Culiacán: CONADE 2026 National Olympiad Host

Culiacán, Sin.– Culiacán will host more than 6 thousand athletes from different municipalities of the state during the state phase of the CONADE 2026 National Olympiadwhich will begin this Wednesday with the disciplines of Sports Shooting and Chess.

In total, there will be 30 disciplines that will be developed in a first stage in various sports spaces in the capital of Sinaloa, consolidating the municipality as the main venue of this important sports event.

He Culiacán City Council welcomes each and every participant, wishing them the greatest success in this qualifying stage towards the highest national competition.

Among the disciplines called are Karate, Basketball, Shooting Sports, Chess, Frontón, Tennis, Beach Volleyball, Handball, Weightlifting and Associated Wrestling; in addition to Judo, 3×3 Basketball, Table Tennis, Skates (Speed), Indoor Volleyball, Athletics, Track Cycling, Taekwondo (forms and combat), Boxing, Softball, Baseball and BMX Cycling.

Bowling, Badminton, Men’s Artistic Gymnastics, Archery, Baseball 5 will also be part of the program, as well as disciplines that will be developed in later stages such as Surfing, Triathlon, Freestyle Cycling, Climbing, Breaking, Women’s Artistic Gymnastics and Road Cycling.

The activity will continue on Thursday, February 5 with the disciplines of Karate, Basketball and Frontón, and will culminate on February 7 with Tennis, Beach Volleyball, Handball, Weightlifting, Associated Wrestling, Judo, Table Tennis and Skates (Speed).

Finally, the state phase will conclude on February 21 with Surfing, Triathlon, Freestyle Cycling, Climbing, Breaking, Women’s Artistic Gymnastics, Road Cycling, Baseball 5 and the Archery test.

In total, 42 disciplines were called, some selectively towards the Regional stage and others directly qualifying for the National phase of the CONADE 2026 Olympiad.

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James Whitfield

James Whitfield is Archysport's racket sports and golf specialist, bringing a global perspective to tennis, badminton, and golf coverage. Based between London and Singapore, James has covered Grand Slam tournaments, BWF World Tour events, and major golf championships on five continents. His reporting combines on-the-ground access with deep knowledge of the technical and strategic elements that separate elite athletes from the rest of the field. James is fluent in English, French, and Mandarin, giving him unique access to athletes across the global tennis and badminton circuits.

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