Olympic Day 2020 - the world’s biggest online Olympic workout

Olympic Day 2020 - the world’s biggest online Olympic workout

The annual celebration of sport and Olympic values on 23 June will bring together Olympians from around the world.

Olympic Day 2020 will see Olympians, athletes and fans all over the globe get active in the world’s largest 24-hour digital Olympic workout. Twenty-three Olympic athletes have already joined the recording of an official Olympic Day workout video, and on Olympic Day, athletes from around the world will lead live workouts at 11 a.m. local time across 20 time zones on @olympics Instagram live.

As the world gets ready to take part in #OlympicDay, Olympic champions, ranging from Kenya’s 1500m gold medallist Faith Kipyegon, to France’s most decorated Olympian of all-time, Martin Fourcade, teamed  up with Tokyo 2020 hopefuls such as Dina Pouryounes, a taekwondo athlete hailing from Iran aiming to represent the Olympic Refugee Team, and the USA’s 13-time Paralympic gold medal-winning swimmer Jessica Long. (The full list of athletes can be found below.)

Since the COVID-19 pandemic forced the world into lockdown and the postponement of the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, close to 5,000 Olympians have engaged with a remarkable 243 million people online across more than 50 countries in the IOC’s #StayStrong, #StayActive, #StayHealthy campaign by sharing their daily workouts and uplifting tips on how to stay healthy in body and mind. Olympic Day 2020 will take this campaign to the next level.

“Celebrating Olympic Day may feel very different from all previous years, but at the same time, on this Olympic Day, our message of the power of sport to bring hope and optimism to everyone resonates even stronger,” said IOC President Thomas Bach. “Let us  join together to use this power of sport to prepare the postponed Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 as a moment of solidarity and resilience of humankind,” he added.

The entire Olympic Movement has been mobilised to join the online activities on 23 June. The IOC and its partners, including Olympic Games Organising Committees for Tokyo 2020, Beijing 2022, Paris 2024, Los Angeles 2028 and Milano-Cortina 2026, the National Olympic Committees (NOCs), International Federations (IFs), Worldwide Olympic Partners and rights-holding broadcasters, will be among those encouraging fans to join the virtual workouts.

For example, Worldwide Olympic Partners Coca-Cola, Samsung and Toyota have supported the campaign by encouraging their athlete ambassadors around the world to host workout sessions. In addition, Alibaba will support a #StayStrong live stream organised by the Chinese Olympic Committee and Beijing 2022, featuring over 350 Chinese athletes and medallists of different generations.

Follow all the action throughout the 24 hours on 23 June:  

- Live workouts on @olympics Instagram at 11 a.m. local time in different time zones around the world, with locally relevant athletes hosting the live activations.

- A compilation workout video featuring 23 different Olympians from around the world showcasing their favourite workout moves will be available on the olympicchannel.com/olympicday

Olympic Day 2020 was always set to stand out in the event’s 72-year history. Commemorating the birth of the modern Olympic Games on 23 June 1894, Olympic Day was established in 1948 and is celebrated to promote participation in sport regardless of age, gender or athletic ability, as well as being an opportunity to celebrate the Olympic values around the world.

“We are all in the same situation right now,” added the IOC President, Thomas Bach. “With the global coronavirus crisis, all of us are living with much uncertainty about the future. In these difficult times, we need the values of sport, our shared Olympic values of excellence, friendship, respect and solidarity, more than ever. The Olympic flame can be the light at the end of the dark tunnel that we all find ourselves in now. On Olympic Day, we are sending this Olympic message to everybody. Please stay strong, stay active, stay healthy. In this Olympic spirit, I wish you all a wonderful Olympic Day 2020,” the President concluded.

The athletes involved in the Olympic Day workout video are:

- Laurie Hernandez (USA, artistic gymnastics)

- Faith Kipyegon (Kenya, athletics)

- Lutalo Muhammad (Great Britain, taekwondo)

- Sandra Sanchez (Spain, karate)

- Meli Derenalagi (Fiji, rugby 7s)

- Martin Fourcade (France, biathlon)

- Tokashiki Ramu (Japan, basketball)

- Eileen Gu (China, freestyle skiing)

- Colleen Quigley (USA, athletics)

- Zeyad Eashash (Jordan, boxing)

- Vinesh Phogat (India, wrestling)

- Tobias Wendel and Tobias Arlt (Germany, luge)

- Federico Molinari (Argentina, artistic gymnastics)

- Dina Pouryounes (Refugee, taekwondo)

- Valentina Marchei (Italy, figure skating)

- Pita Taufatofua (Tonga, taekwondo/cross-country skiing)

- Vivian Kong (Hong Kong China, fencing)

- Petra Klingler (Switzerland, sport climbing)

- Isaac Makwala (Botswana, athletics)

- Pandelela Rinong (Malaysia, diving)

- Agatha Rippel (Brazil, beach volleyball)

- Jessica Long (USA, para swimming)

The athletes lined up for the live Instagram workouts, scheduled at 11 a.m. local time across 20 time zones on @Olympics Instagram include:

- Pita Taufatofua (taekwondo/cross-country skiing) - Tonga

- Tyla Nathan-Wong (rugby 7s) - Wellington, New Zealand

- Melissa Wu (diving) - Brisbane, Australia

- Yamamoto Seito (athletics) - Tokyo, Japan

- Hong Zhang (speed skating) - Beijing, China

- Marcus Fernaldi Gideon, Anthony Ginting and Jonatan Christie (badminton) - Jakarta, Indonesia

- Elizabet Tursynbayeva (figure skating) - Kazakhstan

- PV Sindhu (badminton) - Hyderabad, India

- Aisam ul Haq Qureshi (tennis) - Pakistan

- Zeyad Eashash (boxing) - Amman, Jordan

- Margarita Mamun (rhythmic gymnastics) - Moscow, Russia

- Cameron van der Burgh (swimming) - Cape Town, South Africa

- Johanne Defay (surfing) - Europe

- Abdullah Sediqi (refugee scholarship holder, taekwondo) - Europe

- Desire Operanozie (football) - Lagos, Nigeria

- Cherif Fall (surfing) - Dakar, Senegal

- Hugo Calderano (table tennis) - Rio, Brazil

- Mikel Thomas (athletics) - Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago

- Rommel Pacheco (diving) - Mexico City, Mexico

- Natalie Spooner (ice hockey) - Calgary, Canada

- Kyla Ross (artistic gymnastics) - Los Angeles, USA

- TBC - Tahiti/Hawaii

The International Olympic Committee is a not-for-profit independent international organisation made up of volunteers, which is committed to building a better world through sport. It redistributes more than 90 per cent of its income to the wider sporting movement, which means that every day the equivalent of 3.4 million US dollars goes to help athletes and sports organisations at all levels around the world.

For more information, please contact the IOC Media Relations Team:
Tel: +41 21 621 6000, email: pressoffice@olympic.org, or visit our web site at www.olympic.org.

Broadcast quality footage

The IOC Newsroom: http://iocnewsroom.com/

Videos

YouTube: www.youtube.com/iocmedia

Photos

For an extensive selection of photos available shortly after each event, please follow us on Flickr.

To request archive photos and footage, please contact our Images team at: images@olympic.org.

Social media

For up-to-the-minute information on the IOC and regular updates, please follow us on TwitterFacebook and YouTube.