The 3rd European Games (Polish: III Igrzyska Europejskie, Igrzyska Europejskie 2023), also known as the 2023 European Games or Kraków-Małopolska 2023, was an international multi-sport event held from 21 June to 2 July 2023 in Kraków and Małopolska, Poland. It was the first time that Poland hosted the European Games. All Olympic sports held at the European Games provided qualification opportunities for the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, France.

"We are unity" – slogan on a train in Kraków

Host selection

Kraków was selected as the host city of the 2023 European Games

At the time of the 2015 European Games, the city of Manchester, United Kingdom expressed its wish to host the 2023 Games. No further interest was expressed since after the 2018 European Championships were awarded to Glasgow, Scotland and the 2022 Commonwealth Games were awarded to Birmingham, England.

In May 2018, the European Olympic Committees (EOC) asserted that the bidding process for the 2023 Games would be open to joint bids from multiple countries.

The EOC launched the bid process on 20 September 2018 after a meeting of the constituent National Olympic Committees in Stockholm. Following the approval of the Bid Document, it was sent to the 50 NOCs in Europe alongside a letter from EOC President Janez Kocijančič inviting applications. The application stage was set to close on 28 February 2019.

In January 2019, Marcin Krupa, the mayor of Katowice, Poland, announced the city's interest hosting the Games, becoming the first candidate city. Soon after, Kazan, the capital of Tatarstan, Russia expressed its interest in hosting the 2023 Games and its intention to submit an application to the EOC. Its bid would be made attractive by the fact the city built much sporting infrastructure when hosting the 2013 Summer Universiade and the 2015 FINA World Aquatics Championships and that a Russian bid has been supported by premier Vladimir Putin.

In February 2019, the application deadline was extended by two months, until 30 April, due to "strong interest from across the continent". In May 2019, after the extended deadline had passed, the EOC again postponed the deadline, this time until the 31 May. No reason was given for the second extension.

In May 2019, the Polish Olympic Committee announced that Kraków would replace Katowice as the Polish bid for the Games following the withdrawal of its bid for the 2022 Winter Olympics and the waning interest in Katowice. The same month, EOC President Janez Kocijančič reiterated his expectation that the host for the 2023 Games would be chosen before the start of the 2019 European Games in Minsk on the 21 June 2019.

After the deadline for bid submission passed on the 31 May 2019, the European Olympic Committees confirmed that only one formal bid had been completed, that of Kraków in collaboration with the province Małopolska. The mayor of Kraków, Jacek Majchrowski, had previously said that the city might decline to run the Games without support from regional and national government.

The official election of the European Games 2023 host took place at an EOC General Assembly in Minsk on 22 June 2019 where it was unanimously decided that Kraków and the surrounding Lesser Poland region would hold the Games. The vote was by a show of hands. The contract with the host city was signed on 17 May 2022.

Votes results

2023 European Games bidding results
CityNationVotes
Kraków, MałopolskaPolandUnanimous

Organisation

On 28 June 2019, six days after Kraków was awarded the Games, the EOC confirmed it had signed a letter of intent with the European Union of Gymnastics to include gymnastics in the upcoming Games. In July 2019, Hasan Arat, the vice-president of the Turkish Olympic Committee, was named chair of the EOC's Co-ordination Commission for the 2023 Games. He said he was "honoured and humbled by the decision".

In October the same year, both the city of Kraków and the Małopolska region signed a letter of intent confirming their joint commitment to the hosting of the Games. In March 2020, Kraków's mayor Jacek Majchrowski warned of cuts to the city budget and impacts on the tourism industry due to coronavirus which could impact the success of the Games.

Funding

In February 2021, the Games faced a funding deadlock when the city of Kraków said it needed financial guarantees from the Polish government in order to proceed with the signing of the host city contract. A spokesperson of the office of the mayor of Kraków, Jacek Majchrowski, said that the city had agreed to host the Games "only on condition that the government subsidised the necessary infrastructure". Government organisers blamed the city's leadership, with Jacek Sasin saying that "Kraków is the organiser of the Games" and that the government is "ready" to support it. Sasin said that the government would commit to sharing funding, but only after Kraków signed the host city contract. However, Majchrowski said that he would not sign the agreement until the government has introduced legislation supporting the event's organisation, leading to suggestions that Katowice, the original bid city, and the Silesia region could end up hosting the Games. In a statement, the EOC said they were "working closely with the organisers" and remained "confident" that Kraków would sign the host city contract.

In early March 2021, the EOC entered into talks with Silesian officials to explore the possibility of the region co-hosting the event. Kraków and the Polish government were reported to have come to an agreement over funding by the end of March 2021.

The opening ceremony in Kraków
The Great Britain team at the European Games opening ceremony in Kraków

Opening ceremony

The opening ceremony was held at Henryk Reyman Municipal Stadium and ran from 20:30 to 23:45 CEST.

OrderNationFlag bearerSport/Function
1GreeceElina TzengkoAthletics
2AlbaniaAlvin Karaqi Ornela MahmutajKarate Team official
3AndorraNana LinanTaekwondo
4ArmeniaGayane Chiloyan Levon AghasyanAthletics
5AustriaSofia Polcanova Lukas WeißhaidingerTable tennis Athletics
6AzerbaijanYaylagul Ramazanova Barat GuliyevArchery Fencing
7BelgiumCamille Laus Kevin BorléeAthletics
8Bosnia and HerzegovinaAda Avdagić Nedžad HusićTaekwondo
9BulgariaAngel Kodinov Yuliya KeremidchievaCanoeing Sport climbing
10CroatiaNikolina Ćaćić Matej NevešćaninBoxing Diving
11CyprusConstantina Nicolaou Christos AchilléosShooting Taekwondo
12Czech RepublicIveta Miculyčová Jan KřížCycling Sport climbing
13DenmarkLine Gyldenløve Kristensen Jonathan GrothBeach handball Table tennis
14EstoniaAnnika Koster Joosep Karlson3x3 basketball Canoeing
15FinlandNetta Malinen Antti TekoniemiCanoeing Archery
16FranceMarie Mané Jean-Charles Valladont3x3 basketball Archery
17GeorgiaTsiko Putkaradze Zaza NadiradzeArchery Canoeing
18GermanyIsabel Kattner Max RendschmidtBeach handball Canoeing
19Great BritainAbbie Brown Joe ClarkeRugby sevens Canoeing
20HungaryDóra Madarász Ádám VargaTable tennis Canoeing
21IcelandMarín Aníta Hilmarsdóttir Ingibjörg Erla GrétarsdóttirArchery Taekwondo
22IrelandSarah Lavin Liam JegouAthletics Canoeing
23IsraelLonah Chemtai Salpeter Joaquin SzuchmanAthletics 3x3 basketball
24ItalyOdette Giuffrida Mauro NespoliJudo Archery
25KosovoDonjeta Sadiku Muhamet RamadaniBoxing Athletics
26LatviaInese Tarvida Roberts AkmensTaekwondo Canoeing
27LiechtensteinNadina Klauser Matthias VerlingArtistic swimming Athletics
28LithuaniaHenrikas Žustautas Kamilė NacickaitėCanoeing 3x3 basketball
29LuxembourgNi Xialian Flavio GiannotteTable tennis Fencing
30MaltaElaine Genovese Matthew Galea SolerTennis Athletics
31MonacoXiaoxin Yang Nicolas FedoroffTable tennis Padel
32MontenegroBojana Gojković Danijel FurtulaBoxing Athletics
33NetherlandsIsabel Barnard Sheyi AdetunjiBeach handball 3x3 basketball
34NorwayElisabeth Hammerstad Borgar HaugBeach handball Table tennis
35North MacedoniaMilijana Ristikj Emil PavlovKarate
36PortugalFu Yu Fernando PimentaTable tennis Canoeing
37MoldovaZalina Merghieva Serghei TarnovschiAthletics Canoeing
38RomaniaBianca Ghelber Cătălin ChirilăAthletics Canoeing
39San MarinoAlessandra Perilli Mattias MongiustiShooting Table tennis
40SerbiaMilica Novaković Marko NovakovićCanoeing
41SlovakiaBarbora Balážová Miroslav DuchoňTable tennis Archery
42SloveniaAna Tofant Den Habjan MalavašičTable tennis Archery
43SpainPatricia Encinas Guardado Carlos ArévaloBeach handball Canoeing
44SwedenPetter Menning Linnea StensilsCanoeing
45SwitzerlandNikita Ducarroz Westher MolteniCycling 3x3 basketball
46TurkeyMerve Dinçel Hakan ReçberTaekwondo
47UkraineAnastasia Pavlova Andrii RybachokArchery Canoeing
48EOC Refugee TeamCindy Ngamba Kasra MehdipournejadBoxing Taekwondo
49PolandSandra Drabik Łukasz NiedzielakBoxing Beach handball

Games

Sports

The following competitions took place:

2023 European Games
Archery (8) (details) Artistic swimming (8) (details) Athletics (38) (details) Badminton (5) (details) Basketball (2) (details) Beach handball (2) (details) Beach soccer (2) (details) Boxing (13) (details) Breaking (2) (details) Canoe slalom (10) (details) Canoe sprint (16) (details) Cycling (4) (details) Diving (13) (details) Fencing (12) (details) Judo (1) (details) Karate (12) (details) Kickboxing (16) (details) Modern pentathlon (5) (details) Muaythai (10) (details) Padel (3) (details) Rugby sevens (2) (details) Shooting (30) (details) Ski jumping (5) (details) Sport climbing (6) (details) Table tennis (5) (details) Taekwondo (16) (details) Teqball (5) (details) Triathlon (3) (details)

In addition, the following sports as 'side events' (demonstration sports) were included on the official program:

Side Events at the 2023 European Games
Mountain running (2) (details) Motor racing (details) Chess (1) (details) Amputee football (details) Sumo (12) (details) Orienteering (2) (details) Traditional Martial Arts (4) (details)

Traditional Martial Arts:

  • Kurash
  • Ukrainian Traditional Belt Wrestling
  • Lithuanian Traditional Wrestling “Ristynės
  • Ukrainian Wrestling “SPAS”

An Esports European Games in Katowice, recognised by the EOC, was also held alongside the Games, but did not form part of the Kraków 2023 program.

Calendar

OCOpening ceremonyEvent competitions1Event finalsCCClosing ceremony
June/July20th Tue21st Wed22nd Thu23rd Fri24th Sat25th Sun26th Mon27th Tue28th Wed29th Thu30th Fri1st Sat2nd SunTotal events
CeremoniesOCCC
AquaticsArtistic swimming22318
Diving122222213
Archery22228
Athletics12131338
Badminton235
Basketball (3x3)22
Beach handball22
Beach soccer22
Boxing7613
Breaking22
CanoeingSlalom222410
Sprint46616
CyclingBMX22
Mountain biking22
Fencing22222212
Judo11
Karate6612
Kickboxing1616
Modern pentathlon145
Muaythai1010
Padel33
Rugby sevens22
Shooting3343332232230
Ski jumping12115
Sport climbing11226
Table tennis1225
Taekwondo444416
Teqball2125
Triathlon1113
Daily medal events21363834122591392631254
Cumulative total215795129141166175188197223254
June/July20th Tue21st Wed22nd Thu23rd Fri24th Sat25th Sun26th Mon27th Tue28th Wed29th Thu30th Fri1st Sat2nd SunTotal events

Venues

Events took place in the city of Kraków, the surrounding Lesser Poland Voivodeship region and in Bielsko-Biała and Chorzów in the neighbouring Silesian Voivodeship.

Henryk Reyman Municipal Stadium in Kraków hosted the opening and closing ceremonies
Silesian Stadium in Chorzów hosted athletics
Tauron Arena Kraków
Kraków Main Square
Kraków-Kolna Canoe Slalom Course
Kryspinów Lake
Wielka Krokiew
Key to colours
EExisting
RRenovated
TTemporary

Kraków (eleven sports)

VenueSportsCapacity
Henryk Reyman Municipal StadiumCeremonies and Rugby sevens33,130R
Tauron Arena KrakówFencing15,000E
Cracovia ArenaBasketball 3×31,000T
Hutnik ArenaTable tennis1,000E
AWF Sports CentreModern pentathlon1,000R
Kraków Main SquarePadel and Teqball1,000T
Kolna Canoe Slalom CourseCanoe slalom1,000E
Kryspinów WaterwayCanoe sprint1,400T
Płaszowianka Archery ParkArchery500R
Nowa Huta LakeTriathlonN/AE

Chorzów (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Silesian StadiumAthletics54,378E

Bielsko-Biała (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Dębowiec Sports ArenaKarate3,000E

Krynica-Zdrój (four sports)

VenueSportsCapacity
Krynica-Zdrój ArenaJudo and Taekwondo2,635E
Krynica-Zdrój Hill ParkMountain bike cyclingN/AE

Krzeszowice (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Krzeszowice BMX ParkBMX Freestyle2,300T

Myślenice (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Myślenice ArenaKickboxing and Muaythai566E

Nowy Sącz (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Strzelecki ParkBreaking3,070E

Nowy Targ (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Nowy Targ ArenaBoxing3,000E

Oświęcim (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Aquatics CentreArtistic swimming400E

Rzeszów (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Diving ArenaDiving1,000E

Tarnów (four sports)

VenueSportsCapacity
Arena Jaskółka TarnówBadminton4,317E
Tarnów Beach ArenaBeach handball and Beach soccer1,000T
Tarnów Climbing CentreSport climbing2,500E

Wrocław (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Wrocław Shooting CentreShooting1,300E

Zakopane (one sport)

VenueSportsCapacity
Średnia KrokiewSki jumping (normal hill)15,000E
Wielka KrokiewSki jumping (large hill)15,000E
2023 European Games is located in Lesser Poland Voivodeship
Host cities of the 2023 European Games (Małopolska)
2023 European Games is located in Poland
Host cities of the 2023 European Games (outside Małopolska)

Participating National Olympic Committees

The following 48 National Olympic Committees participated, along with the EOC Refugee Team:

Participating National Olympic Committees
Albania (40) Andorra (27) Armenia (55) Austria (170) Azerbaijan (100) Belgium (140) Bosnia and Herzegovina (55) Bulgaria (113) Croatia (130) Cyprus (74) Czech Republic (273) Denmark (163) Estonia (110) Finland (118) France (298) Georgia (100) Germany (361) Great Britain (254) Greece (170) Hungary (246) Iceland (38) Ireland (123) Israel (141) Italy (372) Kosovo (38) Latvia (98) Liechtenstein (7) Lithuania (148) Luxembourg (60) Malta (36) Moldova (74) Monaco (3) Montenegro (40) Netherlands (186) North Macedonia (38) Norway (155) Poland (404) (host) Portugal (208) Romania (151) EOC Refugee Team (4) San Marino (32) Serbia (125) Slovakia (145) Slovenia (143) Spain (347) Sweden (141) Switzerland (220) Turkey (193) Ukraine (265) *As a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the European Olympic Committees has taken a decision to not invite athletes from Russia and Belarus to the European Games.
IOC CodeCountryRunning OrderAthletes
POL1Poland404
ITA2Italy372
GER3Germany361
ESP4Spain347
FRA5France298
CZE6Czech Republic273
UKR7Ukraine265
GBR8Great Britain254
HUN9Hungary246
SUI10Switzerland220
POR11Portugal208
TUR12Turkey193
NED13Netherlands186
AUT14Austria170
GREGreece170
DEN16Denmark163
NOR17Norway155
ROU18Romania151
LTU19Lithuania148
SVK20Slovakia145
SLO21Slovenia143
ISR22Israel141
SWESweden141
BEL24Belgium140
CRO25Croatia130
SRB26Serbia125
IRL27Ireland123
FIN28Finland118
BUL29Bulgaria113
EST30Estonia110
AZE31Azerbaijan100
GEOGeorgia100
LAT33Latvia98
CYP34Cyprus74
MDAMoldova74
LUX36Luxembourg60
ARM37Armenia55
BIH38Bosnia and Herzegovina55
ALB39Albania40
MNEMontenegro40
ISL41Iceland38
KOSKosovo38
MKDNorth Macedonia38
MLT44Malta36
SMR45San Marino32
AND46Andorra27
LIE47Liechtenstein7
ERT48Refugee Olympic Team4
MON49Monaco3
Total6,857

Medal table

* Host nation (Poland)

2023 European Games medal table
RankNOCGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Italy352639100
2Spain21171957
3Ukraine2112841
4Germany20162763
5France17192662
6Poland*13191850
7Great Britain12102749
8Hungary10101838
9Turkey992038
10Netherlands86519
11Czech Republic7101128
12Austria76619
13Switzerland751224
14Denmark75517
15Romania66517
16Norway64515
17Croatia54413
18Ireland44513
19Georgia4239
20Slovenia38213
21Portugal37616
22Serbia36716
23Bulgaria34512
24Azerbaijan32611
25Latvia3227
26Sweden27514
27Greece251017
28Belgium25613
29Lithuania2248
30Finland2158
31Estonia2103
32Albania2002
33Slovakia1438
34Israel1135
35Moldova1012
36Cyprus0325
37Armenia0123
38Luxembourg0112
39Bosnia and Herzegovina0101
Monaco0101
North Macedonia0101
Totals (41 entries)254253333840

Marketing

Emblem

The official emblem of the games was unveiled on 21 June 2022, exactly one year before the opening ceremony. Designed by Marcin Salawa the emblem depicts a flame containing the towers of St. Mary's Basilica, to represent the city of Kraków and the Tatra Mountains, to represent the landscape of the Małopolska region. The colours, taken from the coats of arms of Kraków, and Małopolska, represent fire and water. Fire is said to symbolise action, will, energy, while water symbolises spirituality, emotions and purification.

Motto

The official motto of the games is We are Unity, Polish: Jesteśmy jednością, lit.'We are One'.

Mascots

“Sandra” and “Krakusek”, mascots, the official mascots

“Krakusek” the dragon and “Sandra” the salamander have been chosen as the official mascots for the European Games Kraków-Małopolska 2023. The initiative, which received over 2,400 entries, was open to young people aged 5–15 across the continent. The dragon design by 15-year-old Katarzyna Biśta from Libiąż references the local culture and history of Kraków. Alongside Krakusek, the creation of the black and gold salamander by 10-year-old Gloria Goryl from Wojnicz portrays the fire salamander which can be found in south Poland.

Promotion

Sponsors

On 6 July 2021, Atos has been selected by the European Olympic Committees as its official Digital Technology Partner for the 2023 and 2027 editions of the European Games. As part of this partnership, Atos, long-standing supporter of the Olympic Movement, and EOC, the governing body for Europe's 50 National Olympic Committees, will work together to improve fan engagement. On November 14 2022, representatives of LaLiga and the European Games Organising Committee signed a cooperation agreement to mutually promote sports events and organisations.

General SponsorOrlen
Main PartnersAtos, La Liga, Lotto, MARR, Realme, Tauron
Media PatronsRMF, Wirtualna Polska

Broadcasting rights

50 countries around the world will broadcast the European Games.

^1 – Included nations are Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela.

Controversies

Former LGBT ideology-free zone

The region of Małopolska, to which the Games were jointly awarded, declared itself an LGBT ideology-free zone in 2019. In August 2020, the Lord Provost of Edinburgh Frank Ross wrote to Kraków's mayor Jacek Majchrowski to confirm the city's opposition to homophobia after calls for a "serious rethink" of the two cities' twinning relationship. In September 2020, a group of European politicians (including Liz Barker, a member of the House of Lords and Terry Reintke and Marc Angel, two MEPs) published a letter addressed to the European Olympic Committees in which they demanded LGBT rights be respected and suggested that the Games should be held in a different location due to the Małopolska region's status. Flemish sports minister Ben Weyts said the region's LGBT-free zone declaration is "incompatible with the values of the Olympic Charter" and that Olympic Committees should not support bids from such regions. The EOC responded, saying that there would be "no discrimination of any kind" and that the Olympic Charter would be respected. The Małopolska region revoked its declaration of an LGBT ideology-free zone on 27 September 2021 and instead adopted a resolution to "oppose any discrimination against anyone for any reason".

Status of Russian and Belarusian athletes

The Polish government has announced that athletes representing Russia and Belarus would not be allowed to attend the games as a result of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.

See also

External links