Austrian Olympic Committee

The Austrian Olympic Committee (German: Österreichisches Olympisches Komitee, ÖOC; IOC Code: AUT) is the non-profit organization representing Austrian athletes in the International Olympic Committee (IOC). The ÖOC also represents the selection of Austrian cities in their bid to be the site for the Olympic Games.

Austrian Olympic Committee
Austrian Olympic Committee logo
Country Austria
CodeAUT
Created1908
Recognized1912
Continental
Association
EOC
HeadquartersVienna, Austria
PresidentHorst Nussbaumer[1]
Secretary GeneralFlorian Gosch
Websitewww.olympia.at

ÖOC is headquartered in Vienna.[2]

History

edit

The Austrian Olympic Committee was created in 1908 and formally recognized by the IOC in 1912.[3]

List of presidents

edit
PresidentTerm
Balduin Groller 1908–1912
Otto Herschmann 1912–1914
Rudolf Graf Colloredo-Mannsfeld[4] 1914–1921
Theodor Schmidt [de] 1929–1938
Josef Gerö [de; eo; es; it] 1946–1954
Heinrich Drimmel [de] 1956–1969
Heinz Pruckner [de] 1969–1972
Kurt Heller [arz; de] 1973–1990
Leo Wallner [de] 1990–2009
Karl Stoss 2009–2025
Horst Nussbaumer 2025–present[1]

Member federations

edit

The Austrian national federations are the organizations that coordinate all aspects of their sports. They are responsible for training, competition, and development of their sports. There are currently 32 Olympic summer and 6 winter sports federations in Austria.

National federationSummer or winterHeadquarters
Austrian Archery AssociationSummerWals-Siezenheim
Austrian Athletics FederationSummerVienna
Austrian Badminton Association [de; nl]SummerVienna
Austrian Baseball Federation [fr; it]SummerVienna
Austrian Basketball FederationSummerVienna
Austrian Bobsleigh and Skeleton FederationWinterInnsbruck
Austrian Boxing FederationSummerReichersberg
Austrian Canoe FederationSummerVienna
Austrian Climbing FederationSummerInnsbruck
Austrian Curling Association [de]WinterVienna
Austrian Cycling FederationSummerVienna
Austrian Equestrian Federation [de]SummerLaxenburg
Austrian Fencing FederationSummerGraz
Austrian Figure Skating Association [de]WinterVienna
Austrian Football AssociationSummerVienna
Austrian Golf Association [de]SummerVienna
Austrian Gymnastics Federation [de]SummerVienna
Austrian Handball FederationSummerVienna
Austrian Hockey Federation [de; nl]SummerVienna
Austrian Ice Hockey AssociationWinterVienna
Austrian Judo FederationSummerVienna
Austrian Karate FederationSummerSankt Pölten
Austrian Luge FederationWinterInnsbruck
Austrian Modern Pentathlon FederationSummerWöllersdorf-Steinabrückl
Austrian Rowing Federation [de]SummerVienna
Austrian Rugby FederationSummerVienna
Austrian Sailing FederationSummerNeusiedl am See
Austrian Shooting Federation [de]SummerInnsbruck
Austrian Speed Skating Association [nl]WinterVienna
Austrian Ski FederationWinterInnsbruck
Austrian Swimming Federation [de]SummerVienna
Austrian Table Tennis Association [de; fr; it; nl]SummerVienna
Austrian Taekwondo FederationSummerSchwaz
Austrian Tennis Association [de; nl]SummerVösendorf
Austrian Triathlon Federation [de]SummerLinz
Austrian Volleyball BundesligaSummerVienna
Austrian Weightlifting FederationSummerVienna
Austrian Wrestling FederationSummerWals-Siezenheim

Pierre de Coubertin Medal

edit

Since 1969, the Austrian Olympic Committee has awarded a Pierre de Coubertin-Medaille, 'Pierre de Coubertin Medal' "for outstanding merits in the Olympic Movement". The first recipients at a ceremony held on 23 June 1969 in the Museum of the 20th Century in Vienna were Austrian President Franz Jonas, IOC President Avery Brundage, IOC member Manfred Mautner Markhof [de], the Minister of Education Theodor Piffl-Perčević [arz; de; no; uk], the ÖOC President Heinrich Drimmel [de], and the ÖOC Hon. Secretary-General Edgar Fried [de].[5] Later recipients include Rudolf Sallinger [arz; de],[6] Pat Hickey,[7] and Dieter Kalt Sr..[8]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. 1 2 Fritz Neumann (24 March 2025). "Neuer ÖOC-Präsident Horst Nussbaumer: "Athletinnen und Athleten im Mittelpunkt"". DerStandard.at. Retrieved 24 March 2025.
  2. Comité, Österreichisches Olympisches. "Österreichisches Olympisches Comité: ÖOC / Kontakt". www.olympia.at (in German). Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  3. Comité, Österreichisches Olympisches. "Österreichisches Olympisches Comité: ÖOC / Wir über uns". www.olympia.at (in German). Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  4. "Olympedia – Rudolf, Graf Colloredo-Mannsfeld". Olympedia – Main Page. 21 March 1948. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
  5. Fried, Edgar (July 1969). "Olympic Days throughout the world – In Austria". Olympic Review Newsletter (22). International Olympic Committee: 402–404. Archived from the original on 25 August 2024. Retrieved 28 August 2024 via Olympic World Library.
  6. "Austria and Olympism". Olympic Review (84). International Olympic Committee: 529. October 1974. Archived from the original on 25 August 2024. Retrieved 28 August 2024 via LA84 Digital Library Collection.
  7. "ÖOC feierte 100 Jahre mit eindrucksvoller Gala". vienna.at (in German). 7 November 2008. Retrieved 28 August 2024.
  8. "Standing Ovations für Dieter!". Österreichisches Olympisches Comité (in German). Retrieved 25 August 2024.
edit