
15BarbadosPortarlingtonLaois
16BelarusBandonCork
17BelgiumNavanMeath
18BeninTubbercurrySligo
19BermudaLisburnAntrim/Down
20BoliviaTullowCarlow
21BonaireGoreyWexford
22Bosnia and HerzegovinaCarrick-on-ShannonLeitrim
23BotswanaTrimMeath
24BrazilMaynoothKildare
25BulgariaMonasterevinKildare
26Burkina FasoBunclodyWexford
27CameroonAn SpidéalGalway
28CanadaEnniscorthyWexford
29Cayman IslandsStrabaneTyrone
30ChadSwinfordMayo
31ChileAthyKildare
32ChinaBrayWicklow
33Chinese TaipeiPortlaoiseLaois
34CongoMohillLeitrim
35Costa RicaDroghedaLouth
36Côte d'IvoireCallanKilkenny
37CroatiaGreystonesWicklow
38CubaCashelTipperary
39CyprusTipperaryTipperary
40Czech RepublicSkibbereenCork
41DenmarkClonakiltyCork
42Dominican RepublicBallinasloeGalway
43EcuadorMountbellewGalway
44EgyptTuamGalway
45EstoniaClifdenGalway
46Faroe IslandsCarrickfergusAntrim
47FinlandBuncranaDonegal
48FranceBallinaMayo
49GabonMitchelstownCork
50ManorhamiltonLeitrim
51GeorgiaKilrushClare
52GermanyKilkennyKilkenny
53GhanaCahirTipperary
54GibraltarSligoSligo
55GreeceDundalkLouth
56GuadeloupeLimavadyLondonderry
57GuatemalaNew RossWexford
58GuineaKilmore QuayWexford
59GuyanaArdeeLouth
60HondurasBanbridgeDown
61Hong KongClonmel Tipperary
62HungaryDonegalDonegal
63IcelandNewryArmagh
64IndiaAthloneRoscommon/Westmeath
65IndonesiaAbbeyleixLaois
66IranMacroomCork
67IrelandCelbridge, Kilcock, Leixlip and LucanKildare and Dublin
68Isle of ManRathanganKildare
69IsraelBallymenaAntrim
70ItalyKillarneyKerry
71JamaicaWaterfordWaterford
72JapanNewbridgeKildare
73JordanListowel and TarbertKerry
74KazakhstanMilltown MalbayClare
75KenyaKilcullenKildare
76South KoreaBorrisokaneTipperary
77KosovoEdenderryOffaly
78KuwaitCastlereaRoscommon
79KyrgyzstanPallasgreenLimerick
80LatviaKellsMeath
81LebanonMullingarWestmeath
82LesothoCahersiveenKerry
83LibyaTemplemoreTipperary
84LiechtensteinCarrigaline and CrosshavenCork
85LithuaniaClonesMonaghan
86LuxembourgNewport and WestportMayo
87MacauBallybofey and StranorlarDonegal
88F.Y.R. of MacedoniaOldcastleMeath
89MalaysiaBanagherOffaly
90MaliKanturkCork
91MaltaThurlesTipperary
92MartiniqueNewcastle West and RathkealeLimerick
93MauritaniaDrumshanboLeitrim
94MauritiusBoyleRoscommon
95MexicoCork and BlarneyCork
96MoldovaCastleislandKerry
97MonacoCarrickmacrossMonaghan
98MoroccoTullamoreOffaly
99NamibiaCookstownTyrone
100NepalVirginiaCavan
101EnniskillenFermanagh
102New ZealandNaasKildare
103NigeriaKillybegsDonegal
104NorwayMagherafeltLondonderry
105OmanYoughalCork
106PakistanBalbrigganDublin
107PalestineKinsaleCork
108PanamaNewtownabbeyAntrim
109ParaguayColeraineLondonderry
110PeruMountmellickLaois
111TramoreWaterford
112PolandWexfordWexford
113PortugalAran IslandsGalway
114Puerto RicoKiltimaghMayo
115QatarBallaghaderreenRoscommon
116RéunionPortumnaGalway
117RomaniaMidletonCork
118RussiaEnnis and BallyeaClare
119San MarinoFermoyCork
120Saudi ArabiaRoscreaTipperary
121SenegalBallygarGalway
122SeychellesBaltinglassWicklow
123Sierra LeoneCastleblaneyMonaghan
124SingaporeArklowWicklow
125SlovakiaCarrick-on-Suir, Rathgormack and Clonea-PowerTipperary and Waterford
126SloveniaCarlowCarlow
127South AfricaDingleKerry
128SpainOmaghTyrone
129Saint Kitts and NevisNenaghTipperary
130Saint LuciaThomastownKilkenny
131Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesBallymoneyAntrim
132SudanBagenalstownCarlow
133SurinameWatervilleKerry
134SwedenNewcastleDown, Dublin or Wicklow
135SwitzerlandKenmareKerry
136SyriaWicklowWicklow
137TajikistanAbbeyfealeKerry
138TanzaniaClaremorrisMayo
139ThailandCarlingford and the Cooley PeninsulaLouth
140TogoAthboyMeath
141Trinidad and TobagoLetterkennyDonegal
142TunisiaMonaghan and BallybayMonaghan
143TurkeyCavanCavan
144TurkmenistanBruffLimerick
145UgandaRoscommonRoscommon
146UkraineLisdoonvarna and DoolinClare
147United Arab EmiratesLongfordLongford
148United StatesBelfastAntrim/Down
149UruguayDungloeDonegal
150UzbekistanKilkeeClare
151VenezuelaCastlebarMayo
152Virgin IslandsNewtownardsDown
153YemenCharlevilleCork
154F.R. of YugoslaviaGortGalway
155ZambiaCootehillCavan
156ZimbabweCraigavonArmagh

Events

Athletes and coaches such as Lleyton Hewitt and his coach Roger Rasheed ; Seve Ballesteros, Sandy Lyle and Andrew Marshall, Mick O'Dwyer and Brian Kerr met and encouraged athletes at events during the games.
Events and venues were: