Sports or recreational activities which are played on snow or ice
Winter sports or winter activities are competitive sports or non-competitive 📈 recreational activities which are played on snow or ice.
[1] Most are variations of skiing, ice skating and sledding.
Traditionally, such games 📈 were only played in cold areas during winter, but artificial snow and artificial ice allow more flexibility.
Playing areas and fields 📈 consist of either snow or ice.
Artificial ice can be used to provide ice rinks for ice skating, ice hockey, para 📈 ice hockey, ringette, broomball, bandy, rink bandy, rinkball, and spongee in a milder climate.
The sport of speed skating uses a 📈 frozen circular track of ice, but in some facilities the track is combined in an enclosed area used for sports 📈 requiring an ice rink or the rink itself is used.
Alternatively, ice cross downhill uses a track with various levels of 📈 elevation and a combination of bends.
Long distance skating ( a.k.a.
"marathon skating") such as tour skating is only performed outdoors and 📈 uses the available natural ice from frozen lakes, ponds, and marshes.
Tour skating at times includes speed skaters, though tour skates 📈 are more common.
Common individual sports include cross-country skiing, alpine skiing, snowboarding, ski jumping, speed skating, figure skating, luge, skeleton, bobsleigh, 📈 ski orienteering and snowmobiling.
Common team sports include ice hockey, ringette, broomball (on either an indoor ice rink, or an outdoor 📈 ice rink or field of snow), curling, rinkball, and bandy.
Based on the number of participants, ice hockey is the world's 📈 most popular winter team sport, followed by bandy.[2]
Winter sports at times have their own multi-sport events, such as the Winter 📈 Olympic Games and the Winter Universiade.
History [ edit ]
In the early days of the Olympics there was not much differentiation 📈 between the summer and winter games.
These confusions would span from around the late 1890s until the early to mid 1900s.
During 📈 this time, some sports considered to be winter sports and played or performed during the Olympic Winter Games today, would 📈 be held during the Olympic Summer Games.
It was originally wanted to keep all of the Olympic sports together under one 📈 event and program, but due to environmental demands of some sports, it had to be separated.[3]
Snow and ice during the 📈 winter time has enabled sliding as a means of transportation, using sledges, skis and skates.
This also led to different pastimes 📈 and sports being developed in the winter season as compared to other times of the year.
Naturally, winter sports are more 📈 popular in countries with longer winter seasons.
In the European Alps, St.
Moritz became a popular winter resort in 1864.[4][5]
While most winter 📈 sports are played outside, ice hockey, speed skating and to some extent bandy have moved indoors starting in the mid-20th 📈 century.
Indoor ice rinks with artificial ice allow ice skating and hockey to be played in hot climates.
Outdoor winter sports will 📈 likely be severely impacted because of climate change in the next century.[6]
List of winter sports [ edit ]
Note: the Olympic 📈 rings next to a sport indicates that this particular sport is included in the Winter Olympic Games, as of the 📈 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
The Paralympic logo indicates the same for a sport not in the Olympics but in the 📈 Winter Paralympic Games.
Ice skating [ edit ]Skiing [ edit ]
Ski jumping at Salpausselkä in Lahti, Finland in 2010Sledding [ edit 📈 ]
An East German bobsleigh in 1951, Oberhof track, Germany
Sports that use sleds going down ice tracks or pulled by something:
Snowboarding 📈 [ edit ]
Snowmobiling [ edit ]
A snowmobile tour at Yellowstone National Park.
Free styleSnocrossRecreationCross-countryHill climbing
Team sports [ edit ]
Based on the 📈 number of participating athletes, bandy is the second most popular winter sport in the world for men
Other sports [ edit 📈 ]
Recreational sports [ edit ]
Some sports are competed in (or simply enjoyed) on a more casual basis, often by children:
Notable 📈 winter sporting events [ edit ]
A postage stamp issued by East Germany in 1968 in commemoration of their first Winter 📈 Olympics as an independent country under a communist regimeWorld Cup [ edit ]
World championships [ edit ]See also [ edit 📈 ]References [ edit ]Citations [ edit ]