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Sports15:07 · 43m ago

Israel Launches Sylvan Adams Institute for Sports Science Ahead of 2028 Olympics

MakoCenter
Translated & summarized from Mako by baba
The story · English

Israel has inaugurated the Sylvan Adams Institute for Sports Science at Tel Aviv University, marking a significant advancement in the country's sports science capabilities. Established through a donation of approximately 100 million shekels from businessman and philanthropist Sylvan Adams, the institute aims to provide comprehensive scientific and technological support to Israeli athletes. It will collaborate with the Israeli Olympic Committee to prepare athletes for the 2028 Los Angeles and 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games.

The institute features state-of-the-art multidisciplinary facilities, including sports science research labs, a technological gym, a climate chamber simulating global competition conditions, motion analysis systems, a current pool, and a hypoxic hotel simulating high-altitude training up to 5,000 meters. It offers a range of professional services such as physiological testing, training consultation, nutritional guidance, and mental coaching.

The institute's team comprises sports scientists, physiologists, engineers, data and AI experts, doctors, and public health professionals working together to translate scientific knowledge into practical tools for elite athletes. Sylvan Adams emphasized that the institute's goal is to nurture Israel's next generation of champions by integrating research, innovation, and professional excellence to enhance athletic performance and increase international medal counts.

Yael Arad, chair of the Israeli Olympic Committee, highlighted the growing global competition and noted that the new institute will provide a significant advantage for Israeli athletes. Professor Irad Ben-Gal, the institute's director, stressed the institute's unique ability to convert scientific data into actionable recommendations, aiming not only to improve performance but also to reduce injury risk, optimize training, and monitor progress over time for both elite athletes and the general public.

With this new facility, Israel seeks to narrow the gap with leading sports nations by combining science, technology, and expertise, hoping to achieve greater international success and more medals in the coming years.

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