1999 Pan American Games - Sports

Sports

329 events in 38 sports were contested.

Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of medal events contested in each sport.

  • Archery (details)
  • Athletics (details)
  • Badminton (details)
  • Baseball (details)
  • Basketball (details)
  • Bowling (details)
  • Boxing (details)
  • Canoeing (details)
  • Cycling (details)
    • Mountain biking
    • Road
    • Track
  • Diving (details)
  • Equestrian (details)
  • Fencing (details)
  • Field Hockey (details)
  • Football (details)
  • Gymnastics (details)
    • Artistic Gymnastics
    • Rhythmic Gymnastics
  • Handball (details)
  • Judo (details)
  • Karate (details)
  • Modern pentathlon (details)
  • Racquetball (details)
  • Roller skating (details)
  • Rowing (details)
  • Sailing (details)
  • Shooting (details)
  • Softball (details)
  • Squash (details)
  • Swimming (details)
  • Synchronized swimming (details)
  • Table tennis (details)
  • Taekwondo (details)
  • Tennis (details)
  • Triathlon (details)
  • Volleyball (details)
  • Water polo (details)
  • Water skiing (details)
  • Weightlifting (details)
  • Wrestling (details)

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    Gayle Gardner, U.S. sports reporter. As quoted in Sports Illustrated, p. 87 (June 17, 1991)

    Short of a wholesale reform of college athletics—a complete breakdown of the whole system that is now focused on money and power—the women’s programs are just as doomed as the men’s are to move further and further away from the academic mission of their colleges.... We have to decide if that’s the kind of success for women’s sports that we want.
    Christine H. B. Grant, U.S. university athletic director. As quoted in the Chronicle of Higher Education, p. A42 (May 12, 1993)

    ...I didn’t come to this with any particular cachet. I was just a person who grew up in the United States. And when I looked around at the people who were sportscasters, I thought they were just people who grew up in the United States, too. So I thought, Why can’t a woman do it? I just assumed everyone else would think it was a swell idea.
    Gayle Gardner, U.S. sports reporter. As quoted in Sports Illustrated, p. 85 (June 17, 1991)