
Commonwealth 2026: One-year countdown to scaled-down Glasgow games
Some of the world's top athletes will arrive in the city next summer for the 2026 games, which kick off on July 23.
The 2014 edition was considered a massive success, with the likes of fastest man on the planet Usain Bolt entertaining fans throughout a memorable summer.
Team Scotland athletes also did their part and had the home crowd cheering them on in every event as they scooped 19 gold, 15 silver, and 19 bronze medals to finish fourth in the overall table.
The games are now returning to Glasgow after the original 2026 host, Victoria, in Australia, pulled out for financial reasons.
Around 3,000 athletes from 74 nations will be competing for over 200 medals, although the number of events has been reduced to fit a tighter schedule.
It will be a much scaled-down version of the usual Commonwealth Games, due to the short notice to prepare, with confirmation only coming at the end of 2024.
Athletes from ten different sports will be competing at the 2026 games, seven down from the 17 featured 12 years ago.
The sports on show will be athletics, swimming, track cycling, weightlifting, lawn bowls, judo, 3×3 basketball, gymnastics, netball, and boxing.
Six of those sports, athletics, swimming, track cycling, weightlifting, lawn bowls, and 3×3 basketball, will also feature para events.
The 3×3 wheelchair basketball event, which debuted at the Birmingham 2022 Games, will return for a second Commonwealth Games appearance.
The events will take place at four venues: Scotstoun Stadium, Tollcross International Swimming Centre, Emirates Arena, and the Scottish Event Campus.
The venues being used are all within eight miles of each other.
Work is under way to upgrade Scotstoun Stadium, which will host the athletics programme, to get it ready in time for the games.
The work at the home of the Glasgow Warriors rugby team has been described as a 'significant milestone'.
An existing athletic track and temporary stands on either side will be removed, and a new surface is being laid.
The Tollcross International Swimming Centre will be the home of swimming, while the Emirates Arena, including the Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome, and the SEC will host the other eight sports.
Athletes and support staff will be housed in hotel accommodations.
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The Herald Scotland
10 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Indiana's weak schedule won't con College Football Playoff committee
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Scotsman
19 hours ago
- Scotsman
Commonwealth Games star bids to emulate Scottish feat last achieved 71 years ago
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Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Scotland went judo daft 'So it was absolutely amazing. We had really successful games in Glasgow and the buzz around the team then was absolutely amazing as well.' Adlington won Scotland's penultimate judo gold of 2014, beating England's Jodie Myers in the +78kg division at the SECC. Two sisters from Lanarkshire, the Renicks, had led the way for Scotland on the mat, with Kimberley and Louise both winning gold on the first day of competition. There were triumphs too for Sarah Clark, Euan Burton and Chris Sherington and it seemed that for those three days in July, Scotland had gone judo daft, with 'Pyjama party' headlines dominating the tabloids. 'I think the team was full of world-class players that had achieved results on the world stage. So I think everyone was confident that they could go out and get a result,' said Adlington when asked to explain the extraordinary success which saw 13 of Scotland's 14-string judo team win medals. 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The Herald Scotland
a day ago
- The Herald Scotland
Games budget of £150m is 'direct investment into city'
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The company, based in the city centre, will directly employ around 160 people and, at its heart, is a team of specialists with world-leading major event experience and sporting expertise, coupled with in-depth city knowledge. The OC will work with an ecosystem of experienced suppliers to deliver the Games safely and in record time. The OC is privately funded, securing its income through Commonwealth Sport, corporate sponsorship, broadcast rights, global partnerships and ticket sales. READ MORE: To whom does it sell? Building on the success of 2014, Glasgow 2026 is set to reimagine the Games you know and love – with a different, and altogether unique, 'Clyde-built' experience that embodies the city's vibrant spirit, ingenuity and passion. 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