
Logo of the Australian Institute of Sport
'The Australian Institute of Sport (AIS)' is a specialised educational and training institution providing coaching for elite junior and senior athletes in a number of sports, many of them
Olympic sports but including a number of others.
The Institute's headquarters is sited in
Canberra, the capital city of
Australia. The 65 hectare site
campus is in the northern
suburb of
Bruce, but some of the institute's programs are located in other Australian cities. It is a division of the
Australian Sports Commission.
History
Set up in 1981 after the
1976 Montreal Olympic Games in which Australia failed to win a
gold medal (regarded as a severe national embarrassment in Australia), the Institute's well-funded programs (and more generally the generous funding for elite sporting programs) are regarded as a major reason for Australia's success in international sporting competition.
Shortly after its inception in 1981, the AIS held a competition for a symbol that would depict the AIS aim of "achieving supremacy in sport". Over 500 designs were submitted. The winner was a design student from Bendigo in Victoria, Rose-Marie Derrico. Her design shows an athlete with hands clasped above the head in recognition of victory. The colours of the logo are red and blue, which are the same colours as the Australian flag
A brief overview of the history of the AIS follows:
| Year | Event |
|---|
| ' 1981 ' | AIS officially opened by the Prime Minister the Rt. Hon. Malcolm Fraser |
| Don Talbot appointed inaugural Director of the AIS |
| Eight founding sports were basketball, gymnastics, netball, swimming, tennis, track and field, and weight lifting |
| '1982' | 36 current and former AIS athletes competed in three sports and won 25 of the 107 medals won by Australia at the 1982 Commonwealth Games held in Brisbane, Australia |
| '1983' | Gymnastics training hall, indoor and outdoor tennis courts, and swimming complex completed |
| '1984' | Frank Stewart Training Centre for netball, basketball, football and weightlifting completed |
| Diving program in Brisbane and hockey program in Perth established |
| Dr John Cheffers appointed Director of the AIS |
| 32 current and former AIS athletes competed in four sports and won seven of the 24 medals won by Australia at the 1984 Olympic Games held in Los Angeles, United States |
| AIS Athlete of the Year - Karen Phillips (swimming) |
| '1985' | Squash program in Brisbane and men's water polo and rowing in Canberra established |
| Sports Science and Sports Medicine, Halls of Residence and administration buildences completed |
| AIS Athlete of the Year - Michele Pearson (swimming) |
| '1986' | Men's cricket program in Adelaide established |
| Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, Scotland - 75 current and former AIS athletes competed in fiver wports and won 52 of the 120 won by Australia |
| AIS Athlete of the Year - James Galloway (rowing) |
| '1987' | Cycling program in Adelaide established |
| Australian Sports Commission and AIS merge |
| Ronald Harvey appointed Director of the AIS |
| AIS Athlete of the Year - Kerry Saxby (track and field) |
| '1988' | Rugby Union program in Brisbane, Sydney and Canberra established |
| Talent Identification program established |
| Olympic Games in Seoul, Korea - 118 current and former AIS athletes compete in 13 sports and won six of 14 medals won by Australia |
| AIS Athlete of the Year - Kerry Saxby (track and field) |
| '1989' | AIS canoe facility opened on the Gold Coast |
| AIS Athlete of the Year - Kerry Saxby (track and field) |
| '1990' | Men's volleyball program in Sydney established |
| Robert de Castella appointed Director of the AIS |
| National Sport Information Centre launched |
| Commonwealth Games in Auckland, New Zealand - 87 current and former AIS athletes competed in six sports and won 77 of the 162 medals won by Australia. |
| AIS Athlete of the Year - Steve McGlede (track cycling) |
Institute
The AIS employs over 190 staff, including 70 coaches to directly support AIS athletes. In addition to coaching staff, the AIS employs a large number of staff who work in Sports Medicine, Education and Technology, which includes disciplines such as sports nutrition, performance analysis, physiology, biomechanics, applied research, talent search, athlete career education, strength and conditioning, psychology and physical therapies.
Outside the front of the main building are a number of sculptures, such as ''Acrobats'' by John Robinson, which shows one acrobat holding another upside down one with just one hand. Also is ''The Basketballer'', one of three works which were commissioned by
AMP Limited to celebrate the 2000 Paralympic
Olympic games. It was brought to the front of the AIS in June 2003.
The AIS competes in the
Victorian Premier League football tournament,
Women's National Basketball League,
South East Australian Basketball League and the
Commonwealth Bank Trophy Netball League.
Programmes
The AIS offers scholarships to over 700 athletes each in year across 35 programs in 26 different sports. Scholarships are also currently offered to
athletes with disabilities in
athletics,
swimming and
skiing.
In 2004/5, the AIS offers Scholarship programmes for the following sports:
★
Football (soccer) for men and women of ages under 20 years old. The men's squad plays in the
Victorian Premier League football competition.
★
Archery, artistic
gymnastics, athletes with disabilities,
basketball,
boxing,
netball,
rowing,
soccer (men), soccer (women),
triathlon, swimming, athletics, men's
volleyball and
water polo (men) administered from Canberra
★
Diving,
squash,
softball and
cricket (men & women), administered from
Brisbane
★ Sprint
canoeing administered from the
Gold Coast
★ Road
cycling and track cycling administered from
Adelaide
★
Australian rules football,
tennis and
winter sports (in partnership with the Olympic Winter Institute) administered from
Melbourne
★
Golf administered from
Mornington Peninsula (Victoria)
★
Rugby union (in partnership with the
Australian Rugby Institute), Athletes with a Disability (AWD) -
alpine skiing,
sailing and Water Polo (women) and
rugby league administered from
Sydney
★
Hockey administered from
Perth.
Olympic Winter Institute of Australia
The AIS and the
Australian Olympic Committee formed the Australian Institute of Winter Sports after the
1998 Winter Olympics. The organisation was renamed to the Olympic Winter Institute of Australia on
July 1,
2001. It provides training in
alpine skiing,
freestyle skiing (including aerial and mogul),
snowboarding,
short track speed skating and
figure skating. It is also a partner with the AIS in
skeleton (toboganning).
See also
★
Australian Sports Commission
★
Australian Cricket Academy
★
Australian Institute of Sport Football (Soccer) Program
★
AIS Arena
References
★ Olympic Winter Institute of Australia:
''Program background and objectives''
External links
★
Australian Institute of Sport Webpage
★
Olympic Winter Institute of Australia web site
★
AIS sports A list of AIS Sports and their locations