The '2000 Summer Olympics' or the 'Millennium Games'/'Games of the New Millennium', officially known as the 'Games of the XXVII Olympiad', were the
Summer Olympic Games held in
2000 in
Sydney,
New South Wales,
Australia.
Bidding process
''See also
2000 Summer Olympics bids''
Sydney won the right to host the games on
September 23,
1993 after being selected over
Beijing,
Berlin,
Istanbul and
Manchester, by the final vote, in an election in
Monte Carlo.
Preliminary matches- from September 13
Although the Olympic Games Opening Ceremony was not scheduled until
September 15, the
football competitions began with preliminary matches on
September 13. Among the pre-ceremony fixtures, host nation Australia lost 1-0 to Italy at the
Melbourne Cricket Ground.
Day 1 - September 15, the Opening Ceremony
Main articles: 2000 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony

The cover for the DVD of the 2000 Sydney Summer Olympics showing fireworks in the background and the lighting of the Olympic Flame by
Cathy Freeman (who subsequently won the
400 m title). Cathy Freeman is a major role model for
Indigenous Australians
Cultural display highlights
The opening ceremony began with a tribute to the Australian pastural heritage of the ''muster'' (or "roundup", in which the ''stockmen'' gather together the
livestock from the vast areas of an
Australian outback sheep or cattle ''station''), symbolising the drawing together of people from across the world. This was introduced by a lone rider,
Steve Jefferys, and his rearing
Australian Stock Horse ''Ammo''. At the cracking of Jefferys'
stockwhip, a further 120 riders entered the Stadium, their stock horses performing intricate steps, including forming the five
Olympic Rings, to the music by
Bruce Rowland, based on the theme which he (Rowland) had previously composed for the 1982 film ''
The Man from Snowy River''.
The
Australian National Anthem was sung, the first verse by
Human Nature and the second by
Julie Anthony.
The ceremony continued, showing many aspects of the land and its people:- the affinity of the mainly coastal-dwelling Australians with the sea that surrounds the "Island Continent", the
indigenous occupation of the land, the coming of the
First Fleet, the continued immigration from many nations and the rural industry on which the economy of the nation was built, including a display representing the harshness of rural life based on the paintings of Sir
Sidney Nolan. Two memorable scenes were the representation of the "Heart" of the country by 200
Aboriginal women from
Central Australia who danced up ''"the mighty spirit of God to protect the Games"'' and the overwhelmingly noisy representation of the
construction industry by hundreds of tap-dancing teenagers.
Because the wife of
Juan Antonio Samaranch, the IOC President, was seriously ill and not able to accompany her husband to the Olympics, former Australian Olympic Champion swimmer,
Dawn Fraser, accompanied Samaranch during the Australian cultural display, explaining to him some of the more obscure cultural references.
Formal presentation
A record 199 nations entered the stadium, the only missing
IOC member being
Afghanistan (suspended due to the
Taliban regime's prohibition against practicing any kind of
sports). Most remarkable was the entering of
North and
South Korea as one team, using a specially designed
unification flag: a white background flag with a blue map of the
Korea peninsula; the two teams would compete separately, however. Four athletes from
East Timor also marched in the parade of nations. Although the country-to-be had no National Olympic Committee then, they were allowed to compete under the
Olympic Flag. The
Governor-General,
Sir William Deane, opened the games.
The
Olympic Flag was carried around the arena by eight former Australian Olympic champions:
Bill Roycroft,
Murray Rose,
Liane Tooth,
Gillian Rolton,
Marjorie Jackson,
Lorraine Crapp,
Michael Wenden and
Nick Green. During the raising of the Olympics Flag, the
Olympic Hymn was sung by the Millennium Choir of the
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia.
The opening ceremony concluded with the lighting of the
Olympic Flame. Former Australian Olympic champion
Herb Elliott brought the Olympic Flame into the stadium. Then, celebrating 100 years of women's participation in the Olympic Games, former Australian women Olympic champions:
Betty Cuthbert and
Raelene Boyle,
Dawn Fraser,
Shirley Strickland (later Shirley Strickland de la Hunty),
Shane Gould and
Debbie Flintoff-King brought the torch through the stadium, handing it over to
Cathy Freeman, who lit the flame in the cauldron within a circle of fire. Unfortunately, what should have been a spectacular climax to the ceremony was somewhat spoilt by a technical glitch which meant that the Olympic flame was suspended in mid-air for several minutes, rather than immediately rising up a water-covered ramp to the top of the stadium. After the problem was fixed, the cauldron continued its course, and the ceremony concluded with a spectacular fireworks display.
Some significant participants
The young girl singer, who featured in the early part of the opening ceremony, was
Nikki Webster. Other musical performers were
Olivia Newton-John and
John Farnham (who sang the duet "Dare to Dream" while walking among the athletes),
Vanessa Amorosi (who sang "Heroes Live Forever" while a huge cloth was lowered down to cover the athletes - with sporting images and the image of a white dove of peace then being displayed on the cloth) and
Tina Arena (who sang "The Flame"). There was also a massed Millennium Marching Band of 2000 musicians - with 1000 Australian musicians, the remaining 1000 musicians being from other countries around the world. (the massed band was so large that six
conductors were required for the segment).
The English-language announcer for the Opening Ceremony was Australian actor
John Stanton, while the Channel 7 narrator for the Indigenous section of the display was actor
Ernie Dingo.
Events
Day 2 - September 16
The first medals of the Games were awarded in the women's 10 metre
air rifle competition, which was won by
Nancy Johnson of the
United States.
The
Triathlon made its Olympic debut with the women's race. Set in the surroundings of the iconic
Sydney Opera House,
Brigitte McMahon representing
Switzerland swam, cycled and ran to the first gold medal in the sport, beating the favoured home athletes.
The first star of the Games was
Ian Thorpe. The 17-year-old Australian first set a new world record in the 400 m freestyle final before competing in an exciting 4 x 100 m freestyle final. Swimming the last leg, Thorpe passed the leading Americans and arrived in a new world record time, two tenths of a second ahead of the Americans. In the same event for women, the Americans also broke the world record, finishing ahead of the
Netherlands and
Sweden.
Samaranch had to leave for home, as his wife was severely ill. Upon arrival, his wife had already died. Samaranch returned to Sydney four days later. The Olympic flag was flown at half-staff during the period as a sign of respect to Samaranch's wife.
Day 3 - September 17
Canadian Simon Whitfield sprinted away in the last 100 metres of the men's triathlon, becoming the inaugural winner in the event.
On the
cycling track,
Robert Bartko beat fellow
German Jens Lehmann in the individual pursuit, setting a new Olympic Record.
Leontien Zijlaard-van Moorsel set a world record in the semi-finals the same event for women.
In the swimming pool, American
Tom Dolan beat the world record in the 400 m
medley, successfully defending the title he won in
Atlanta four years prior. Dutchwoman
Inge de Bruijn also clocked a new world record, beating her own time in the 100 m butterfly final to win by more than a second.
Day 4 - September 18
The main event for the Australians on the fourth day of the Games was the 200 m freestyle.
Dutchman Pieter van den Hoogenband had broken the world record in the semi-finals, taking it from the new Australian hero
Ian Thorpe, who came close to the world record in his semi-final heat. As the final race finished, Van den Hoogenband's time was exactly the same as in the semi-finals, finishing ahead of Thorpe by half a second.
China won the
gold medal in the men's team all-around
gymnastics competition, after being the runner-up in the previous two Olympics. The other medals were taken by
Ukraine and
Russia, respectively.
Zijlaard-van Moorsel lived up to the expectations set by her world record in
cycling in the semis by winning the gold medal.
Day 9 - September 23
By rowing in the winning coxless four,
Steve Redgrave of
Great Britain became a member of a select group who had won gold medals at five consecutive Olympics.
The swimming 4 x 100-metre medley relay of B.J. Bedford, Megan Quann (Jendrick), Jenny Thompson and Dara Torres became the first women's relay under 4-minutes, swimming 3:58 and setting a world record, claiming the gold medal for the United States.
Day 10 - September 26
Rulon Gardner, never a
NCAA champion or a world medalist, beat
Alexander Karelin of Russia to win gold in the super heavyweight class,
Greco-Roman wrestling. Karelin had won gold in
Seoul,
Barcelona and
Atlanta. Before this fight he had never lost in international competition, had been unbeaten in all competitions in 13 years, and had not surrendered a point in a decade.
Day 11 - September 25
Australian
Cathy Freeman won the 400 metre final in front of a jubilant Sydney crowd at the
Olympic Stadium, ahead of Lorraine Graham of
Jamaica and
Katharine Merry of
Great Britain. Freeman's win made her the first competitor in Olympic Games history to light the
Olympic Flame and then go on to win a
Gold Medal.
Day 13 - September 28
The
Canadian flag at athletes' village is lowered to half-staff as
Canadian athletes pay tribute to former prime minister
Pierre Trudeau after hearing of his passing in
Montreal (Because of the time difference, it was September 29 in Sydney when Trudeau died).
Day 15 - September 30
Cameroon won a historic gold medal over
Spain in the Men's Olympic
Football Final at the Olympic Stadium. The game went to a penalty shootout.
Day 16 - October 1

Olympic colours on the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch declared at the Closing Ceremony,
"I am proud and happy to proclaim that you have presented to the world the best Olympic Games ever."
Yvonne Kenny was the soprano who sang the ''
Olympic Hymn'' at the Closing Ceremony. The ceremony featured performing artists such as
Jimmy Barnes,
Midnight Oil,
Kylie Minogue,
Slim Dusty,
Christine Anu,
Nikki Webster,
John Paul Young, Melbourne-based singer
Vanessa Amorosi,
Tommy Emmanuel CGP, and pop duo
Savage Garden.
The Games were then handed over to the city of their birthplace,
Athens, where they would again take place in
2004. The ceremony concluded with a huge
fireworks display on
Sydney Harbour.
Sports
See the medal winners, ordered by sport:
★
Wheelchair Racing (Demonstration Event)
Medal count
Main articles: 2000 Summer Olympics medal count
These are the top medal-collecting nations for the 2000 Games.
''(Host country is highlighted)''
| 1 | | '40' | 24 | '33' | '97' |
| 2 | | 32 | '28' | 28 | 88 |
| 3 | | 28 | 16 | 15 | 59 |
| 4 | | 16 | 25 | 17 | 58 |
| 5 | | 13 | 17 | 26 | 56 |
| 6 | | 13 | 14 | 11 | 38 |
| 7 | | 13 | 8 | 13 | 34 |
| 8 | | 12 | 9 | 4 | 25 |
| 9 | | 11 | 11 | 7 | 29 |
| 10 | | 11 | 10 | 7 | 28 |
Participating nations

Participating countries
199
National Olympic Committees (NOCs) participated in the Sydney Games, two more than in
1996. In addition, there were four
Timorese Individual Olympic Athletes at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
Eritrea,
Micronesia and
Palau made their Olympic debut this year.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ |
★ ''
Venues
Sydney Olympic Park
★
Stadium Australia: Opening and Closing Ceremonies, Athletics, Football final
★
Sydney International Aquatic Centre: Diving, Swimming, Synchronised Swimming, Water Polo
★
State Sports Centre: Table Tennis, Taekwondo
★
NSW Tennis Centre: Tennis
★
State Hockey Centre: Field Hockey
★
The Dome and Exhibition Complex: Badminton, Basketball, Rhythmic Gymnastics, Handball, Modern Pentathlon, Volleyball
★
Sydney SuperDome: Artistic Gymnastics, Trampoline, Basketball
★
Sydney Baseball Stadium: Baseball, Modern Pentathlon
★
Sydney International Archery Park: Archery
Sydney
★
Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre: Wrestling, Boxing, Judo, Fencing
★
Sydney Entertainment Centre: Volleyball
★
Dunc Gray Velodrome: Track Cycling
★
Sydney International Shooting Centre: Shooting
★
Sydney International Equestrian Centre: Equestrian
★
Sydney International Regatta Centre: Rowing, Sprint Canoeing
★
Blacktown Olympic Centre: Baseball, Softball
★
Mountain Bike Course, Fairfield City Farm: Mountain Biking
★
Ryde Aquatic Leisure Centre: Water Polo
★
Penrith Whitewater Stadium: Slalom Canoeing
★
Bondi Beach: Beach Volleyball
★
Sydney Football Stadium: Football preliminaries
Outside of Sydney
★
Bruce Stadium,
Canberra: Football Preliminaries
★
Hindmarsh Stadium,
Adelaide: Football Preliminaries
★
Melbourne Cricket Ground: Football preliminaries
★
Brisbane Cricket Ground: Football preliminaries
Media coverage
Most of the footage used by international broadcasters of the Opening and Closing Ceremony was directed out of SOBO (Sydney Olympic Broadcasting Organisation) by Australian director
Peter Faiman.
The games were covered by the following broadcasters:
★
Seven Network (Australia)
★
RTÉ (Ireland)
★
BBC (Great Britain)
★
NBC (United States)
★
SVT (Sweden)
★
CBC and
TSN (Canada)
★
NHK (Japan)
★
ARD and
ZDF (Germany)
★
France Télévisions (
France 2 and
France 3) and
Canal + (France)
★
Televisa and
TV Azteca (Mexico)
★
TVNZ (New Zealand)
★
TV Globo and
TV Bandeirantes for (Brazil)
Running up to the games an Australian comedy satire,
The Games, was broadcast in Australia (it was also broadcast, at a later date, in New Zealand). It featured a spoof of the issues and events that the top-level organisers and bureaucrats suffered in the lead up to the games.
NBC presented over 400+ hours on their main and sister stations,
CNBC and
MSNBC. The downside of the American coverage was that it was presented on tape delay rather than live due to the 15-hour time difference. The lone exception was the gold medal game in Men's Basketball, which featured the U.S. defeating France 85-75. The game was televised live in primetime on Saturday, September 30(EDT), which was the afternoon of Sunday, October 1 in Australia. In their
2004 coverage, NBC and its sister networks presented live coverage throughout the morning and afternoon, while showing marquee events pre-taped in prime time.
A poignant part of the media coverage happened in the Canadian broadcast. On September 28, the CBC was airing the Olympics, when the network's chief correspondent,
Peter Mansbridge, broke in and said:
:"Hello from Toronto, I'm Peter Mansbridge. Sad news to report from Montreal...
Pierre Elliott Trudeau, prime minister of Canada from
1968 to
1984 with one brief interruption in
1979, has passed away..."
People in Canada who wanted to see the Olympics between then and the closing ceremonies had to turn to TSN because the CBC was broadcasting news coverage related to the
death and state funeral of the former prime minister.
Organization

SOCOG organisational structure circa 1998 - five groups and 33 divisions reporting to the CEO are organised primarily along functional lines with only a limited number of divisions (eg Interstate Football and Villages) anticipating a venue focussed design.

SOCOG organisational structure circa 1999 - functional divisions and precinct/venue streams are organised in a matrix structure linked to the Main Operations Centre (MOC). Some functions such as Project Management (in the Games Coordination group) continue to exist largely outside this matrix structure.
Bodies responsible for the Olympics
A number of quasi-government bodies were responsible for the construction, organisation and execution of the Sydney Games. These included:
★
SOCOG the Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games, primarily responsible for the staging of the Games
★
OCA the Olympic Coordination Authority, primarily responsible for construction and oversight
★
ORTA the Olympic Roads and Transport Authority
★
OSCC the Olympic Security Command Centre
★
OIC the Olympic Intelligence Centre
★
JTF Gold the
Australian Defence Force Joint Taskforce Gold
★
SOBO the Sydney Olympic Broadcasting Organisation (nominally part of SOCOG)
These organisations worked closely together and with other bodies such as:
★ the
International Olympic Committee (or IOC)
★ the
Australian Olympic Committee (or AOC)
★ the other 197
National Olympic Committees (or NOCs)
★ the 33
International Sporting Federations (or IFs)
★ all three levels of Australian government (federal, state and local)
★ dozens of official sponsor and hundreds of official supplier companies
The Sydney Millennium Mascots, Syd, Milli, and Olly were designed by
Matt Hatton and
Jozef Szekeres.
These bodies are often collectively referred to as the "Olympic Family".
Organization of the Paralympics
Organization of the
2000 Summer Paralympics was the responsibility of
SPOC the Sydney Paralympic Organizing Committee. However much of the planning and operation of the Paralympic Games was outsourced to SOCOG such that most operational programmes planned both the Olympic and Paralympic Games.
Other Olympic events
Organisation of the Olympic Games included not only the actual sporting events but also the management (and sometimes construction) of the sporting venues and surrounding precincts, the organisation of the
Sydney Olympic Arts Festival and
Olympic torch relay. The route the relay took is shown here:
Phases of the Olympic project
The staging of the Olympics were treated as a
project on a vast scale, with the project broken into several broad phases:
★
1993 to
1996 – positioning
★
1997 – going operational
★
1998 – procurement/venuisation
★
1999 – testing/refinement
★
2000 - implementation
★
2001 - post implementation and wind-down
SOCOG organisational design
The internal organisation of SOCOG evolved over the phases of the project and changed, sometimes radically, several times.
In late 1998 the design was principally ''functional''. The top two tiers below the
CEO Sandy Hollway consisted of five ''groups'' (managed by Group General Managers and the Deputy CEO) and twenty ''divisions'' (managed by divisional General Managers), which in turn were further broken up into ''programmes'' and ''sub programmes'' or ''projects''.
In 1999 functional areas (FAs) broke up into geographic precinct and venue teams (managed by Precinct Managers and Venue Managers) with functional area staff reporting to both the FA manager and the venue manager. Ie, SOCOG moved to a
matrix structure. The Interstate Football division extant in 1998 was the first of these geographically based venue teams.
Volunteer program
The origins of the volunteer program for Sydney 2000 dates back to the bid, as early as 1992.
On
December 17 1992, a group of Sydney citizens, interested in the prospect of hosting the 2000 Olympic and Paralympic Games, gathered for a meeting at Sports House, at Wentworth Park in
Sydney.
In the period leading up to 1999, after Sydney had won the bid, the small group of volunteers grew from approximately 42 to around 500. These volunteers became known as Pioneer Volunteers. The Pioneer Volunteer program was managed internally by SOCOG's Volunteer Services Department in consultation with prominent peak groups like
The Centre for Volunteering (Volunteering NSW) and
TAFE. Some of the Pioneer Volunteers still meet every four months, an unseen legacy of the games which brought together a community spirit not seen before.
During the Olympic games tens of thousands of volunteers helped everywhere at the Olympic venues and elsewhere in the city. They were honoured with a parade like the athletes had a few days before.
The official mascots
The official
mascots chosen for the 2000 Summer Olympics were:
[1]
★ 'Olly' the
Kookaburra — 'Olly' was named for 'Olympics'
★ 'Syd' the
Platypus — 'Syd' was named for 'Sydney', the host city for the Games.
★ 'Millie' the
Echidna — 'Millie' was named for 'Millennium'
There was also an unofficial mascot,
Fatso the Fat-Arsed Wombat, popularized by comedy team
The Dream with Roy and HG.
The Bronze Medals
Until the end of
1991,
[2] Australia minted both a:
★
1 cent coin — featuring a
Feathertail Glider on the reverse side of the coin
★
2 cent coin — featuring a
Frill-necked Lizard on the reverse side of the coin
In 1992, these
coins began to be removed from circulation. People were urged to exchange them for coins still in circulation.
Both the 1 cent coins and 2 cent coins were melted down and turned into
bronze medals for the 2000 Olympics.
[3] [4]
Award
★ The International Olympic Committee awarded Sydney and its inhabitants with the "Pierre de Coubertin Trophy" in recognition of the collaboration and happiness shown by the people of Sydney during the event to all the athletes and visitors around the world.
Trivia
★
Mary Donaldson and
Crown Prince Frederik met each other in Sydney during the Olympics.
★ 2000 is both the year of these Olympics and the
postcode of its city.
★ These were the last Games under the presidency of
Juan Antonio Samaranch.
★ These were the only games in Olympic history, where the same person who lit the flame in the cauldron (Cathy Freeman) then went on to win a gold medal in the same games.
Fictional reference
★ The
James Bond character in the film ''
Die Another Day'',
Miranda Frost, won a gold medal in fencing. It was referred to by
Madonna's character Verity, who told Bond that she won the gold by default (after her opponent died of a steroid overdose orchestrated by
Gustav Graves) in Sydney.
★ The 2000 Olympics are a key plot element of the book ''
Rainbow Six''
Notes and references
{{FootnotesSmall|resize=
See also
★
Aussie Aussie Aussie, Oi Oi Oi
★
Olympic Games
★
2000 Summer Paralympics
★
International Olympic Committee
★
IOC country codes
★
External links
★
Sydney Olympic Games Information
★
Sydney Olympic Park
★
Sydney Olympic Games Opening Ceremony - Australian Special Events
★
Australian Olympic Committee site on 2000 Sydney Olympics - includes information and photo gallery
★
IOC Site on 2000 Summer Olympics
★
Sydney 2000 Games Collection at the Powerhouse Museum - information and audio files
★
A Look Back at the Sydney Olympics and Paralympics - Australian Bureau of Statistics
★
2000 Sydney Olympics - Culture and Recreation
★
Satellite view of 2000 Sydney Olympics sites
★
Sydney 2000 Olympic Games - archived websites in PANDORA
★
Sydney 2000 Olympic and Paralympic Games Photo Map - Photomap of Venues, Events and Construction leading up to Sydney 2000
★
Volunteers Website - Website maintained by and for Sydney 2000 Volunteer Alumni
★
Official Report Vol. 1 - Digital Archive from the Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles
★
Sydney 2000 Olympic pins
★ Valley Independent newspaper,September 27th,2000.