ASEAN University Games
| Abbreviation | AUG |
|---|---|
| First event | 1981 Chiang Mai, Thailand |
| Occur every | 2 years |
| Last event | 2024 Surabaya and Malang, Indonesia |
| Next event | 2026 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
| Formation | 1980 |
|---|---|
| Type | Sports federation |
| Headquarters | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
| Membership | 11 countries |
Official language | English |
| Website | ausc.my |
ASEAN University Games (AUG) is a biennial sports event that involves athletes from the universities of the ASEAN member countries. It is regulated by ASEAN University Sports Council (AUSC) which was established in 1980.[1]
Sports
- Athletics
- Basketball
- Badminton
- Football
- Petanque
- Pencak silat
- Sepak takraw
- Shooting
- Swimming
- Table tennis
- Tennis
- Taekwondo
- Volleyball
- Rugby sevens
- Archery
- Beach volleyball
- Bowling
- Chess
- Chinlone
- Diving
- Field hockey
- Futsal
- Golf
- Judo
- Lawn bowls
- Netball
- Squash
- Vovinam
- Wushu
Participating nations
List of ASEAN University Games


Location of the ASEAN University Games host
| Edition | Year | Host city | Host country | Date | Sports | Events | Nations | Top ranked team | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | 1981 | Chiang Mai | 4 | [2] | |||||
| II | 1982 | Jakarta | [2] | ||||||
| III | 1984 | Bangi | 10–17 November 1984 | 6 | 6 | [3] | |||
| IV | 1986 | Singapore | [4] | ||||||
| V | 1988 | Pattaya | [2] | ||||||
| VI | 1990 | Bandung | [2] | ||||||
| VII | 1993 | Shah Alam | [3] | ||||||
| VIII | 1994 | Singapore | 19–25 June 1994 | 8 | 6 | [4] | |||
| IX | 1996 | Bandar Seri Begawan | [2] | ||||||
| X | 1999 | Bangkok | 79 | 9 | [5] | ||||
| XI | 2002 | Manila | 19–24 January 2002 | 8 | [6] | ||||
| XII | 2004 | Surabaya | 5–12 December 2004 | 10 | 112 | 10 | [7] | ||
| XIII | 2006 | Hanoi | 16–22 December 2006 | 12 | 157 | 9 | [8] | ||
| XIV | 2008 | Kuala Lumpur | 11–21 December 2008 | 21 | 219 | 10 | [9] | ||
| XV | 2010 | Chiang Mai | 15–23 December 2010 | 15 | 183 | 11 | [10] | ||
| XVI | 2012 | Vientiane | 12–20 December 2012 | 17 | 240 | 11 | [11] | ||
| XVII | 2014 | Palembang | 11–21 December 2014 | 18 | 208 | 11 | [12] | ||
| XVIII | 2016 | Singapore | 10–19 July 2016 | 15 | 173 | 11 | [13] | ||
| XIX | 2018 | Naypyidaw | 10–19 December 2018 | 17 | 203 | 11 | [14] | ||
| XX | 2022 | Ubon Ratchathani | 26 July–6 August 2022[a] | 23 | 236 | 11 | [15] | ||
| XXI | 2024 | Surabaya-Malang | 25 June - 6 July 2024 | 21 | 250 | 11 | [16] | ||
| XXII | 2026 | Kuala Lumpur |
- Note
- ^[a] Originally scheduled for 13–22 December 2020, previously postponed to 18–27 June 2021, 22–30 June 2022 and finally to 26 July - 6 August 2022.
References
- ^ About Us
- ^ a b c d e "2010 AUG Issue 1" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 December 2010.
- ^ a b AUG 2008 mforum
- ^ a b Singapore athletes confident ahead of Asean University Games
- ^ 1999 AUG
- ^ 2002 AUG
- ^ "2004 AUG". Archived from the original on 18 March 2018. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
- ^ 2006 AUG
- ^ 2008 AUG
- ^ 2010 AUG
- ^ 2012 AUG
- ^ 2014 AUG
- ^ 2016 AUG
- ^ "2018 AUG". Archived from the original on 16 January 2020. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ "2022 AUG". Archived from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
- ^ "2024 AUG".
External links
- Official website
- Results system
- Chiang Mai Mail 2010 ASEAN University Games Newsletter Archived 24 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- International Games
- AUSC Facebook