2006 Arctic Winter Games
Host city | Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, United States |
---|---|
Nations | 7 countries
|
Teams | 9 territories
|
Athletes | approx. 2000 |
Opening | 5 March 2006 (2006-03-05) |
Closing | 11 March 2006 (2006-03-11) |
Website | www |
← Wood Buffalo 2004 Yellowknife 2008 → |
Approximately 2,000 athletes, coaches, team staff and officials participated in the 2006 Arctic Winter Games on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska in the United States. The 2006 games took place from March 5 through March 11. Events were held mostly in the larger towns of Soldotna and Kenai, along with Homer (curling) and the Alyeska Ski Resort in Girdwood (alpine skiing and snowboarding). Soldotna, Kenai, Homer, and the town of Seward also hosted cultural events. This was the fifth time Alaska had hosted the games.
Participants
- Alaska (host contingent)
- Greenland
- Northwest Territories
- Nunavik Quebec (traditionally defined Northern Inuit region of the Nord-du-Québec administrative region in Quebec)
- Nunavut
- Northern Alberta
- Russia (because only the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug participated they were referred to as team Russia, competing under the Russian flag)
- Sami (Sami peoples of Norway, Sweden, and Finland collectively)
- Yukon Territory
The 2008 Arctic Winter Games were held in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories.
Events
Competition was held in alpine skiing, badminton, basketball, biathlon, cross-country skiing, curling, Dene games (see Dene), dog mushing, figure skating, gymnastics, ice hockey, indoor soccer, Inuit games (see Inuit), short track speed skating, snowboarding, snowshoe biathlon, snowshoeing (see Snowshoe), speed skating, table tennis, volleyball, and wrestling.
2006 medal tally
(Unofficially listed with number of gold medals taking priority followed by silvers.)
Team | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Alaska | 80 | 64 | 47 |
Alberta North | 42 | 45 | 41 |
Northwest Territories | 28 | 41 | 36 |
Yamal-Nenets | 22 | 21 | 7 |
Greenland | 20 | 17 | 11 |
Yukon | 17 | 20 | 44 |
Nunavut | 13 | 24 | 38 |
Nunavik Quebec | 13 | 6 | 8 |
Saami | 5 | 6 | 10 |
External links
- 2006 Official Site
- Arctic Winter Games Official Site
- ESPN Article
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- 1970 Yellowknife
- 1972 Whitehorse
- 1974 Anchorage
- 1976 Schefferville
- 1978 Hay River/Pine Point
- 1980 Whitehorse
- 1982 Fairbanks
- 1984 Yellowknife
- 1986 Whitehorse
- 1988 Fairbanks
- 1990 Yellowknife
- 1992 Whitehorse
- 1994 Slave Lake
- 1996 Chugiak/Eagle River
- 1998 Yellowknife
- 2000 Whitehorse
- 2002 Nuuk/Iqaluit
- 2004 Wood Buffalo
- 2006 Kenai Peninsula
- 2008 Yellowknife
- 2010 Grande Prairie
- 2012 Whitehorse
- 2014 Fairbanks
- 2016 Nuuk
- 2018 South Slave
- 2020 Whitehorse†
- 2023 Wood Buffalo
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