Montenegrin Olympic Committee
Country/Region | Montenegro |
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Code | MNE |
Created | 13 December 1993 |
Recognized | 7 July 2007 |
Continental Association | EOC |
Headquarters | Podgorica, Montenegro |
President | Dušan Sinomović |
Secretary General | Božidar Vuksanović |
Website | www.cok.me |
The Montenegrin Olympic Committee (Montenegrin: Црногорски олимпијски комитет, romanized: Crnogorski olimpijski komitet) is the National Olympic Committee representing Montenegro. It is responsible for promoting the Olympic ideals and for ensuring that Montenegro is represented with athletes at the Olympic Games and other multi-sport events. The committee's president, as of January 2008[update], is Dušan Simonović.
Members of the committee are 20 sports federations, which elect the Executive Council composed of the president and sixteen members.
The MOC organizes the 2019 Games of the Small States of Europe in Budva.
History
[edit]The Montenegrin Olympic Committee regards its foundation date as 13 December 1993, when the organization was established as the top association for Olympic sports in the Republic of Montenegro, a federal state within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia created in February 1992 as a successor state to SFR Yugoslavia.
From 1993 to 2006 it was a regional organization for sports in Montenegro, under the auspices of the Belgrade-based Yugoslav Olympic Committee (IOC code "YUG"). During this period, in February 2003 the country was reorganized as a confederacy and renamed Serbia and Montenegro, with the top Olympic committee also renamed Olympic Committee of Serbia and Montenegro (IOC code "SCG").
Following the May 2006 independence referendum, which saw Montenegro become a sovereign country, Montenegro's Olympic Committee (COK) was recognized as the 204th national member of the International Olympic Committee on 7 July 2007 at the 119th IOC session in Guatemala City, with the new assigned IOC code "MNE".
Montenegro's first appearance in the Olympics as an independent state came little more than a year later, at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where it was represented by a team of 19 athletes, including 13 members of the national water polo team.
Prior to independence, COK had established its award for the best young male and female athletes of the year and the best women's and men's team in 1999.
List of presidents
[edit]President | Term |
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Dušan Sinomović | 2008–present |
Executive committee
[edit]- President: Dušan Sinomović
- Vice presidents: Boro Mračević, Bojana Popović
- Members: Dimitrije Rašović, Jovica Rečević, Dragan Samardžić, Božidar Vuksanović, Dejan Bajić, Veselin Barović, Momir Đurđevac, Branko Jovanović, Dragan Kopitović, Rajko Kosić, Džemal Ljušković, Vanja Mugoša, Cvetko Pajković, Radmila Petrović
Member federations
[edit]The Montenegrin National Federations are the organizations that coordinate all aspects of their individual sports. They are responsible for training, competition and development of their sports. There are currently 19 Olympic Summer and one Winter Sport Federations in Montenegro.
Awards
[edit]Since 1999, at the end of each calendar year proclaimed the most successful athletes. Initially declared Young Male Athlete, Young Female Athlete, Men's Team and Woman's Team, awards for the Sportsman of the Year were introduced in 2011. The competition includes results from current Olympic sports.