词条 | 1993 Southeast Asian Games |
释义 |
| Name = 17th Southeast Asian Games | Logo = 1993 sea games.png | Size = | Optional caption = | Events = 29 sports | Nations participating = 9 | Athletes participating = | Opening ceremony = 12 June | Closing ceremony = 20 June | Officially opened by = Wee Kim Wee {{small|President of Singapore}} | Athlete's Oath = | Judge's Oath = | torch lighter =Grace Young | Ceremony venue = Singapore National Stadium | previous = 1991 | next = 1995 }} The 1993 Southeast Asian Games, officially known as the 17th Southeast Asian Games, was a multi-sport event held in Singapore from 12 to 20 June 1993 with 29 sports featured in the games. The games were opened by Wee Kim Wee, the President of Singapore. This was the third time Singapore hosted the games and its first since 1983. Previously, Singapore also hosted the games for the first time in 1973.[1] The final medal tally was led by Indonesia, followed by Thailand, the Philippines and host Singapore. MarketingLogoThe logo of the 1993 Southeast Asian Games is an image of a lion, which represents Singapore with the nickname, the lion city as the host of the 1993 Southeast Asian Games. The colours of the lion, blue, yellow, red, black and green are colours of the Olympic movement and represents the Olympic and sportsmanship spirit of the participating athletes in which the important thing is not to win, but to take part. The 6-ring chain, the logo of the Southeast Asian Games Federation, represents the six founding nations of the Southeast Asian Games and the Southeast Asian Games itself. MascotThe mascot of the 1993 Southeast Asian Games is a lion named, Singa. It has heart-shaped mane, snout and tail which represents the welcome of athletes to the city with lots of love.[2][3] {{clear}}The gamesParticipating nations{{col-start}}{{col-3}}
Sports{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
}} Medal tableA total of 1048 medals, comprising 319 Gold medals, 318 Silver medals and 411 Bronze medals were awarded to athletes. The host Singapore's performance was their best ever yet and was placed fourth overall amongst participating nations.
| caption = | host = SIN | flag_template = flagIOC2team | event = 1993 Southeast Asian Games | team = | gold_INA = 88 | silver_INA = 81 | bronze_INA = 84 | gold_THA = 63 | silver_THA = 70 | bronze_THA = 63 | gold_PHI = 57 | silver_PHI = 59 | bronze_PHI = 72 | gold_SIN = 50 | silver_SIN = 40 | bronze_SIN = 74 | host_SIN = yes | gold_MAS = 43 | silver_MAS = 45 | bronze_MAS = 65 | gold_VIE = 9 | silver_VIE = 6 | bronze_VIE = 19 | gold_MYA = 8 | silver_MYA = 13 | bronze_MYA = 16 | gold_BRU = 1 | silver_BRU = 3 | bronze_BRU = 18 | gold_LAO = 0 | silver_LAO = 1 | bronze_LAO = 0 }} References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/history/events/fda6f178-bd95-4d28-93e7-d274d39def5d|title=Singapore hosts the 17th SEA Games|accessdate=16 February 2017}} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://justinzhuang.com/posts/tag/singa/|title=Roar! Sporting Lions in Singapore}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.seagames2015.com/news/multimedia/looking-back-at-sea-games-singapore|title=Looking Back At SEA Games Singapore|deadurl=bot: unknown|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170212004048/http://www.seagames2015.com/news/multimedia/looking-back-at-sea-games-singapore|archivedate=12 February 2017|df=dmy-all}} External links
| prev = 1991 Manila, Philippines | list = Southeast Asian Games | next = 1995 Chiang Mai, Thailand }}{{SEA Games}}{{Singapore-sport-stub}}{{SEAsianGames-stub}} 7 : Southeast Asian Games|1993 in multi-sport events|International sports competitions hosted by Singapore|1993 in Singaporean sport|1993 Southeast Asian Games|Multi-sport events in Singapore|1993 in Asian sport |
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