Return to the Special Olympics Homepage
Athletes
Meet Our Athletes
Eligibility
Code Of Conduct
How to Register
Athlete-Related Activities
Athlete Leadership Programs (ALPs)
Healthy Athletes
Unified Sports®
Sports
Sports Offered
Sports Rules
Divisioning
Games & Competition
Advancement Criteria
Competition Calendar
Officials
Regional Games
World Games
About Us Press Room Initiatives Find a Location Contact Us Site Map Donate to Special Olympics
Keyword Search and Help
Special Olympics offers training and competition opportunities in 30 Olympic-type sports for athletes 8 years or older.  For children with intellectual disabilities ages 2 through 7, Special Olympics provides a Young Athletes Program. Special Olympics coaches have a unique opportunity to work with athletes in competitive situations to assist in their training for life. As a grass-roots organization, Special Olympics relies on volunteers at all levels of the movement to ensure that every athlete is offered a quality sports training and competition experience. Individual donors, corporate partners and many others make it possible for Special Olympics to offer children and adults with intellectual disabilities the opportunity to develop physical fitness, demonstrate courage and experience joy through participation in the program.
English > Compete > Regional Games > European Youth Games
Regional Games
  Print this page      

Special Olympics European Youth Games 2006

Read inspiring stories about the Youth Games athletes and their friends on http://www.athleteconnect.org/

Special Olympics European Youth Games, Rome, Italy
Read inspiring stories about the Youth Games athletes and their friends on http://www.athleteconnect.org/, or visit the Special Olympics European Youth Games Web site for information in Italian and English.

The Special Olympics European Youth Games were held 30 September-5 October in Rome, Italy. The Youth Games involved 1,400 athletes from all 57 Special Olympics National Programs in Europe and Eurasia.

Read reports from the European Youth Games (Updated 12 October 2006)

This was the first time that a Special Olympics event focused on young people between the ages of 12 and 21. The aim of the Youth Games was to encourage young people with and without intellectual disabilities to break down barriers and forge new friendships to help build a more welcoming and inclusive society.

Click to visit the AthleteConnect Web site

Visit the AthleteConnect Web site, where school-age children all over Europe and Eurasia made real and valuable connections with the Special Olympics athletes who competed in the Special Olympics European Youth Games. Virtually anyone between the ages of 12 and 21 — with or wihout an intellectual disability — could participate! AthleteConnect gives you the opportunity to make new friends and participate in activities that promote acceptance, respect, friendship and community spirit. Visit today to read inspiring stories about the Youth Games athletes and their friends.

"Many young people with intellectual disabilities will grow up in relative isolation, excluded from their peer group. They are not invited to play at break-time; they are not chosen to be on the team. The Special Olympics European Youth Games will promote a message of welcome and inclusion among young people with and without disabilities, transforming difference into acceptance, mutual respect and friendship," said Michael Smith, Managing Director of the Brussels-based office of Special Olympics Europe/Eurasia.

At the Youth Games, Special Olympics athletes competed in seven sports:

  • Aquatics
  • Athletics
  • Basketball
  • Bocce
  • Bowling
  • Gymnastics, and
  • Unified Sports® Football (Soccer)

Supporters of the Athlete Connect Web site wear their custom T-shirts
Left to right, Special Olympics Europe/Eurasia Athlete Leadership Programs (ALPs) Manager Nolwen Grassin, Special Olympics Italy athlete Serena Silvi, Special Olympics Czech Republic athlete Marcela Klicperova, Special Olympics Belgium athlete Jacques van Hees and Special Olympics Europe/Eurasia Schools Initiatives Manager Sabine Brecklinghaus model their Athlete Connect T-shirts. [Photo courtesy AthleteConnect]

AthleteConnect is a project that ran parallel to the Youth Games, and aimed to use the experience of Special Olympics athletes taking part to make new connections with peers from schools in their community. The AthleteConnect Web site enabled schools to post information, such as photos, articles and videos, about how they got involved in Special Olympics and made connections with Special Olympics athletes in the run-up to the Youth Games. The project's goal was to involve all 1,400 Special Olympics athletes from 57 countries who participated in the Youth Games.

The AthleteConnect concept was based on the desire that young people with intellectual disabilities have to participate in sports competition and to experience friendship with peers in their community. Special Olympics has an opportunity to provide both, showing that sports can be both enjoyable and a powerful tool for social inclusion. The school-driven AthleteConnect activities included sports, social, fundraising and public awareness events that involved Special Olympics athletes and their peers. Activities were organized throughout the year, leading up to the Games and upon athletes' return from Rome.

Participants:
    1,400 from all 57 National Programs in Europe/Eurasia
    400 coaches
    3,000 family members
    2,000 volunteers
    20,000 school-age children

Other components of the Youth Games included a European symposium on the inclusion of young people with disabilities through sports, health screenings, a youth summit, a Law Enforcement Torch Run® for Special Olympics, and a pre-Games Host Town program in the Lazio Region (28-29 September) where delegations were welcomed into local communities.

Advertising agency JWT Milan created a television advertisement [watch now] as part of publicity efforts for the European Youth Games, a shoot that involved more than 10 directors and film crews working independently in different countries to capture footage of sports fields, football pitches, swimming pools and basketball courts.

Back to Top
Special Olympics
1133 19th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20036 USA
+1 (202) 628-3630
Fax: +1 (202) 824-0200