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Special Olympics Great Britain

Sporting organisation for people with intellectual disabilities


Summary

Sporting organisation for people with intellectual disabilities

FieldValue
nameSpecial Olympics Great Britain
logoSpecial Olympics Great Britain logo.png
sportSpecial Olympics
countryflagGBR
jurisdictionEngland, Scotland, Wales
founded1978
headquartersLondon
presidentLawrie McMenemy
vicepresidentPaul Anderson
chairmanPaul Richardson
chiefexecLaura Baxter MBE (Interim)
urlhttp://www.specialolympicsgb.org.uk/

Special Olympics Great Britain (SOGB) is a sporting organisation for children and adults with intellectual disabilities that operates in England, Scotland and Wales. It is part of the global Special Olympics movement. Great Britain is represented at the Special Olympics World Games and the Special Olympics Great Britain National Games are held on a four year cycle.

History

Initially known as Special Olympics UK, it was founded in 1978 by Chris Maloney MBE and at the time, was one of the first European programmes of the international Special Olympics movement. Special Olympics GB was established on 8 August 1979, the year Great Britain made its début at the Special Olympics World Games in Brockport, United States.

Organisation

Special Olympics GB creates opportunities for children and adults with learning (intellectual) disabilities to take part in various sports training and competition year-round.

Special Olympics is often confused with the Paralympics, which is for elite athletes with physical and/or intellectual disabilities.

To be eligible to take part in the Special Olympics GB programmes, participants would have to have an IQ of 75 and below. There are currently 140 Special Olympics clubs in Great Britain, run by over 4,000 volunteers, and involving 10,000 athletes who benefit from taking regular sport training and competitions programmes.

Special Olympics GB has a charitable status and has been receiving donations and funding from individuals as well as corporate partners. National Grid, Coca-Cola GB, ABB and Lions Clubs International are some of the long-term official partners of the charity.

Special Olympic GB Ambassadors from the world of sports and entertainment help to raise funds and build awareness of the charity's work throughout Great Britain.

Special Olympics GB includes former Southampton football manager Lawrie McMenemy, Olympic Champion athlete Darren Campbell, former NBA basketball legend John Amaechi, TV beauty and style guru Armand Beasley.

Special Olympics GB offers 28 different individual and team sports that provide meaningful training and competition opportunities for people with intellectual (learning) disabilities.

Special Olympics GB has an extensive network of clubs operating in 19 regions throughout England, Scotland and Wales.

All the clubs and competitions are run solely by an army of dedicated volunteers.

Great Britain at the Special Olympics World Games

Athletes representing Great Britain have participated in both the summer and the winter editions of the Special Olympics World Games.

Summer

GamesAthletes
Ireland Dublin 2003193
China Shanghai 2007156
Greece Athens 2011149
USA Los Angeles 2015112
United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi 2019127
Germany Berlin 202382

Source:

Winter

GamesAthletes
USA Idaho 200910
South Korea Pyongchang 20137
Austria Graz and Schladming 201721
Russia Kazan 2022Cancelled
Italy Turin 2025Future event

Source:

Special Olympics Great Britain National Games

The Special Olympics Great Britain National Games are held every four years. The 2021 edition was postponed as a result of the global COVID-19 pandemic and a venue and dates are to be determined.

Editions

EditionYearHost cityStart dateEnd date
I1982Liverpool
II1986Brighton and Hove
III1989Leicester
IV1993Sheffield20 August26 August
V1997Portsmouth28 June5 July
VI2001Cardiff28 July7 August
VII2005Glasgow2 July9 July
VIII2009Leicester25 July31 July
IX2013Bath28 August1 September
X2017Sheffield7 August12 August
*XI*TBATBATBATBA

Teams

Athletes compete as part of twelve regional teams; East Midlands, East of England, Greater London, North West England, Northern England, Scotland, South East England, South West England, Southern England, Wales, West Midlands, Yorkshire and the Humber.

References

References

  1. "History | Special Olympics".
  2. "About Us | Special Olympics".
  3. "National Sponsors | Special Olympics".
  4. "Ambassadors | Special Olympics".
  5. "Sports We Offer | Special Olympics".
  6. "Find A Club | Special Olympics".
  7. "As a Volunteer | Special Olympics".
  8. (4 December 2003). "2003 World Summer Games : EE.SO Great Britain".
  9. (8 September 2015). "Great Britain - Special Olympics World Games".
  10. "SO Great Britain".
  11. "GREAT BRITAIN FACT SHEET".
  12. (29 July 2020). "Liverpool will not hold Special Olympics".
  13. "Find a Club".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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