2004年7月20日

Factfile

Category : OLYMPICS 2004
Athens factfileThe XXVIII Summer Olympic Games will be held in Athens from 13 August to 29 August 2004. Here are some facts and figures about the big event.

Greece was the birthplace of the ancient Olympic Games with the first recorded event staged in 776 BC.

Athens will host the summer Olympics for the second time in modern history. The first official Games were held in Athens in 1896.

Athens won the race to stage the 2004 Summer Games on 5 September 1997 at the 106th IOC session in Lausanne, defeating Rome in the final round of the vote by 66 to 41.
Buenos Aires, Cape Town and Stockholm fell out in earlier stages, while Istanbul, Lille, Rio de Janeiro, San Juan, Seville and St Petersburg did not make the shortlist.


Some 28 sports will be represented in 38 venues. A total of 301 medal ceremonies will take place over a period of 16 days.

More than 10,500 athletes and 3,000 team officials from 199 countries will participate.

Around 21,500 members of the world's media are expected to cover the Games from Greece.
Story: IOC rejects Athens security fears

The Olympic Village will house 16,000 athletes and team officials during the Olympic Games and 6,000 during the Paralympic Games.


Some 45,000 security personnel are due to work at the Olympics, with 60,000 trained volunteers from around the world.

The IOC will give just over $1bn to the Athens Organising Committee from the sale of broadcast rights and worldwide sponsorship, which is roughly 60% of the Games' operating budget.
The remaining 40% will be financed from local sponsorship, ticketing and licensing sales.


Afghanistan will return to the Games after a suspension in 1999, which was enforced partly because of the Taleban's ban on the participation of women athletes.

George Michael has been asked to compose the theme song of the Athens Olympics.
The singer, who was born in north London, has Greek family roots. His real name is Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou.

Michael considers Olympic song


The Athens Games' official mascots are Phevos and Athena, who are brother and sister. Their creation was inspired by an ancient Greek doll.
The names derive from two Olympian gods: Phevos, the god of light and music, known as Apollo; and Athena, goddess of wisdom and patron of the city of Athens.

The Olympics Games mascot was first introduced in 1968 during the Winter Olympics in Grenoble.


The Athens Olympic torch is designed to resembles an olive leaf. It weighs 700 grams and is 68cm long.

The Games emblem portrays an olive wreath, or kotinos, a branch from an olive tree intertwined in a circle.
During the ancient Olympic Games, the kotinos was the official award of Olympic champions, while the olive was the sacred tree of Athens.


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