website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Pan American Games 2023


Totallympics

Recommended Posts

17 minutes ago, Olympian1010 said:

In defense of Lacrosse, it is about as Pan American as a sport can get. In terms of origin and top countries. I do agree that it largely non-competitive at the moment, but maybe World Games inclusion will help with that a little.

Yes, I'd love to see Lacrosse being included in future editions, as you said, it is an authentic American sport. and there are now enough teams to at least have a 6 NOC's field.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308115
Share on other sites

21 minutes ago, Olympian1010 said:

Honestly, the sport I’m most sad about not being on the Pan Am program is Ulama. Obviously it doesn’t have an international federation, and it’s only played in a few places at the moment (though it is expanding), but it is the most Pan American sport out there. It’s the OG of Pan American sports, having been played by Mesoamericans for centuries. It’s a shame that there’s never really been an effort to develop it on the continent, and get it on the program :(

Well, this sport is not even fully implemented in Mexico and has not made it into the Olimpiada Juvenil, an event also cancelled by our pseudo communist current government.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308116
Share on other sites

51 minutes ago, Olympian1010 said:

In defense of Lacrosse, it is about as Pan American as a sport can get. In terms of origin and top countries. I do agree that it largely non-competitive at the moment, but maybe World Games inclusion will help with that a little.

I agree about the origin, but it barely reaches the minimum number of federations to justify its inclusion in the Pan Am sports program. I don't think we need this sport at the Pan Am Games in any form, to be honest.
 

49 minutes ago, Olympian1010 said:

Honestly, the sport I’m most sad about not being on the Pan Am program is Ulama. Obviously it doesn’t have an international federation, and it’s only played in a few places at the moment (though it is expanding), but it is the most Pan American sport out there. It’s the OG of Pan American sports, having been played by Mesoamericans for centuries. It’s a shame that there’s never really been an effort to develop it on the continent, and get it on the program :(

This doesn't make any sense. If it has been played in Mexico and Central America, it does not fit the definition of a Pan American sport at all.

In the end, it depends on what people want from the Pan American Games. There are those who want a mini-Olympics with countries from North, Centra and South American, and the Caribbean, and there are a few people who want that specific, indigenous and exotic sports eventually get added to the program. I'd be okay with a Pan American Indigenous Games or something like that, but I don't really understand why sports that are barely played on the continent are even considered for a full fledged edition of the Pan Ams. I mean, we already have some weird sports like Basque Pelota, Water Skiing and Racquetball, so why add even more bizarre sports to the program? What will come next? Capoeira?

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308122
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, mrv86 said:

Well, this sport is not even fully implemented in Mexico and has not made it into the Olimpiada Juvenil, an event also cancelled by our pseudo communist current government.

Man, your views on politics really make me cringe. I would never think you're one of those people who see any leftist government as pseudo-communism, but here we are. Besides, it doesn't make any sense: if the government is pseudo-communist, why cancel a sports event which would celebrate national identity?

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308130
Share on other sites

46 minutes ago, thiago_simoes said:

Man, your views on politics really make me cringe. I would never think you're one of those people who see any leftist government as pseudo-communism, but here we are. Besides, it doesn't make any sense: if the government is pseudo-communist, why cancel a sports event which would celebrate national identity?

I had high hopes for AMLO, but he has morphed into your run of the mill Central American corrupt socialist/communist.
 

His policy has been to defund sports, and put the money towards programs that help the general populace if I’m not mistaken...

 

I haven’t followed Mexican politics much lately, so @mrv86 could probably explain the sports thing better than me.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308143
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, thiago_simoes said:

Man, your views on politics really make me cringe. I would never think you're one of those people who see any leftist government as pseudo-communism, but here we are. Besides, it doesn't make any sense: if the government is pseudo-communist, why cancel a sports event which would celebrate national identity?

That's why I call them pseudo communist. They say they're left leaning and keeping the country away from conservatism and neoliberalism, yet:

 

  • The President and the Congress he controls is moving towards criminalizing memes about government officials.
  • He was about to deprive 75% of public employees of their computers and then force them to buy them back from the government.
  • He supports strong Evangelical sects, which have cause lack of funds for the National Humans Right Commission, which he calls absurds.
  • He's about to end the independence of the Electoral authority and courts.
  • He cut the funds for public sports and Olympic hopefuls, yet he gave away more than 2 thousand million pesos to private entrepeneurs of the Mexican Baseball League.
  • He signed that aberration called T-MEC, which basically ends any benefit NAFTA had for Mexican industry and services, and now turns the country into a slave force.

 

I have no ill will toward social (but not socialist) systems, like the policies that have been implemented by some European countries; but, as I have repeatedly said in this forum, there is not a single left leaning or socialist politician in the whole country; just a bunch of  thieves and crooks who use political terms to further down their own personal fortunes.

 

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308147
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, mrv86 said:

That's why I call them pseudo communist. They say they're left leaning and keeping the country away from conservatism and neoliberalism, yet:

 

  • The President and the Congress he controls is moving towards criminalizing memes about government officials.
  • He was about to deprive 75% of public employees of their computers and then force them to buy them back from the government.
  • He supports strong Evangelical sects, which have cause lack of funds for the National Humans Right Commission, which he calls absurds.
  • He's about to end the independence of the Electoral authority and courts.
  • He cut the funds for public sports and Olympic hopefuls, yet he gave away more than 2 thousand million pesos to private entrepeneurs of the Mexican Baseball League.
  • He signed that aberration called T-MEC, which basically ends any benefit NAFTA had for Mexican industry and services, and now turns the country into a slave force.

 

I have no ill will toward social (but not socialist) systems, like the policies that have been implemented by some European countries; but, as I have repeatedly said in this forum, there is not a single left leaning or socialist politician in the whole country; just a bunch of  thieves and crooks who use political terms to further down their own personal fortunes.

 

 

But the whole thing about governments that strongly support sports is that they want people to be proud of the nation while they do terrible things when no one is paying attention. I've not seen any act of communism here, honestly, and that was my point when I replied to your message. It doesn't mean that I support any of his actions, but I can't say I understand much about what's going on in Mexico now, to be honest. However, my main point of concern is that one can't just throw the word "communist" whenever one doesn't like what the government is doing. I mean, here in Brazil people have feared communist for decades now, to the point of electing Bolsonaro, and we're in deep, deep trouble thanks to him. Not that AMLO seems to be any better, especially when it comes to how he deals with the covid-19 pandemic, but it's not like I see him as a communist in the slightest (okay, criminalizing memes is bad, but that's about it).

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308175
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, thiago_simoes said:

But the whole thing about governments that strongly support sports is that they want people to be proud of the nation while they do terrible things when no one is paying attention. I've not seen any act of communism here, honestly, and that was my point when I replied to your message. It doesn't mean that I support any of his actions, but I can't say I understand much about what's going on in Mexico now, to be honest. However, my main point of concern is that one can't just throw the word "communist" whenever one doesn't like what the government is doing. I mean, here in Brazil people have feared communist for decades now, to the point of electing Bolsonaro, and we're in deep, deep trouble thanks to him. Not that AMLO seems to be any better, especially when it comes to how he deals with the covid-19 pandemic, but it's not like I see him as a communist in the slightest (okay, criminalizing memes is bad, but that's about it).

 

Well, without going further in a thread that doesn't belong, let's say I'm against any word that finishes in "-ism". As a profesor at high school said, "any ism seeks to have the absolute truth in a world of relatives"

 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308178
Share on other sites

Here is some more Santiago 2023 news, baseball/softball were to be dropped as well, but PASO forced them to keep the sports. So clearly they have their favourites. 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308182
Share on other sites

hace 6 horas, mrv86 dijo:

 

Well, without going further in a thread that doesn't belong, let's say I'm against any word that finishes in "-ism". As a profesor at high school said, "any ism seeks to have the absolute truth in a world of relatives"

 

 

So.. your professor advocated for relativism :lol:   

  

Not that it is a bad thing.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/2343-pan-american-games-2023/page/6/#findComment-308192
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • Men's Futsal AFC Asian Cup 2026 Final February 7th 2026   Indonesia  vs  Iran    Semifinals  
    • Oh yeah that’s true   Based off ability and form he wouldn’t 
    • Born in Reunion grew up in Wanaka NZ, and learnt all his snowboarding there Junior WC in big air for NZ not so long ago until he switched to GB. 
    • He probably would considering Jon Cooper is the coach. Not a coincidence 3 lightning players were on the initial roster.
    • February 2026 International break   05.02.2026   EUROPEAN NATIONS LEAGUE   Division B   Tournament in Oslo   -   4-5 After OT   1. NOR 2 2. HUN 1  -. AUT 0  Not Played yet   -------------------------------------------------   Division C   Tournament in Edinburgh   -   3-4  -   3-2 After PSO   1. SLO 3 2. GBR 2 3. UKR 1 4. POL 0    -------------------------------------------------   Division D   Tournament in Brasov   -   3-1   1. ROU 3 2. LTU 0 - ESP 0  Not Played yet
    • Yeah it is but Point wouldn’t have gotten his spot on the team if it wasn’t for the initial early selections of 6 names ofc so it’s for the best
    • So here it is, was a hard work, so please appreciate it    Anyway  is still for some reason missing. One day when they will realize the OC is tomorrow, perhaps they will announce their flag bearers as well   until then here is the 2026 class     Albania - Lara Colturi (Alpine Skiing) / Denni Xhepa (Alpine Skiing) Andorra - Cande Moreno (Alpine Skiing) / Irineu Altiniras Esteve (Cross-Country Skiing) / Joan Verdu (Alpine Skiing) Argentina - Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (Alpine Skiing) / Franco Dal Farra (Cross-Country Skiing) Armenia - Karina Akopova (Figure Skating)/ Nikita Rakhmanin (Figure Skating) Australia - Jakara Anthony (Freestyle Skiing) / Matt Graham (Freestyle Skiing) Austria - Anna Gasser (Snowboarding) / Benjamin Karl (Snowboarding) Azerbaijan - Anastasia Alina Papathoma Paraskevaidou (Alpine Skiing) / Vladimir Litvintsev (Figure Skating) Belgium - Hanne Desmet (Short Track Speed Skating) / Maximilien Drion (Ski Mountaineering) Benin - Nathan Tchibozo (Alpine Skiing) Bolivia - Timo Juhani Gronlund (Cross-Country Skiing) Bosnia and Herzegovina - Elvedina Muzaferija (Alpine Skiing) / Marko Sljivic (Alpine Skiing) Brazil - Nicole Rocha Silveira (Skeleton) / Lucas Pinheiro Braathen (Alpine Skiing) Bulgaria - Alexandra Feigin (Figure Skating) / Vladimir Iliev (Biathlon) Canada - Marielle Thompson (Freestyle Skiing) / Mikael Kingsbury (Freestyle Skiing) Chile - Matilde Schwencke (Alpine Skiing) / Sebastian Endrestad (Cross-Country Skiing) China - Zhang Chutong (Short Track Speed Skating) / Ning Zhongyan (Speed Skating) Chinese Taipei - Lin Sin-Rong (Bobsleigh) / Li Yu-Hsiang (Figure Skating) Colombia - Fredrik Fodstad (Cross-Country Skiing) Croatia - Valentina Ascic (Short Track Speed Skating) / Matija Legovic (Biathlon) Cyprus - Andrea Loizidou (Alpine Skiing) / Yianno Kouyoumdjian (Alpine Skiing) Czechia - Lucie Charvátová (Biathlon) / David Pastrňák (Ice Hockey) Denmark - Denise Dupont (Curling) / Jesper Jensen Aebo (Ice Hockey) Ecuador - Klaus Jungbluth Rodriguez (Cross-Country Skiing)  Eritrea - Shannon Abeda (Alpine Skiing) Estonia - Johanna Talihaerm (Biathlon) / Marten Liiv (Speed Skating) Finland - Krista Parmakoski (Cross-Country Skiing) / Mikko Lehtonen (Ice Hockey) France - Chloe Trespeuch (Snowboarding) / Clement Noel (Alpine Skiing) Georgia - Nino Tsiklauri (Alpine Skiing, Cortina) / Luka Buchukuri (Alpine Skiing, Cortina) / Diana Davis (Figure Skating, Milano) / Luka Berulava (Figure Skating, Milano) Germany - Katharina Schmid (Ski Jumping) / Leon Draisaitl (Ice Hockey) Great Britain - Lilah Fear (Figure Skating) / Brad Hall (Bobsleigh) Greece - Nefeli Tita (Cross-Country Skiing) / AJ Ginnis (Alpine Skiing) Guinea-Bissau - Winston Tang (Alpine Skiing)  Haiti - Stevenson Savart (Cross-Country Skiing) Hong Kong - Eloise Yung Shih King (Alpine Skiing) / Kwok Tsz Fung (Short Track Speed Skating) Hungary - Maja Somodi (Short Track Speed Skating) / Bence Nogradi (Short Track Speed Skating) Iceland - Elin van Pelt (Alpine Skiing) / Jon Erik Sigurdsson (Alpine Skiing) India - Arif Mohd Khan (Alpine Skiing)  Individual Neutral Athletes - Volunteer Iran - Samaneh Beyrami Baher (Cross-Country Skiing) / Danyal Saveh Shemshaki (Cross-Country Skiing) Ireland - Anabelle Zurbay (Alpine Skiing) / Thomas Maloney Westgard (Cross-Country Skiing) Israel - Mariia Seniuk (Figure Skating) / Jared Firestone (Skeleton) Italy - Federica Brignone (Alpine Skiing, Cortina) / Amos Mosaner (Curling, Cortina) / Arianna Fontana (Short Track Speed Skating, Milano) / Federico Pellegrino (Cross Country Skiing, Milano) Jamaica - Mica Moore (Bobsleigh)/ Henri Rivers (Alpine Skiing) Japan - Sena Tomita (Snowboarding) / Wataru Morishige (Speed Skating) Kazakhstan - Ayaulum Amrenova (Freestyle Skiing) / Denis Nikisha (Short Track Speed Skating) Kenya - Sabrina Simader (Alpine Skiing) / Issa Gachingiri Labordet dit Pierre (Alpine Skiing) Kosovo - Kiana Kryeziu (Alpine Skiing) / Drin Kokaj (Alpine Skiing) Kyrgyzstan - Artur Saparbekov (Cross-Country Skiing) Latvia - Dzenefera Germane (Alpine Skiing) / Kaspars Daugavins (Ice Hockey) Lebanon - Andrea Elie Antoine El-Hayek (Alpine Skiing) Liechtenstein - Martin Kranz (Bobsleigh) Lithuania - Allison Reed (Figure Skiing) / Saulius Ambrilevičius (Figure Skating) Luxembourg - Matthieu Osch (Alpine Skiing) Madagascar - Mialitiana Clerc (Alpine Skiing) / Mathieu Gravier (Alpine Skiing) Malaysia - Aruwin Salehhuddin (Alpine Skiing) Malta - Jenny Axisa Eriksen (Cross-Country Skiing) Mexico - Sarah Schlepper (Alpine Skiing) / Donovan Carrillo (Figure Skating) Moldova - Elizaveta Hlusovici (Cross-Country Skiing) / Iulian Luchin (Cross-Country Skiing) Monaco - Arnaud Alessandria (Alpine Skiing) Mongolia - Ariuntungalag Enkhbayar (Cross-Country Skiing) / Ariunbat Altanzul (Alpine Skiing) Montenegro - Branislav Pekovic (Alpine Skiing) Morocco - Pietro Tranchina (Alpine Skiing) Netherlands - Kimberley Bos (Skeleton) / Jens van´t Wout (Short Track Speed Skating) New Zealand - Nigeria - Samuel Uduigowme Ikpefan (Cross-Country Skiing) North Macedonia - Jana Atanasovska (Alpine Skiing) / Stavre Jada (Cross-Country Skiing) Norway - Kajsa Vickhoff Lie (Alpine Skiing) / Peder Kongshaug (Speed Skating) Pakistan - Muhammad Karim (Alpine Skiing) Philippines - Tallulah Proulx (Alpine Skiing) / Francis Ceccarelli (Cross-Country Skiing) Poland - Natalia Czerwonka (Speed Skating) / Kamil Stoch (Ski Jumping) Portugal - Vanina Guerillot (Alpine Skiing) / Jose Cabeca (Cross-Country Skiing) Puerto Rico - Kellie Delka (Skeleton) Romania - Julia Sauter (Figure Skating) / Mihai Cristian Tentea (Bobsleigh) San Marino - Rafael Mini (Alpine Skiing) Saudi Arabia - Rakan Alireza (Cross-Country Skiing) Serbia - Anja Ilic (Cross-Country Skiing) / Milos MIlosavljevic (Cross-Country Skiing) Singapore - Faiz Basha Munwar (Alpine Skiing) Slovakia - Viktória Čerňanská (Bobsleigh) / Tomáš Tatar (Ice Hockey) Slovenia - Nika Prevc (Ski Jumping) / Domen Prevc (Ski Jumping) South Africa - Nicole Burger (Skeleton) / Matthew Smith (Cross-Country Skiing) South Korea - Park Ji-Woo (Speed Skating) / Cha Jun-Hwan (Figure Skating) Spain - Olivia Smart (Figure Skating) / Joaquim Salarich (Alpine Skiing) Sweden - Sara Hector (Alpine Skiing) / Walter Wallberg (Freestyle Skiing) Switzerland - Fanny Smith (Freestyle Skiing) / Nino Niederreiter (Ice Hockey) Thailand -  Karen Chanloung (Cross-Country Skiing) / Mark Chanloung (Cross-Country Skiing) Trinidad and Tobago - Emma Gatcliffe (Alpine Skiing) / Nikhil Alleyne (Alpine Skiing) Türkiye - Irem Dursun (Cross-Country Skiing) / Furkan Akar (Short Track Speed Skating) Ukraine - Yelizaveta Sidorko (Short Track Speed Skating) / Vladyslav Heraskevych (Skeleton) United Arab Emirates - Piera Hudson (Alpine Skiing) / Alexander Astridge (Alpine Skiing) United States - Erin Jackson (Speed Skating) / Frank Del Duca (Bobsleigh) Uruguay - Nicolas Pirozzi Mayer (Alpine Skiing) Uzbekistan - Daniil Eybog (Short Track Speed Skating) Venezuela - Nicolas Claveau-Laviolette (Cross-Country Skiing)
×
×
  • Create New...