2007 Winter Deaflympics

16th Winter Deaflympics
Host citySalt Lake City,  United States
Nations23 countries
Athletes298 athletes
Events27 (5 disciplines)
Opening3 Feb 2007
Closing10 Feb 2007
Summer
← Melbourne 2005
Taipei 2009 →
Winter
← Sundsvall 2003
Vysoké Tatry 2011 →

The 2007 Winter Deaflympics, officially known as the 16th Winter Deaflympics, is an international multi-sport event that was held from 3 to 10 February 2007 in Salt Lake City, United States.[1]

Sports

Curling has been recognized as a demonstration sports.

  • Curling (2) (details)
  • Ice hockey (1) (details)
  • Skiing
    • Alpine skiing (10) (details)
    • Cross-country skiing (9) (details)
    • Snowboarding (5) (details)

Results

https://www.deaflympics.com/games/2007-w/results

Medals

1  Russia 9 5 4 18
2  Czech Republic 4 3 2 9
3  United States 3 5 5 13
4  Canada 3 1 0 4
5  Japan 3 0 1 4
6  Germany 2 1 0 3
7  Switzerland 1 4 2 7
8  Austria 1 1 2 4
9  Finland 1 1 1 3
10  Ukraine 0 4 3 7
11  Italy 0 1 2 3
12  Slovenia 0 1 1 3
13  China 0 0 1 1
 Croatia 0 0 1 1
 Turkey 0 0 1 1
 Sweden 0 0 1 1
Total 27 27 27 81

Nations

Countries participated:

Country / Men / Women / Total

  1.  Australia 1 0 1
  2.  Austria 8 1 9
  3.  Canada 28 7 35
  4.  China 11 3 14
  5.  Croatia 0 6 6
  6.  Czech Republic 0 4 4
  7.  Finland 25 1 26
  8.  France 1 0 1
  9.  Germany 19 2 21
  10.  Italy 5 5 10
  11.  Japan 12 5 17
  12.  Lithuania 1 0 1
  13.  Netherlands 0 1 1
  14.  Pakistan 1 0 1
  15.  Poland 1 1 2
  16.  Russia 29 5 34
  17.  Slovakia 4 7 11
  18.  Slovenia 1 1 2
  19.  Sweden 25 0 25
  20.  Switzerland 10 3 13
  21.  Turkey 4 0 4
  22.  Ukraine 5 3 8
  23.  United States 39 13 52

Total 230 68 298

See also

External links

  • https://web.archive.org/web/20170814062349/http://deaflympics.com/games.asp?2007-w
  • Results book

References

  1. ^ "Salt Lake 2007".
Preceded by
2003
XV
Sundavall, Sweden
2007
XVI
Salt Lake City, USA
Succeeded by
2011
XVII
Vysoké Tatry, Slovakia
  • v
  • t
  • e
Summer Games
Winter Games
  1. ^ Bowling was held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The 2021 games were postponed to 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.


Stub icon

This article about a sporting event is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e