School Games
The School Games is an annual sporting competition for elite school-age athletes in the United Kingdom that began in 2006.
The event was based on an Olympic Games model, with multiple sports events held across an intensive four-day period. The Games were organised by the Youth Sport Trust, sponsored by Sainsbury's, and from 2008 received funding from Legacy Trust UK, a charitable trust set up to ensure that the 2012 Summer Olympics generate a lasting legacy across the UK.
In 2011, 1,600 elite school-aged athletes participated in the event across twelve sports: athletics, badminton, cycling, fencing, gymnastics, hockey, judo, rugby sevens, swimming, table tennis, volleyball, and wheelchair basketball.
Locations
UK School Games
- 2006 — Glasgow
- 2007 — Coventry
- 2008 — South West England
- 2009 — Wales
- 2010 — North East England
- 2011 — Sheffield
School Games
- 2012 — London
- 2013 — Sheffield
- 2014 — Manchester
- 2015 — Manchester
- 2016 — Loughborough
- 2017 — Loughborough
Changes in 2012
Name change
Following the 2011 UK School Games, the event changed its name to the School Games.Format change
The structure of the event also changed from previous years. The UK School Games was an annual event for the most talented school-age athletes, whereas the new School Games is a year-round, inclusive sports competition that’s designed to get young people of all ages and abilities enjoying the benefits of competitive sport. There is a new pyramid structure in place and school-aged pupils will compete at four levels:- Level 1 – Intra-school competition
- Level 2 – Local inter-school competition
- Level 3 – Annual area school games festival
- Level 4 – National multi-sport event