Tropical nations at the Winter Olympics

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Ghana entering the stadium during the opening ceremony of the 2010 Winter Olympics.

Although traditionally associated with cold weather nations, the Winter Olympics have also had participation from several tropical nations. The typical climate of these nations is not conducive to participation in winter sports, and no Winter Olympic medals have ever been won by a tropical nation. Probably because of that, their entries are a subject of human interest stories during the Games.[1][2][3]

The first participating warm-weather nation in the Winter Games was Mexico. Much of Mexico is at a latitude north of the Tropic of Cancer, and most of the country has a subtropical highland or semi-arid climate, so it is not exclusively a tropical nation. Nonetheless, Mexico made its Winter debut at the 1928 Winter Olympics[4] with a five-man bobsleigh team that finished eleventh of twenty-three entrants.[5] Mexico did not return again to the Winter Games until 1984.[6]

The first truly tropical nation to compete in the Winter Olympic Games is the Philippines, who sent two alpine skiers to the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan.[7] Ben Nanasca placed 42nd in the giant slalom event (out of 73 entrants), and Juan Cipriano did not finish. In the slalom event, neither skier was able to finish. Costa Rica became the second tropical nation to participate at the Winter Games, in 1980 at Lake Placid, New York,[8] where Arturo Kinch also competed in alpine skiing events. Kinch would continue to compete for Costa Rica at three more Winter Games, including the 2006 Games at age 49. There he finished 96th in the 15 km cross-country skiing event, ahead of only Prawat Nagvajara of Thailand.[3][9]

The 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Canada attracted a large number of tropical nations, including Costa Rica, Fiji, Guam, Guatemala, Jamaica, Netherlands Antilles, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and the United States Virgin Islands.[10] The Jamaican Bobsled Team became a fan favorite at these Games[11] and were later the inspiration behind the 1993 motion picture Cool Runnings. In the 1994 Games six years later, the Jamaican four man sled placed a creditable fourteenth, ahead of the United States and Russia, while a Jamaican bobsledder Lascelles Brown won silver for Canada in 2006.

The 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy marked the Winter Games debut of Ethiopia[2] and Madagascar.[12] The 2010 Games in Vancouver, Canada saw the debut of the Cayman Islands, Colombia, Peru,[13] and Ghana.[14] The 2014 Winter Olympics saw the debut of Dominica, Timor-Leste, Togo and Tonga.

List of participating tropical nations

File:World map torrid.svg
World map with tropical latitudes highlighted in red
File:Klimagürtel-der-erde-tropen.png
World map with tropical climates highlighted in red

This list of nations includes those that lie entirely or predominantly within the tropical latitudes and also have a mostly tropical climate according to the Köppen climate classification system. Years of Winter Olympic Games participation are shown.

Africa
 Cameroon (CMR) 2002
 Ethiopia (ETH) 2006–2010
 Ghana (GHA) 2010
 Kenya (KEN) 1998–2006
 Madagascar (MAD) 2006
 Senegal (SEN) 1984, 1992–1994, 2006–2010
 Togo (TOG) 2014
 Zimbabwe (ZIM) 2014
 
Caribbean
 British Virgin Islands (IVB) 1984, 2014
 Cayman Islands (CAY) 2010–2014
 Dominica (DMA) 2014
 Jamaica (JAM) 1988–2002, 2010–2014
22x20px Netherlands Antilles (AHO) 1988–1992
 Puerto Rico (PUR) 1984–2002
 Trinidad and Tobago (TRI) 1994–2002
 Virgin Islands (ISV) 1988–2006, 2014
 
Central and South America
 Bolivia (BOL) 1956, 1980-1992
 Brazil (BRA) 1992–2014
 Colombia (COL) 2010
 Costa Rica (CRC) 1980–1992, 2006
 Guatemala (GUA) 1988
 Honduras (HON) 1992
 Paraguay (PAR) 2014
 Peru (PER) 2010–2014
 Venezuela (VEN) 1998–2006, 2014
 
Oceania
 American Samoa (ASA) 1994
 Fiji (FIJ) 1988, 1994, 2002
 Guam (GUM) 1988
 Tonga (TGA) 2014
 
Asia
 Hong Kong (HKG) 2002–2014
 Philippines (PHI) 1972, 1988–1992, 2014
 Thailand (THA) 2002–2006, 2014
 East Timor (TLS) 2014

Other warm weather nations (located in the subtropics, for example) that have competed in the Winter Games include Australia (which has a tropical far north, and became the first Southern Hemisphere nation to win a gold medal at the Winter Olympics in 2002), Bermuda, Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong, India (which contains a section of the Himalayas), Mexico, South Africa, Swaziland, Uruguay and several North African nations including Algeria, Egypt and Morocco.

Tonga sought to make its Winter Olympic debut at the 2010 Winter Olympics by entering a single competitor in luge, attracting some media attention, but he crashed in the final round of qualifying.[15] Two years later, he attracted media attention again when it was discovered he had altered his name to that of one of his sponsors, a lingerie firm, as a marketing stunt. He was, at that time, in training to attempt to qualify for the 2014 Winter Olympics.[16][17]

Notable winter Olympians from tropical nations

File:2011-02-27 Philip Boit 01.jpg
Philip Boit was the first Kenyan to participate in the Winter Olympics.
Lamine Guèye, the first Black African skier to take part in a Winter Olympics.
Michael Christian Martinez, the first Southeast Asian and Filipino figure skater to take part in the Winter Olympics. He is also the first figure skater from the tropical zone to compete in the Winter Olympics
Name Nation Sport
Anne Abernathy  Virgin Islands luge
Bruno Banani  Tonga luge
Judd Bankert  Guam biathlon
Iginia Boccalandro  Venezuela luge
Philip Boit  Kenya cross-country skiing
Lascelles Brown  Jamaica[nb 1] bobsleigh
Roberto Carcelen  Peru cross-country skiing
Isabel Clark Ribeiro  Brazil snowboarding
Cynthia Denzler  Colombia alpine skiing
Erroll Fraser  British Virgin Islands speed skating
Lamine Guèye  Senegal alpine skiing
Werner Hoeger  Venezuela luge
Errol Kerr  Jamaica freestyle skiing
Arturo Kinch  Costa Rica alpine skiing and cross-country skiing
Eric Maleson  Brazil bobsleigh
Michael Christian Martinez  Philippines figure skating
Andrew McNeilly  Trinidad and Tobago bobsleigh
Isaac Menyoli  Cameroon cross-country skiing
Renato Mizoguchi  Brazil luge
Prawat Nagvajara  Thailand cross-country skiing
Kwame Nkrumah-Acheampong  Ghana alpine skiing
Raymond Ocampo  Philippines luge
Ricardo Raschini  Brazil bobsleigh and luge
Mathieu Razanakolona  Madagascar alpine skiing
Rusiate Rogoyawa  Fiji cross-country skiing
Leyti Seck  Senegal alpine skiing
Robel Teklemariam  Ethiopia cross-country skiing
Michael Teruel  Philippines alpine skiing
Laurence Thoms  Fiji alpine skiing
Dow Travers  Cayman Islands alpine skiing
George Tucker  Puerto Rico luge
Vanessa Vanakorn  Thailand alpine skiing
Hubertus von Hohenlohe  Mexico alpine skiing

Winter Paralympic Games

As of 2014, only two tropical nations have been represented at the Winter Paralympic Games.[18] Tofiri Kibuuka of Uganda competed in cross-country skiing at the inaugural edition of the Winter Paralympics in 1976 and again at the 1980 Games.[19] After Kibuuka obtained Norwegian nationality, he began to compete for Norway at the Paralympics starting in 1984, winning several medals in athletics at the Summer Paralympics. Brazil sent two athletes as part of its debut at the 2014 Winter Paralympics.

Africa
 Uganda (UGA) 1976–1980
Central and South America
 Brazil (BRA) 2014
Name Nation Sport
Tofiri Kibuuka Uganda cross-country skiing

Winter Youth Olympic Games

Five tropical nations were represented at the First Winter Youth Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria.

Africa
 Eritrea (ERI) 2012
 
Caribbean
 Cayman Islands (CAY) 2012
 
Central and South America
 Brazil (BRA) 2012
 Peru (PER) 2012
 
Asia
 Philippines (PHI) 2012

See also

Notes

  1. Brown competed for Jamaica in the 2002 Games, but has competed for Canada since 2006.

References

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  16. "Tonga's chosen one takes aim at Sochi luging", Vancouver Sun, 2 December 2011
  17. "Outside Edge: Liar, liar, pants on fire in the snow", The Independent, 5 February 2012
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  19. Results for Tofiri Kibuuka from the International Paralympic Committee