- Astronauts aboard the International Space Station held the first ever Olympic-style competition in space.
- The "Space Olympics" was held as a tribute to the Tokyo 2020 games, which came to a close this weekend.
- The teams competed in the four "athletic events" and a "closing ceremony" as a way to boost team morale and cohesion.
- See more stories on Insider's business page.
Astronauts currently on board the International Space Station held their own version of the Olympics. The tribute was broadcast from the International Space Station stationed in low Earth orbit over 250 miles about the planet's surface.
American astronauts, Shane Kimbrough, Megan McArthur, and Mark Vande Hei, French astronaut Thomas Pesquet, Japanese astronaut Ahihiko Hoshide, and Russian cosmonauts Pyotr Dubrov and Oleg Novitskiy participated in the friendly competition to honor the end of the Tokyo 2020 games.
The group was divided into two teams named after the ISS-docked spacecrafts, Team Soyuz and Team Dragon.
The event wasn't sanctioned by the International Olympic Committee, but the IOC's official Twitter liked and retweeted the event on Sunday.
Source: Twitter
They participated in four events inspired by classic summer Olympic disciplines. Some allowed for outright winners, while others were judged by the team members and ground control. Olympic handball typically has players run across the field and throw balls into the opposing goals. In "no handball," players on the two teams used their breaths to blow a small ping pong ball through opposing hatch doors. Team Soyuz won the event. Each team choreographed a "synchronized floating" routine in zero-gravity. Here, Team Dragon shuffle together as music plays in the background. The teams also improvised "gymnastics: lack-of-floor" routines, with the astronauts taking turns doing flips and stylized turns in midair. Cosmonaut Dubrov gained extra points for performing his routine without touching any surface of the module. "Weightless sharpshooting" was pretty straightforward, with players aiming rubber bands at a predetermined target. The challenge came in hitting the target while adjusting for the lack of air resistance and gravity. At the end of the games, Japanese astronaut Hoshide and French astronaut Pesquet coordinated a symbolic "Closing Ceremony." It also mirrored the pass-off of the Olympic Games between the two countries, with the 2024 Summer Olympics being held in Paris.
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