Home>News Center>Sports
         
 

USA-China Sports Summit for 2005 to open
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-07-28 09:44

The US Olympic Committee announced the creation of the USA-China Sports Summit, a multi-sport competition to be launched next year in Seattle as part of the build-up to the 2008 Beijing Games.

USOC chief executive Jim Scherr, noting that the USOC's "primary goal" at the moment is the fast-approaching Athens Olympics, said it wasn't too soon to look toward 2008.

"This is an opportunity for our athletes to prepare for 2008 and for new rivals like China," Scherr said.

The mini-sports festival, to be held June 8-12, 2005 and again in 2006 and/or 2007, will be a world-class invitational with competition expected, but not yet confirmed, in athletics, indoor volleyball, diving, archery and other sports still in negotiation.

Top-level US and Chinese athletes as well as a host of other invited countries will participate.

The agreement also has the option for the Chinese Olympic Committee to host the event in 2006.

The USA-China Sports Summit will be the second international, multi-sport competition created in recent years by the USOC, joining the Titan Games, which will be contested in Atlanta for the third time in late summer 2005.

"With the creation of the USA-China Sports Summit and the Titan Games, we've developed sporting events that will intensify and maximize competitive opportunities for US athletes and will increase fan interest in Olympic sports.

The event, expected to cost some US$12 million, will be staged at venues in Seattle and surrounding cities.

The area is no stranger to such events, having hosted the Goodwill Games in 1990.



 
  Today's Top News     Top Sports News
 

Foreigners encouraged to invest in West China

 

   
 

Chinese-American faces trial for spying

 

   
 

Japanese-left bombs injure Jilin boys

 

   
 

Explosion shakes Chinese embassy in Kabul

 

   
 

Disasters claim lives, do damage to farmland

 

   
 

Disease-free zones key to animal husbandry

 

   
  USA-China Sports Summit for 2005 to open
   
  Dutchman Haan brings 'total football' to China
   
  Beijing sports fans are second to none
   
  South Korea power into quarters
   
  Sharapova courting more success on US hardcourts
   
  Athens angry over ceremony 'leak'
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
Advertisement