Wrestling olympics 2024

United World Wrestling has released the qualifying procedures for the 2024 Paris Olympic Games. There will be a 3-step process that will result in 16 total qualifiers for each Olympic weight in all three styles. Check out a breakdown of the qualifying process below.

Step 1 - 5 Qualifiers From World Championships

  • All 4 medalists at each Olympic weight
  • Winner of the wrestle-off between bronze medal losers at the Olympic weights

This is the first major change from the Tokyo Olympic qualifying process. At the 2019 World Championships, any wrestler who competed in a medal match automatically qualified their country for the Olympics in that weight. Now, the losers of each bronze medal match will wrestle off with an Olympic qualifying spot on the line. 

Step 2 - 8 Qualifiers From 4 Continental Tournaments

  • 2 Finalists at each Olympic weight from the Pan-Am, Asian, African, and European continental Olympic qualifying tournaments

This is the only step of the qualifying process that stays the same as the 2020 Olympic qualifying process. Finalists from each continental tournament will qualify for the Olympics resulting in 8 total qualifiers at each weight. 

Step 3 - 3 Qualifiers From 2024 World Olympic Qualifier

  • 2 Finalists at each Olympic weight
  • Winner of the wrestle-off between two bronze medal winners

Again, this is a change from the Tokyo Olympic qualifying process. In 2021 only the finalists qualified the finalists for the Olympics. This time around, the bronze medal winners will wrestle off to earn the final Olympic qualifying spot. 

Check out the full release from United World Wrestling detailing the Olympic Qualifying procedures here.

This document goes into even further detail.

Games of the XXXIII Olympiad

Wrestling olympics 2024

Emblem of the 2024 Summer Olympics

Host cityParis, France
MottoGames wide open
(French: Ouvrons grand les Jeux)[1]
NationsTBA
Athletes10,500 (quota limit)[2]
Events329 in 32 sports (48 disciplines)
Opening26 July 2024
Closing11 August 2024
StadiumStade de France (Athletics competition, closing ceremony)[3]
Jardins du Trocadéro and River Seine (Opening ceremony)

Summer

← Tokyo 2020

Los Angeles 2028 →

Winter

← Beijing 2022

Milano–Cortina 2026 →

2024 Summer Paralympics

The 2024 Summer Olympics (French: Jeux olympiques d'été de 2024), officially the Games of the XXXIII Olympiad (French: Jeux de la XXXIIIe Olympiade) and also known as Paris 2024, is an upcoming international multi-sport event that is scheduled to take place from 26 July to 11 August 2024 with Paris as its main host city and 16 cities spread across Metropolitan France and one in the French overseas territory of Tahiti as subsites.[4]

Paris was awarded the Games at the 131st IOC Session in Lima, Peru, on 13 September 2017. Due to multiple withdrawals that left only Paris and Los Angeles in contention, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) approved a process to concurrently award the 2024 and 2028 Summer Olympics to the two cities. Having previously hosted in 1900 and 1924, Paris will become the second city to host the Summer Olympics three times after London (1908, 1948 and 2012). The Paris Games of 2024 will mark the centenary of the Paris Games of 1924, the sixth Olympic games hosted by France (three in summer - 1900, 1924, 2024 and three in winter - 1924, 1968, 1992), and the first Olympic Games in France since the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville.

The Games will feature the debut of breaking (breakdancing) as an Olympic event, and it will also be the final Olympic Games held during the presidency of IOC President Thomas Bach.[5]

Bidding process[edit]

Paris, Hamburg, Budapest, Rome, and Los Angeles were the five candidate cities. The process was slowed by withdrawals, political uncertainty, and deterring costs.[6] Hamburg withdrew its bid on 29 November 2015 after holding a referendum.[7] Rome withdrew on 21 September 2016 citing fiscal difficulties.[8] On 22 February 2017, Budapest withdrew after a petition against the bid collected more signatures than necessary for a referendum.[9][10][11]

Following these withdrawals, the IOC Executive Board met in Lausanne, Switzerland, to discuss the 2024 and 2028 bid processes on 9 June 2017.[12][13] The International Olympic Committee formally proposed electing the 2024 and 2028 Olympic host cities at the same time in 2017, a proposal which an Extraordinary IOC Session approved on 11 July 2017 in Lausanne.[13] The IOC set up a process whereby the LA 2024 and Paris 2024 bid committees met with the IOC to discuss who would host the Games in 2024 and 2028, and whether it was possible to select the host cities for both at the same time.[14]

Following the decision to award the two Games simultaneously, Paris was understood as the preferred host for 2024. On 31 July 2017, the IOC announced Los Angeles as the sole candidate for 2028,[15][16] enabling Paris to be confirmed as host for 2024. Both decisions were ratified at the 131st IOC Session on 13 September 2017.[17]

Host city election[edit]

Paris was elected as the host city on 13 September 2017 at the 131st IOC Session in Lima, Peru. The two French IOC members, Guy Drut and Tony Estanguet, were ineligible to vote under the rules of the Olympic Charter.

2024 Summer Olympics
bidding results
City Nation Votes
Paris
Wrestling olympics 2024
 
France
Unanimous

The Games[edit]

Ceremonies[edit]

Wrestling olympics 2024

The French segment at the Tokyo 2020 closing ceremony was performed live on Place du Trocadéro, which will be the site of the protocolar segments for 2024 opening ceremonies.

In July 2021, Paris 2024 president Tony Estanguet stated that the COJOP2024 was conducting a feasibility study on hosting the opening and closing ceremonies outside of a traditional stadium setting, so that they could "marry the best of Paris–the iconic sites–to the possibility of engaging with hundreds of thousands of people, maybe more."[18] This concept of an "open Games" was exemplified in the Paris 2024 handover presentation during the Tokyo 2020 closing ceremony,[18] which featured a live segment from a viewing party at Place du Trocadéro.[19] Estanguet expected the sites for the ceremonies to be announced by the end of the year.[18]

On 13 December 2021, it was announced that the opening ceremony will feature athletes being transported by boat from Pont d'Austerlitz to Pont d'Iéna along the Seine river. The 6 km (3.7 miles) route will pass landmarks such as the Louvre, Notre-Dame de Paris, and Place de la Concorde, and feature cultural presentations. The official protocol will take place at a 30,000 seat "mini-stadium" at the Trocadéro. Organisers stated that the ceremony would be the most "spectacular and accessible opening ceremony in Olympic history", with Estanguet stating that it would be free to attend, and estimating that it could attract as many as 600,000 spectators. This event is expected to return on its full spectator capacity after the majority of the events at the previous Summer Olympics in Tokyo were held behind closed doors with no public spectators due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[20][21][22] Originally, the closing ceremony was expected to take place also at the provisional arena. However, on September 23, 2022, when Thomas Jolly was announced as four ceremonies (two olympic and two paralympic) creative director, the Organizing Committee announced that the closing ceremonies for both the Olympic and Paralympic Games will be held at the Stade de France, while the possibility is being considered to held the Paralympics Opening at the Place de la Concorde.[23] This will be the first Olympic Games where the opening ceremonies will not be hosted in a traditional stadium, and the second time in Summer Olympics history where opening ceremonies will not be held in the same stadium as the athletics competition (as it happened in Rio de Janeiro in 2016).[24]

Sports[edit]

Under current IOC policies, the programme of the Summer Olympics consists of 28 mandatory "core" sports that persist between Games, and optional sports that may be added by the IOC and organising committee in order to improve local interest,[25][26] provided that the total number of participants does not exceed 10,500 athletes.[27] During the 131st IOC Session in September 2017, the IOC approved the 28 sports of the 2016 programme for Paris 2024, while also inviting the Paris Organising Committee to submit up to five additional sports for consideration.[28][29]

In August 2017, the Paris Organising Committee announced that it would hold talks with the IOC and professional esports organisations about the possibility of introducing competitive video gaming in 2024.[30][31] In July 2018, the IOC confirmed it would not consider esports for the 2024 Olympics.[32] On 21 February 2019, the Paris Organising Committee announced they would propose the inclusion of breakdancing (breaking), as well as skateboarding, sport climbing, and surfing—three sports which debuted at the then-upcoming 2020 Summer Olympics as optional sports.[33][34][32] All four sports were approved during the 134th IOC Session in Lausanne, Switzerland on 24 June 2019.[34][32][35]

The 2024 Summer Olympic program is scheduled to feature 32 sports encompassing 329 events, the first Summer Olympics since 1960 to have fewer events than the preceding edition. The number of events in each discipline is noted in parentheses.[36]

2024 Summer Olympic Sports program

  • Aquatics
    • Wrestling olympics 2024
      Artistic swimming (2)
    • Wrestling olympics 2024
      Diving (8)
    • Wrestling olympics 2024
      Marathon swimming (2)
    • Wrestling olympics 2024
      Swimming (35)
    • Wrestling olympics 2024
      Water polo (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Archery (5)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Athletics (48)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Badminton (5)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Basketball
    • Basketball (2)
    • 3x3 basketball (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Boxing (13)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Breaking (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Canoeing
    • Slalom (6)
    • Sprint (10)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Cycling
    • BMX (4)
    • Mountain biking (2)
    • Road (4)
    • Track (12)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Equestrian
    • Dressage (2)
    • Eventing (2)
    • Jumping (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Fencing (12)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Field hockey (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Football (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Golf (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Gymnastics
    • Artistic (14)
    • Rhythmic (2)
    • Trampoline (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Handball (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Judo (15)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Modern pentathlon (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Rowing (14)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Rugby sevens (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Sailing (10)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Shooting (15)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Skateboarding (4)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Sport climbing (4)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Surfing (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Table tennis (5)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Taekwondo (8)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Tennis (5)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Triathlon (3)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Volleyball
    • Volleyball (indoor) (2)
    • Beach volleyball (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Weightlifting (10)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
    Wrestling
    • Freestyle (12)
    • Greco-Roman (6)

Qualifying National Olympic Committees[edit]

*The following is a list of National Olympic Committees who have at least one athlete who has qualified for the 2024 Olympics.

Participating National Olympic Committees

  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Armenia (1)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Australia (4)[37]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Belgium (3)[38]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Brazil (19)[39]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Bulgaria (7)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Canada (5)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     China (13)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Chinese Taipei (1)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Colombia (18)[40]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Cuba (1)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Czech Republic (5)[41]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Denmark (4)[37]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Dominican Republic (18)[42]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Egypt (1)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     France (360) (host)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Germany (14)[37]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Great Britain (26)[43]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Greece (1)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     India (3)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Iran (1)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Ireland (6)[44]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Israel (5)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Italy (5)[41]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Japan (6)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Netherlands (6)[37]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     New Zealand (3)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Norway (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Pakistan (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Poland (3)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Qatar (1)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Serbia (1)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Slovakia (2)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     South Korea (5)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Spain (6)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Sweden (11)[37]
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Switzerland (3)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     Ukraine (3)
  • Wrestling olympics 2024
     United States (71)[42]

Number of athletes by National Olympic Committee

As of 12 November 2022

RankingNOCAthletes
1
Wrestling olympics 2024
 France
360
2
Wrestling olympics 2024
 United States
71
3
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Great Britain
26
4
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Brazil
19
5
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Colombia
18
5
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Dominican Republic
18
7
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Germany
14
8
Wrestling olympics 2024
 China
13
9
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Sweden
11
10
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Bulgaria
7
11
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Ireland
6
11
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Japan
6
11
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Netherlands
6
11
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Spain
6
15
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Canada
5
15
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Czech Republic
5
15
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Israel
5
15
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Italy
5
15
Wrestling olympics 2024
 South Korea
5
20
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Australia
4
20
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Denmark
4
22
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Belgium
3
22
Wrestling olympics 2024
 India
3
22
Wrestling olympics 2024
 New Zealand
3
22
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Poland
3
22
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Switzerland
3
22
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Ukraine
3
28
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Norway
2
28
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Pakistan
2
28
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Slovakia
2
31
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Armenia
1
31
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Chinese Taipei
1
31
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Cuba
1
31
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Egypt
1
31
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Greece
1
31
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Iran
1
31
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Qatar
1
31
Wrestling olympics 2024
 Serbia
1

Calendar[edit]

The following schedule is correct as of the press release by COJOP2024 in July 2022. The exact schedule may change in due time.

All times and dates use Central European Summer Time (UTC+2)

Venues[edit]

Most of the Olympic events will be held in the city of Paris and its metropolitan region, including the neighbouring cities of Saint-Denis, Le Bourget, Nanterre, Versailles, and Vaires-sur-Marne. Lille will host the handball events, while the sailing events will be held in the Mediterranean city of Marseille and the surfing events are expected to be held in Teahupo'o village in the overseas territory of French Polynesia respectively. Football will be hosted in six other cities, which are Marseille, Lyon, Saint-Étienne, Bordeaux, Nantes and Nice, in addition to Paris, with some of them were home to Ligue 1 clubs.

Grand Paris zone (seven sports)[edit]

Wrestling olympics 2024

Wrestling olympics 2024

Centre Aquatique during construction (2022)

Venue Events Capacity Status
Yves du Manoir Stadium Field hockey 15,000 Renovated
Stade de France Rugby 7's 77,083 Existing
Athletics (track and field)
Closing Ceremony
Paris La Défense Arena[a] Aquatics (swimming, water polo playoffs) 15,220
Porte de La Chapelle Arena Badminton 8,000 Additional
Gymnastics (rhythmic)
Paris Aquatic Center[45][46] Aquatics (water polo preliminaries, diving, artistic swimming) 5,000
Le Bourget Climbing Venue Sport climbing 5,000 Temporary
Notes

  1. ^ The local organising committee uses the non-sponsored name Arena 92, which was the venue's name during its initial planning phase. By the time it opened in 2017, the name had changed to U Arena (also non-sponsored) and then to the current Paris La Défense Arena in 2018 through a sponsorship deal.

Paris Centre zone (20 sports)[edit]

Wrestling olympics 2024

Wrestling olympics 2024

Wrestling olympics 2024

Wrestling olympics 2024

Venue Events Capacity Status
Parc des Princes Football (finals) 48,583 Existing
Roland Garros Stadium Tennis 34,000
Boxing (semifinals, finals)
Philippe Chatrier Court (with retractable roof) Boxing (semifinals, finals) 15,000
Tennis
Court Suzanne Lenglen (with retractable roof)[47] Tennis 10,000
Court Simonne Mathieu and secondary courts 9,000 (5,000+2,000+8x250)
Paris Expo Porte de Versailles Volleyball 12,000
Boxing (preliminaries, quarterfinals) 10,000
Table Tennis 6,000
Weightlifting 6,000
Bercy Arena Gymnastics (artistic and trampoline) 15,000
Basketball (quarterfinals, semifinals, finals)
Grand Palais Fencing 8,000
Taekwondo
Place de la Concorde Basketball (3x3) 30,000 Temporary
Breakdancing
Cycling (BMX freestyle)
Skateboarding
Pont d'Iéna Aquatics (marathon swimming) 13,000
(3,000 sitting)
Athletics (marathon, race walk)
Cycling (road, time trial)
Triathlon
Eiffel Tower Stadium Beach Volleyball 12,000
Grand Palais Éphémère Judo 8,000
Wrestling
Les Invalides Archery 8,000

Versailles zone (four sports)[edit]

Location of the facilities in the Paris area (ex. Versailles)

Wrestling olympics 2024

Wrestling olympics 2024

Wrestling olympics 2024

Wrestling olympics 2024

Vaires-Torcy Nautical Center

Venue Events Capacity Status
Palace of Versailles Equestrian (dressage, jumping, eventing cross country) 80,000
(22,000 + 58,000)
Temporary
Modern pentathlon (excluding fencing ranking rounds)
Le Golf National Golf 35,000 Existing
Élancourt Hill Cycling (Mountain biking) 25,000
Vélodrome de Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines Cycling (track) 5,000
Modern pentathlon (fencing ranking rounds)
Cycling (BMX racing) 5,000

Outlying (seven sports)[edit]

Wrestling olympics 2024

Venue Events Capacity Status
Pierre Mauroy Stadium (Lille) Basketball (preliminaries) 26,000 Existing
Handball (quarterfinals, semifinals, finals)
National Olympic Nautical Stadium of Île-de-France (Vaires-sur-Marne) Rowing 22,000
Canoe-Kayak (sprint)
Canoe-Kayak (slalom)
Stade Vélodrome (Marseille) Football (6 preliminaries, women's quarter-final, men's semi-final) 67,394
Parc Olympique Lyonnais (Lyon) Football (6 preliminaries, men's quarter-final, women's semi-final) 59,186
Stade Matmut Atlantique (Bordeaux) Football (6 preliminaries, women's quarter-final, men's 3rd place match) 42,115
Stade Geoffroy-Guichard (Saint-Étienne) Football (6 preliminaries, men's quarter-final, women's 3rd place match) 41,965
Allianz Riviera (Nice) Football (6 preliminaries, quarterfinals) 35,624
Stade de la Beaujoire (Nantes) Football (6 preliminaries, quarterfinals) 35,322
Port de la Pointe Rouge (Marseille) Sailing 5,000
Débarcadère Teahupoo (Teahupo'o, French Polynesia) Surfing 5,000
National Shooting Center (Châteauroux) Shooting 3,000

Non-competitive[edit]

Venue Events Capacity Status
Jardins du Trocadéro and River Seine Opening Ceremony 600,000 Temporary
L'Île-Saint-Denis Olympic Village 17,000 Additional
Le Bourget Media Village Temporary
International Broadcast Centre
Main Press Centre

Wrestling olympics 2024

Marketing[edit]

Emblem[edit]

The emblem for the 2024 Summer Olympics and Paralympics was unveiled on 21 October 2019 at the Grand Rex. Inspired by Art Deco,[48][49] it is a representation of Marianne, the national personification of France, with a flame formed in negative space by her hair. The emblem also resembles a gold medal. Tony Estanguet explained that the emblem symbolised "the power and the magic of the Games", and the Games being "for people". The use of a female figure also serves as an homage to the 1900 Summer Olympics in Paris, which were the first to allow women to participate.[50] The emblem was designed by the French designer Sylvain Boyer[51] with the French design agencies Ecobranding & Royalties.[52][53][51]

The emblem for Paris 2024 was considered the biggest new logo release of 2019 by many design magazines.[54][55] An Opinion Way survey shows that 83 percent of French people say they like the new Paris 2024 Games emblem. Approval ratings were high, with 82 percent of those surveyed finding it aesthetically appealing and 78 percent finding it to be creative.[56] It was met with some mockery on social media, one user commenting that the logo "would be better suited to a dating site or a hair salon".[57]

For the first time, the 2024 Summer Paralympics are sharing the same logo and the look of games, as their corresponding Olympics, with no difference, reflecting a shared "ambition" between both events.[58]

[edit]

Sponsors of the 2024 Summer Olympics
Worldwide Olympic Partners
  • Airbnb
  • Alibaba Group
  • Allianz
  • Atos
  • Bridgestone
  • The Coca-Cola Company-Mengniu Dairy
  • Deloitte
  • Intel
  • Omega SA
  • Panasonic
  • Procter & Gamble
  • Samsung Electronics
  • Toyota
  • Visa Inc.
Premium Partners
  • Carrefour
  • Électricité de France[59]
  • Groupe BPCE
  • Orange[60]
  • Sanofi[61]
Official Partners
  • Accor
  • Air France
  • Cisco Systems[62]
  • Danone
  • Decathlon[63]
  • Française des Jeux
  • Le Coq Sportif
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers
Official Supporters
  • DXC Technology
  • Egis Group
  • Enedis
  • OnePlan
  • Optic 2000
  • Randstad
  • Salesforce
  • Sodexo

Broadcasting rights[edit]

In France, domestic rights to the 2024 Summer Olympics are owned by Warner Bros. Discovery (formerly Discovery Inc.) via Eurosport, with free-to-air coverage sub-licensed to the country's public broadcaster France Télévisions.[64]

  • Armenia – APMTV[65]
  • Asia – Dentsu (rights to be sold to local broadcasters)[66]
  • Belgium – RTBF, VRT[67][68]
  • Brazil – Grupo Globo[69]
  • Canada – CBC/Radio-Canada, TSN, RDS[70][71]
  • China – CMG[72]
  • Croatia – HRT[73]
  • Colombia – Caracol Televisión[74]
  • Denmark – DR, TV 2[75]
  • Estonia – Postimees Group[76]
  • Europe – Eurosport (partial rights to be sold to local broadcasters, except Russia)[77]
  • Finland – Yle[78]
  • France – France Télévisions
  • Germany – ARD, ZDF[79]
  • Greece – ERT[80]
  • Hungary – MTVA[81]
  • Indian subcontinent – Viacom18[82]
  • Italy – RAI[83]
  • Iceland – RÚV[76]
  • Japan – Japan Consortium[84]
  • Kosovo – RTK[65]
  • Latin America (except Brazil) – América Móvil[85]
  • Lithuania – TV3[76]
  • MENA – beIN Sports[86]
  • Netherlands – NOS[87]
  • New Zealand – Sky Television[88]
  • North Korea – SBS[89]
  • Pacific Islands1 – Sky Television[88]
  • Romania – TVR[90]
  • Serbia – RTS[76]
  • Slovenia – RTV[76]
  • Peru – Grupo ATV[91]
  • Poland – TVP[92]
  • South Africa – SABC, SuperSport[93]
  • South Korea – SBS[89]
  • Spain – RTVE[76]
  • Sub-Saharan Africa – Infront Sports & Media, SuperSport[94][93]
  • United Kingdom – BBC[95]
  • United States – NBCUniversal[96]

^1 – Included nations & territories are Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Niue, Palau, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.

See also[edit]

  • 2024 Summer Paralympics
  • Olympic Games celebrated in France
    • 1900 Summer Olympics – Paris
    • 1924 Summer Olympics – Paris
    • 1924 Winter Olympics – Chamonix
    • 1968 Winter Olympics – Grenoble
    • 1992 Winter Olympics – Albertville
    • 2024 Summer Olympics – Paris
  • List of IOC country codes

References[edit]

  1. ^ "New Paris 2024 slogan "Games wide open" welcomed by IOC President". International Paralympic Committee. 25 July 2022. Archived from the original on 26 July 2022. Retrieved 25 July 2022."Le nouveau slogan de Paris 2024 "Ouvrons grand les Jeux" accueilli favorablement par le président du CIO" (in French). International Paralympic Committee. 25 July 2022. Archived from the original on 26 July 2022. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Gender equality and youth at the heart of the Paris 2024 Olympic Sports Programme". www.olympics.com/. International Olympic Committee. 7 December 2020. Retrieved 2 August 2020. The 10,500-athlete quota set for Paris 2024, including new sports, will lead to an overall reduction in the number of athletes
  3. ^ "Stade de France".
  4. ^ Butler, Nick (7 February 2018). "Paris 2024 to start week earlier than planned after IOC approve date change". insidethegames.biz. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  5. ^ "Thomas Bach re-elected as IOC president until 2025". AP NEWS. 10 March 2021. Retrieved 29 July 2022.
  6. ^ Butler, Nick. "Exclusive: IOC vow to "further adjust" candidature process after Budapest 2024 withdrawal". Inside the Games. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  7. ^ "Five world-class cities in strong competition for Olympic Games 2024 – IOC to contribute USD 1.7 billion to the local organising committee" (Press release). Lausanne, Switzerland: International Olympic Committee. 16 September 2015. Archived from the original on 18 September 2015. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  8. ^ Rome 2024 Olympic bid collapses in acrimony Archived 21 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine at BBC News. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
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  • "Paris 2024". Olympics.com. International Olympic Committee.
  • Paris 2024
Summer Olympics
Preceded by

Tokyo

XXXIII Olympiad
Paris

2024
Succeeded by

Los Angeles

Is wrestling in the 2024 Olympics?

The Paris 2024 wrestling competition will take place between 5-11 August at the Champ de Mars Arena, which is the same venue as the judo competition. There are two styles of wrestling, Greco-Roman and Freestyle, and a total of 18 events will be held at Paris 2024, which is the same amount as Tokyo 2020.

Is wrestling removed from Olympics 2024?

On 8 September 2013, at the 125th IOC Session, the IOC selected wrestling to be reinstated in the Olympic program for 2020 and 2024.

Is wrestling going to be in the next Olympics?

Wrestlers go to the mat in the City of Light from Monday, August 5 to Sunday, August 11 during the 2024 Paris Olympic Games. Athletes will grapple for gold, silver and bronze across six weight classes per discipline. Men will compete in freestyle and Greco-Roman while women will chase Olympic glory in freestyle.

Is wrestling still part of the Olympics?

In 2013, the International Olympic Committee voted to remove wrestling from the Olympics, even though it had been contested at every Games since 1904.