European Youth Olympic Festival

The European Youth Olympic Festival (EYOF) is a biennial multi-sport event for youth (14 to 18 years old[1]) athletes from the 50 member countries of the association of European Olympic Committees. The festival has a summer edition, held for the first time in Brussels in 1991, and a winter edition, which began two years later in Aosta. It was known as the European Youth Olympic Days from 1991 to 1999.[2]

History

The event is run by the European Olympic Committees, under the patronage of the International Olympic Committee, and was the first multi-sport event in the Olympic tradition specifically for European athletes; it predates its senior equivalent, the European Games by some 24 years, and the Youth Olympic Games by 19 years.

The event should not be confused with the various European junior and youth championships in individual sports, such as the European Junior Athletics Championships which are organised by sporting federations.

Editions

Summer

European Summer Youth Olympic Festival
Year Edition Host city Host nation Sports Events Nations Start date End date Competitors Top nation
1991 1 Brussels Belgium 9 70 33 12 July 21 July 2,084  France
1993 2 Valkenswaard Netherlands 10 86 43 3 July 9 July 1,874  Russia
1995 3 Bath Great Britain 10 86 47 9 July 14 July 1,709 Great Britain
1997 4 Lisbon Portugal 10 86 47 18 July 24 July 2,500  Russia
1999 5 Esbjerg Denmark 11 84 48 10 July 16 July 2,324  Russia
2001 6 Murcia Spain 10 90 48 3 July 9 July 2,500  Russia
2003 7 Paris France 10 95 48 28 July 2 August 2,500  Russia
2005 8 Lignano Sabbiadoro Italy 11 109 48 3 July 8 July 3,965  Russia
2007 9 Belgrade Serbia 11 100 49 22 July 27 July 3,000  Russia
2009 10 Tampere Finland 9 109 49 19 July 26 July 3,302  Russia
2011 11 Trabzon Turkey 9 109 49 24 July 29 July 3,138  Russia
2013 12 Utrecht Netherlands 9 111 49 14 July 19 July 3,143  Russia
2015 13 Tbilisi Georgia 9 112 50 26 July 1 August 3,304  Russia
2017 14 Győr Hungary 10 130 50 22 July 30 July 3,675  Russia
2019 15 Baku Azerbaijan 10 135 48 20 July 28 July 2,700  Russia
2022 16 Banská Bystrica Slovakia 10 120 48 24 July 30 July 2,252  Italy
2023 17 Maribor Slovenia 10 122 48 23 July 29 July 2,419  Italy
2025 18 Skopje North Macedonia 13 151 49 20 July 26 July 4,000  Italy
2027 19 Lignano Sabbiadoro Italy
2029 20 Flanders Belgium
2031 21 Liepāja Latvia

Winter

Host cities of the European Winter Youth Olympic Festival
European Winter Youth Olympic Festival
Year Edition Host city Host nation Sports Events Nations Start date End date Competitors Top nation
1993 1 Aosta Italy 5 17 33 7 February 10 February 708  Russia
1995 2 Andorra la Vella Andorra 4 17 40 4 February 10 February 740  Italy
1997 3 Sundsvall Sweden 6 27 41 7 February 13 February 991  Russia
1999 4 Poprad-Tatry Slovakia 7 27 40 6 March 12 March 819  Russia
2001 5 Vuokatti Finland 7 28 40 11 March 15 March 1,111  Russia
2003 6 Bled Slovenia 7 28 41 25 January 31 January 1,242  Russia
2005 7 Monthey Switzerland 8 35 41 23 January 28 January 1,184  Russia
2007 8 Jaca Spain 6 20 43 18 February 23 February 1,284  Russia
2009 9 Silesia Poland 9 31 47 15 February 20 February 1,615  Russia
2011 10 Liberec Czech Republic 8 28 44 13 February 18 February 1,492  Germany
2013 11 Braşov Romania 8 36 45 17 February 22 February 1,465  Russia
2015 12 Vorarlberg-Liechtenstein Austria
Liechtenstein
8 30 45 25 January 30 January 1,509  Russia
2017 13 Erzurum Turkey 9 38 34 12 February 17 February 1,241  Russia
2019 14 Sarajevo-East Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina 8 32 46 10 February 15 February 1,537  Norway
2022 15 Vuokatti Finland 9 39 46 20 March 25 March 932  Finland
2023 16 Friuli-Venezia Giulia Italy 12 59 47 21 January 28 January 1,252  France
2025 17 Bakuriani Georgia 8 38 45 9 February 16 February 901  Italy
2027 18 Braşov Romania
2029 19 Liberec Czech Republic


Sports

Summer Games

Sport (discipline) 91 93 95 97 99 01 03 05 07 09 11 13 15 17 19 22 23 25
Current summer sports
 
Athletics
Badminton
Basketball
Canoeing
Cycling
Gymnastics
Handball
Judo
Shooting
Swimming
Table tennis
Taekwondo
Volleyball
Discontinued summer sports
Field hockey
Football
Sailing
Skateboarding
Tennis
Water polo
Wrestling

Winter Games

Sport (discipline) 93 95 97 99 01 03 05 07 09 11 13 15 17 19 22 23 25
Current winter sports
 
Alpine skiing
Biathlon
Cross-country skiing
Figure skating
Freestyle skiing
Ice hockey
Short-track speed skating
Snowboarding
Discontinued winter sports
Curling
Ski jumping
Nordic combined
Ski mountaineering
Speed skating

All-time medal table

Combined medal table

From 1991 to 2025 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival.

European Youth Olympic Festival medal table
RankNOCGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia (RUS)369241199809
2 Italy (ITA)216203206625
3 Great Britain (GBR)175139135449
4 France (FRA)166172181519
5 Germany (GER)138167179484
6 Hungary (HUN)11799135351
7 Spain (ESP)9289100281
8 Ukraine (UKR)89101113303
9 Poland (POL)7282113267
10 Romania (ROU)709787254
11 Netherlands (NED)676698231
12 Sweden (SWE)617060191
13 Austria (AUT)546279195
14 Slovenia (SLO)545969182
15 Turkey (TUR)544965168
16 Finland (FIN)526264178
17 Norway (NOR)526260174
18 Switzerland (SUI)507079199
19 Belgium (BEL)495470173
20 Czech Republic (CZE)475780184
21 Azerbaijan (AZE)352959123
22 Croatia (CRO)32323498
23 Belarus (BLR)313156118
24 Georgia (GEO)313054115
25 Slovakia (SVK)23254290
26 Denmark (DEN)23213680
27 Israel (ISR)22212568
28 Lithuania (LTU)21212668
29 Serbia (SRB)19272571
30 Estonia (EST)18241759
31 Ireland (IRL)15293478
32 Portugal (POR)15152656
33 Greece (GRE)13263675
34 Latvia (LAT)13231955
35 Soviet Union (URS)125724
36 Bulgaria (BUL)11252157
37 Moldova (MDA)1181837
38 Cyprus (CYP)66820
39 NOC Belarus54413
40 Yugoslavia (YUG)43613
41 Luxembourg (LUX)4217
42 Armenia (ARM)321116
43 Iceland (ISL)3137
44 Bosnia and Herzegovina (BIH)24511
45 Czechoslovakia (TCH)2204
46 Serbia and Montenegro (SCG)1629
47 Montenegro (MNE)1225
48 Kosovo (KOS)1012
49 Albania (ALB)0011
 Andorra (AND)0011
 Malta (MLT)0011
Totals (51 entries)2,4212,4252,7537,599

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sports Events". European Olympic Committees. Archived from the original on 11 July 2022. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  2. ^ Bell, Daniel (2003). Encyclopedia of International Games. McFarland and Company, Inc. Publishers, Jefferson, North Carolina. ISBN 0-7864-1026-4.