- Source: Unified Team at the Paralympics
The Unified Team was the name used for the sports team of eleven former constituent republics of the Soviet Union
(excluding Estonia, Georgia, Latvia, and Lithuania) at the 1992 Winter Paralympics in Albertville and the 1992 Summer Paralympics in Barcelona. The IOC country code was EUN, after the French name, Équipe Unifiée.
The Paralympic Flag was used in place of a national flag at the Opening Ceremony and at medals ceremonies, and the Paralympic Hymn was played for gold medallists. Unlike the Unified Team at the Olympics, the Summer Paralympic team paraded in the opening ceremony with no special procedure (no placard displayed the names of the individual countries, the announcers did not announce the names of the individual countries, and the athletes did not carry flags of the individual countries).
Details
For details of the Unified Team's participation, see:
Unified Team at the 1992 Winter Paralympics
Unified Team at the 1992 Summer Paralympics
Participating countries
Performance
The Unified Team finished third to the United States and Germany in the overall medal tally at Albertville with 10 golds, 8 silvers, and 3 bronzes; 21 medals in total
The team finished eighth at Barcelona with 16 golds, 14 silvers, and 15 bronzes; 45 medals in total
(Note, however, that the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) does not officially recognise national medal totals.)
Athletes
Athletes competing for the Unified team at the 1992 Summer and 1992 Winter Paralympic Games.
= Summer Games
=Men
Women
= Winter Games
=Men
Women
See also
Unified Team at the Olympics
Independent Paralympic Participants at the 1992 Summer Paralympics
Korean Unification Flag
CIS national football team
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Unified Team at the Paralympics
- Unified Team at the Olympics
- EUN
- Unified Team
- CIS national football team
- Unified Team at the 1992 Winter Paralympics
- Unified Team at the 1992 Summer Paralympics
- Commonwealth of Independent States
- Belarus
- Russia at the Paralympics