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  1. Les Jeux olympiques d'hiver de 2010, officiellement connus comme les XXI es Jeux olympiques d'hiver, ont lieu à Vancouver au Canada le 22 février 2010. Vancouver obtient les Jeux lors de sa troisième candidature en s'imposant face aux villes de PyeongChang en Corée du Sud et Salzbourg en Autriche.C'est la troisième fois qu'une ville canadienne organise les Jeux olympiques après Montréal ...

  2. The 2010 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XXI Olympic Winter Games ( French: XXIes Jeux olympiques d'hiver) and also known as Vancouver 2010 ( Squamish: K'emk'emeláy̓ 2010 ), were an international winter multi-sport event held from February 12 to 28, 2010 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, with some events held in the surrounding ...

  3. 12 févr. 2010 · Héritage Vancouver 2010. Découvrez l’héritage durable que l’édition des Jeux Olympiques de Vancouver 2010 a laissé à ses hôtes.. Les sports de montagne à Whistler. Pour ces Jeux d’Hiver 2010, Whistler a accueilli les épreuves olympiques et paralympiques de ski alpin, ski de fond et biathlon, ainsi que le combiné nordique, le saut à ski, le bobsleigh, la luge et le skeleton.

  4. 12 févr. 2010 · Vancouver Venues. The 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games events in Vancouver included curling, figure skating, ice hockey, sledge hockey, short-track speed skating and wheelchair curling. Speed skating took place in Richmond, while the snowboard and freestyle skiing events were hosted at Cypress Mountain in the District of West Vancouver.

  5. Les 14 médaillés d’or du Canada constituent le record du plus grand nombre de médailles d’or remportées par un même pays aux Jeux d’hiver, tandis que la récolte totale de 26 médailles devenait alors un nouveau record canadien. Joannie Rochette en action lors de son programme libre à Vancouver 2010. 25 février 2010.

  6. Official list of medal winners and results by sport at the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games. Celebrate medal-winning moments by the world's top athletes.

  7. 6 août 2011 · Vancouver became Canada's third Olympic host city after winning the vote on the second ballot over PyeongChang, South Korea. But unlike the first two times the Olympic Games came to Canada when the host nation went without a gold medal, this time there were a record number of trips to the top of the podium. Canada's 14 gold medals were the most ever won by one country at a Winter Games while ...

  8. Vancouver’s Olympic quest began in 1998, when the Canadian Olympic Committee (COC) selected the city over Calgary and Quebec for Canada’s bid to host the 2010 Winter Games. The bid was technically a joint venture between Vancouver and the Coast Mountains resort town of Whistler, which lies about 70 miles (110 km) north of Vancouver and was the proposed site of most of the Games’ skiing ...

  9. 2 juil. 2020 · 3:05. In July 2003, Vancouver is announced as the victor in the competition to host the 2010 winter Olympics. Now, they could only wait. An arena full of 18,000 people had gathered in Vancouver to ...

  10. Vancouver 2010 reached a record potential audience of 3.8 billion people worldwide and approximately 1.8 billion viewers. There was almost double the amount of television coverage of Vancouver 2010 than there was for the Turin Games in 2006 and three times the amount available during Salt Lake City 2002, representing 31,902 hours of broadcast

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