International Virtus Sports Federation

Virtus Sport (formerly INAS or INAS Sport) (International Sports Federation for Persons with Intellectual Disability; originally called INAS-FMH, later INAS-FID, INAS and now as Virtus Sport) is a federation which was established in 1986 by professionals in the Netherlands who were involved in sport and wanted to promote the participation of athletes with mental handicap in elite sports (intellectual impairment).

The organisations brand name is the Virtus promoting sport worldwide for athletes with intellectual disability, autism and Down syndrome.

Names

 * 1) INAS-FMH :1986-1994
 * 2) INAS-FID - International Sports Federation for Persons with an Intellectual Disability (INAS-FID): 1994-?
 * 3) INAS - International Sports Federation for Persons with Intellectual Disability: ? - 2019
 * 4) Virtus Sport: 2019-present

History
The founding meeting of the first Executive Committee took place in January 1986 and the organisation became a member of the ICC – the International Coordinating Committee – the organisation that later became the International Paralympic Committee.

INAS' original membership was just 14 nations which has steadily grown into c.80 nations today.

In 1989, the 1st World Games for Athletes with an Intellectual Disability were held in Harnosand, Sweden and in 1992, immediately after the Barcelona Paralympic Games, the first Paralympic Games for 'Persons with mental handicap' were held in Madrid.

In 1994, INAS-FMH became INAS-FID – the 'International Sports Federation for Persons with Intellectual Disability' and in 1996, for the first time, a small programme of events for athletes with an intellectual disability was included in the Paralympic Games in Atlanta.

A larger programme including Athletics, Swimming and Basketball was included in the Sydney Paralympic Games in 2000, but it soon emerged that a small number of athletes had cheated the system of determining eligibility, resulting in the suspension of events — a suspension that was to remain in place until 2012.

Despite exclusion from the Paralympic Games, the Inas sport programme continued to grow considerably to incorporate more than 10 sports whilst its membership grew to cover all 5 continents.

INAS provides competition opportunities for elite athletes with an intellectual disability in Paralympic and non-Paralympic sports and is different from Special Olympics, which provides non-elite opportunities worldwide.

Eligibility and classification
Athletes with an intellectual disability are characterised by an IQ of 75 or below, significant limitations in Adaptive Behaviour and the disability must be present before the age of 18. This is based on the American Association for Intellectual and Developmental Disability definition of Intellectual Disability.

Approximately 1.5% of the population is thought to have an intellectual disability.

Recognized Sports
Sports:

Core Sports

 * 1) Athletics
 * 2) Basketball
 * 3) Cricket
 * 4) Cycling
 * 5) Equestrian
 * 6) Football/Futsal
 * 7) Judo
 * 8) Rowing
 * 9) Skiing
 * 10) Swimming
 * 11) Table Tennis
 * 12) Tennis

Partnerships With International Federations

 * 1) Golf
 * 2) Karate
 * 3) Para-Hockey
 * 4) Sailing
 * 5) Taekwondo

Current activities
Today's sport programme includes some 15 annual events, and more than 4000 athletes are registered to compete at an international level, whilst many hundreds of thousands of people with an intellectual disability have the opportunity to enjoy sport through the work of member organisations.

Following a partnership between INAS and the International Paralympic Committee to overhaul the process of determining athlete eligibility, events for athletes with an intellectual disability were re-instated to the Paralympic programme by the IPC General Assembly in November 2009, in preparation for the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

In 2019, INAS rebranded as Virtus.

INAS World Championships

 * Main article : INAS World Championships

Note : INAS do not organise events in Taekwondo but work in partnership with World Taekwondo World Para Taekwondo Championships.


 * Source :
 * http://www.inas.org/events/results
 * http://www.inas.org/events

INAS Global Games

 * Main article : INAS Global Games

In 2004 INAS launched a new multi-sport competition INAS Global Games (INAS World Games / Intellectual Disability Global Games). The first event took place in Bollnäs, Sweden and featured more than 1000 athletes. The second Global Games took place in Czech Republic in 2009. With the re-inclusion of athletes with an intellectual disability into Paralympic competition, it was decided to move the Global Games to the year preceding the Paralympics. The next Global Games therefore takes place in 2011. After a bidding procedure, Italy was chosen as the host nation. The 2015 Global Games took place in Guayaquil, Ecuador, in September. The 2019 INAS Global Games will take place in Brisbane, Queensland Australia. Results : http://www.inas.org/events/results

2023: https://www.virtus.sport/2023-vichy-france

900 athletes from 47 nations

Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Peru, and the Solomon Islands = debut

13 sports

athletics, basketball, cycling, equestrian, futsal, handball, judo, karate, rowing, swimming, table tennis, taekwondo, and tennis.

Karate, judo, and equestrian = debut at GG2023

France 189 medals (88 gold, 56 silver and 45 bronze)

Australia with 125 medals (42 gold, 41 silver and 42 bronze)

Italy with 87 medals (30 gold, 27 silver and 30 bronze)

Results 2023: https://c3k8ff.n3cdn1.secureserver.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Results-GG2023.pdf

Regional Games
Source:

European Championships
Source:

Members (28 nations in 2019):

Sports:

Euro Web:


 * 1) Athletics:
 * 2) Swimming:
 * 3) Futsal/Football :
 * 4) Basketball:
 * 5) Handball:
 * 6) Table Tennis:
 * 7) Other Sports (Cycling,Rowing,Judo,Skiing,Tennis,Equestrian):

INAS European Games
Results: http://www.inas.org/event/2018-inas-european-games?instance_id=76
 * Main article : INAS European Games

https://web.archive.org/web/20191221125831/http://www.inaseurope.org/index.html

1st Virtus European Winter Games, Zakopane 2024 (2020 was cancelled)

http://www.virtuseurope.eu/other-sports.html

http://www.virtuseurope.eu/synthesis.html

http://www.virtuseurope.eu/athletics.html

http://www.virtuseurope.eu/swimming.html

http://www.virtuseurope.eu/index.html

1st European Winter Games (skiing, rowing, futsal, basketball 3x3) 2 March - 8 March 2024 Zakopane (Poland)

INAS Asia-Pacific Games
1st Virtus Oceania Asia Games 2022, 5-11 November (OA Games) - Australia

Inaugural Virtus Oceania Asia Games:

Sports:


 * 1) Athletics - Paralympic Pathway
 * 2) Badminton - Demonstration Sport
 * 3) Basketball
 * 4) Cycling - Track & Road Cycling
 * 5) Judo
 * 6) Rowing - On-Water & Indoor Rowing
 * 7) Sailing - Para Sailing International Championship
 * 8) Swimming - Paralympic Pathway
 * 9) Table Tennis - Paralympic Pathway
 * 10) Taekwondo
 * 11) Triathlon - Demonstration Sport

Nations:

20 countries:

Australia Brazil Colombia Ecuador Fiji France (including Wallis & Futuna, New Caledonia) Hong Kong India Indonesia Islamic Republic of Iran Japan Macau Malaysia Maldives New Zealand Republic of Palau Papua New Guinea Philippines Republic of Korea Singapore Chinese Taipei Thailand Great Britain United States of America

Events:

Medals:

Solomon Islands = one silver

Republic of Palau = no medal

INAS African Games
No Yet.

INAS Pan American Games
2026 in Peru, Inaugural 2026 Virtus Americas Regional Games