Sport in South America: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Maracana Stadium June 2013.jpg|thumb|[[Maracanã Stadium]] in [[Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil]] |
[[File:Maracana Stadium June 2013.jpg|thumb|[[Maracanã Stadium]] in [[Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil]] |
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[[Association football]] is the most popular sport in almost all South American countries. There are a wide range of sports played in the continent of South America. Popular sports include [[rugby union]], [[baseball]], [[basketball]], [[tennis]], [[golf]], [[volleyball]], [[Field hockey|hockey]], [[beach volleyball]], [[motorsports]] and [[cricket]]. South America held its first Olympic Games in [[Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil in [[2016 Summer Olympics|2016]]. Two years prior to this, major cities in Brazil hosted the [[2014 FIFA World Cup]]. |
[[Association football]] is the most popular sport in almost all South American countries. There are a wide range of sports played in the continent of South America. Popular sports include [[rugby union]], [[baseball]], [[basketball]], [[tennis]], [[golf]], [[volleyball]], [[Field hockey|hockey]], [[beach volleyball]], [[motorsports]] and [[cricket]]. South America held its first Olympic Games in [[Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil in [[2016 Summer Olympics|2016]]. Two years prior to this, major cities in Brazil hosted the [[2014 FIFA World Cup]]. |
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== Team sports == |
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==Association football== |
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[[File:Pele con brasil (cropped).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Pelé]]]] |
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[[File:Maradona 1986 vs italy.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Maradona]]]] |
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=== Association football === |
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{{main article|Football in South America}} |
{{main article|Football in South America}} |
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South America and Europe share the supremacy over the sport, as all national team winners in [[FIFA World Cup]] history and all winning teams at the [[FIFA Club World Cup]] have come from these two continents. Brazil holds the world record at the [[FIFA World Cup]] with five titles in total. [[Argentina]] has three titles and [[Uruguay]] have two. So far four South American nations have hosted the tournament including its first edition in Uruguay ([[1930 FIFA World Cup|1930]]). The other three were Brazil ([[1950 FIFA World Cup|1950]], [[2014 FIFA World Cup|2014]]), [[Chile]] ([[1962 FIFA World Cup|1962]]), and Argentina ([[1978 FIFA World Cup|1978]]). |
South America and Europe share the supremacy over the sport, as all national team winners in [[FIFA World Cup]] history and all winning teams at the [[FIFA Club World Cup]] have come from these two continents. Brazil holds the world record at the [[FIFA World Cup]] with five titles in total. [[Argentina]] has three titles and [[Uruguay]] have two. So far four South American nations have hosted the tournament including its first edition in Uruguay ([[1930 FIFA World Cup|1930]]). The other three were Brazil ([[1950 FIFA World Cup|1950]], [[2014 FIFA World Cup|2014]]), [[Chile]] ([[1962 FIFA World Cup|1962]]), and Argentina ([[1978 FIFA World Cup|1978]]). |
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South America is home to the longest running international football tournament; [[Copa América]], which has been regularly contested since [[1916 South American Championship|1916]]. |
South America is home to the longest running international football tournament; [[Copa América]], which has been regularly contested since [[1916 South American Championship|1916]]. Argentina have won the Copa América a record 16 times, followed by Uruguay with 15 titles and Brazil with 9. |
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About the [[FIFA Confederations Cup]], Brazil is the biggest winner of all time with 4 titles. At the [[Football at the Summer Olympics|Olympic Games]], Brazil has 2 titles, Argentina 2, and Uruguay 2. In the [[FIFA U-20 World Cup]], Argentina has 6 titles |
About the [[FIFA Confederations Cup]], Brazil is the biggest winner of all time with 4 titles. At the [[Football at the Summer Olympics|Olympic Games]], Brazil has 2 titles, Argentina 2, and Uruguay 2. In the [[FIFA U-20 World Cup]], Argentina has 6 titles, Brazil 5 and Uruguay 1. In the [[FIFA U-17 World Cup]], Brazil has 4 titles. |
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The continent has produced many of the most famous and most talented players in history, including [[Pelé]], [[Garrincha]], [[Ronaldo (Brazilian footballer)|Ronaldo]], [[Roberto Carlos]], [[Romário]], [[Ronaldinho]], [[Zico (footballer)|Zico]], [[Nílton Santos]], [[Djalma Santos]], [[Cláudio Taffarel|Taffarel]], [[Paulo Roberto Falcão|Falcão]], [[Rivaldo]] and [[Neymar]] (Brazil); [[Maradona]], [[Messi]], [[Alfredo Di Stéfano|Di Stéfano]], [[Batistuta]], [[Daniel Passarella|Passarella]], [[Mario Kempes]] (Argentina); [[Luis Suárez]], [[Enzo Francescoli]], [[Edinson Cavani|Cavani]], [[Diego Forlán|Forlán]], [[Obdulio Varela]] (Uruguay); [[Elías Figueroa]], [[Iván Zamorano]], [[Marcelo Salas]], [[Alexis Sánchez]] (Chile); [[Carlos Valderrama]], [[Radamel Falcao]], [[James Rodríguez]] (Colombia); [[Carlos Gamarra]], [[Romerito]], [[Arsenio Erico]] (Paraguay); [[Álex Aguinaga]], [[Alberto Spencer]] (Ecuador); [[Teófilo Cubillas]], [[César Cueto]], [[Claudio Pizarro]] (Peru).<ref> |
The continent has produced many of the most famous and most talented players in history, including [[Pelé]], [[Garrincha]], [[Ronaldo (Brazilian footballer)|Ronaldo]], [[Roberto Carlos]], [[Romário]], [[Ronaldinho]], [[Zico (footballer)|Zico]], [[Nílton Santos]], [[Djalma Santos]], [[Cláudio Taffarel|Taffarel]], [[Paulo Roberto Falcão|Falcão]], [[Rivaldo]] and [[Neymar]] (Brazil); [[Maradona]], [[Messi]], [[Alfredo Di Stéfano|Di Stéfano]], [[Batistuta]], [[Daniel Passarella|Passarella]], [[Mario Kempes]] (Argentina); [[Luis Suárez]], [[Enzo Francescoli]], [[Edinson Cavani|Cavani]], [[Diego Forlán|Forlán]], [[Obdulio Varela]] (Uruguay); [[Elías Figueroa]], [[Iván Zamorano]], [[Marcelo Salas]], [[Alexis Sánchez]] (Chile); [[Carlos Valderrama]], [[Radamel Falcao]], [[James Rodríguez]] (Colombia); [[Carlos Gamarra]], [[Romerito]], [[Arsenio Erico]] (Paraguay); [[Álex Aguinaga]], [[Alberto Spencer]] (Ecuador); [[Teófilo Cubillas]], [[César Cueto]], [[Claudio Pizarro]] (Peru).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/futebol/copa-america/noticia/messi-di-stefano-e-maradona-mineirao-recebeu-maiores-idolos-da-argentina-em-diferentes-papeis.ghtml|title=Messi, Di Stéfano e Maradona: Mineirão recebeu maiores ídolos da Argentina em diferentes papéis|date=June 18, 2019|website=ge}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://placar.com.br/placar/o-rei-e-fim-de-papo-por-que-pele-e-o-maior-de-todos-os-tempos/|title=O rei e fim de papo: por que Pelé é o maior de todos os tempos|first=Luiz Felipe|last=Castro|date=March 30, 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://copadomundo.uol.com.br/2010/selecoes/uruguai/idolos/|title=Uruguai: ídolos e craques da seleção - UOL Copa do Mundo 2010|website=copadomundo.uol.com.br}}</ref> |
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At club level, teams like [[São Paulo FC|São Paulo]], [[Palmeiras]], [[Santos FC|Santos]], [[Fluminense]], [[CR Vasco da Gama|Vasco]], [[Botafogo de Futebol e Regatas|Botafogo]], [[Internacional]], [[Grêmio]], [[Atlético Mineiro]], [[Cruzeiro Esporte Clube|Cruzeiro]] and [[Atlético Paranaense]] (Brazil); [[Boca Juniors]], [[Club Atlético River Plate|River Plate]], [[Club Atlético Independiente|Independiente]], [[Estudiantes de La Plata|Estudiantes]], [[Club Atlético Vélez Sarsfield|Vélez Sarsfield]], [[Racing Club de Avellaneda|Racing]] and [[San Lorenzo de Almagro|San Lorenzo]] (Argentina); [[Peñarol]] and [[Club Nacional de Football|Nacional]] (Uruguay); [[Atlético Nacional]] (Colombia); [[L.D.U. Quito]] and [[Independiente del Valle]] (Ecuador); [[Club Olimpia|Olimpia]] and [[Cerro Porteño]] (Paraguay) are among the main football clubs in the world.<ref> |
At club level, teams like [[São Paulo FC|São Paulo]], [[Palmeiras]], [[Santos FC|Santos]], [[Fluminense]], [[CR Vasco da Gama|Vasco]], [[Botafogo de Futebol e Regatas|Botafogo]], [[Internacional]], [[Grêmio]], [[Atlético Mineiro]], [[Cruzeiro Esporte Clube|Cruzeiro]] and [[Atlético Paranaense]] (Brazil); [[Boca Juniors]], [[Club Atlético River Plate|River Plate]], [[Club Atlético Independiente|Independiente]], [[Estudiantes de La Plata|Estudiantes]], [[Club Atlético Vélez Sarsfield|Vélez Sarsfield]], [[Racing Club de Avellaneda|Racing]] and [[San Lorenzo de Almagro|San Lorenzo]] (Argentina); [[Peñarol]] and [[Club Nacional de Football|Nacional]] (Uruguay); [[Atlético Nacional]] (Colombia); [[L.D.U. Quito]] and [[Independiente del Valle]] (Ecuador); [[Club Olimpia|Olimpia]] and [[Cerro Porteño]] (Paraguay) are among the main football clubs in the world.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://jovempan.com.br/esportes/futebol/botafogo-agora-e-o-unico-entre-os-12-grandes-clubes-do-brasil-sem-titulo-de-libertadores.html|title=Botafogo agora é o único entre os 12 grandes clubes do Brasil sem título de Libertadores – Jovem Pan|date=November 4, 2023|website=Botafogo agora é o único entre os 12 grandes clubes do Brasil sem título de Libertadores – Jovem Pan}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.espn.com.br/futebol/artigo/_/id/9966397/athletico-pr-mais-relevante-quais-clubes-grupo-12-grandes-veja-opiniao-comentaristas-canais-disney|title=Athletico-PR já é mais relevante que quais clubes do grupo dos '12 grandes'? Veja opinião dos comentaristas dos canais Disney|date=February 23, 2022|website=ESPN.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.lance.com.br/libertadores/brasil-ou-argentina-quem-tem-mais-titulos-na-libertadores.html|title=Brasil ou Argentina: quem tem mais títulos na Libertadores? - Lance!|date=September 7, 2023|website=Brasil ou Argentina: quem tem mais títulos na Libertadores? - Lance!}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.lance.com.br/libertadores/hincha-de-otro-cuadro-rivalidade-entre-nacional-e-penarol-e-nitida-a-cada-passo-em-montevideu.html|title='Hincha de otro cuadro': rivalidade entre Nacional e Peñarol é nítida a cada passo em Montevidéu - Lance!|date=November 23, 2021|website='Hincha de otro cuadro': rivalidade entre Nacional e Peñarol é nítida a cada passo em Montevidéu - Lance!}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://placar.com.br/coluna/la-popular/atletico-nacional-e-millonarios-na-final-mais-historica-do-futebol-colombiano/|title=Millonarios vence final histórica contra Atlético Nacional, nos pênaltis|date=June 25, 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.uol.com.br/esporte/futebol/ultimas-noticias/2023/10/26/nova-forca-futebol-do-equador-se-consolida-com-exportacao-titulos-e-copas.htm|title=Nova força? Futebol do Equador se consolida com exportação, títulos e Copas|date=October 26, 2023|website=UOL}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/futebol/libertadores/noticia/2013/07/mundo-afora-na-sombra-do-olimpia-cerro-porteno-cresce-torcida-do-galo.html|title=Mundo Afora: na sombra do Olimpia, Cerro Porteño cresce torcida do Galo|first=Por Felipe Schmidt Rio de|last=Janeiro|date=July 24, 2013|website=globoesporte.com}}</ref> |
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<gallery class="center" widths="180px" heights="120px"> |
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Pele con brasil (cropped).jpg|[[Pelé]] |
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==Football variations: futsal, beach soccer, footvolley == |
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Maradona 1986 vs italy.jpg|[[Maradona]] |
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</gallery> |
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==== Variations: futsal, beach soccer, footvolley ==== |
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[[File:Falcao Rio 2007.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Falcão (futsal player)|Falcão]]]] |
[[File:Falcao Rio 2007.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Falcão (futsal player)|Falcão]]]] |
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Brazil invented some variations of football, such as [[beach soccer]] and [[footvolley]]. [[Futsal]], having been invented in [[Uruguay]], neighboring Brazil, is also widely practiced in the country, mainly in the state of [[Rio Grande do Sul]], neighboring Uruguay.<ref name="gauchazh.clicrbs.com.br"> |
Brazil invented some variations of football, such as [[beach soccer]] and [[footvolley]]. [[Futsal]], having been invented in [[Uruguay]], neighboring Brazil, is also widely practiced in the country, mainly in the state of [[Rio Grande do Sul]], neighboring Uruguay.<ref name="gauchazh.clicrbs.com.br">{{Cite web|url=https://gauchazh.clicrbs.com.br/geral/informe-comercial/2022/11/conheca-5-esportes-que-foram-criados-no-brasil-clamt6rka00110170kh0mz4w1.html|title=Conheça 5 esportes que foram criados no Brasil|date=November 18, 2022|website=GZH}}</ref> |
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In [[futsal]], Brazil, [[Argentina]], [[Colombia]] and [[Paraguay]] are among the greatest world powers. Before the Fifa tournament, since 1982 there is the Futsal World Championship, organized by the former International Federation of Indoor Soccer (Fifusa) and now by the current [[Asociación Mundial de Futsal|AMF]], where Paraguay are the current AMF world champions with four, Colombia three, Brazil & Argentina twice, and Venezuela once. In the Fifa tournaments, Brazil is the biggest champion of the [[FIFA Futsal World Cup]], with 5 titles, with Argentina having a title in [[2016 FIFA Futsal World Cup|2016]]. [[Falcão (futsal player)|Falcão]] is the most renowned male Brazilian player.<ref> |
In [[futsal]], Brazil, [[Argentina]], [[Colombia]] and [[Paraguay]] are among the greatest world powers. Before the Fifa tournament, since 1982 there is the Futsal World Championship, organized by the former International Federation of Indoor Soccer (Fifusa) and now by the current [[Asociación Mundial de Futsal|AMF]], where Paraguay are the current AMF world champions with four, Colombia three, Brazil & Argentina twice, and Venezuela once. In the Fifa tournaments, Brazil is the biggest champion of the [[FIFA Futsal World Cup]], with 5 titles, with Argentina having a title in [[2016 FIFA Futsal World Cup|2016]]. [[Falcão (futsal player)|Falcão]] is the most renowned male Brazilian player.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/futsal/noticia/o-brasil-e-hepta-ou-penta-entenda-a-polemica-dos-titulos-do-mundial-de-futsal.ghtml|title=O Brasil é hepta ou penta? Entenda a polêmica dos títulos do Mundial de Futsal|date=September 9, 2021|website=ge}}</ref> |
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In [[beach soccer]], Brazil and [[Uruguay]] are among the world's greatest powers, with Brazil being the biggest champion of the [[FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup]], with 5 titles. In addition, it has nine world titles from the former competition organized by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), the [[Beach Soccer World Championships]].<ref> |
In [[beach soccer]], Brazil and [[Uruguay]] are among the world's greatest powers, with Brazil being the biggest champion of the [[FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup]], with 5 titles. In addition, it has nine world titles from the former competition organized by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), the [[Beach Soccer World Championships]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/eventos/futebol-de-areia/noticia/veja-todos-os-campeoes-da-copa-do-mundo-de-futebol-de-areia.ghtml|title=Veja todos os campeões da Copa do Mundo de Futebol de Areia|date=August 20, 2021|website=ge}}</ref> |
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[[Footvolley]] is a recreational sport widely practiced on Brazilian beaches, mainly in [[Rio de Janeiro]], where it was invented.<ref name="gauchazh.clicrbs.com.br"/> |
[[Footvolley]] is a recreational sport widely practiced on Brazilian beaches, mainly in [[Rio de Janeiro]], where it was invented.<ref name="gauchazh.clicrbs.com.br"/> |
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=== Baseball === |
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[[Baseball]] is the most popular sport in [[Venezuela]]. In [[Colombia]], Baseball is very popular in their north region, and has been gaining popularity recently in the other regions of Colombia. A wide list of players from Venezuela and Colombia are in the major leagues in the United States. Both countries are the only ones in this region to participate in the [[World Baseball Classic]] (plus Brazil) and the [[Caribbean Series]]. |
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[[File:Manu referee (cropped).JPG|thumb|left|upright|[[Manu Ginóbili]]]] |
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=== Basketball === |
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[[Basketball]] is particularly popular in South America. One of the most important achievements was the [[Argentina national basketball team|Argentina]] gold medal in [[Basketball at the 2004 Summer Olympics|Men's basketball]] at the [[2004 Summer Olympics]]. Argentina won the [[FIBA World Championship|World Championship]] in [[1950 FIBA World Championship|1950]]. In Brazil, basketball became popular with the [[Brazil men's national basketball team]] winning the [[FIBA World Championship|World Championship]] two times ([[1959 FIBA World Championship|1959]], [[1963 FIBA World Championship|1963]]) and the Olympic bronze 3 times. [[Oscar Schmidt]] is the most renowned male Brazilian player. The [[Brazil women's national basketball team]] is also one of the best teams in the world having won the [[1994 FIBA World Championship for Women]], obtained the [[Basketball at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|Olympic runner-up in 1996]] and the [[Basketball at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|Olympic bronze medal in 2000]], and with three players in the Hall of Fame: [[Hortência Marcari]], [[Maria Paula Silva]] and [[Janeth Arcain]]. Also, in Venezuela, Uruguay, Chile, Colombia and Paraguay, basketball is widely played & very popular.<ref>[http://ge.globo.com/basquete/noticia/2013/02/oscar-schmidt-entra-para-o-hall-da-fama-do-basquete-nos-eua.html Oscar Schmidt entra para o Hall da Fama do basquete nos EUA]</ref><ref>[https://ge.globo.com/basquete/noticia/hortencia-faz-60-anos-relembre-a-trajetoria-de-conquistas-e-marcas-da-rainha-do-basquete-brasileiro.ghtml Hortência faz 60 anos: relembre a trajetória de conquistas e marcas da Rainha do basquete brasileiro]</ref> |
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[[File:Manu referee (cropped).JPG|thumb|upright|[[Manu Ginóbili]]]] |
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[[Basketball]] is particularly popular in South America. One of the most important achievements was the [[Argentina national basketball team|Argentina]] gold medal in [[Basketball at the 2004 Summer Olympics|Men's basketball]] at the [[2004 Summer Olympics]]. Argentina won the [[FIBA World Championship|World Championship]] in [[1950 FIBA World Championship|1950]]. In Brazil, basketball became popular with the [[Brazil men's national basketball team]] winning the [[FIBA World Championship|World Championship]] two times ([[1959 FIBA World Championship|1959]], [[1963 FIBA World Championship|1963]]) and the Olympic bronze 3 times. [[Oscar Schmidt]] is the most renowned male Brazilian player. The [[Brazil women's national basketball team]] is also one of the best teams in the world having won the [[1994 FIBA World Championship for Women]], obtained the [[Basketball at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|Olympic runner-up in 1996]] and the [[Basketball at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|Olympic bronze medal in 2000]], and with three players in the Hall of Fame: [[Hortência Marcari]], [[Maria Paula Silva]] and [[Janeth Arcain]]. Also, in Venezuela, Uruguay, Chile, Colombia and Paraguay, basketball is widely played & very popular.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/basquete/noticia/2013/02/oscar-schmidt-entra-para-o-hall-da-fama-do-basquete-nos-eua.html|title=Oscar Schmidt entra para o Hall da Fama do basquete nos EUA|first1=Por GLOBOESPORTE COM|last1=Houston|first2=Estados|last2=Unidos|date=February 15, 2013|website=globoesporte.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/basquete/noticia/hortencia-faz-60-anos-relembre-a-trajetoria-de-conquistas-e-marcas-da-rainha-do-basquete-brasileiro.ghtml|title=Hortência faz 60 anos: relembre a trajetória de conquistas e marcas da Rainha do basquete brasileiro|date=September 23, 2019|website=ge}}</ref> |
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The FIBA World Cup took place in South America seven times: Argentina ([[1950 FIBA World Championship|1950]], [[1990 FIBA World Championship|1990]]), Brazil ([[1954 FIBA World Championship|1954]], [[1963 FIBA World Championship|1963]]), Chile ([[1959 FIBA World Championship|1959]]), Uruguay ([[1967 FIBA World Championship|1967]]) and Colombia ([[1982 FIBA World Championship|1982]]). |
The FIBA World Cup took place in South America seven times: Argentina ([[1950 FIBA World Championship|1950]], [[1990 FIBA World Championship|1990]]), Brazil ([[1954 FIBA World Championship|1954]], [[1963 FIBA World Championship|1963]]), Chile ([[1959 FIBA World Championship|1959]]), Uruguay ([[1967 FIBA World Championship|1967]]) and Colombia ([[1982 FIBA World Championship|1982]]). |
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=== Cricket === |
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{{see also|Argentina national cricket team|Brazil national cricket team|Chile national cricket team|Peru national cricket team|Uruguay national cricket team|Guyana national cricket team}} |
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[[File:Brazil national volleyball team 2012.jpg|thumb|right|[[Brazil men's national volleyball team]], 2012]] |
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[[File:Women's volleyball podium Rio 2007.jpg|thumb|left|[[Brazil women's national volleyball team]], 2007]] |
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[[Cricket]] is the most popular sport in [[Guyana]]. Apart from there, is mostly played in the [[Southern Cone]], especially in areas settled by English people. Although a number of South American nations have teams, none of them are major, except for the [[Guyana national cricket team]], which plays in inter-regional competitions in the Caribbean. Guyana is also an independent nation represented by the [[West Indies cricket team]], the only team in the [[Americas]] with [[Test cricket|Test]] status. |
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[[Volleyball]] is the second most popular sport in Brazil. The [[Brazil men's national volleyball team|Brazilian men's team]] has 6 Olympic medals (3 gold, 3 silver), 7 World Championship medals (3 gold, 3 silver, 1 bronze) and has won nine World Leagues, while [[Brazil women's national volleyball team|Brazil's women's team]] has won two gold, one silver and two bronze medals at the Olympic Games, in addition to four runners-up and a third place at World Championships. In the 1980s, [[Peru women's national volleyball team]] was one of the strongest in the world, winning an Olympic silver medal in 1988, as well as a silver medal in 1982 and a bronze in 1986 at the World Championships. [[Argentina men's national volleyball team]] has won 2 Olympic bronzes in 1988 and 2020, and a bronze at the 1982 World Championship.<ref>[https://institucional.cbv.com.br/historia História]</ref><ref>[https://sportbuzz.uol.com.br/noticias/volei/relembre-10-maiores-conquistas-do-brasil-no-volei-masculino.phtml Relembre as 10 maiores conquistas do Brasil no Vôlei masculino]</ref><ref>[https://memoriaglobo.globo.com/esporte/telejornais-e-programas/globo-esporte/coberturas-e-reportagens/noticia/volei-selecao-de-ouro.ghtml Vôlei: Seleção de Ouro]</ref> |
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[[South American Cricket Championship]] is a [[limited overs cricket]] tournament played since 1995 between the national teams of the continent with North American teams also often invited to participate. It is currently played annually but until 2013 was usually played biennially. |
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== Beach Volleyball == |
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Variants of [[street cricket]] are also played, such as [[bete-ombro]] in Brazil. |
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Brazil is one of the strongest countries in the world in [[beach volleyball]], a sport widely practiced in the country due to its long coastline, mainly in Rio de Janeiro and in the Northeast Region of the country. Until the 2020 Olympic Games, the country had [[Beach volleyball at the Summer Olympics|2 golds, 3 silvers and 1 bronze in the men's modality, and 1 gold, 4 silvers and 2 bronzes in the women's modality]]. Argentina, Chile and Venezuela usually send representatives to the Olympic Games, but without any significant results so far. In world championships, in addition to several titles obtained by Brazilians, the Argentines [[Mariano Baracetti]] and [[Martín Conde]] were world champions in 2001.<ref>[https://ge.globo.com/olimpiadas/noticia/brasil-termina-sem-medalhas-no-volei-de-praia-pela-primeira-vez-na-historia.ghtml Brasil termina sem medalhas no vôlei de praia pela primeira vez na história]</ref> |
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=== Field Hockey === |
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== Brazilian jiu-jitsu, vale tudo, and mixed martial arts == |
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[[File: |
[[File:Las Leonas 2008 (completo).jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|''Las Leonas'', the women's national team]] |
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Very popular in [[Argentina]] (2 times World Champion). The [[Argentina women's national field hockey team|women's national team ''Las Leonas'']] is one of the world's most successful, with five Olympic medals, two [[Women's Hockey World Cup|World Cups]], a [[FIH Hockey World League|World League]] and seven [[Hockey Champions Trophy|Champions Trophy]].{{sfn|Nauright|Parrish|2012|p=11}} The national team won the [[Women's Hockey World Cup|World Cup]] in [[2002 Women's Hockey World Cup|2002]] and [[2010 Women's Hockey World Cup|2010]]. At the Olympic Games, it won the silver medal in [[Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics#Women's tournament|2000]], [[Field hockey at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|2012]] and [[Field hockey at the 2020 Summer Olympics|2020]], as well as bronze in [[Field hockey at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|2004]] and [[Field hockey at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|2008]]. ''Las Leonas'' also won the annual [[Hockey Champions Trophy|Champions Trophy]] on seven occasions, in [[2001 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2001]], [[2008 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2008]], [[2009 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2009]], [[2010 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2010]], [[2012 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2012]], [[2014 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2014]] and [[2016 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2016]] and the [[FIH Hockey World League|World League 2014–2015]]. [[Luciana Aymar]] is recognized as the best female player in the history of the sport,<ref name="hwc1">{{cite web |year=2014 |title=Meet Luciana Aymar – Las Leonas (Argentina) |url=http://www.rabobankhockeyworldcup2014.com/video/meet-luciana-aymar-las-leonas-argentina |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140616131926/http://www.rabobankhockeyworldcup2014.com/video/meet-luciana-aymar-las-leonas-argentina |archive-date=16 June 2014 |access-date=6 December 2015 |publisher=Rabobank Hockey World Cup 2014 |place=Nieuwegein, The Netherlands}}</ref> being the only player to have received the [[FIH Player of the Year Awards|FIH Player of the Year Award]] eight times.<ref name="fih1">{{cite web |date=8 December 2013 |title=Amazing Aymar lands eighth FIH Player of the Year crown |url=http://www.fih.ch/en/news-4873-amazing-aymar-lands-eighth-fih-player-of |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131212013213/http://www.fih.ch/en/news-4873-amazing-aymar-lands-eighth-fih-player-of |archive-date=12 December 2013 |publisher=FIH – Fédération Internationale de Hockey sur Gazon [International Hockey Federation] |place=Lausanne, Switzerland}}</ref> |
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The [[Argentina men's national field hockey team|men's national team ''Los Leones'']] won the gold medal at the [[Field hockey at the 2016 Summer Olympics#Men's tournament|2016 Summer Olympics]] and the bronze medal at the [[2014 Men's Hockey World Cup|2014 World Cup]] and [[2008 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy|2008 Champions Trophy]]. The national squad also won [[Field hockey at the Pan American Games|Pan American Games]] on ten occasions and the [[2005 Men's Hockey Champions Challenge|2005]], [[2007 Men's Hockey Champions Challenge|2007]] and [[2012 Men's Hockey Champions Challenge I|2012]] [[Hockey Champions Challenge|Champions Challenges]]. |
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[[Mixed martial arts]] is one of the most popular sports in Brazil.<ref>http://www.therealbrazil.com/blog/2012/08/08/mma-brazils-favourite-new-sport/ {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140811154607/http://www.therealbrazil.com/blog/2012/08/08/mma-brazils-favourite-new-sport/ |date=2014-08-11 }} MMA: Brazil's Favourite New Sport?</ref> |
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==== Rink Hockey ==== |
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[[Brazilian jiu-jitsu]] originated in Brazil in the 1910s, and emphasizes ground fighting techniques and submission holds involving joint-locks and chokeholds. [[Hélio Gracie]] had a rather small build and changed jiu-jitsu (originating from Japan) to be used by anyone in a real fight situation. The belt progression system goes in the following order: White, Blue, Purple, Brown, Black, Red-black, and Red. [[Gracie Jiu Jitsu]] became known internationally in the 1990s, due to the very skilled fighters in the Gracie family, namely Hélio Gracie, [[Royce Gracie]], and [[Rickson Gracie]], which are also responsible for spreading the practice of [[vale tudo]], meaning "anything goes", which evolved into mixed martial arts tournaments such as [[Pride Fighting Championships|PRIDE]], [[DREAM (mixed martial arts)|DREAM]], and the [[Ultimate Fighting Championship]]. Many Brazilian fighters have become significant figures in various mixed martial art tournaments abroad, some notable Brazilian fighters in these tournaments include [[Anderson Silva]], [[José Aldo]], [[Wanderlei Silva]], [[Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira|Minotauro]], [[Vitor Belfort]], [[Mauricio Rua]], [[Murilo Bustamante]], [[Junior dos Santos]], [[Rafael dos Anjos]], [[Fabricio Werdum]], [[Lyoto Machida]], [[Alex Pereira]] and [[Amanda Nunes]]. Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador and Uruguay have already had some fighters in MMA, but to this day none of them have won the title of champion.<ref>[https://www.band.uol.com.br/esportes/colunistas/duelo-ufc/ufc-hall-da-fama-com-anderson-silva-brasil-tem-5-nomes-16590452 Anderson Silva entra no Hall da Fama do UFC, que tem 5 brasileiros; conheça]</ref><ref>[https://gauchazh.clicrbs.com.br/esportes/noticia/2016/07/minotauro-entra-no-hall-da-fama-do-ufc-e-aposta-em-proximos-indicados-6537677.html Minotauro entra no Hall da Fama do UFC e aposta em próximos indicados]</ref><ref>[https://super.abril.com.br/historia/como-surgiu-o-jiu-jitsu-brasileiro-e-quais-suas-inovacoes/ Como surgiu o jiu-jitsu brasileiro e quais suas inovações?]</ref><ref>[https://www.mormaii.com.br/site/a-historia-do-jiu-jitsu/ A HISTÓRIA DO JIU-JITSU]</ref> |
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[[Argentina]] has won the world cup in 5 times. |
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==Handball== |
=== Handball === |
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[[File:Deborah Pontes.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Deborah Pontes]]]] |
[[File:Deborah Pontes.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Deborah Pontes]]]] |
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[[Handball]] is a sport that came with German immigrants, which is very popular in schools around South America. It's the second most practiced sport in schools in Brazil. The [[Brazil men's national handball team]] is considered the best in South America, with the [[Argentina men's national handball team]] being its biggest rival. The biggest highlight in South America, however, has been the [[Brazil women's national handball team]], which, in the [[2013 World Women's Handball Championship|2013 World Championship]], were crowned world champions for the first time. They also finished 5th at the 2016 Summer Olympics.<ref> |
[[Handball]] is a sport that came with German immigrants, which is very popular in schools around South America. It's the second most practiced sport in schools in Brazil. The [[Brazil men's national handball team]] is considered the best in South America, with the [[Argentina men's national handball team]] being its biggest rival. The biggest highlight in South America, however, has been the [[Brazil women's national handball team]], which, in the [[2013 World Women's Handball Championship|2013 World Championship]], were crowned world champions for the first time. They also finished 5th at the 2016 Summer Olympics.<ref>{{Cite web |date=May 29, 2018 |title=Handebol, esporte de origem europeia que conquistou o Brasil |url=https://imperatriz.ma.gov.br/noticias/jeis/2018/handebol-o-esporte-com-origem-europeia-que-conquistou-o-brasil.html |website=Prefeitura Municipal de Imperatriz - Maranhão}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=December 22, 2013 |title=É campeão! Brasil vence a Sérvia e conquista seu primeiro título mundial |url=https://ge.globo.com/handebol/noticia/2013/12/brasil-bate-servia-faz-historia-e-e-campeao-mundial-de-forma-invicta.html |website=globoesporte.com}}</ref> |
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== |
=== Polo === |
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[[File: |
[[File:Adolpho Cambiaso.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Adolfo Cambiaso]]]] |
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[[File:Juan Manuel Fangio (circa 1952).jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Juan Manuel Fangio]]]] |
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[[Polo]] is popular in some parts of [[Argentina]], Brazil, [[Chile]], and [[Uruguay]]. South America is the biggest winner of the [[World Polo Championship]], with Argentina having 5 titles, Brazil 3 and Chile 2. [[Adolfo Cambiaso]] is an Argentine polo player considered one of the greatest references in the history of this sport.<ref>{{Cite web |title=World Polo Tour | The official ranking of polo |url=https://www.worldpolotour.com/?sec=1 |website=www.worldpolotour.com}}</ref> |
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South America have several drivers who won the [[Formula One]] championship multiple times, including five-time champion [[Juan Fangio]] of [[Argentina]], and Brazilian drivers [[Emerson Fittipaldi]] (2 titles), [[Nelson Piquet]] (3 titles), and [[Ayrton Senna]] (3 titles). Brazil has hosted the [[Brazilian Grand Prix]] every year since 1973 and the [[Argentine Grand Prix]] has hosted Formula One on 20 occasions. |
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=== Rugby union === |
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In Motos, South America had notable drivers as [[Johnny Cecotto]], [[Carlos Lavado]], [[Alex Barros]], [[Sebastian Porto]], [[Martín Cárdenas (motorcyclist)|Martín Cárdenas]] and [[Yonny Hernández (motorcyclist)|Yonny Hernández]]. Also, South America has hosted the Moto GP in [[Venezuelan motorcycle Grand Prix|Venezuela]] (1977–1979), [[Brazilian motorcycle Grand Prix|Brazil]] (1987–1989, 1992; 1995–1997, 1999–2004 as [[Rio de Janeiro motorcycle Grand Prix|Rio Grand Prix]]) and [[Argentine motorcycle Grand Prix|Argentina]] (1961–1963, 1981–1982, 1987, 1994–1995, 1998–1999, 2014–2019, 2022-2023). |
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[[File:Argentina vs England 2011 RWC (1).jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.15|Argentina facing [[England national rugby union team|England]] at the [[2011 Rugby World Cup]]]] |
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[[Rugby union]] is becoming popular in South America, following the recent successes of [[Argentina national rugby union team|Argentina]] in recent [[Rugby World Cup]] competitions (3rd place in 2007 and 4th place in 2015). The popularity of the game has spread across the continent. |
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The [[Dakar Rally]] is also hosted by South America from 2009 to 2019 (mostly in Chile and Argentina). |
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[[Uruguay national rugby union team|Uruguay]], [[Paraguay national rugby union team|Paraguay]], [[Colombia national rugby union team|Colombia]], [[Brazil national rugby union team|Brazil]], [[Chile national rugby union team|Chile]], [[Venezuela national rugby union team|Venezuela]], Guyana, Peru and Bolivia all have Rugby Federations.<ref>[http://gosouthamerica.about.com/od/rugby/Rugby_in_South_America.htm Rugby in South America<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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== |
=== Volleyball === |
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[[Volleyball]] is the second most popular sport in Brazil. The [[Brazil men's national volleyball team|Brazilian men's team]] has 6 Olympic medals (3 gold, 3 silver), 7 World Championship medals (3 gold, 3 silver, 1 bronze) and has won nine World Leagues, while [[Brazil women's national volleyball team|Brazil's women's team]] has won two gold, one silver and three bronze medals at the Olympic Games, in addition to four runners-up and a third place at World Championships. In the 1980s, [[Peru women's national volleyball team]] was one of the strongest in the world, winning an Olympic silver medal in 1988, as well as a silver medal in 1982 and a bronze in 1986 at the World Championships. [[Argentina men's national volleyball team]] has won 2 Olympic bronzes in 1988 and 2020, and a bronze at the 1982 World Championship.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cbv.com.br/historia/|title=CBV - Confederação Brasileira de Vôleibol}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://sportbuzz.uol.com.br/noticias/volei/relembre-10-maiores-conquistas-do-brasil-no-volei-masculino.phtml|title=Relembre as 10 maiores conquistas do Brasil no Vôlei masculino}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://memoriaglobo.globo.com/esporte/telejornais-e-programas/globo-esporte/coberturas-e-reportagens/noticia/volei-selecao-de-ouro.ghtml|title=Vôlei: Seleção de Ouro|date=March 2, 2022|website=memoriaglobo}}</ref> |
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[[File:Gustavo Kuerten French Open 2005.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Gustavo Kuerten]] at the [[2005 French Open]]]] |
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<gallery class="center" caption="Brazilian volleyball teams" widths="180px" heights="120px"> |
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Women's volleyball podium Rio 2007.jpg|[[Brazil women's national volleyball team]], 2007 |
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Brazil national volleyball team 2012.jpg|[[Brazil men's national volleyball team]], 2012 |
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</gallery> |
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==== Beach Volleyball ==== |
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Brazil is one of the strongest countries in the world in [[beach volleyball]], a sport widely practiced in the country due to its long coastline, mainly in Rio de Janeiro and in the Northeast Region of the country. Until the 2024 Summer Olympic Games, the country had [[Beach volleyball at the Summer Olympics|3 golds, 3 silvers and 2 bronze in the men's event, and 1 gold, 4 silvers and 2 bronzes in the women's events]]. Argentina, Chile and Venezuela usually send representatives to the Olympic Games, but without any significant results so far. In World Championships, in addition to several titles obtained by Brazilians, the Argentines [[Mariano Baracetti]] and [[Martín Conde]] were world champions in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/olimpiadas/noticia/brasil-termina-sem-medalhas-no-volei-de-praia-pela-primeira-vez-na-historia.ghtml|title=Brasil termina sem medalhas no vôlei de praia pela primeira vez na história|date=August 4, 2021|website=ge}}</ref> |
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== Individual sports == |
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South America has produced a number of talented tennis players such as [[Maria Bueno]], the greatest South American tennis player, three-time [[French Open]] winner [[Gustavo Kuerten]], four-time Grand Slam and Masters winner [[Guillermo Vilas]], the first Latin American ranked number 1 in [[Association of Tennis Professionals]] (ATP) [[Marcelo Ríos]], the first Latin American World number 1 in women tennis and the first Latin American to win a Grand Slam [[Anita Lizana]], [[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] winner [[Gabriela Sabatini]], [[French Open]] winners [[Gastón Gaudio]] and [[Andrés Gómez]], 2009 [[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] winner [[Juan Martín del Potro]], and double Olympic Gold medalist [[Nicolás Massú]]. In doubles, the continent has already produced players like [[Marcelo Melo]], [[Bruno Soares]], [[Luisa Stefani]], [[Juan Sebastián Cabal]] and [[Robert Farah (tennis)|Robert Farah]]. The continent hosts ATP tournaments, such as the [[Rio Open|ATP 500 in Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil, and the [[Argentina Open|ATP 250 in Buenos Aires]] and [[Córdoba Open|Córdoba]], in Argentina, and the [[Chile Open (tennis)|ATP 250 in Chile]]. Argentina was [[2016 Davis Cup|Davis Cup champion in 2016]], and Brazil was a semi-finalist twice, in [[1992 Davis Cup World Group|1992]] and [[2000 Davis Cup World Group|2000]]. Chile has already reached the quarterfinals three times.<ref>[https://www.esportelandia.com.br/tenis/tenistas-brasileiros-em-duplas/ A história e o sucesso dos tenistas brasileiros em duplas]</ref><ref>[https://cassiozirpoli.com.br/os-tenistas-brasileiros-campeoes-do-grand-slam-grama-saibro-simples-dupla-juvenil/ Os tenistas brasileiros campeões de Grand Slam. Grama, saibro, simples, dupla, juvenil…]</ref> |
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=== Archery === |
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[[File: |
[[File:Marcusvinidiusdalmeida.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Marcus Vinicius D'Almeida]]]] |
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[[Marcus Vinicius D'Almeida]], in the [[recurve bow]] category, is the greatest male [[archery]] athlete in the history of South America, having been number 1 in the world in 2023, and world runner-up in 2021. The Chilean [[Denisse van Lamoen]] won a world title in the recurve bow in 2011, and the Colombian [[Natalia Sánchez (archer)|Natalia Sánchez]] was a world bronze medalist in 2009. In the [[Compound bow]] (which does not participate in the Olympic Games), The Colombian [[Sara López]], multiple world champion, stands out.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Marcus D’Almeida, antigo ‘Neymar arqueiro’, alcança o topo do tiro com arco após fortalecer a mente |url=https://www.estadao.com.br/esportes/marcus-dalmeida-antigo-neymar-arqueiro-se-consolida-no-topo-do-tiro-com-arco/ |website=Estadão}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=vinicius-dalmeida-and-vice-world-archery-champion.ghtml Marcus Vinicius D´Almeida is vice-world archery champion |url=https://ge.globo.com/tiro-com-arco/noticia/marcus-}}</ref> |
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Brazil is the greatest South American power in swimming, competing on an equal footing with the world's powers in this sport, especially in men's swimming. Some of the greatest exponents of Brazilian swimming history are: [[César Cielo]], [[Ricardo Prado]], [[Gustavo Borges]], [[Fernando Scherer]], [[Thiago Pereira]], [[Djan Madruga]], [[Bruno Fratus]], [[Manuel dos Santos (swimmer)|Manuel dos Santos]], [[Tetsuo Okamoto]], [[Nicholas Santos]], [[Felipe França]], [[Fernando Scheffer]], [[Kaio de Almeida]], [[João Gomes Júnior]], [[Felipe Lima (swimmer)|Felipe Lima]], [[Guilherme Costa (swimmer)|Guilherme Costa]], [[Ana Marcela Cunha]], [[Etiene Medeiros]] and [[Poliana Okimoto]]. [[Argentina]] was the main force on the continent until the 1960s, with historically important swimmers such as [[Luis Nicolao]], [[José Meolans]] and [[Georgina Bardach]]. Other countries like [[Venezuela]] (with [[Francisco Sánchez (swimmer)|Francisco Sánchez]], [[Rafael Vidal]] and [[Albert Subirats]]) and [[Chile]] (with [[Kristel Kobrich]]) tend to reveal talent from time to time. Brazil hosted the [[1995 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m)]] and won the [[2014 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m)]].<ref>[https://epichurus.com/2012/05/16/um-resumo-da-historia-da-natacao-brasileira/ Um resumo da história da natação brasileira]</ref><ref>[https://mastersportsacademia.com.br/dicas/conheca-a-historia-da-natacao-no-brasil/ Conheça a História da Natação no Brasil]</ref> |
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==Athletics== |
=== Athletics === |
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[[File:Adhemar da Silva 1956.jpg|thumb |
[[File:Adhemar da Silva 1956.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Adhemar Ferreira da Silva]]]] |
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South America has a number of historically important and some legendary athletes in track and field. In Brazil, the following stand out: [[Adhemar Ferreira da Silva]], [[Joaquim Cruz]], [[Maurren Maggi]], [[Thiago Braz]], [[Vanderlei Cordeiro de Lima]], [[João Carlos de Oliveira]], [[Robson Caetano]], [[Fabiana Murer]], [[Alison dos Santos]], [[Nélson Prudêncio]], [[Jadel Gregório]], [[José Luíz Barbosa|Zequinha Barbosa]], [[Sanderlei Parrela]], [[Claudinei Quirino]], [[Vicente de Lima]], [[André Domingos]], [[Édson Ribeiro]],[[Caio Bonfim]], [[Rosângela Santos]], [[Leticia Oro Melo|Letícia Oro Melo]], [[Mauro Vinícius da Silva]] and [[Darlan Romani]]. Colombia with [[Caterine Ibargüen]], [[Ximena Restrepo]], [[Anthony Zambrano]] and [[Sandra Arenas]], Venezuela with [[Yulimar Rojas]], Ecuador with [[Jefferson Pérez]], Argentina with [[Delfo Cabrera]], [[Juan Carlos Zabala]], [[Noemí Simonetto de Portela]] and [[Reinaldo Gorno]] also contribute to the evolution of sport on the continent. The continent has a great tradition in competitions such as the [[triple jump]], and hosts important events such as the [[Saint Silvester Road Race]].<ref> |
South America has a number of historically important and some legendary athletes in track and field. In Brazil, the following stand out: [[Adhemar Ferreira da Silva]], [[Joaquim Cruz]], [[Maurren Maggi]], [[Thiago Braz]], [[Vanderlei Cordeiro de Lima]], [[João Carlos de Oliveira]], [[Robson Caetano]], [[Fabiana Murer]], [[Alison dos Santos]], [[Nélson Prudêncio]], [[Jadel Gregório]], [[José Luíz Barbosa|Zequinha Barbosa]], [[Sanderlei Parrela]], [[Claudinei Quirino]], [[Vicente de Lima]], [[André Domingos]], [[Édson Ribeiro]],[[Caio Bonfim]], [[Rosângela Santos]], [[Leticia Oro Melo|Letícia Oro Melo]], [[Mauro Vinícius da Silva]] and [[Darlan Romani]]. Colombia with [[Caterine Ibargüen]], [[Ximena Restrepo]], [[Anthony Zambrano]] and [[Sandra Arenas]], Venezuela with [[Yulimar Rojas]], Ecuador with [[Jefferson Pérez]], Argentina with [[Delfo Cabrera]], [[Juan Carlos Zabala]], [[Noemí Simonetto de Portela]] and [[Reinaldo Gorno]] also contribute to the evolution of sport on the continent. The continent has a great tradition in competitions such as the [[triple jump]], and hosts important events such as the [[Saint Silvester Road Race]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=ATLETISMO | Memória O Globo |url=https://memoria.oglobo.globo.com/jornalismo/esportes/atletismo-9353999 |website=memoria.oglobo.globo.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=História do Atletismo no Brasil |url=https://www.cbat.org.br/acbat/historico.asp}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Gavini |first=Fernando |date=July 11, 2022 |title=Brasil projeta melhor participação da história no Mundial |url=https://www.olimpiadatododia.com.br/atletismo/452000-brasil-projeta-melhor-participacao-da-historia-no-mundial-de-atletismo/ |website=Olimpíada Todo Dia}}</ref> |
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=== Canoeing === |
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[[File: |
[[File:Rio 2016. Canoagem de velocidade-Canoe sprint (28529187903).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Erlon Silva]] (front) and [[Isaquias Queiroz]] (back)]] |
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The Brazilian [[Isaquias Queiroz]] is the best canoeist in the history of South America, being the only Olympic champion of this modality on the continent and adding a total of four Olympic medals until the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. [[Erlon Silva]] also won Olympic silver for Brazil in canoeing.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Isaquias Queiroz in COB |url=https://www.cob.org.br/pt/cob/time-brasil/atletas/isaquias-queiroz-dos-santos/}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Erlon Souza at COB |url=https://www.cob.org.br/pt/cob/time-brasil/atletas/erlon-de-souza-silva/}}</ref> |
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Boxing is particularly strong in South America, with several world and Olympic champions born in the continent. In [[Argentina]], the most historically important boxers are:[[Carlos Monzón]], [[Horacio Accavallo]], [[Santos Laciar]], [[Juan Martín Coggi]], [[Nicolino Locche]], [[Víctor Galíndez]], [[Jorge Castro (boxer)|Jorge Castro]], [[Marcela Acuña]] and. [[Sergio Martínez (boxer)|Sergio Martínez]]. In Brazil, [[Eder Jofre]], [[Acelino Freitas]], [[Miguel de Oliveira]], [[Valdemir Pereira]], [[Rose Volante]] and [[Patrick Teixeira]] are former world champions, while [[Adilson Rodrigues]] was an important Heavyweight of the 1980s and 1990s; [[Robson Conceição]] and [[Hebert Conceição]] were Olympic champions, and other Olympic medalists were [[Servílio de Oliveira]], [[Yamaguchi Falcão]], [[Esquiva Falcão]], [[Abner Teixeira]], [[Adriana Araújo]] and [[Beatriz Ferreira]].<ref>[https://www.esportelandia.com.br/artes-marciais/maiores-boxeadores-brasileiros/ Os 10 maiores boxeadores brasileiros de todos os tempos]</ref><ref>[https://cultura.uol.com.br/esporte/noticias/2021/03/03/817_historia-do-boxe-no-brasil.html História do boxe no Brasil]</ref> |
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=== Chess === |
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Venezuela and Colombia have also had strong eras in boxing. Venezuela particularly in the 1970s and 1980s with champions like [[Betulio Gonzalez]] and [[Rafael Orono]], and Colombia with boxers such as [[Rodrigo Valdez]], [[Antonio Cervantes]] and [[Miguel Lora]]. |
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Chess is a sport with many fans in South America. The continent has produced some great players such as Argentine [[Miguel Najdorf]] (known for the [[Sicilian Defense, Najdorf Variation|Najdorf Variation]]), and Brazilians [[Henrique Mecking]] (3rd best in the world in 1977) and [[Luis Paulo Supi]] (who defeated world champion [[Magnus Carlsen]]).<ref>{{Cite web |title=GM Supi vs GM Carlsen |url=https://www.chess.com/game/live/4912555148 |access-date= |website=Chess.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Magnus reaction to an incredible sacrifice |url=https://www.reddit.com/r/chess/comments/grbl7b/magnus_reaction_to_an_incredible_sacrifice_if_you/ |access-date=2020-05-28 |website=reddit.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Announcing The Chess.com Immortal Game |url=https://www.chess.com/news/view/chesscom-immortal-game-winner |access-date=2021-04-20 |website=Chess.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=rodrigues |first=camila |date=October 31, 2015 |title=Os 14 Grandes Mestres de Xadrez Brasileiros |url=https://rafaelleitao.com/grandes-mestres-brasileiros/ |website=Rafael Leitão}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Pinheiro |first=Guilherme |date=August 20, 2021 |title=Xadrez ganha status de eSport e cresce durante a pandemia |url=https://www.adrenaline.com.br/games/e-sport/xadrez-ganha-status-de-esport-e-cresce-durante-a-pandemia/ |website=Adrenaline}}</ref> |
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<gallery class="center" widths="180px" heights="120px"> |
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Henrique Mecking 1978.jpg|[[Henrique Mecking]] |
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Hoogoven-schaaktoernooi Wijk aan Zee, nummer 7 Najdorf; Bestanddeelnr 926-1759.jpg|[[Miguel Najdorf]] |
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</gallery> |
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=== Combat sports === |
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==Judo== |
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[[File:Aurelio miguel ouro nas olimpiadas de seul.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Aurélio Miguel]]]] |
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==== Boxing ==== |
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Brazil is one of the greatest world powers in judo, a sport developed in the country thanks to its large Japanese community. The greatest exponents of the sport until today were [[Aurélio Miguel]], [[Sarah Menezes]] and [[Rogério Sampaio]], Olympic champions. Brazil also had several other important judo athletes, such as the Olympic runners-up [[Douglas Vieira]], [[Tiago Camilo]], [[Carlos Honorato]], and the Olympic bronze medalists [[Chiaki Ishii]], [[Luiz Onmura]], [[Walter Carmona]], [[Henrique Guimarães]], [[Leandro Guilheiro]], [[Flávio Canto]], [[Ketleyn Quadros]], [[Felipe Kitadai]], [[Mayra Aguiar]], [[Daniel Cargnin (judoka)|Daniel Cargnin]] and [[Rafael Silva (judoka)|Rafael Silva]].<ref name="História do Judô">[https://cbj.com.br/historia_do_judo/ História do Judô]</ref><ref name="Galeria de Campeões">[https://cbj.com.br/galeria_de_campeoes/ Galeria de Campeões]</ref><ref name="www1.folha.uol.com.br">[https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/esporte/2021/07/bronze-de-mayra-aguiar-e-24a-medalha-olimpica-do-judo-brasileiro-relembre-vencedores.shtml Bronze de Mayra Aguiar é 24ª medalha olímpica do judô brasileiro; relembre vencedores]</ref> The sport has also been developing lately in [[Argentina]], with judokas like [[Paula Pareto]], and in [[Colombia]], with judokas like [[Yuri Alvear]].<ref name="História do Judô"/><ref name="Galeria de Campeões"/><ref name="www1.folha.uol.com.br"/> |
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[[File:Eder Jofre (1970).tif|thumb|upright|[[Éder Jofre]]]] |
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Boxing is particularly strong in South America, with several world and Olympic champions born in the continent. In [[Argentina]], the most historically important boxers are:[[Carlos Monzón]], [[Horacio Accavallo]], [[Santos Laciar]], [[Juan Martín Coggi]], [[Nicolino Locche]], [[Víctor Galíndez]], [[Jorge Castro (boxer)|Jorge Castro]], [[Marcela Acuña]] and. [[Sergio Martínez (boxer)|Sergio Martínez]]. In Brazil, [[Eder Jofre]], [[Acelino Freitas]], [[Miguel de Oliveira]], [[Valdemir Pereira]], [[Rose Volante]] and [[Patrick Teixeira]] are former world champions, while [[Adilson Rodrigues]] was an important Heavyweight of the 1980s and 1990s; [[Robson Conceição]] and [[Hebert Conceição]] were Olympic champions, and other Olympic medalists were [[Servílio de Oliveira]], [[Yamaguchi Falcão]], [[Esquiva Falcão]], [[Abner Teixeira]], [[Adriana Araújo]] and [[Beatriz Ferreira]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=August 12, 2024 |title=Os 20 maiores boxeadores brasileiros de todos os tempos |url=https://www.esportelandia.com.br/artes-marciais/maiores-boxeadores-brasileiros/ |website=www.esportelandia.com.br}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=História do boxe no Brasil |url=https://cultura.uol.com.br/esporte/noticias/2021/03/03/817_historia-do-boxe-no-brasil.html |website=TV Cultura}}</ref> |
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==Skateboarding== |
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[[File:Rayssa Leal (crop).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Rayssa Leal]]]] |
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Venezuela and Colombia have also had strong eras in boxing. Venezuela particularly in the 1970s and 1980s with champions like [[Betulio Gonzalez]] and [[Rafael Orono]], and Colombia with boxers such as [[Rodrigo Valdez]], [[Antonio Cervantes]] and [[Miguel Lora]]. |
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Skateboarding is very popular in Brazil, especially in large urban centers. The country has internationally renowned skaters like [[Bob Burnquist]], [[Sandro Dias]], [[Rayssa Leal]], [[Pedro Barros (skateboarder)|Pedro Barros]], [[Kelvin Hoefler]], [[Pâmela Rosa]] and [[Letícia Bufoni]]. [[Peru]] is a country that shows a certain degree of development in skateboarding, having sent representatives like [[Angelo Caro Narvaez]] to World Championships and the Olympics.<ref>[https://www.olimpiadatododia.com.br/skate/245831-dia-mundial-do-skate-relembre-a-historia-da-modalidade-no-brasil/ De alternativo a esperança de medalha: o skate no Brasil]</ref> |
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==== Brazilian jiu-jitsu, vale tudo, and mixed martial arts ==== |
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==Surfing== |
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[[File: |
[[File:Anderson Silva.png|thumb|upright|[[Anderson Silva]]]] |
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[[Mixed martial arts]] is one of the most popular sports in Brazil.<ref>http://www.therealbrazil.com/blog/2012/08/08/mma-brazils-favourite-new-sport/ {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140811154607/http://www.therealbrazil.com/blog/2012/08/08/mma-brazils-favourite-new-sport/|date=2014-08-11}} MMA: Brazil's Favourite New Sport?</ref> |
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Surfing is very popular in Brazil. The country has progressively evolved to become one of the biggest forces in the sport in the world. [[Fábio Gouveia]] reached number 5 in the world in 1992. In the 2010s, the Brazilian Storm appears, with several Brazilians getting closer to the world title, until [[Gabriel Medina]] conquers the same in 2014 and [[Adriano de Souza]] wins in 2015. In 2020 surfing ascends to the category of Olympic sport and [[Ítalo Ferreira]] becomes Olympic champion. [[Filipe Toledo]] was also world champion, in 2022. [[Peru]] also has renowned surfers such as [[Lucca Mesinas]] and [[Miguel Tudela (surfer)|Miguel Tudela]].<ref>[https://wavelengthmag.com/brazil-become-worlds-best-surfing-nation/ How Did Brazil Become The World’s Best Surfing Nation?]</ref><ref>[https://olympics.com/en/news/surfing-olympic-champion-italo-ferreira-s-story-and-road-at-the-tokyo-2020-olymp Italo Ferreira's story and road at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics]</ref> |
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[[Brazilian jiu-jitsu]] originated in Brazil in the 1910s, and emphasizes ground fighting techniques and submission holds involving joint-locks and chokeholds. [[Hélio Gracie]] had a rather small build and changed jiu-jitsu (originating from Japan) to be used by anyone in a real fight situation. The belt progression system goes in the following order: White, Blue, Purple, Brown, Black, Red-black, and Red. [[Gracie Jiu Jitsu]] became known internationally in the 1990s, due to the very skilled fighters in the Gracie family, namely Hélio Gracie, [[Royce Gracie]], and [[Rickson Gracie]], which are also responsible for spreading the practice of [[vale tudo]], meaning "anything goes", which evolved into mixed martial arts tournaments such as [[Pride Fighting Championships|PRIDE]], [[DREAM (mixed martial arts)|DREAM]], and the [[Ultimate Fighting Championship]]. Many Brazilian fighters have become significant figures in various mixed martial art tournaments abroad, some notable Brazilian fighters in these tournaments include [[Anderson Silva]], [[José Aldo]], [[Wanderlei Silva]], [[Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira|Minotauro]], [[Vitor Belfort]], [[Mauricio Rua]], [[Murilo Bustamante]], [[Junior dos Santos]], [[Rafael dos Anjos]], [[Fabricio Werdum]], [[Lyoto Machida]], [[Alex Pereira]] and [[Amanda Nunes]]. Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador and Uruguay have already had some fighters in MMA, but to this day none of them have won the title of champion.<ref>{{Cite web |date=March 20, 2023 |title=Anderson Silva entra no Hall da Fama do UFC, que tem 5 brasileiros; conheça |url=https://www.band.uol.com.br/esportes/colunistas/duelo-ufc/ufc-hall-da-fama-com-anderson-silva-brasil-tem-5-nomes-16590452 |website=www.band.uol.com.br}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=July 11, 2016 |title=Minotauro entra no Hall da Fama do UFC e aposta em próximos indicados |url=https://gauchazh.clicrbs.com.br/esportes/noticia/2016/07/minotauro-entra-no-hall-da-fama-do-ufc-e-aposta-em-proximos-indicados-6537677.html |website=GZH}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Como surgiu o jiu-jitsu brasileiro e quais suas inovações? |url=https://super.abril.com.br/historia/como-surgiu-o-jiu-jitsu-brasileiro-e-quais-suas-inovacoes/ |website=Super}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=May 13, 2021 |title=A história do Jiu-Jitsu, a arte suave que conquistou o Brasil e o mundo |url=https://www.mormaii.com.br/site/a-historia-do-jiu-jitsu/}}</ref> |
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== Gymnastics == |
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[[File:Rebeca Andrade Rio 2016.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Rebeca Andrade]]]] |
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==== Fencing ==== |
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Brazil has a large training center for Olympic athletes in [[artistic gymnastics]], which has already revealed athletes such as [[Rebeca Andrade]], [[Arthur Zanetti]], [[Daiane dos Santos]], [[Jade Barbosa]], [[Flávia Saraiva]], [[Arthur Mariano]], [[Diego Hypólito]] and [[Daniele Hypólito]].<ref>[https://ge.globo.com/ginastica-artistica/mundial-de-ginastica-artistica/noticia/mundial-de-ginastica-lista-de-medalhas-do-brasil-na-historia-da-competicao.ghtml Mundial de ginástica: lista de medalhas do Brasil na história da competição]</ref> In Chile, [[Tomás González (gymnast)|Tomás González]] reached 4th place in the floor and vault events at the 2012 London Olympics.<ref>{{cite web|access-date=5 August 2012|archive-date=11 April 2013|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130411090726/http://www.london2012.com/gymnastics-artistic/event/men-floor-exercise/index.html?v=20120805-142928843|author=Juegos Olímpicos de Londres 2012|date=5 August 2012|publisher=www.london2012.com|title=Men's Floor Exercise – Olympic Gymnastics – Artistic|url=http://www.london2012.com/gymnastics-artistic/event/men-floor-exercise/index.html?v=20120805-142928843}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref><ref>{{cite web|access-date=6 August 2012|archive-date=11 April 2013|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130411074026/http://www.london2012.com/gymnastics-artistic/event/men-vault/phase=gam002100/index.html|author=Juegos Olímpicos de Londres 2012|date=6 August 2012|publisher=www.london2012.com|title=Men's Vault – Olympic Gymnastics – Artistic|url=http://www.london2012.com/gymnastics-artistic/event/men-vault/phase=gam002100/index.html}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref> In [[rhythmic gymnastics]], the Brazilian team won an unprecedented bronze in the general event of the Athens, Greece stage of the [[2023 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series|Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup]], held in March 2023.<ref>[https://ge.globo.com/ginastica-ritmica/noticia/2023/03/18/brasil-conquista-bronze-inedito-na-copa-do-mundo-de-ginastica-ritmica.ghtml Brasil conquista bronze inédito na Copa do Mundo de ginástica rítmica]</ref> |
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Although South America has little tradition in [[fencing]], the continent has produced some renowned athletes. The Venezuelan [[Rubén Limardo]] was an Olympic champion in 2012 in [[Fencing at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's épée|Men's épée]], in addition to being twice a silver medalist at World Championships. For Brazil, [[Nathalie Moellhausen]] was world champion in 2019 for Brazil and in 2009 for Italy, and reached the quarter-finals of the 2016 Olympic Games in [[Fencing at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's épée|Women's épée]]. [[Guilherme Toldo]] reached the quarter-finals of the 2016 Summer Olympics in [[Fencing at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's foil|Men's foil]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=July 18, 2019 |title=Nathalie Moellhausen ganha medalha de ouro e faz história no Mundial de Esgrima da Hungria |url=https://ge.globo.com/esgrima/noticia/natalie-moelhausen-ganha-medalha-de-ouro-e-faz-historia-no-mundial-de-esgrima-da-hungria.ghtml |website=ge}}</ref> |
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==== Judo ==== |
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==Yachting and Equestrianism== |
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[[File: |
[[File:Aurelio miguel ouro nas olimpiadas de seul.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Aurélio Miguel]]]] |
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[[File:CHI Genève 2013 - 20131212 - Rodrigo Pessoa et Citizenguard Cadjanine Z.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Rodrigo Pessoa]]]] |
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Brazil is one of the greatest world powers in judo, a sport developed in the country thanks to its large Japanese community. The greatest exponents of the sport until today were [[Aurélio Miguel]], [[Sarah Menezes]] and [[Rogério Sampaio]], Olympic champions. Brazil also had several other important judo athletes, such as the Olympic runners-up [[Douglas Vieira]], [[Tiago Camilo]], [[Carlos Honorato]], and the Olympic bronze medalists [[Chiaki Ishii]], [[Luiz Onmura]], [[Walter Carmona]], [[Henrique Guimarães]], [[Leandro Guilheiro]], [[Flávio Canto]], [[Ketleyn Quadros]], [[Felipe Kitadai]], [[Mayra Aguiar]], [[Daniel Cargnin (judoka)|Daniel Cargnin]] and [[Rafael Silva (judoka)|Rafael Silva]].<ref name="História do Judô">{{Cite web |title=CBJ | Confederação Brasileira de Judô |url=https://cbj.com.br/pt/ |website=CBJ | Confederação Brasileira de Judô}}</ref><ref name="www1.folha.uol.com.br">{{Cite web |date=July 29, 2021 |title=Bronze de Mayra Aguiar é 24ª medalha olímpica do judô brasileiro; relembre vencedores |url=https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/esporte/2021/07/bronze-de-mayra-aguiar-e-24a-medalha-olimpica-do-judo-brasileiro-relembre-vencedores.shtml |website=Folha de S.Paulo}}</ref> The sport has also been developing lately in [[Argentina]], with judokas like [[Paula Pareto]], and in [[Colombia]], with judokas like [[Yuri Alvear]].<ref name="História do Judô" /><ref name="Galeria de Campeões">{{cite web |date=9 January 2023 |title=Galeria de Campeões |url=https://cbj.com.br/galeria_de_campeoes/ |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230306165147/https://cbj.com.br/galeria_de_campeoes/ |archive-date=6 March 2023 |access-date=14 September 2024 |website=CBJ}}</ref><ref name="www1.folha.uol.com.br" /> |
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Despite yachting and equestrianism being inaccessible sports for the general population, Brazil has a great tradition in yachting, and, to a lesser extent, but no less important, tradition in equestrianism. The biggest center for these sports in South America is [[Rio de Janeiro]] and its neighboring city [[Niterói]]. Several Olympic medalists in yachting have trained in [[Guanabara Bay]], such as [[Martine Grael]], [[Clinio Freitas]], [[Daniel Adler (sailor)|Daniel Adler]], [[Eduardo Penido]], [[Isabel Swan]], [[Henrique Pellicano|Kiko Pellicano]], [[Marcelo Ferreira]], [[Marcos Soares (sailor)|Marcos Soares]], [[Nelson Falcão]] and [[Ronaldo Senfft]]. The country also has olympic medalists from São Paulo [[Robert Scheidt]], [[Torben Grael]], [[Kahena Kunze]], [[Reinaldo Conrad]], [[Alexandre Welter]], [[Bruno Prada]] and [[Peter Ficker]]. In equestrianism, the [[Hipódromo da Gávea|Gávea Hippodrome]] trained athletes such as [[Rodrigo Pessoa]] and his father [[Nelson Pessoa]], as well as [[Luiz Felipe de Azevedo]]; the country also has olympic medalists from São Paulo [[Álvaro de Miranda Neto]] and from Rio Grande do Sul [[André Johannpeter]]. [[Argentina]] also trains high-level athletes in yachting, with some Olympic medals. [[Santiago Lange]] and [[Cecilia Carranza]] were Olympic champions in 2016, and the country still had 4 silvers and 5 bronzes in yachting by the 2020 games. The country has already won an Olympic silver in equestrian with [[Carlos Moratorio]]. [[Chile]] won 2 Olympic silvers in 1952 in equestrianism, mainly with the help of [[Óscar Cristi]].<ref>[https://ge.globo.com/olimpiadas/noticia/veja-a-lista-das-medalhas-do-brasil-na-historia-dos-jogos-olimpicos.ghtml Veja a lista das medalhas do Brasil na história dos Jogos Olímpicos]</ref> |
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==== Taekwondo ==== |
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[[File: |
[[File:Natalia Falavigna.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Natalia Falavigna]]]] |
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[[File:Hoogoven-schaaktoernooi Wijk aan Zee, nummer 7 Najdorf; Bestanddeelnr 926-1759.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Miguel Najdorf]]]] |
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Chess is a sport with many fans in South America. The continent has produced some great players such as Argentine [[Miguel Najdorf]] (known for the [[Sicilian Defense, Najdorf Variation|Najdorf Variation]]), and Brazilians [[Henrique Mecking]] (3rd best in the world in 1977) and [[Luis Paulo Supi]] (who defeated world champion [[Magnus Carlsen]]).<ref>{{Cite web |title=GM Supi vs GM Carlsen |url=https://www.chess.com/game/live/4912555148 |website=Chess.com |access-date=}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Magnus reaction to an incredible sacrifice |url=https://www.reddit.com/r/chess/comments/grbl7b/magnus_reaction_to_an_incredible_sacrifice_if_you/ |website=reddit.com |access-date=2020-05-28}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Announcing The Chess.com Immortal Game |url=https://www.chess.com/news/view/chesscom-immortal-game-winner |access-date=2021-04-20 |website=Chess.com}}</ref><ref>[https://rafaelleitao.com/grandes-mestres-brasileiros/ Os 14 Grandes Mestres de Xadrez Brasileiros]</ref><ref>[https://adrenaline.com.br/noticias/v/70566/xadrez-ganha-status-de-esport-e-cresce-durante-a-pandemia Xadrez ganha status de esport e cresce durante a pandemia]</ref> |
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==Baseball== |
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[[Baseball]] is the most popular sport in [[Venezuela]]. In [[Colombia]], Baseball is very popular in their north region, and has been gaining popularity recently in the other regions of Colombia. A wide list of players from Venezuela and Colombia are in the major leagues in the United States. Both countries are the only ones in this region to participate in the [[World Baseball Classic]] (plus Brazil) and the [[Caribbean Series]]. |
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== Table tennis == |
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[[File:ITTF World Tour 2017 German Open Calderano Hugo 03.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Hugo Calderano]]]] |
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[[Table tennis]] is very popular and widely played in Brazil, and the country has a considerable tradition in this sport. The greatest player in the history of the country is [[Hugo Calderano]], who reached number 3 in the world in 2022 (becoming the greatest [[Americas]] player of all time), and was the first South American to reach the quarterfinals of this sport at the Olympic Games. Other historically important players in the country are [[Gustavo Tsuboi]], [[Cláudio Kano]], [[Hugo Hoyama]], [[:pt:Biriba|Biriba]], [[Cazuo Matsumoto]], [[Thiago Monteiro (table tennis)|Thiago Monteiro]] and [[Bruna Takahashi]]. The best players from [[Argentina]] so far have been [[Liu Song (table tennis)|Liu Song]], [[Gastón Alto]] and [[Horacio Cifuentes]]. For Chile, the player [[Berta Rodríguez]] stood out.<ref>[https://ge.globo.com/tenis-de-mesa/noticia/hugo-calderano-chega-ao-melhor-ranking-da-carreira-3o-do-mundo-no-tenis-de-mesa.ghtml Hugo Calderano alcanza el mejor ranking de su carrera: 3º del mundo en tenis de mesa]</ref><ref>[https://www.uol.com.br/esporte/olimpiadas/ultimas-noticias/2021/07/27/superado-hugo-hoyama-celebra-nova-marca-do-tenis-de-mesa-em-olimpiadas.htm Superado, Hugo Hoyama celebra el resultado de Hugo Calderano en las Olimpíadas]</ref> |
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== Taekwondo == |
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[[File:Natalia Falavigna.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Natalia Falavigna]]]] |
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In [[taekwondo]], in 1992, when it was still an Olympic demonstration sport, the Venezuelan [[Arlindo Gouveia]] was champion and [[Adriana Carmona]] was a bronze medalist (later she would be a bronze medalist in 2004, officially). Another Venezuelan, [[Dalia Contreras]], was a bronze medalist in 2008. Brazilian [[Natália Falavigna]] was a bronze medalist in 2008 and 4th place in 2004. [[Maicon Siqueira]] won bronze in 2016. [[Diogo Silva (taekwondo)|Diogo Silva]] finished 4th in 2004 and 2012, and [[Milena Titoneli]] finished 4th in 2020. Argentina's biggest highlights are [[Sebastián Crismanich]], Olympic champion in 2012, and [[Gabriel Taraburelli]] who finished 4th place in 2000. For Colombia, [[Óscar Muñoz Oviedo]] was bronze in 2012, and [[Gladys Mora]] finished 4th in 2004. The Peruvian [[Peter López Santos]] came in 4th place in 2008.<ref>[https://ge.globo.com/olimpiadas/taekwondo/noticia/2016/08/herdeiro-de-diogo-silva-e-falavigna-maicon-nova-face-do-taekwondo.html "Herdeiro" de Diogo Silva e Falavigna: Maicon, a nova face do taekwondo]</ref> |
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== Canoeing == |
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[[File:Rio 2016. Canoagem de velocidade-Canoe sprint (28529187903).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Erlon Silva]] (front) and [[Isaquias Queiroz]] (back)]] |
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The Brazilian [[Isaquias Queiroz]] is the best canoeist in the history of South America, being the only Olympic champion of this modality on the continent and adding a total of four Olympic medals until the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. [[Erlon Silva]] also won Olympic silver for Brazil in canoeing.<ref>[https://www.cob.org.br/pt/cob/time-brasil/atletas/isaquias-queiroz-dos-santos/ Isaquias Queiroz in COB]</ref><ref>[https://www.cob.org.br/pt/cob/time-brasil/atletas/erlon-de-souza-silva/ Erlon Souza at COB]</ref> |
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== Archery == |
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[[File:Marcusvinidiusdalmeida.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Marcus Vinicius D'Almeida]]]] |
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[[Marcus Vinicius D'Almeida]], in the [[recurve bow]] category, is the greatest male [[archery]] athlete in the history of South America, having been number 1 in the world in 2023, and world runner-up in 2021. The Chilean [[Denisse van Lamoen]] won a world title in the recurve bow in 2011, and the Colombian [[Natalia Sánchez (archer)|Natalia Sánchez]] was a world bronze medalist in 2009. In the [[Compound bow]] (which does not participate in the Olympic Games), The Colombian [[Sara López]], multiple world champion, stands out.<ref>[https://www.estadao.com.br/esportes/marcus-dalmeida-antigo-neymar-arqueiro-se-consolida-no-topo-do-tiro-com-arco/ Marcus D'Almeida, former 'Neymar arqueiro', reached the top of archery after strengthening his mind]</ref><ref>[https://ge.globo.com/tiro-com-arco/noticia/marcus- vinicius-dalmeida-and-vice-world-archery-champion.ghtml Marcus Vinicius D´Almeida is vice-world archery champion]</ref> |
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==Field Hockey== |
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[[File:Las Leonas 2008 (completo).jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|''Las Leonas'', the women's national team]] |
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Very popular in [[Argentina]] (2 times World Champion). The [[Argentina women's national field hockey team|women's national team ''Las Leonas'']] is one of the world's most successful, with five Olympic medals, two [[Women's Hockey World Cup|World Cups]], a [[FIH Hockey World League|World League]] and seven [[Hockey Champions Trophy|Champions Trophy]].{{sfn|Nauright|Parrish|2012|p=11}} The national team won the [[Women's Hockey World Cup|World Cup]] in [[2002 Women's Hockey World Cup|2002]] and [[2010 Women's Hockey World Cup|2010]]. At the Olympic Games, it won the silver medal in [[Field hockey at the 2000 Summer Olympics#Women's tournament|2000]], [[Field hockey at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|2012]] and [[Field hockey at the 2020 Summer Olympics|2020]], as well as bronze in [[Field hockey at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|2004]] and [[Field hockey at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament|2008]]. ''Las Leonas'' also won the annual [[Hockey Champions Trophy|Champions Trophy]] on seven occasions, in [[2001 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2001]], [[2008 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2008]], [[2009 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2009]], [[2010 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2010]], [[2012 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2012]], [[2014 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2014]] and [[2016 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy|2016]] and the [[FIH Hockey World League|World League 2014–2015]]. [[Luciana Aymar]] is recognized as the best female player in the history of the sport,<ref name=hwc1>{{cite web|title=Meet Luciana Aymar – Las Leonas (Argentina) |url=http://www.rabobankhockeyworldcup2014.com/video/meet-luciana-aymar-las-leonas-argentina|publisher=Rabobank Hockey World Cup 2014|place=Nieuwegein, The Netherlands|year=2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140616131926/http://www.rabobankhockeyworldcup2014.com/video/meet-luciana-aymar-las-leonas-argentina|archive-date=16 June 2014|url-status=dead|access-date=6 December 2015}}</ref> being the only player to have received the [[FIH Player of the Year Awards|FIH Player of the Year Award]] eight times.<ref name=fih1>{{cite web|url=http://www.fih.ch/en/news-4873-amazing-aymar-lands-eighth-fih-player-of|title=Amazing Aymar lands eighth FIH Player of the Year crown|publisher=FIH – Fédération Internationale de Hockey sur Gazon [International Hockey Federation]|place=Lausanne, Switzerland|date=8 December 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131212013213/http://www.fih.ch/en/news-4873-amazing-aymar-lands-eighth-fih-player-of|archive-date=12 December 2013|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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The [[Argentina men's national field hockey team|men's national team ''Los Leones'']] won the gold medal at the [[Field hockey at the 2016 Summer Olympics#Men's tournament|2016 Summer Olympics]] and the bronze medal at the [[2014 Men's Hockey World Cup|2014 World Cup]] and [[2008 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy|2008 Champions Trophy]]. The national squad also won [[Field hockey at the Pan American Games|Pan American Games]] on ten occasions and the [[2005 Men's Hockey Champions Challenge|2005]], [[2007 Men's Hockey Champions Challenge|2007]] and [[2012 Men's Hockey Champions Challenge I|2012]] [[Hockey Champions Challenge|Champions Challenges]]. |
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== Modern pentathlon == |
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[[Yane Marques]] is the only person born in South America to win an Olympic medal in [[modern pentathlon]] (until the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games), having also been the first person in Latin America to do so.<ref>[https://www.cob.org.br/pt/cob/time-brasil/atletas/yane-marcia-campos-da-fonseca-marques/ Yane Marques at COB]</ref> |
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==Rink Hockey== |
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[[Argentina]] has won the world cup in 5 times. |
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==Rugby union== |
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[[File:Argentina vs England 2011 RWC (1).jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.15|Argentina facing [[England national rugby union team|England]] at the [[2011 Rugby World Cup]]]] |
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[[Rugby union]] is becoming popular in South America, following the recent successes of [[Argentina national rugby union team|Argentina]] in recent [[Rugby World Cup]] competitions (3rd place in 2007 and 4th place in 2015). The popularity of the game has spread across the continent. |
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[[Uruguay national rugby union team|Uruguay]], [[Paraguay national rugby union team|Paraguay]], [[Colombia national rugby union team|Colombia]], [[Brazil national rugby union team|Brazil]], [[Chile national rugby union team|Chile]], [[Venezuela national rugby union team|Venezuela]], Guyana, Peru and Bolivia all have Rugby Federations.<ref>[http://gosouthamerica.about.com/od/rugby/Rugby_in_South_America.htm Rugby in South America<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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In [[taekwondo]], in 1992, when it was still an Olympic demonstration sport, the Venezuelan [[Arlindo Gouveia]] was champion and [[Adriana Carmona]] was a bronze medalist (later she would be a bronze medalist in 2004, officially). Another Venezuelan, [[Dalia Contreras]], was a bronze medalist in 2008. Brazilian [[Natália Falavigna]] was a bronze medalist in 2008 and 4th place in 2004. [[Maicon Siqueira]] won bronze in 2016. [[Diogo Silva (taekwondo)|Diogo Silva]] finished 4th in 2004 and 2012, and [[Milena Titoneli]] finished 4th in 2020. Argentina's biggest highlights are [[Sebastián Crismanich]], Olympic champion in 2012, and [[Gabriel Taraburelli]] who finished 4th place in 2000. For Colombia, [[Óscar Muñoz]] was bronze in 2012, and [[Gladys Mora]] finished 4th in 2004. The Peruvian [[Peter López Santos]] came in 4th place in 2008.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Janeiro |first=Por Marcelo Barone e Renan MoraisRio de |date=August 22, 2016 |title="Herdeiro" de Diogo Silva e Falavigna: Maicon, a nova face do taekwondo |url=https://ge.globo.com/olimpiadas/taekwondo/noticia/2016/08/herdeiro-de-diogo-silva-e-falavigna-maicon-nova-face-do-taekwondo.html |website=globoesporte.com}}</ref> |
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==Weightlifting== |
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Weightlifting is popular in [[Colombia]] and has been evolving in Brazil. Some of the top Colombian weightlifters are: [[María Isabel Urrutia]], [[Óscar Figueroa (weightlifter)|Óscar Figueroa]], [[Mabel Mosquera]] and [[Diego Fernando Salazar]]. The greatest exponent of this sport in Brazil were [[Fernando Reis]] and [[Laura Amaro]].<ref>[https://www.cob.org.br/pt/cob/confederacoes/cblp/ Confederação Brasileira de Levantamento de Pesos]</ref><ref>[https://ge.globo.com/levantamento-de-peso/noticia/fernando-reis-herda-bronze-e-se-torna-1o-medalhista-do-brasil-em-um-mundial-de-levantamento-de-peso.ghtml Fernando Reis herda bronze e se torna 1º medalhista do Brasil em um Mundial de levantamento de pesos]</ref><ref>[https://ge.globo.com/levantamento-de-peso/noticia/laura-amaro-conquista-a-prata-no-mundial-de-levantamento-de-peso.ghtml Laura Amaro conquista a prata no Mundial de levantamento de peso]</ref> |
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==Cycling== |
=== Cycling === |
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[[File:Nairo Quintana, Paris-Nice 2013.JPG|thumb|[[Nairo Quintana]]: Colombian Champion of the [[Giro d'Italia]] and the [[Vuelta a España]]]] |
[[File:Nairo Quintana, Paris-Nice 2013.JPG|thumb|[[Nairo Quintana]]: Colombian Champion of the [[Giro d'Italia]] and the [[Vuelta a España]]]] |
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[[File:Rio 2016. Ciclismo BMX-BMX Cycling (29016608602).jpg|thumb|[[Mariana Pajón]] is a Colombian cyclist, two-time Olympic gold medalist and [[UCI BMX World Championships|BMX World Champion]]]] |
[[File:Rio 2016. Ciclismo BMX-BMX Cycling (29016608602).jpg|thumb|[[Mariana Pajón]] is a Colombian cyclist, two-time Olympic gold medalist and [[UCI BMX World Championships|BMX World Champion]]]] |
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[[Cycle sport|Cycling]] in Colombia became very popular with the beginning of the annual [[Vuelta a Colombia]] race in 1951, followed by the annual [[Clásico RCN]] starting in 1961. The triumphs of [[Martín Emilio "Cochise" Rodríguez]] in European cycling competitions increased the sport's popularity, which in turn helped to develop the [[Colombian Cycling Federation]]. Rodriguez was followed by professional Colombian cyclists known as the "Colombian beetles", which include up to this date [[Luis Herrera (cyclist)|Luis "Lucho" Herrera]], [[Luis Felipe Laverde]], [[Fabio Parra]], [[Víctor Hugo Peña]], [[Santiago Botero]], [[Mauricio Soler]]. The "escarabajo" (beetle) nickname was coined by radio announcer José Enrique Buitrago, while watching [[Ramón Hoyos]] climb a hill ahead of French professional racer [[José Beyaert]] during the 1955 Vuelta a Colombia.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.elespectador.com/deportes/ciclismo/por-que-llaman-escarabajos-los-ciclistas-colombianos-articulo-701598 |
[[Cycle sport|Cycling]] in Colombia became very popular with the beginning of the annual [[Vuelta a Colombia]] race in 1951, followed by the annual [[Clásico RCN]] starting in 1961. The triumphs of [[Martín Emilio "Cochise" Rodríguez]] in European cycling competitions increased the sport's popularity, which in turn helped to develop the [[Colombian Cycling Federation]]. Rodriguez was followed by professional Colombian cyclists known as the "Colombian beetles", which include up to this date [[Luis Herrera (cyclist)|Luis "Lucho" Herrera]], [[Luis Felipe Laverde]], [[Fabio Parra]], [[Víctor Hugo Peña]], [[Santiago Botero]], [[Mauricio Soler]]. The "escarabajo" (beetle) nickname was coined by radio announcer José Enrique Buitrago, while watching [[Ramón Hoyos]] climb a hill ahead of French professional racer [[José Beyaert]] during the 1955 Vuelta a Colombia.<ref>{{cite web |date=6 July 2017 |title=¿Por qué llaman escarabajos a los ciclistas colombianos? |url=https://www.elespectador.com/deportes/ciclismo/por-que-llaman-escarabajos-los-ciclistas-colombianos-articulo-701598 |access-date=30 July 2019 |website=[[El Espectador]]}}</ref> |
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Colombian cycling has enjoyed a renaissance in the early 2010s, with Colombian riders enjoying international success.<ref>{{Cite web| |
Colombian cycling has enjoyed a renaissance in the early 2010s, with Colombian riders enjoying international success.<ref>{{Cite web |date=12 July 2013 |title=Colombia undergoes cycling boom |url=http://english.cntv.cn/program/sportsscene/20130712/102629.shtml |access-date=2 August 2013 |website=[[CCTV.com]]}}</ref><ref name="antbanter">{{Cite web |last=Beal |first=Anthony |date=9 May 2013 |title=Antbanter: The Colombian Revolution |url=http://velovoices.com/2013/05/09/antbanter-the-colombian-revolution/ |access-date=2 August 2013 |website=VeloVoices}}</ref><ref name="rapha">{{Cite web |date=20 May 2013 |title=A Call To Arms |url=http://www.rapha.cc/a-call-to-arms |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130921032020/http://www.rapha.cc/a-call-to-arms |archive-date=21 September 2013 |access-date=2 August 2013 |website=Rapha.cc}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=29 July 2013 |title=What's next for Colombian cycling? |url=http://www.cyclinginquisition.com/2013/07/whats-next-for-colombian-cycling.html |access-date=2 August 2013 |website=Cycling Inquisition}}</ref> One of the factors cited for this success has been the establishment of the [[4-72 Colombia]] cycling team (formerly known as Colombia es Pasión-Café de Colombia), which has developed several cyclists who have gone on to compete for [[UCI WorldTeam|UCI Worldteams]].<ref name="antbanter" /><ref>{{Cite web |last=Lindsey |first=Joe |date=7 May 2013 |title=Here Come the Colombians |url=http://bicycling.com/blogs/boulderreport/2013/05/07/here-come-the-colombians/ |access-date=2 August 2013 |website=[[Bicycling (magazine)|bicycling.com]]}}</ref> The government-backed [[Colombia–Coldeportes]] cycling team competed at the 2013 Giro d'Italia, and was the first all-Colombian team to do so for 21 years.<ref name="rapha" /> The team aimed to secure UCI ProTeam status and compete in the Tour de France,<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wallace |first=Arturo |date=4 May 2013 |title=Giro team revives Colombia's passion for pedalling |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-22397265 |access-date=2 August 2013 |website=[[bbc.co.uk]]}}</ref> however the team announced its disbanding in October 2015 due to the withdrawal of financial support from [[Coldeportes]], the Colombian government's sports ministry. Riders who graduated to the UCI World Tour from the team included [[Esteban Chaves]] and [[Darwin Atapuma]].<ref>{{cite web |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=15 October 2015 |title=Colombia–Coldeportes team forced to fold |url=http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/colombia-coldeportes-team-forced-to-fold/ |access-date=29 May 2016 |website=[[cyclingnews.com]]}}</ref> High-profile riders emerging in this period include [[Nairo Quintana]], [[Rigoberto Urán]], [[Sergio Henao]], [[Carlos Betancur]] and [[Mariana Pajón]]. The two main strongholds of the sport in Colombia are the [[Altiplano Cundiboyacense]] in the centre of the country and [[Antioquia Department|Antioquia]] in the west, both being mountainous regions.<ref>{{cite web |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=1 June 2014 |title=¿Por qué los colombianos son tan buenos en ciclismo? |trans-title=Why are Colombians so good at cycling? |url=http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2014/06/140531_colombianos_ciclismo_buenos_nairo_amv |access-date=13 July 2016 |website=[[bbc.com]] |language=es}}</ref> |
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Some of the top Colombian cyclists are: |
Some of the top Colombian cyclists are: |
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*[[Edwin Ávila]], double track cycling world champion in the points race (2011,2014). |
*[[Edwin Ávila]], double track cycling world champion in the points race (2011,2014). |
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*[[Esteban Chaves]], second place in the [[Giro d'Italia]] (2016) |
*[[Esteban Chaves]], second place in the [[Giro d'Italia]] (2016) |
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*[[Carlos |
*[[Carlos Ramírez (BMX rider)|Carlos Ramírez]] placed third at the [[2016 Summer Olympics]] in [[Cycling at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's BMX|men's BMX]] |
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*[[Iván Sosa]], 1st place overall in the [[2018 Vuelta a Burgos]] |
*[[Iván Sosa]], 1st place overall in the [[2018 Vuelta a Burgos]] |
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*[[Fernando Gaviria]] wearer of the [[Yellow Jersey]] in the [[2018 Tour de France]] |
*[[Fernando Gaviria]] wearer of the [[Yellow Jersey]] in the [[2018 Tour de France]] |
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*[[Egan Bernal]] winner of the general and youth classifications in the [[2019 Tour de France]] and [[2021 Giro d'Italia]] |
*[[Egan Bernal]] winner of the general and youth classifications in the [[2019 Tour de France]] and [[2021 Giro d'Italia]] |
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==Golf== |
=== Golf === |
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Golf is growing in popularity in both Brazil and Argentina but is not widely played elsewhere in South America. [[Culture of Bolivia#sports|Bolivia]] has the highest tournament class golf course in the world. |
Golf is growing in popularity in both Brazil and Argentina but is not widely played elsewhere in South America. [[Culture of Bolivia#sports|Bolivia]] has the highest tournament class golf course in the world. |
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=== Gymnastics === |
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[[File:Rebeca Andrade Rio 2016.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Rebeca Andrade]]]] |
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Brazil has a large training center for Olympic athletes in [[artistic gymnastics]], which has already revealed athletes such as [[Rebeca Andrade]], [[Arthur Zanetti]], [[Daiane dos Santos]], [[Jade Barbosa]], [[Flávia Saraiva]], [[Arthur Mariano]], [[Diego Hypólito]] and [[Daniele Hypólito]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=October 17, 2021 |title=Mundial de ginástica: lista de medalhas do Brasil na história da competição |url=https://ge.globo.com/ginastica-artistica/mundial-de-ginastica-artistica/noticia/mundial-de-ginastica-lista-de-medalhas-do-brasil-na-historia-da-competicao.ghtml |website=ge}}</ref> In Chile, [[Tomás González (gymnast)|Tomás González]] reached 4th place in the floor and vault events at the 2012 London Olympics.<ref>{{cite web |author=Juegos Olímpicos de Londres 2012 |date=5 August 2012 |title=Men's Floor Exercise – Olympic Gymnastics – Artistic |url=http://www.london2012.com/gymnastics-artistic/event/men-floor-exercise/index.html?v=20120805-142928843 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130411090726/http://www.london2012.com/gymnastics-artistic/event/men-floor-exercise/index.html?v=20120805-142928843 |archive-date=11 April 2013 |access-date=5 August 2012 |publisher=www.london2012.com}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref><ref>{{cite web |author=Juegos Olímpicos de Londres 2012 |date=6 August 2012 |title=Men's Vault – Olympic Gymnastics – Artistic |url=http://www.london2012.com/gymnastics-artistic/event/men-vault/phase=gam002100/index.html |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130411074026/http://www.london2012.com/gymnastics-artistic/event/men-vault/phase=gam002100/index.html |archive-date=11 April 2013 |access-date=6 August 2012 |publisher=www.london2012.com}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref> In [[rhythmic gymnastics]], the Brazilian team won an unprecedented bronze in the general event of the Athens, Greece stage of the [[2023 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series|Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup]], held in March 2023.<ref>{{Cite web |date=March 18, 2023 |title=Brasil conquista bronze inédito na Copa do Mundo de ginástica rítmica |url=https://ge.globo.com/ginastica-ritmica/noticia/2023/03/18/brasil-conquista-bronze-inedito-na-copa-do-mundo-de-ginastica-ritmica.ghtml |website=ge}}</ref> |
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=== Jai Alai === |
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[[Jai alai]] or [[Basque pelota]] is played in many parts of South America. Although this sport is mostly played in Spain and France, there are federations of Basque ball in [[Argentina]], [[Bolivia]], Brazil, [[Chile]], [[Ecuador]], [[Paraguay]], [[Peru]], [[Uruguay]], and [[Venezuela]]. Due to the origin of the game, there are many good players who are [[Basques]], either natives or from the [[Basque diaspora]].<ref name="AuñamendiBest">[http://www.euskomedia.org/aunamendi/102263 Pilota vasca (campeonatos)] at Auñamendi Encyclopedia</ref> |
[[Jai alai]] or [[Basque pelota]] is played in many parts of South America. Although this sport is mostly played in Spain and France, there are federations of Basque ball in [[Argentina]], [[Bolivia]], Brazil, [[Chile]], [[Ecuador]], [[Paraguay]], [[Peru]], [[Uruguay]], and [[Venezuela]]. Due to the origin of the game, there are many good players who are [[Basques]], either natives or from the [[Basque diaspora]].<ref name="AuñamendiBest">[http://www.euskomedia.org/aunamendi/102263 Pilota vasca (campeonatos)] at Auñamendi Encyclopedia</ref> |
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=== Modern pentathlon === |
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==Cricket== |
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[[Yane Marques]] is the only person born in South America to win an Olympic medal in [[modern pentathlon]] (until the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games), having also been the first person in Latin America to do so.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Yane Marques at COB |url=https://www.cob.org.br/pt/cob/time-brasil/atletas/yane-marcia-campos-da-fonseca-marques/}}</ref> |
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{{see also|Argentina national cricket team|Brazil national cricket team|Chile national cricket team|Peru national cricket team|Uruguay national cricket team|Guyana national cricket team}} |
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=== Motorsports === |
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[[Cricket]] is the most popular sport in [[Guyana]]. Apart from there, is mostly played in the [[Southern Cone]], especially in areas settled by English people. Although a number of South American nations have teams, none of them are major, except for the [[Guyana national cricket team]], which plays in inter-regional competitions in the Caribbean. Guyana is also an independent nation represented by the [[West Indies cricket team]], the only team in the [[Americas]] with [[Test cricket|Test]] status. |
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South America have several drivers who won the [[Formula One]] championship multiple times, including five-time champion [[Juan Fangio]] of [[Argentina]], and Brazilian drivers [[Emerson Fittipaldi]] (2 titles), [[Nelson Piquet]] (3 titles), and [[Ayrton Senna]] (3 titles). Brazil has hosted the [[Brazilian Grand Prix]] every year since 1973 and the [[Argentine Grand Prix]] has hosted Formula One on 20 occasions. |
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In Motos, South America had notable drivers as [[Johnny Cecotto]], [[Carlos Lavado]], [[Alex Barros]], [[Sebastian Porto]], [[Martín Cárdenas (motorcyclist)|Martín Cárdenas]] and [[Yonny Hernández (motorcyclist)|Yonny Hernández]]. Also, South America has hosted the Moto GP in [[Venezuelan motorcycle Grand Prix|Venezuela]] (1977–1979), [[Brazilian motorcycle Grand Prix|Brazil]] (1987–1989, 1992; 1995–1997, 1999–2004 as [[Rio de Janeiro motorcycle Grand Prix|Rio Grand Prix]]) and [[Argentine motorcycle Grand Prix|Argentina]] (1961–1963, 1981–1982, 1987, 1994–1995, 1998–1999, 2014–2019, 2022-2023). |
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[[South American Cricket Championship]] is a [[limited overs cricket]] tournament played since 1995 between the national teams of the continent with North American teams also often invited to participate. It is currently played annually but until 2013 was usually played biennially. |
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The [[Dakar Rally]] is also hosted by South America from 2009 to 2019 (mostly in Chile and Argentina). |
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Variants of [[street cricket]] are also played, such as [[bete-ombro]] in Brazil. |
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<gallery class="center" widths="180px" heights="120px"> |
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Senna 1992 Monaco cropped.jpg|[[Ayrton Senna]], the most successful Brazilian driver in [[Formula One]] |
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Juan Manuel Fangio (circa 1952).jpg|[[Juan Manuel Fangio]] |
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</gallery> |
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=== Skateboarding === |
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==Polo== |
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[[File: |
[[File:Rayssa Leal (crop).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Rayssa Leal]]]] |
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Skateboarding is very popular in Brazil, especially in large urban centers. The country has internationally renowned skaters like [[Bob Burnquist]], [[Sandro Dias]], [[Rayssa Leal]], [[Pedro Barros (skateboarder)|Pedro Barros]], [[Kelvin Hoefler]], [[Pâmela Rosa]] and [[Letícia Bufoni]]. [[Peru]] is a country that shows a certain degree of development in skateboarding, having sent representatives like [[Ángelo Caro]] to World Championships and the Olympics.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Freitas |first=Rafael |date=June 21, 2020 |title=De alternativo a esperança de medalha: o skate no Brasil |url=https://www.olimpiadatododia.com.br/skate/245831-dia-mundial-do-skate-relembre-a-historia-da-modalidade-no-brasil/ |website=Olimpíada Todo Dia}}</ref> |
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[[Polo]] is popular in some parts of [[Argentina]], Brazil, [[Chile]], and [[Uruguay]]. South America is the biggest winner of the [[World Polo Championship]], with Argentina having 5 titles, Brazil 3 and Chile 2. [[Adolfo Cambiaso]] is an Argentine polo player considered one of the greatest references in the history of this sport.<ref>[https://www.worldpolotour.com/?sec=1 Ranking]</ref> |
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=== Surfing === |
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[[File:Ítalo Ferreira em 2021.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Ítalo Ferreira]]]] |
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Surfing is very popular in Brazil. The country has progressively evolved to become one of the biggest forces in the sport in the world. [[Fábio Gouveia]] reached number 5 in the world in 1992. In the 2010s, the Brazilian Storm appears, with several Brazilians getting closer to the world title, until [[Gabriel Medina]] conquers the same in 2014 and [[Adriano de Souza]] wins in 2015. In 2020 surfing ascends to the category of Olympic sport and [[Ítalo Ferreira]] becomes Olympic champion. [[Filipe Toledo]] was also world champion, in 2022. [[Peru]] also has renowned surfers such as [[Lucca Mesinas]] and [[Miguel Tudela (surfer)|Miguel Tudela]].<ref>{{Cite web |last1=Magazine |first1=Wavelength Surf |last2=Gartside |first2=Luke |date=September 1, 2019 |title=How Did Brazil Become The World's Best Surfing Nation? |url=https://wavelengthmag.com/brazil-become-worlds-best-surfing-nation/}}</ref><ref>[https://olympics.com/en/news/surfing-olympic-champion-italo-ferreira-s-story-and-road-at-the-tokyo-2020-olymp Italo Ferreira's story and road at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics]</ref> |
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=== Swimming === |
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[[File:Cesar Cielo at 2009 US World Trials.jpg|thumb|upright|[[César Cielo]]]] |
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Brazil is the greatest South American power in swimming, competing on an equal footing with the world's powers in this sport, especially in men's swimming. Some of the greatest exponents of Brazilian swimming history are: [[César Cielo]], [[Ricardo Prado]], [[Gustavo Borges]], [[Fernando Scherer]], [[Thiago Pereira]], [[Djan Madruga]], [[Bruno Fratus]], [[Manuel dos Santos (swimmer)|Manuel dos Santos]], [[Tetsuo Okamoto]], [[Nicholas Santos]], [[Felipe França]], [[Fernando Scheffer]], [[Kaio de Almeida]], [[João Gomes Júnior]], [[Felipe Lima (swimmer)|Felipe Lima]], [[Guilherme Costa (swimmer)|Guilherme Costa]], [[Ana Marcela Cunha]], [[Etiene Medeiros]] and [[Poliana Okimoto]]. [[Argentina]] was the main force on the continent until the 1960s, with historically important swimmers such as [[Luis Nicolao]], [[José Meolans]] and [[Georgina Bardach]]. Other countries like [[Venezuela]] (with [[Francisco Sánchez (swimmer)|Francisco Sánchez]], [[Rafael Vidal]] and [[Albert Subirats]]) and [[Chile]] (with [[Kristel Kobrich]]) tend to reveal talent from time to time. Brazil hosted the [[1995 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m)]] and won the [[2014 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m)]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=May 16, 2012 |title=Um resumo da história da natação brasileira |url=https://epichurus.com/2012/05/16/um-resumo-da-historia-da-natacao-brasileira/}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=January 23, 2020 |title=Conheça a História da Natação no Brasil | Master Sports |url=https://mastersportsacademia.com.br/dicas/conheca-a-historia-da-natacao-no-brasil/}}</ref> |
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=== Tennis === |
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[[File:Gustavo Kuerten French Open 2005.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Gustavo Kuerten]] at the [[2005 French Open]]]] |
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South America has produced a number of talented tennis players such as [[Maria Bueno]], the greatest South American tennis player, three-time [[French Open]] winner [[Gustavo Kuerten]], four-time Grand Slam and Masters winner [[Guillermo Vilas]], the first Latin American ranked number 1 in [[Association of Tennis Professionals]] (ATP) [[Marcelo Ríos]], the first Latin American World number 1 in women tennis and the first Latin American to win a Grand Slam [[Anita Lizana]], [[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] winner [[Gabriela Sabatini]], [[French Open]] winners [[Gastón Gaudio]] and [[Andrés Gómez]], 2009 [[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] winner [[Juan Martín del Potro]], and double Olympic Gold medalist [[Nicolás Massú]]. In doubles, the continent has already produced players like [[Marcelo Melo]], [[Bruno Soares]], [[Luisa Stefani]], [[Juan Sebastián Cabal]] and [[Robert Farah (tennis)|Robert Farah]]. The continent hosts ATP tournaments, such as the [[Rio Open|ATP 500 in Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil, and the [[Argentina Open|ATP 250 in Buenos Aires]] and [[Córdoba Open|Córdoba]], in Argentina, and the [[Chile Open (tennis)|ATP 250 in Chile]]. Argentina was [[2016 Davis Cup|Davis Cup champion in 2016]], and Brazil was a semi-finalist twice, in [[1992 Davis Cup World Group|1992]] and [[2000 Davis Cup World Group|2000]]. Chile has already reached the quarterfinals three times.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.esportelandia.com.br/tenis/tenistas-brasileiros-em-duplas/|title=A história e o sucesso dos tenistas brasileiros em duplas|date=April 23, 2024|website=www.esportelandia.com.br}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cassiozirpoli.com.br/os-tenistas-brasileiros-campeoes-do-grand-slam-grama-saibro-simples-dupla-juvenil/|title=O Brasil tem quantos títulos no Grand Slam? Os tenistas já venceram na grama, no saibro...|first=Cassio|last=Zirpoli|date=September 10, 2020}}</ref> |
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=== Table tennis === |
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[[File:ITTF World Tour 2017 German Open Calderano Hugo 03.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Hugo Calderano]]]] |
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[[Table tennis]] is very popular and widely played in Brazil, and the country has a considerable tradition in this sport. The greatest player in the history of the country is [[Hugo Calderano]], who reached number 3 in the world in 2022 (becoming the greatest [[Americas]] player of all time), and was the first South American to reach the quarterfinals of this sport at the Olympic Games. Other historically important players in the country are [[Gustavo Tsuboi]], [[Cláudio Kano]], [[Hugo Hoyama]], [[:pt:Biriba|Biriba]], [[Cazuo Matsumoto]], [[Thiago Monteiro (table tennis)|Thiago Monteiro]] and [[Bruna Takahashi]]. The best players from [[Argentina]] so far have been [[Liu Song (table tennis)|Liu Song]], [[Gastón Alto]] and [[Horacio Cifuentes]]. For Chile, the player [[Berta Rodríguez]] stood out.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/tenis-de-mesa/noticia/hugo-calderano-chega-ao-melhor-ranking-da-carreira-3o-do-mundo-no-tenis-de-mesa.ghtml|title=Hugo Calderano chega ao melhor ranking da carreira: 3º do mundo no tênis de mesa|date=January 30, 2022|website=ge}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.uol.com.br/esporte/olimpiadas/ultimas-noticias/2021/07/27/superado-hugo-hoyama-celebra-nova-marca-do-tenis-de-mesa-em-olimpiadas.htm|title=Superado, Hugo Hoyama celebra resultado de Hugo Calderano nas Olimpíadas|website=www.uol.com.br}}</ref> |
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=== Weightlifting === |
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Weightlifting is popular in [[Colombia]] and has been evolving in Brazil. Some of the top Colombian weightlifters are: [[María Isabel Urrutia]], [[Óscar Figueroa (weightlifter)|Óscar Figueroa]], [[Mabel Mosquera]] and [[Diego Fernando Salazar]]. The greatest exponent of this sport in Brazil were [[Fernando Reis]] and [[Laura Amaro]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cob.org.br/pt/cob/confederacoes/cblp/|title=Confederação Brasileira de Levantamento de Pesos}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/levantamento-de-peso/noticia/fernando-reis-herda-bronze-e-se-torna-1o-medalhista-do-brasil-em-um-mundial-de-levantamento-de-peso.ghtml|title=Fernando Reis herda bronze e se torna 1º medalhista do Brasil em um Mundial de levantamento de pesos|date=March 20, 2021|website=ge}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ge.globo.com/levantamento-de-peso/noticia/laura-amaro-conquista-a-prata-no-mundial-de-levantamento-de-peso.ghtml|title=Laura Amaro conquista a prata no Mundial de levantamento de peso|date=December 14, 2021|website=ge}}</ref> |
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=== Yachting and Equestrianism === |
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[[File:Robert Scheidt 2007.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Robert Scheidt]]]] |
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[[File:CHI Genève 2013 - 20131212 - Rodrigo Pessoa et Citizenguard Cadjanine Z.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Rodrigo Pessoa]]]] |
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Despite yachting and equestrianism being inaccessible sports for the general population, Brazil has a great tradition in yachting, and, to a lesser extent, but no less important, tradition in equestrianism. The biggest center for these sports in South America is [[Rio de Janeiro]] and its neighboring city [[Niterói]]. Several Olympic medalists in yachting have trained in [[Guanabara Bay]], such as [[Martine Grael]], [[Clinio Freitas]], [[Daniel Adler (sailor)|Daniel Adler]], [[Eduardo Penido]], [[Isabel Swan]], [[Henrique Pellicano|Kiko Pellicano]], [[Marcelo Ferreira]], [[Marcos Soares (sailor)|Marcos Soares]], [[Nelson Falcão]] and [[Ronaldo Senfft]]. The country also has olympic medalists from São Paulo [[Robert Scheidt]], [[Torben Grael]], [[Kahena Kunze]], [[Reinaldo Conrad]], [[Alexandre Welter]], [[Bruno Prada]] and [[Peter Ficker]]. In equestrianism, the [[Hipódromo da Gávea|Gávea Hippodrome]] trained athletes such as [[Rodrigo Pessoa]] and his father [[Nelson Pessoa]], as well as [[Luiz Felipe de Azevedo]]; the country also has olympic medalists from São Paulo [[Álvaro de Miranda Neto]] and from Rio Grande do Sul [[André Johannpeter]]. [[Argentina]] also trains high-level athletes in yachting, with some Olympic medals. [[Santiago Lange]] and [[Cecilia Carranza]] were Olympic champions in 2016, and the country still had 4 silvers and 5 bronzes in yachting by the 2020 games. The country has already won an Olympic silver in equestrian with [[Carlos Moratorio]]. [[Chile]] won 2 Olympic silvers in 1952 in equestrianism, mainly with the help of [[Óscar Cristi]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=November 4, 2019 |title=Veja a lista das medalhas do Brasil na história dos Jogos Olímpicos |url=https://ge.globo.com/olimpiadas/noticia/veja-a-lista-das-medalhas-do-brasil-na-historia-dos-jogos-olimpicos.ghtml |website=ge}}</ref> |
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Although South America has little tradition in [[fencing]], the continent has produced some renowned athletes. The Venezuelan [[Rubén Limardo]] was an Olympic champion in 2012 in [[Fencing at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's épée|Men's épée]], in addition to being twice a silver medalist at World Championships. For Brazil, [[Nathalie Moellhausen]] was world champion in 2019 for Brazil and in 2009 for Italy, and reached the quarter-finals of the 2016 Olympic Games in [[Fencing at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's épée|Women's épée]]. [[Guilherme Toldo]] reached the quarter-finals of the 2016 Summer Olympics in [[Fencing at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's foil|Men's foil]].<ref>[https://globoesporte.globo.com/esgrima/noticia/natalie-moelhausen-ganha-medalha-de-ouro-e-faz-historia-no-mundial-de-esgrima-da-hungria.ghtml Nathalie Moellhausen ganha medalha de ouro e faz história no Mundial de Esgrima da Hungria]</ref> |
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==Games== |
==Games== |
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Some of sports have different regional championships, for example [[Latin American Table Tennis Championships]] and [[Latin America Amateur Championship]] or [[Ibero-American Championships in Athletics]]. |
Some of sports have different regional championships, for example [[Latin American Table Tennis Championships]] and [[Latin America Amateur Championship]] or [[Ibero-American Championships in Athletics]]. |
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===Main Regions=== |
===Main Regions=== |
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* [[Americas]]: |
* [[Americas]]:[[Pan American Games]] |
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* [[South America]]: [[South American Championships]] |
* [[South America]]: [[South American Championships]] |
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* [[Ibero-America]]: Ibero American Championships (Athletics |
* [[Ibero-America]]: Ibero American Championships (Athletics and Weightlifting) |
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* [[Latin America]]: Latin American Championships (Table Tennis, Golf, [[Latin Cup (disambiguation)|Latin Cup]]) |
* [[Latin America]]: Latin American Championships (Table Tennis, Golf, [[Latin Cup (disambiguation)|Latin Cup]]) |
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* Andean States ([[Bolivarian Games]]) |
* Andean States ([[Bolivarian Games]]) |
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* [[Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas]] (Simon Bolivar Weightlifting Championships or Cups / Copa Simon Bolivar in Athletics)<ref>https://iwf.sport/results/results-by-events/results-by-events-old-bw/?event_year=2011</ref><ref>https://worldathletics.org/competition/calendar-results/results/7201425?eventId=10229618</ref> |
* [[Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas]] (Simon Bolivar Weightlifting Championships or Cups / Copa Simon Bolivar in Athletics)<ref>{{cite web | url=https://iwf.sport/results/results-by-events/results-by-events-old-bw/?event_year=2011 | title=Results by Events Old BW }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://worldathletics.org/competition/calendar-results/results/7201425?eventId=10229618 | title=Copa Simon Bolivar | Results | World Athletics }}</ref> |
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* [[Northern South America]] (Beach Soccer:[[Copa América de Beach Soccer]]) |
* [[Northern South America]] (Beach Soccer:[[Copa América de Beach Soccer]]) |
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* [[Southern Cone]] (Beach Soccer:[[Copa América de Beach Soccer]]) |
* [[Southern Cone]] (Beach Soccer:[[Copa América de Beach Soccer]]) |
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*[[Sport in Asia]] |
*[[Sport in Asia]] |
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*[[Sport in Europe]] |
*[[Sport in Europe]] |
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*[[Culture of Latin America#Sports|Sport in Latin America]] |
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*[[Sport in North America]] |
*[[Sport in North America]] |
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*[[Sport in Oceania]] |
*[[Sport in Oceania]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
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===Bibliography=== |
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{{refbegin}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Nauright |first=John |last2=Parrish |first2=Charles |title=Sports Around the World |publisher=ABC-CLIO |publication-place=Santa Barbara, Calif |date=2012-04-06 |isbn=978-1-59884-300-2}} |
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{{refend}} |
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{{Americas topic|Sport in}} |
{{Americas topic|Sport in}} |
Latest revision as of 01:25, 6 November 2024
Association football is the most popular sport in almost all South American countries. There are a wide range of sports played in the continent of South America. Popular sports include rugby union, baseball, basketball, tennis, golf, volleyball, hockey, beach volleyball, motorsports and cricket. South America held its first Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 2016. Two years prior to this, major cities in Brazil hosted the 2014 FIFA World Cup.
Team sports
[edit]Association football
[edit]South America and Europe share the supremacy over the sport, as all national team winners in FIFA World Cup history and all winning teams at the FIFA Club World Cup have come from these two continents. Brazil holds the world record at the FIFA World Cup with five titles in total. Argentina has three titles and Uruguay have two. So far four South American nations have hosted the tournament including its first edition in Uruguay (1930). The other three were Brazil (1950, 2014), Chile (1962), and Argentina (1978).
South America is home to the longest running international football tournament; Copa América, which has been regularly contested since 1916. Argentina have won the Copa América a record 16 times, followed by Uruguay with 15 titles and Brazil with 9.
About the FIFA Confederations Cup, Brazil is the biggest winner of all time with 4 titles. At the Olympic Games, Brazil has 2 titles, Argentina 2, and Uruguay 2. In the FIFA U-20 World Cup, Argentina has 6 titles, Brazil 5 and Uruguay 1. In the FIFA U-17 World Cup, Brazil has 4 titles.
The continent has produced many of the most famous and most talented players in history, including Pelé, Garrincha, Ronaldo, Roberto Carlos, Romário, Ronaldinho, Zico, Nílton Santos, Djalma Santos, Taffarel, Falcão, Rivaldo and Neymar (Brazil); Maradona, Messi, Di Stéfano, Batistuta, Passarella, Mario Kempes (Argentina); Luis Suárez, Enzo Francescoli, Cavani, Forlán, Obdulio Varela (Uruguay); Elías Figueroa, Iván Zamorano, Marcelo Salas, Alexis Sánchez (Chile); Carlos Valderrama, Radamel Falcao, James Rodríguez (Colombia); Carlos Gamarra, Romerito, Arsenio Erico (Paraguay); Álex Aguinaga, Alberto Spencer (Ecuador); Teófilo Cubillas, César Cueto, Claudio Pizarro (Peru).[1][2][3]
At club level, teams like São Paulo, Palmeiras, Santos, Fluminense, Vasco, Botafogo, Internacional, Grêmio, Atlético Mineiro, Cruzeiro and Atlético Paranaense (Brazil); Boca Juniors, River Plate, Independiente, Estudiantes, Vélez Sarsfield, Racing and San Lorenzo (Argentina); Peñarol and Nacional (Uruguay); Atlético Nacional (Colombia); L.D.U. Quito and Independiente del Valle (Ecuador); Olimpia and Cerro Porteño (Paraguay) are among the main football clubs in the world.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]
Variations: futsal, beach soccer, footvolley
[edit]Brazil invented some variations of football, such as beach soccer and footvolley. Futsal, having been invented in Uruguay, neighboring Brazil, is also widely practiced in the country, mainly in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, neighboring Uruguay.[11]
In futsal, Brazil, Argentina, Colombia and Paraguay are among the greatest world powers. Before the Fifa tournament, since 1982 there is the Futsal World Championship, organized by the former International Federation of Indoor Soccer (Fifusa) and now by the current AMF, where Paraguay are the current AMF world champions with four, Colombia three, Brazil & Argentina twice, and Venezuela once. In the Fifa tournaments, Brazil is the biggest champion of the FIFA Futsal World Cup, with 5 titles, with Argentina having a title in 2016. Falcão is the most renowned male Brazilian player.[12]
In beach soccer, Brazil and Uruguay are among the world's greatest powers, with Brazil being the biggest champion of the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup, with 5 titles. In addition, it has nine world titles from the former competition organized by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), the Beach Soccer World Championships.[13]
Footvolley is a recreational sport widely practiced on Brazilian beaches, mainly in Rio de Janeiro, where it was invented.[11]
Baseball
[edit]Baseball is the most popular sport in Venezuela. In Colombia, Baseball is very popular in their north region, and has been gaining popularity recently in the other regions of Colombia. A wide list of players from Venezuela and Colombia are in the major leagues in the United States. Both countries are the only ones in this region to participate in the World Baseball Classic (plus Brazil) and the Caribbean Series.
Basketball
[edit]Basketball is particularly popular in South America. One of the most important achievements was the Argentina gold medal in Men's basketball at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Argentina won the World Championship in 1950. In Brazil, basketball became popular with the Brazil men's national basketball team winning the World Championship two times (1959, 1963) and the Olympic bronze 3 times. Oscar Schmidt is the most renowned male Brazilian player. The Brazil women's national basketball team is also one of the best teams in the world having won the 1994 FIBA World Championship for Women, obtained the Olympic runner-up in 1996 and the Olympic bronze medal in 2000, and with three players in the Hall of Fame: Hortência Marcari, Maria Paula Silva and Janeth Arcain. Also, in Venezuela, Uruguay, Chile, Colombia and Paraguay, basketball is widely played & very popular.[14][15]
The FIBA World Cup took place in South America seven times: Argentina (1950, 1990), Brazil (1954, 1963), Chile (1959), Uruguay (1967) and Colombia (1982).
Cricket
[edit]Cricket is the most popular sport in Guyana. Apart from there, is mostly played in the Southern Cone, especially in areas settled by English people. Although a number of South American nations have teams, none of them are major, except for the Guyana national cricket team, which plays in inter-regional competitions in the Caribbean. Guyana is also an independent nation represented by the West Indies cricket team, the only team in the Americas with Test status.
South American Cricket Championship is a limited overs cricket tournament played since 1995 between the national teams of the continent with North American teams also often invited to participate. It is currently played annually but until 2013 was usually played biennially.
Variants of street cricket are also played, such as bete-ombro in Brazil.
Field Hockey
[edit]Very popular in Argentina (2 times World Champion). The women's national team Las Leonas is one of the world's most successful, with five Olympic medals, two World Cups, a World League and seven Champions Trophy.[16] The national team won the World Cup in 2002 and 2010. At the Olympic Games, it won the silver medal in 2000, 2012 and 2020, as well as bronze in 2004 and 2008. Las Leonas also won the annual Champions Trophy on seven occasions, in 2001, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2014 and 2016 and the World League 2014–2015. Luciana Aymar is recognized as the best female player in the history of the sport,[17] being the only player to have received the FIH Player of the Year Award eight times.[18]
The men's national team Los Leones won the gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal at the 2014 World Cup and 2008 Champions Trophy. The national squad also won Pan American Games on ten occasions and the 2005, 2007 and 2012 Champions Challenges.
Rink Hockey
[edit]Argentina has won the world cup in 5 times.
Handball
[edit]Handball is a sport that came with German immigrants, which is very popular in schools around South America. It's the second most practiced sport in schools in Brazil. The Brazil men's national handball team is considered the best in South America, with the Argentina men's national handball team being its biggest rival. The biggest highlight in South America, however, has been the Brazil women's national handball team, which, in the 2013 World Championship, were crowned world champions for the first time. They also finished 5th at the 2016 Summer Olympics.[19][20]
Polo
[edit]Polo is popular in some parts of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay. South America is the biggest winner of the World Polo Championship, with Argentina having 5 titles, Brazil 3 and Chile 2. Adolfo Cambiaso is an Argentine polo player considered one of the greatest references in the history of this sport.[21]
Rugby union
[edit]Rugby union is becoming popular in South America, following the recent successes of Argentina in recent Rugby World Cup competitions (3rd place in 2007 and 4th place in 2015). The popularity of the game has spread across the continent. Uruguay, Paraguay, Colombia, Brazil, Chile, Venezuela, Guyana, Peru and Bolivia all have Rugby Federations.[22]
Volleyball
[edit]Volleyball is the second most popular sport in Brazil. The Brazilian men's team has 6 Olympic medals (3 gold, 3 silver), 7 World Championship medals (3 gold, 3 silver, 1 bronze) and has won nine World Leagues, while Brazil's women's team has won two gold, one silver and three bronze medals at the Olympic Games, in addition to four runners-up and a third place at World Championships. In the 1980s, Peru women's national volleyball team was one of the strongest in the world, winning an Olympic silver medal in 1988, as well as a silver medal in 1982 and a bronze in 1986 at the World Championships. Argentina men's national volleyball team has won 2 Olympic bronzes in 1988 and 2020, and a bronze at the 1982 World Championship.[23][24][25]
Beach Volleyball
[edit]Brazil is one of the strongest countries in the world in beach volleyball, a sport widely practiced in the country due to its long coastline, mainly in Rio de Janeiro and in the Northeast Region of the country. Until the 2024 Summer Olympic Games, the country had 3 golds, 3 silvers and 2 bronze in the men's event, and 1 gold, 4 silvers and 2 bronzes in the women's events. Argentina, Chile and Venezuela usually send representatives to the Olympic Games, but without any significant results so far. In World Championships, in addition to several titles obtained by Brazilians, the Argentines Mariano Baracetti and Martín Conde were world champions in 2001.[26]
Individual sports
[edit]Archery
[edit]Marcus Vinicius D'Almeida, in the recurve bow category, is the greatest male archery athlete in the history of South America, having been number 1 in the world in 2023, and world runner-up in 2021. The Chilean Denisse van Lamoen won a world title in the recurve bow in 2011, and the Colombian Natalia Sánchez was a world bronze medalist in 2009. In the Compound bow (which does not participate in the Olympic Games), The Colombian Sara López, multiple world champion, stands out.[27][28]
Athletics
[edit]South America has a number of historically important and some legendary athletes in track and field. In Brazil, the following stand out: Adhemar Ferreira da Silva, Joaquim Cruz, Maurren Maggi, Thiago Braz, Vanderlei Cordeiro de Lima, João Carlos de Oliveira, Robson Caetano, Fabiana Murer, Alison dos Santos, Nélson Prudêncio, Jadel Gregório, Zequinha Barbosa, Sanderlei Parrela, Claudinei Quirino, Vicente de Lima, André Domingos, Édson Ribeiro,Caio Bonfim, Rosângela Santos, Letícia Oro Melo, Mauro Vinícius da Silva and Darlan Romani. Colombia with Caterine Ibargüen, Ximena Restrepo, Anthony Zambrano and Sandra Arenas, Venezuela with Yulimar Rojas, Ecuador with Jefferson Pérez, Argentina with Delfo Cabrera, Juan Carlos Zabala, Noemí Simonetto de Portela and Reinaldo Gorno also contribute to the evolution of sport on the continent. The continent has a great tradition in competitions such as the triple jump, and hosts important events such as the Saint Silvester Road Race.[29][30][31]
Canoeing
[edit]The Brazilian Isaquias Queiroz is the best canoeist in the history of South America, being the only Olympic champion of this modality on the continent and adding a total of four Olympic medals until the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Erlon Silva also won Olympic silver for Brazil in canoeing.[32][33]
Chess
[edit]Chess is a sport with many fans in South America. The continent has produced some great players such as Argentine Miguel Najdorf (known for the Najdorf Variation), and Brazilians Henrique Mecking (3rd best in the world in 1977) and Luis Paulo Supi (who defeated world champion Magnus Carlsen).[34][35][36][37][38]
Combat sports
[edit]Boxing
[edit]Boxing is particularly strong in South America, with several world and Olympic champions born in the continent. In Argentina, the most historically important boxers are:Carlos Monzón, Horacio Accavallo, Santos Laciar, Juan Martín Coggi, Nicolino Locche, Víctor Galíndez, Jorge Castro, Marcela Acuña and. Sergio Martínez. In Brazil, Eder Jofre, Acelino Freitas, Miguel de Oliveira, Valdemir Pereira, Rose Volante and Patrick Teixeira are former world champions, while Adilson Rodrigues was an important Heavyweight of the 1980s and 1990s; Robson Conceição and Hebert Conceição were Olympic champions, and other Olympic medalists were Servílio de Oliveira, Yamaguchi Falcão, Esquiva Falcão, Abner Teixeira, Adriana Araújo and Beatriz Ferreira.[39][40]
Venezuela and Colombia have also had strong eras in boxing. Venezuela particularly in the 1970s and 1980s with champions like Betulio Gonzalez and Rafael Orono, and Colombia with boxers such as Rodrigo Valdez, Antonio Cervantes and Miguel Lora.
Brazilian jiu-jitsu, vale tudo, and mixed martial arts
[edit]Mixed martial arts is one of the most popular sports in Brazil.[41]
Brazilian jiu-jitsu originated in Brazil in the 1910s, and emphasizes ground fighting techniques and submission holds involving joint-locks and chokeholds. Hélio Gracie had a rather small build and changed jiu-jitsu (originating from Japan) to be used by anyone in a real fight situation. The belt progression system goes in the following order: White, Blue, Purple, Brown, Black, Red-black, and Red. Gracie Jiu Jitsu became known internationally in the 1990s, due to the very skilled fighters in the Gracie family, namely Hélio Gracie, Royce Gracie, and Rickson Gracie, which are also responsible for spreading the practice of vale tudo, meaning "anything goes", which evolved into mixed martial arts tournaments such as PRIDE, DREAM, and the Ultimate Fighting Championship. Many Brazilian fighters have become significant figures in various mixed martial art tournaments abroad, some notable Brazilian fighters in these tournaments include Anderson Silva, José Aldo, Wanderlei Silva, Minotauro, Vitor Belfort, Mauricio Rua, Murilo Bustamante, Junior dos Santos, Rafael dos Anjos, Fabricio Werdum, Lyoto Machida, Alex Pereira and Amanda Nunes. Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador and Uruguay have already had some fighters in MMA, but to this day none of them have won the title of champion.[42][43][44][45]
Fencing
[edit]Although South America has little tradition in fencing, the continent has produced some renowned athletes. The Venezuelan Rubén Limardo was an Olympic champion in 2012 in Men's épée, in addition to being twice a silver medalist at World Championships. For Brazil, Nathalie Moellhausen was world champion in 2019 for Brazil and in 2009 for Italy, and reached the quarter-finals of the 2016 Olympic Games in Women's épée. Guilherme Toldo reached the quarter-finals of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Men's foil.[46]
Judo
[edit]Brazil is one of the greatest world powers in judo, a sport developed in the country thanks to its large Japanese community. The greatest exponents of the sport until today were Aurélio Miguel, Sarah Menezes and Rogério Sampaio, Olympic champions. Brazil also had several other important judo athletes, such as the Olympic runners-up Douglas Vieira, Tiago Camilo, Carlos Honorato, and the Olympic bronze medalists Chiaki Ishii, Luiz Onmura, Walter Carmona, Henrique Guimarães, Leandro Guilheiro, Flávio Canto, Ketleyn Quadros, Felipe Kitadai, Mayra Aguiar, Daniel Cargnin and Rafael Silva.[47][48] The sport has also been developing lately in Argentina, with judokas like Paula Pareto, and in Colombia, with judokas like Yuri Alvear.[47][49][48]
Taekwondo
[edit]In taekwondo, in 1992, when it was still an Olympic demonstration sport, the Venezuelan Arlindo Gouveia was champion and Adriana Carmona was a bronze medalist (later she would be a bronze medalist in 2004, officially). Another Venezuelan, Dalia Contreras, was a bronze medalist in 2008. Brazilian Natália Falavigna was a bronze medalist in 2008 and 4th place in 2004. Maicon Siqueira won bronze in 2016. Diogo Silva finished 4th in 2004 and 2012, and Milena Titoneli finished 4th in 2020. Argentina's biggest highlights are Sebastián Crismanich, Olympic champion in 2012, and Gabriel Taraburelli who finished 4th place in 2000. For Colombia, Óscar Muñoz was bronze in 2012, and Gladys Mora finished 4th in 2004. The Peruvian Peter López Santos came in 4th place in 2008.[50]
Cycling
[edit]Cycling in Colombia became very popular with the beginning of the annual Vuelta a Colombia race in 1951, followed by the annual Clásico RCN starting in 1961. The triumphs of Martín Emilio "Cochise" Rodríguez in European cycling competitions increased the sport's popularity, which in turn helped to develop the Colombian Cycling Federation. Rodriguez was followed by professional Colombian cyclists known as the "Colombian beetles", which include up to this date Luis "Lucho" Herrera, Luis Felipe Laverde, Fabio Parra, Víctor Hugo Peña, Santiago Botero, Mauricio Soler. The "escarabajo" (beetle) nickname was coined by radio announcer José Enrique Buitrago, while watching Ramón Hoyos climb a hill ahead of French professional racer José Beyaert during the 1955 Vuelta a Colombia.[51]
Colombian cycling has enjoyed a renaissance in the early 2010s, with Colombian riders enjoying international success.[52][53][54][55] One of the factors cited for this success has been the establishment of the 4-72 Colombia cycling team (formerly known as Colombia es Pasión-Café de Colombia), which has developed several cyclists who have gone on to compete for UCI Worldteams.[53][56] The government-backed Colombia–Coldeportes cycling team competed at the 2013 Giro d'Italia, and was the first all-Colombian team to do so for 21 years.[54] The team aimed to secure UCI ProTeam status and compete in the Tour de France,[57] however the team announced its disbanding in October 2015 due to the withdrawal of financial support from Coldeportes, the Colombian government's sports ministry. Riders who graduated to the UCI World Tour from the team included Esteban Chaves and Darwin Atapuma.[58] High-profile riders emerging in this period include Nairo Quintana, Rigoberto Urán, Sergio Henao, Carlos Betancur and Mariana Pajón. The two main strongholds of the sport in Colombia are the Altiplano Cundiboyacense in the centre of the country and Antioquia in the west, both being mountainous regions.[59]
Some of the top Colombian cyclists are:
- María Luisa Calle, bronze medal winner in the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens and World Champion.
- Fabio Parra, 3rd place in the tour de France, 1988
- Santiago Botero, Time trial world champion
- Martín Emilio "Cochise" Rodríguez, Hour world record holder and world champion in 4,000 m pursuit.
- Marlon Pérez, Youth World Champion in the points race, 1994
- Efraín Domínguez, Double world record in kilometer and 200 m pushed 1987
- Luis "Lucho" Herrera, "El jardinerito", Champion of the Dauphiné Libéré (1988, 1991) and Vuelta a España (1987), first non-European to win the Tour de France Mountains classification (1985)
- Martín Ramírez, Champion Dauphiné Libéré 1984
- Alfonso Flórez Ortiz, Champion Tour de l'Avenir 1980
- Víctor Hugo Peña, one of only three Colombian cyclists to have ever worn the yellow jersey in the Tour de France (2003).
- Rigoberto Urán, silver medal winner in the Men's Olympic Road Race, 2012 Summer Olympics, second place in the Giro d'Italia (2013, 2014), second place in the Tour de France (2017).
- Mariana Pajón, gold medal winner at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the women's BMX event, gold medal winner at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the women's BMX event.
- Carlos Oquendo, bronze medal winner at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the men's BMX event.
- Nairo Quintana, 2nd place overall in the Tour de France, 2013, 1st place overall Tour of the Basque Country, 2013, 1st place overall Vuelta a Burgos, 2013, 1st place overall Giro d'Italia 2014, winner of Tirreno–Adriatico 2015, 1st place overall Vuelta a España 2016.
- Edwin Ávila, double track cycling world champion in the points race (2011,2014).
- Esteban Chaves, second place in the Giro d'Italia (2016)
- Carlos Ramírez placed third at the 2016 Summer Olympics in men's BMX
- Iván Sosa, 1st place overall in the 2018 Vuelta a Burgos
- Fernando Gaviria wearer of the Yellow Jersey in the 2018 Tour de France
- Egan Bernal winner of the general and youth classifications in the 2019 Tour de France and 2021 Giro d'Italia
Golf
[edit]Golf is growing in popularity in both Brazil and Argentina but is not widely played elsewhere in South America. Bolivia has the highest tournament class golf course in the world.
Gymnastics
[edit]Brazil has a large training center for Olympic athletes in artistic gymnastics, which has already revealed athletes such as Rebeca Andrade, Arthur Zanetti, Daiane dos Santos, Jade Barbosa, Flávia Saraiva, Arthur Mariano, Diego Hypólito and Daniele Hypólito.[60] In Chile, Tomás González reached 4th place in the floor and vault events at the 2012 London Olympics.[61][62] In rhythmic gymnastics, the Brazilian team won an unprecedented bronze in the general event of the Athens, Greece stage of the Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup, held in March 2023.[63]
Jai Alai
[edit]Jai alai or Basque pelota is played in many parts of South America. Although this sport is mostly played in Spain and France, there are federations of Basque ball in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. Due to the origin of the game, there are many good players who are Basques, either natives or from the Basque diaspora.[64]
Modern pentathlon
[edit]Yane Marques is the only person born in South America to win an Olympic medal in modern pentathlon (until the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games), having also been the first person in Latin America to do so.[65]
Motorsports
[edit]South America have several drivers who won the Formula One championship multiple times, including five-time champion Juan Fangio of Argentina, and Brazilian drivers Emerson Fittipaldi (2 titles), Nelson Piquet (3 titles), and Ayrton Senna (3 titles). Brazil has hosted the Brazilian Grand Prix every year since 1973 and the Argentine Grand Prix has hosted Formula One on 20 occasions.
In Motos, South America had notable drivers as Johnny Cecotto, Carlos Lavado, Alex Barros, Sebastian Porto, Martín Cárdenas and Yonny Hernández. Also, South America has hosted the Moto GP in Venezuela (1977–1979), Brazil (1987–1989, 1992; 1995–1997, 1999–2004 as Rio Grand Prix) and Argentina (1961–1963, 1981–1982, 1987, 1994–1995, 1998–1999, 2014–2019, 2022-2023).
The Dakar Rally is also hosted by South America from 2009 to 2019 (mostly in Chile and Argentina).
-
Ayrton Senna, the most successful Brazilian driver in Formula One
Skateboarding
[edit]Skateboarding is very popular in Brazil, especially in large urban centers. The country has internationally renowned skaters like Bob Burnquist, Sandro Dias, Rayssa Leal, Pedro Barros, Kelvin Hoefler, Pâmela Rosa and Letícia Bufoni. Peru is a country that shows a certain degree of development in skateboarding, having sent representatives like Ángelo Caro to World Championships and the Olympics.[66]
Surfing
[edit]Surfing is very popular in Brazil. The country has progressively evolved to become one of the biggest forces in the sport in the world. Fábio Gouveia reached number 5 in the world in 1992. In the 2010s, the Brazilian Storm appears, with several Brazilians getting closer to the world title, until Gabriel Medina conquers the same in 2014 and Adriano de Souza wins in 2015. In 2020 surfing ascends to the category of Olympic sport and Ítalo Ferreira becomes Olympic champion. Filipe Toledo was also world champion, in 2022. Peru also has renowned surfers such as Lucca Mesinas and Miguel Tudela.[67][68]
Swimming
[edit]Brazil is the greatest South American power in swimming, competing on an equal footing with the world's powers in this sport, especially in men's swimming. Some of the greatest exponents of Brazilian swimming history are: César Cielo, Ricardo Prado, Gustavo Borges, Fernando Scherer, Thiago Pereira, Djan Madruga, Bruno Fratus, Manuel dos Santos, Tetsuo Okamoto, Nicholas Santos, Felipe França, Fernando Scheffer, Kaio de Almeida, João Gomes Júnior, Felipe Lima, Guilherme Costa, Ana Marcela Cunha, Etiene Medeiros and Poliana Okimoto. Argentina was the main force on the continent until the 1960s, with historically important swimmers such as Luis Nicolao, José Meolans and Georgina Bardach. Other countries like Venezuela (with Francisco Sánchez, Rafael Vidal and Albert Subirats) and Chile (with Kristel Kobrich) tend to reveal talent from time to time. Brazil hosted the 1995 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m) and won the 2014 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m).[69][70]
Tennis
[edit]South America has produced a number of talented tennis players such as Maria Bueno, the greatest South American tennis player, three-time French Open winner Gustavo Kuerten, four-time Grand Slam and Masters winner Guillermo Vilas, the first Latin American ranked number 1 in Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Marcelo Ríos, the first Latin American World number 1 in women tennis and the first Latin American to win a Grand Slam Anita Lizana, US Open winner Gabriela Sabatini, French Open winners Gastón Gaudio and Andrés Gómez, 2009 US Open winner Juan Martín del Potro, and double Olympic Gold medalist Nicolás Massú. In doubles, the continent has already produced players like Marcelo Melo, Bruno Soares, Luisa Stefani, Juan Sebastián Cabal and Robert Farah. The continent hosts ATP tournaments, such as the ATP 500 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and the ATP 250 in Buenos Aires and Córdoba, in Argentina, and the ATP 250 in Chile. Argentina was Davis Cup champion in 2016, and Brazil was a semi-finalist twice, in 1992 and 2000. Chile has already reached the quarterfinals three times.[71][72]
Table tennis
[edit]Table tennis is very popular and widely played in Brazil, and the country has a considerable tradition in this sport. The greatest player in the history of the country is Hugo Calderano, who reached number 3 in the world in 2022 (becoming the greatest Americas player of all time), and was the first South American to reach the quarterfinals of this sport at the Olympic Games. Other historically important players in the country are Gustavo Tsuboi, Cláudio Kano, Hugo Hoyama, Biriba, Cazuo Matsumoto, Thiago Monteiro and Bruna Takahashi. The best players from Argentina so far have been Liu Song, Gastón Alto and Horacio Cifuentes. For Chile, the player Berta Rodríguez stood out.[73][74]
Weightlifting
[edit]Weightlifting is popular in Colombia and has been evolving in Brazil. Some of the top Colombian weightlifters are: María Isabel Urrutia, Óscar Figueroa, Mabel Mosquera and Diego Fernando Salazar. The greatest exponent of this sport in Brazil were Fernando Reis and Laura Amaro.[75][76][77]
Yachting and Equestrianism
[edit]Despite yachting and equestrianism being inaccessible sports for the general population, Brazil has a great tradition in yachting, and, to a lesser extent, but no less important, tradition in equestrianism. The biggest center for these sports in South America is Rio de Janeiro and its neighboring city Niterói. Several Olympic medalists in yachting have trained in Guanabara Bay, such as Martine Grael, Clinio Freitas, Daniel Adler, Eduardo Penido, Isabel Swan, Kiko Pellicano, Marcelo Ferreira, Marcos Soares, Nelson Falcão and Ronaldo Senfft. The country also has olympic medalists from São Paulo Robert Scheidt, Torben Grael, Kahena Kunze, Reinaldo Conrad, Alexandre Welter, Bruno Prada and Peter Ficker. In equestrianism, the Gávea Hippodrome trained athletes such as Rodrigo Pessoa and his father Nelson Pessoa, as well as Luiz Felipe de Azevedo; the country also has olympic medalists from São Paulo Álvaro de Miranda Neto and from Rio Grande do Sul André Johannpeter. Argentina also trains high-level athletes in yachting, with some Olympic medals. Santiago Lange and Cecilia Carranza were Olympic champions in 2016, and the country still had 4 silvers and 5 bronzes in yachting by the 2020 games. The country has already won an Olympic silver in equestrian with Carlos Moratorio. Chile won 2 Olympic silvers in 1952 in equestrianism, mainly with the help of Óscar Cristi.[78]
Games
[edit]Core Games
[edit]- South American Games
- South American Beach Games
- South American Masters Games
- South American University Games
- Bolivarian Games
- ALBA Games
- Ibero American Games
- South American Deaf Games
- South American Blind Games
- South American Schools Games
- Latin American University Games
- Latin American Transplant Games
- Latin American Special Olympics Games
Related Games
[edit]- Pan American Games
- Parapan American Games
- Pan American Schools Games
- Pan American University Games
- Pan American Masters Games
- Central American and Caribbean Games
- Caribbean Games
- World Indigenous Games
- Indigenous Peoples' Games
- Pacific Ocean Games
Regions Championships
[edit]Some of sports have different regional championships, for example Latin American Table Tennis Championships and Latin America Amateur Championship or Ibero-American Championships in Athletics.
Main Regions
[edit]- Americas:Pan American Games
- South America: South American Championships
- Ibero-America: Ibero American Championships (Athletics and Weightlifting)
- Latin America: Latin American Championships (Table Tennis, Golf, Latin Cup)
Sub Regions
[edit]- Andean States (Bolivarian Games)
- Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas (Simon Bolivar Weightlifting Championships or Cups / Copa Simon Bolivar in Athletics)[79][80]
- Northern South America (Beach Soccer:Copa América de Beach Soccer)
- Southern Cone (Beach Soccer:Copa América de Beach Soccer)
- Pacific Rim (Pacific Rim Championships, Pan Pacific Swimming Championships)
Tournaments
[edit]For National Teams
- Copa América
- Copa América de Futsal
- Copa América de Beach Soccer
- South American Basketball Championship
- South America Volleyball Championship
- South American Handball Championship
- South American Baseball Championship
- South American Cricket Championship
- South American Rugby Championship
- Roller Hockey Pan American Championships
- Men's South American Hockey Championship
For Clubs
- Copa Libertadores
- Copa Libertadores de Futsal
- Copa Libertadores de Fútbol Playa
- Campeonato Sudamericano de Clubes Campeones de Básquetbol
- South American Volleyball Club Championship
- South American Men's Club Handball Championship
- Super Rugby Americas
- Roller Hockey South American Club Championship
See also
[edit]- Sport in Africa
- Sport in Asia
- Sport in Europe
- Sport in Latin America
- Sport in North America
- Sport in Oceania
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Bibliography
[edit]- Nauright, John; Parrish, Charles (2012-04-06). Sports Around the World. Santa Barbara, Calif: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-300-2.