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Participants compete in basketball at the Annual US Police & Fire Championships.
Participants compete in basketball at the Annual US Police & Fire Championships.
UPDATED:

Several thousand police and firefighters from across the country are slated to come to San Diego to participate in an Olympics-style sports competition.

The 58th annual U.S. Police and Fire Championships runs from May 31 to June 7 at San Diego Marriott Mission Valley along with 27 other venues throughout the county. The idea behind the sporting event is to foster camaraderie, physical fitness, and community spirit among first responders from a wide variety of fields.

The nonprofit California Police Athletic Federation organized the competition. It is expected to draw 2,700 police officers, firefighters and personnel from Corrections, Probation and U.S. Customs and Border Protection. The nonprofit also runs the World Police & Fire Games, which attracts international participants.

More than 38 events will be held, ranging from team sports, such as basketball and soccer, to individual competitions, such as track and field, swimming and CrossFit.

The idea for the games came from a San Diego police captain. In 1967, Capt. Veon “Duke” Nyhus, a World War II Navy veteran, wanted to promote physical fitness and camaraderie in the law enforcement community. Nyhus, who retired from the San Diego Police Department as a deputy chief in 1983, was an athlete from the start. He was on the archery team at Arizona State University and ed the San Diego Archers when he moved to San Diego in 1952.

Nyhus spearheaded the effort to start the California Police Olympics with the help of colleagues who felt the sporting event would boost overall fitness, reduce stress and increase the police force’s professional abilities.

The first year of the event, the two-day competition drew 504 ed participants in 16 sports. Since then, it has grown into national and international competitions. The World Police & Fire Games began in 1985 in San Jose. The California Police Olympics, which started 58 years ago, led to the current U.S. Police and Fire Championships, which was established in 2012.

The event is free for spectators.

Visit https://af.org/uspfc/

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