|
|
|
|
1978 British Commonwealth Games
Edmonton, Canada
|
|
The XI Games was the first to bear the current day
name of the Commonwealth Games. Whilst Edmonton had
won the right to host the Games with an audacious
vision presented six years earlier to the
Commonwealth Games Federation General Assembly, the
organisers had to walk a careful tightrope in the
immediate run up to the Edmonton Games to ensure
that there was no repeat of the African nations
boycott of the 1976 Montreal Olympics caused by a
New Zealand rugby tour of South Africa.
Forty-six countries sent a total of 1,405 athletes
and 504 officials to the Edmonton Games. As host
nation, Canada also topped the medal table for the
first time.
Ten sports were featured at the Edmonton Games -
athletics, badminton, boxing, cycling, gymnastics,
lawn bowls, shooting, swimming and diving,
weightlifting and wrestling
|
|
Credits|Contacts|FAQ’s|Privacy
policy|Legall
|
The History of the Games
|
1930 - Hamilton,
Canada. |
|
1934 –
London, England. |
|
1938 –
Sydney, Australia. |
|
1950 –
Auckland, New Zealand. |
|
1954 –
Vancouver, Canada. |
|
1958 –
Cardiff, Wales. |
|
1962 –
Perth, Australia. |
|
1966 – Kingston, Jamaica.
|
|
1970 –
Edinburgh, Scotland. |
|
1974 –
Christchurch, New Zealand. |
|
1978 –
Edmonton, Canada. |
|
1982 –
Brisbane, Australia. |
|
1986 –
Edinburgh, Scotland. |
|
1990 –
Auckland, New Zealand. |
|
1994 –
Victoria, Canada. |
|
1998 – Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia. |
|
2002 –
Manchester, England. |
|
2006 –
Melbourne, Australia. |
|
2010 - Delhi, India. |
| |
|