Events
On
January 28,
International Olympic Committee Vice-President Kim Un-yong is arrested on charges of corruption in
Seoul. Prosecutors arrest Kim minutes after an arrest warrant is issued by the Seoul District Court, and the 72-year-old was put behind bars after his pre-trial detention was approved.
On
April 27, the
International Olympic Committee takes out insurance in case the
Athens Olympic Games are canceled due to
terrorism or
natural disasters.
On
May 18, the
International Olympic Committee announced the list of cities accepted as candidates to host the
2012 Olympic Games. The five candidate cities are
Paris,
New York,
Moscow,
London and
Madrid.
==
2004 Summer Olympics==
The 2004 Olympics opened in
Athens,
Greece on
August 13.
==
Athletics==
::''For an extensive coverage see
2004 in athletics (track and field)''
===
Cross-country running===
★
★
January 3 - Winners from the
2004 Great Winter Run X-country race at
Newcastle,
England:
★
★
★ Women's 6.3 km:
Tirunesh Dibada,
Ethiopia 21:01
★
★
★ Men's 8.0 km:
Sileshi Sihine, Ethiopia 26:15
Track
★
United States Olympic Track and Field trials,
Sacramento, California:
★
★
July 10 -
Marion Jones finishes fourth in the qualifying for the
100 meter dash, and therefore fails to qualify for the
2004 Summer Olympics in that event. (Jones did qualify for the Olympics in the
long jump.)
★
★
July 11 -
Tim Montgomery, current
world record holder in the men's
100 meter run, fails to qualify for the
2004 Summer Olympics, finishing 7th out of 8 competitors in the trials finals.
===
Marathon
International Races
★
April 4 —
Rotterdam Marathon,
Netherlands
★
★ Men's Winner:
Felix Limo (KEN) 2:06:14
★
★ Women's Winner:
Zhor El Kamch (MAR) 2:26:10
★
April 18 —
London Marathon,
United Kingdom
★
★ Men's Winner:
Evans Rutto (KEN) 2:06:18
★
★ Women's Winner:
Margaret Okayo (KEN) 2:22:35
★
April 19 —
Boston Marathon,
United States
★
★ Men's Winner:
Timothy Cherigat (KEN) 2:10:37
★
★ Women's Winner:
Catherine Ndereba (KEN) 2:24:27
★
May 16 —
Enschede Marathon,
Netherlands
★
★ Men's Winner:
Girma Tola (ETH) 2:10:33
★
★ Women's Winner:
Nadezhda Wijenberg (NED) 2:31:23
★
August 22 —
Olympic Marathon,
Athens, Greece
★
★ Women's Winner:
Mizuki Noguchi (JPN) 2:26:20
★
August 29 —
Olympic Marathon,
Athens, Greece
★
★ Men's Winner:
Stefano Baldini (ITA) 2:10:55
★
November 7 —
New York City Marathon,
United States
★
★ Men's Winner:
Hendrik Ramaala (RSA) 2:09:28
★
★ Women's Winner:
Paula Radcliffe (GBR) 2:23:10
★
December 5 —
Fukuoka Marathon,
Japan
★
★ Men's Winner:
Tsuyoshi Ogata (JPN) 2:09:10
National Champions
★
April 4 —
Rotterdam,
Netherlands
★
★ Men's Winner:
Luc Krotwaar — 2:11:56
★
★ Women's Winner:
Nadezhda Wijenberg — 2:38:38
★
April 18 —
London,
England
★
★ Men's Winner:
Jonathan Brown — 2:13:39
★
★ Women's Winner:
Birhan Dagne — 2:34:45
★
May 30 —
Ottawa,
Canada
★
★ Men's Winner:
Matthew McInnes — 2:18:52
★
★ Women's Winner:
Nicole Stevenson — 2:34:45
★
July 4 —
Turku,
Finland
★
★ Men's Winner:
Petri Saavalainen — 2:24:22
★
★ Women's Winner:
Marjaana Lahti — 2:55:38
★
September 12 —
Sydney,
Australia
★
★ Men's Winner:
Daniel Green — 2:23:06
★
★ Women's Winner:
Jenny Wickman — 2:55:09
★
October 3 —
Budapest,
Hungary
★
★ Men's Winner:
Roland Ádók — 2:26:34
★
★ Women's Winner:
Simona Staicu — 2:38:17
==
Auto Racing==
★
Stock car racing (
NASCAR):
★
★
February 15 -
Daytona 500: won by
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
★
★
November 21st -
Kurt Busch wins the 2004 Nextel Cup at the conclusion of a ten-race "playoff" by seven points.
★
Indy Racing League:
★
★
May 30 -
Indianapolis 500: won by
Buddy Rice
★
Formula One:
★
★
August 15 -
Ferrari clinch
Formula One constructors title
★
★
August 29 -
Michael Schumacher clinches seventh
Formula One title
★
24 hours of Le Mans
★
★ June -
Tom Kristensen /
Rinaldo Capello /
Seiji Ara driving an
Audi R8 with Audi Sport Japan Team Goh win the LMP1 class and overall victory in the Le Mans 24 Hours.
★
★
★ The LMP2 category was won by the #32 Interport Racing
Lola with drivers
Bill Binnie,
Clint Field, and
Rick Sutherland.
★
★
★ The GTS category was won by the #65
Chevrolet Corvette with drivers
Oliver Gavin,
Olivier Beretta, and
Jan Magnussen.
★
★
★ The GT category was won by the #90 White Lightning
Porsche with drivers
Sascha Maassen,
Jörg Bergmeister, and
Patrick Long.
★
V8 Supercar:
★
★ March - Marcos Ambrose (
Ford Falcon) won Adelaide 500
★
★ November - Andrews Jones (
Ford Falcon) won V8 Development (level two) Series
★
★
October 10 - Greg Murphy and Rick Kelly (
Holden Commodore) won
Bathurst 1000
★
★ September - Marcos Ambrose (
Ford Falcon) won V8 Championship Series
★
Formula 3000:
★
★
Vitantonio Liuzzi wins the title by comfortable margin;; championship is replaced by
GP2 for the new year
★
Superfund Euro 3000 Series
★
★ champion -
Nicky Pastorelli of
The Netherlands
★
Asian Formula 3
★
★ Inaugural season of the Asian Formula Three Championship.
==
Baseball==
Main articles: 2004 in baseball
★
June 27 College World Series:
Cal State Fullerton wins the
NCAA College World Series, defeating
Texas 3-2 to win the best-of-three championship series 2-0.
★
July 4:
Éric Gagné's consecutive
saves streak ended at 84 in a 6-5
Los Angeles Dodgers victory against the
Arizona Diamondbacks
★
July 10:
Barry Bonds breaks his own record for
intentional walks received in a season; amazingly, he broke the former full-season record of 68 set in
2002 before the
All-Star break. After three intentional walks in a 3-1
San Francisco Giants win over the
Arizona Diamondbacks, his total stood at 71. He would end the season with 120.
★
August 8: At
Comerica Park,
Boston Red Sox outslugged the
Detroit Tigers 11-9, despite
knuckle baller
Tim Wakefield giving up a record six
home runs.
★
August 31: The
Cleveland Indians win a 22-0 rout of the
New York Yankees, who endured the worst shutout loss in league history.
★
September 17: At
San Francisco,
Barry Bonds became just the third player in
MLB history to hit 700
home runs. Bonds joined the select company of
Hall of Famers Hank Aaron (755) and
Babe Ruth (714) with his historic blast off
San Diego Padres Jake Peavy in the third inning.
★
September 17: At
Seattle,
Ichiro Suzuki hits his 199th single of the season, breaking the
major league baseball record of 198, set by
Lloyd Waner in
1927.
★
September 29:
Major League Baseball announces that the
Montreal Expos will be moved to the
Washington, DC area for the
2005 season.
★
October 1:
Ichiro Suzuki of the
Seattle Mariners gets two base hits to break the 83-year-old record for most hits in a single season. The previous record, held by
George Sisler, was 257 hits in a season.
★
October 20: The
Boston Red Sox win the
ALCS, coming back from 0-3 in the best-of-seven series against the
New York Yankees.
★
October 26:
Seibu Lions PL defeats
Chunichi Dragons CL, 4 games to 3 in the
Japan Series.
★
October 27: The
Boston Red Sox sweep the
St. Louis Cardinals, four games to none, to win the
World Series for the first time in 86 years.
See also
2004 in baseball
==
Basketball==
★
NBA Finals: The
Detroit Pistons, in a major upset, defeat the heavily-favored
Los Angeles Lakers, 4 games to 1. It is the Pistons first NBA title in fourteen years.
★
November 19 - A game between the Detroit Pistons and the
Indiana Pacers is called with less than a minute remaining after a fight between opposing players turns into a far more massive brawl between Pacers players and Pistons supporters. For more details on the brawl and its aftermath, see
Pacers-Pistons brawl.
★ The Los Angeles Lakers dynasty is dismantled, after
Shaquille O'Neal is traded to the
Miami Heat,
Phil Jackson retires, and many role players either sign with other teams (such as
Derek Fisher) or retire (such as
Rick Fox).
★
NCAA Men's Basketball Championship
★
★ The
UConn Huskies win 82-73 over the
Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. UConn's
Emeka Okafor is named Most Outstanding Player of the
Final Four.
★
NCAA Women's Basketball Championship
★
★ The
UConn Huskies defeat the
Tennessee Lady Volunteers, 70-61, making UConn the first school to win both the NCAA Division I men's and women's basketball championships in the same season. A Division II school,
Central Missouri State, was the first to accomplish this double in 1984. UConn's
Diana Taurasi is named the Most Outstanding Player of the
Final Four.
★
August 25- The
Puerto Rican National Basketball Team defeats the United States'
Dream Team 92-73 on the opening game if the
2004 Summer Olympics. This marked the first time the Dream Team lost an Olympic Game.
★
Euroleague:
Maccabi Tel-Aviv of
Israel wins the final 118-74 over
Fortitudo Bologna of
Italy.
★
Chinese Basketball Association finals:
Guangdong Southern Tigers defeat
Bayi Rockets, 3 games to 1.
★
National Basketball League (Australia):
Sydney Kings defeated the
West Sydney Razorbacks 3-2 in best-of-five final series.
==
Boxing==
★
February 19 to
29 – '
35th European Amateur Boxing Championships' held in
Pula, Croatia
★
★ ''Light Flyweight (– 48 kg):''
Sergey Kazakov (Russia)
★
★ ''Flyweight (– 51 kg):''
Georgi Balakshin (Russia)
★
★ ''Bantamweight (– 54 kg):''
Gennady Kovalev (Russia)
★
★ ''Featherweight (– 57 kg):''
Vitaly Tajbert (Germany)
★
★ ''Lightweight (– 60 kg):''
Dimitar Stilianov (Bulgaria)
★
★ ''Light Welterweight (– 64 kg):''
Alexander Maletin (Russia)
★
★ ''Welterweight (– 69 kg):''
Oleg Saitov (Russia)
★
★ ''Middleweight (– 75 kg):''
Gaidarbek Gaidarbekov (Russia)
★
★ ''Light Heavyweight (– 81 kg):''
Evgeny Makarenko (Russia)
★
★ ''Heavyweight (– 91 kg):''
Alexander Alexeyev (Russia)
★
★ ''Super Heavyweight (+ 91 kg):''
Alexander Povetkin (Russia)
★
March 13 – The world junior middleweight championship was unified as
Shane Mosley lost to
Winky Wright.
★
May 15 –
Antonio Tarver won the
WBC light-heavyweight title with a stunning second-round knockout of champion
Roy Jones Jr.
★
July 30 –
Danny Williams knocks out
Mike Tyson in the fourth round of a non-championship bout.
★
August 16 –
Robert Quiroga, former
International Boxing Federation super flyweight champion, found stabbed to death.
★
September 18 –
Bernard Hopkins successfully defends his undisputed middleweight title with a ninth-round knockout of
Oscar de la Hoya.
==
Cricket==
★
March 5 -
Pakistan beat the
West Indies by 25 runs to win the
2004 Under-19 Cricket World Cup.
★
March 12 -
Shane Warne becomes the first
spinner in history to take 500
Test wickets.
★
March 13 -
India beat
Pakistan in the highest scoring
one-day international ever (693 runs), in the opening match of their first Pakistan tour since
1989.
★ April -
Ricky Ponting is named ''Leading Cricketer in the World'' by
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack.
★
April 2 -
Zimbabwe Cricket Union announces the retirement of
Heath Streak as captain of
Zimbabwe. It is later revealed he was sacked, and 15 senior players withdraw from Zimbabwean cricket, citing political interference by
Robert Mugabe's government in team selection.
★
April 12 - The West Indies'
Brian Lara regains the individual Test innings record from
Australian
Matthew Hayden with 400 not out in the fourth Test against England in St. John's,
Antigua.
★
May 8 -
Sri Lanka's
Muttiah Muralitharan breaks
Courtney Walsh's world record of 519 Test wickets with his 520th wicket against Zimbabwe in
Harare.
★
June 10 - Zimbabwe Cricket Union agrees to abandon any further Test matches in 2004, under pressure from
International Cricket Council over substandard teams due to 15 striking players.
★
June 19 -
September 4 - Inaugural
Pro Cricket season, the first professional cricket tournament in the
United States.
★
September 10 -
September 25 -
ICC Champions Trophy in
England:
West Indies beats
England in the final.
see also
2004 in cricket
==
Curling==
★
2004 Nokia Brier:
★
★ Final: (
March 14)
Nova Scotia (
Mark Dacey) 10-9
Alberta (
Randy Ferbey)
★
2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts:
★
★ Final: (
February 29)
Canada (
Colleen Jones) 7-4
Quebec (
Marie-France Larouche)
★
2004 Ford World Curling Championship:
★
★ Women's Final: (
April 24)
Canada (
Colleen Jones) 8-4
Norway (
Dordi Nordby)
★
★ Men's Final: (
April 25)
Sweden (
Peja Lindholm) 7-6
Germany (
Sebastian Stock)
★
Canada Cup
★
★ Women's Final: (
January 10)
Colleen Jones 8-7
Sherry Anderson
★
★ Men's Final: (
January 11)
Randy Ferbey 10-3
John Morris
★ M&M Meat Shops National Final (
January 25)
Glenn Howard 5-3
Jeff Stoughton
★ PharmAssist Players' Championship Final (
April 4)
John Morris 7-5
Jeff Stoughton
★
2004 Canadian mixed curling championship Final: (
January 18)
Alberta (
Shannon Kleibrink) 9-5
Ontario (
Heath McCormick) ''Shannon Kleibrink becomes the first woman to skip and win the Canadian mixed curling championship. Last year, she was the first to skip and participate in the event, losing only in the final.''
★ Canadian Senior Curling Championship
★
★ Women's Final: (
February 1)
Ontario (Anne Dunn) 7-3
British Columbia (Kathy Smiley)
★
★ Men's Final: (February 1)
Newfoundland and Labrador (Bas Buckle) 9-8
Nova Scotia (Steve Ogden)
★
World Junior Curling Championships
★
★ Women's Final: (
March 27)
Norway (
Linn Githmark) 9-6
Canada (
Jill Mouzar)
★
★ Men's Final: (
March 28)
Sweden (Niklas Edin) 6-4
Switzerland (Stefan Rindisblacher)
==
Cycling
=
Road Cycling===
★
Giro d'Italia - won by
Damiano Cunego of
Italy. Sprinter
Alessandro Petacchi wins nine stages. See
2004 Giro d'Italia
★
Tour de France -
★
★ Overall (
Yellow jersey) -
Lance Armstrong, his record-setting sixth consecutive title.
★
★ King of the Mountains (
Polka dot jersey) -
Richard Virenque, a record seventh title
★
★ Points Classification (
Green jersey) -
Robbie McEwen
★
★ Young Rider (
White jersey) -
Vladimir Karpets
★
★ Team -
T-Mobile Team
===
Cyclo-cross===
★
UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in
Pont-Château,
France (
January 31–
February 1)
★
★ 'Men's Competition'
★ #Gold –
Bart Wellens
★ #Silver –
Mario De Clercq
★ #Bronze –
Sven Vanthourenhout
★
★ 'Women's Competition'
★ #Gold –
Laurence Leboucher
★ #Silver –
Maryline Salvetat
★ #Bronze –
Hanka Kupfernagel
==
Field Hockey==
World Competitions
★
Men's Olympic Qualifier Tournament in
Madrid,
Spain
★
★ Gold Medal: The Netherlands
★
★ Silver Medal: Spain
★
★ Bronze Medal: Pakistan
★
Olympic Games (Men's Competition) in
Athens,
Greece
★
★ Gold Medal: Australia
★
★ Silver Medal: The Netherlands
★
★ Bronze Medal: Germany
★
Men's Champions Trophy in
Lahore,
Pakistan
★
★ Gold Medal: Spain
★
★ Silver Medal: The Netherlands
★
★ Bronze Medal: Pakistan
★
Women's Olympic Qualifier Tournament in
Auckland,
New Zealand
★
★ Gold Medal: Japan
★
★ Silver Medal: Spain
★
★ Bronze Medal: New Zealand
★
Olympic Games (Women's Competition) in
Athens,
Greece
★
★ Gold Medal: Germany
★
★ Silver Medal: The Netherlands
★
★ Bronze Medal: Argentina
★
Women's Champions Trophy in
Rosario,
Argentina
★
★ Gold Medal: The Netherlands
★
★ Silver Medal: Germany
★
★ Bronze Medal: Argentina
Regional Competitions
★
Men's Pan American Cup in
London, Canada
★
★ Gold Medal: Argentina
★
★ Silver Medal: Canada
★
★ Bronze Medal: Chile
★
Women's Asia Cup in
New Delhi, India
★
★ Gold Medal: India
★
★ Silver Medal: Japan
★
★ Bronze Medal: China
★
Women's Pan American Cup in
Bridgetown,
Barbados
★
★ Gold Medal: Argentina
★
★ Silver Medal: United States
★
★ Bronze Medal: Canada
==
Figure skating==
★
Canadian Figure Skating Championships at
Edmonton:
★
★
January 9
★
★
★ Junior
Ice dance winners:
Tessa Virtue, (
London) and
Scott Moir (
Ilderton, Ontario), 2.8 factored placements
★
★
★ Junior Pairs winners:
Jessica Dubé, (
Drummondville, Quebec) and
Bryce Davison, (
Cambridge, Ontario), 1.5 factored placements
★
★
January 10
★
★
★ Junior Women's singles winner:
Myriane Samson, (
Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec), 1.5 factored placements
★
★
January 11
★
★
★ Senior Ice Dance winners:
Marie-France Dubreuil and
Patrice Lauzon, (
Boisbriand, Quebec), 2.0
★ 2004
United States Figure Skating Championships at
Atlanta, Georgia:
★
★
January 8:
★
★
★ Junior Pairs winners:
Shantel Jordan and
Jeremy Barrett,
Bradenton, Florida, 2.5 factored placements
★
★
January 9:
★
★
★ Junior Men's winner:
Christopher Toland, 3.5
★
★
★ Junior Ice Dance winners:
Morgan Matthews and
Maxim Zavozin,
New York City, 2.0
★
★
January 10:
★
★
★ Senior Men's winner:
Johnny Weir,
Newark, Delaware, 1.5
★
★
★ Senior Pairs winners:
Rena Inoue and
John Baldwin, 2.0
★
★
★ Junior Ladies' winner:
Kimberly Meissner,
Bel Air, Maryland, 2.0
★
★
★ Senior Ice Dance winners:
Tanith Belbin and
Benjamin Agosto,
Detroit, Michigan, 2.0
★
★
January 11:
★
★
★ Senior Ladies' winner:
Michelle Kwan, 2.0
★ 2004
European Figure Skating Championships,
Budapest, Hungary
★
★
February 4, Senior Pairs:
★
★
★ 1-
Tatiana Totmianina and
Maxim Marinin,
Russia, 1.5 factored placements
★
★
★ 2-
Maria Petrova and
Alexei Tikhonov, Russia, 3.0
★
★
★ 3-
Dorota Zagorska and
Mariusz Siudek,
Poland, 4.5
★
★
February 5, Senior Men's:
★
★
★
Brian Joubert,
France, 2.6
★
★
★
Evgeny Plushenko,
Russia, 3.0
★
★
★
Ilia Klimkin, Russia, 5.6
★
★
February 6, Senior Ice Dance:
★
★
★
Tatiana Navka and
Roman Kostomarov,
Russia, 2.0
★
★
★
Albena Denkova and
Maxim Staviski,
Bulgaria, 4.6
★
★
★
Elena Grushina and
Ruslan Goncharov,
Ukraine, 5.4
★
★
February 7: Senior Ladies':
★
★
★
Julia Sebestyen,
Hungary, 1.5
★
★
★
Elena Liashenko,
Ukraine, 4.0
★
★
★
Elena Sokolova,
Russia, 5.0
★ 2004
World Figure Skating Championships,
Dortmund,
Germany
★
★
March 24, Senior Pairs:
★
★
★
Tatiana Totmianina and
Maxim Marinin,
Russia, 2.5 factored placements
★
★
★
Shen Xue and
Zhao Hongbo,
China, 3.0
★
★
★
Pang Qing and
Tong Jian, China
★
★
March 25, Senior Men's:
★
★
★
Evgeny Plushenko, Russia, 2.0
★
★
★
Brian Joubert,
France, 4.0
★
★
★
Stefan Lindemann,
Germany, 6.0
★
★
March 26, Senior Dance:
★
★
★
Tatiana Navka and
Roman Kostomarov, Russia, 2.0
★
★
★
Albena Denkova and
Maxim Staviski,
Bulgaria, 3.6
★
★
★
Kati Winkler and
René Lohse, Germany, 6.2
★
★
March 27, Senior Ladies':
★
★
★
Shizuka Arakawa,
Japan, 2.6
★
★
★
Sasha Cohen,
United States, 4.0
★
★
★
Michelle Kwan, United States, 5.6
==
Football (
American)==
★
College football Bowl Championship Series (
2003 season):
★
★
January 1 -
Rose Bowl:
USC 28,
Michigan 14
★
★
January 1 -
Orange Bowl:
Miami 16,
Florida State 14
★
★
January 2 -
Fiesta Bowl:
Ohio State 35,
Kansas State 28
★
★
January 4 -
Sugar Bowl:
LSU 21,
Oklahoma 14
★
★
January 5 - LSU is awarded the 2003 BCS national championship; USC is awarded the 2003 Associated Press national championship
★
College football (other divisions;
2004 season):
★
★
Division I-AA:
James Madison 31,
Montana 21
★
★
Division II:
Valdosta State 36,
Pittsburg State 31
★
★
Division III:
Linfield 28,
Mary Hardin-Baylor 21
★
National Football League:
★
★
February 1 -
Super Bowl XXXVIII:
New England Patriots 32,
Carolina Panthers 29 at
Houston, Texas
★
★
August 8 -
John Elway,
Barry Sanders,
Carl Eller and
Bob Brown are inducted into the
Pro Football Hall of Fame
★
★
September 19 -
Jerry Rice's record of 274 consecutive games with a
pass reception comes to an end, although his
Oakland Raiders defeat the
Buffalo Bills, 13-10.
★
★
September 27 -
Morten Andersen appears in his 341st
NFL game, breaking the record set by
George Blanda.
★
★
December 26 -
Peyton Manning threw his 49th
touchdown pass of the season in a game against the
San Diego Chargers breaking
Dan Marino's single season touchdown record
★
NFL Europe:
★
★
June 12 - World Bowl:
Berlin Thunder 30,
Frankfurt Galaxy 24
★
Arena Football League:
★
★
June 27 -
ArenaBowl XVIII:
San Jose SaberCats 69,
Arizona Rattlers 62 at
Phoenix, Arizona
==
Football (
Australian rules)==
★
Australian Football League
★
★
Port Adelaide wins the 108th AFL premiership (Port Adelaide 17.11 (113) d
Brisbane Lions 10.13 (73))
★
★
Brownlow Medal awarded to
Chris Judd (
West Coast Eagles)
★
★ ''See also
Australian Football League season 2004''
==
Football (
Canadian)==
★
November 21:
Toronto Argonauts defeats
British Columbia Lions 27-19 in the
92nd Grey Cup, played in
Ottawa,
Canada.
==
Football (
rugby league) ==
★
May 15 -
St Helens defeat
Wigan Warriors 32-16 to win the
Challenge Cup.
★
June 17 -
Martin Gleeson and
Sean Long are banned for four and three months respectively after placing bets on their side,
St Helens, to lose a
Super League match against the
Bradford Bulls.
★
October 3 -
Canterbury Bulldogs defeat
Sydney Roosters 16-13 in the
Grand Final to win the
NRL premiership.
★
October 16 -
Leeds Rhinos defeat
Bradford Bulls 16-8 in the
Super League Grand Final to become champions of Super League IX.
★
November 27 -
Australia defeat
Great Britain 44-4 in the final of the second
Tri-Nations competition.
==
Football (
Rugby Union)==
★
Hong Kong Sevens -
England beat
Argentina 22-12
★
Super 12 -
ACT Brumbies defeated
Crusaders 47-38
★
Six Nations Championship -
France (Grand Slam).
Ireland win the
Triple Crown.
★
Heineken Cup -
London Wasps defeated
Toulouse 27-20
★
Tri Nations Series - The
Springboks of
South Africa win due to bonus points, after all sides finish with two wins and two losses. The
All Blacks of
New Zealand retain the
Bledisloe Cup.
★
International Rugby Board year-end awards:
★
★ Player of the Year:
Schalk Burger, South Africa
★
★ Coach of the Year:
Jake White, South Africa
★
★ Team of the Year: South Africa
==
Football (
Soccer)==
::''For an extensive coverage see
2004 in football (soccer)''
★
February 14 –
Tunisia beat
Morocco 2-1 to clinch the first
African Cup of Nations in the country's history.
★
May 26 –
Porto defeat
AS Monaco 3-0 in the
UEFA Champions League final in
Gelsenkirchen,
Germany.
★
July 4 –
Greece surprising win the
UEFA Euro 2004 football tournament, defeating the host nation
Portugal 1-0.
★
July 25 –
Brazil win the
Copa América football tournament, defeating
Argentina 4-2 on penalties.
★
August 7 –
Japan win the
2004 Asian Cup football tournament, defeating
China 3-1.
★
August 26 –
United States win the
Olympic women's football tournament, defeating
Brazil 2-1 in extra time.
★
August 28 –
Argentina win the
Olympic men's football tournament, defeating
Paraguay 1-0.
★
September 7 –
Cienciano defeats
Boca Juniors 4-2 on penalties to win the
South American Recopa final in
Fort Lauderdale, Florida,
USA.
★
December 17 –
Boca Juniors defeats
Bolívar 2-1 on aggregate to win the
Copa Sudamericana final in
Buenos Aires,
Argentina.
==
Gaelic Athletic Association==
★ '
Camogie'
★
★ All-Ireland Camogie Champion:
Tipperary
★
★ National Camogie League:
Tipperary
★ '
Gaelic football'
★
★
All-Ireland Senior Football Championship:
Kerry 1-20 d.
Mayo 2-9
★
★
National Football League:
Kerry 3-11 d.
Galway 1-16
★
★
Tommy Murphy Cup:
Clare 1-11 d.
Sligo 0-11
★ '
Ladies' Gaelic football'
★
★ All-Ireland Senior Football Champion:
Galway
★
★ National Football League:
Mayo
★ '
Hurling'
★
★
All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship:
Cork 0-17 d.
Kilkenny 0-9
★
★
National Hurling League:
Gliding
★ '
World Gliding Championships',
Elverum,
Norway
★
★ Club Class Winner: Sebastian Kawa, Poland; Glider:
SZD-48-3M Brawo
==
Golf==
Main articles: 2004 in golf
'Men's golf'
★
Major Championships
★
★
April 11 -
The Masters -
Phil Mickelson wins the first major of his career.
★
★
June 20 -
U.S. Open -
Retief Goosen wins his second U.S. Open title
★
★
July 18 -
The Open Championship -
Todd Hamilton, a virtual unknown, wins at
Royal Troon in a playoff over
Ernie Els
★
★
August 15 -
PGA Championship -
Vijay Singh wins in a three-hole playoff over
Chris DiMarco and
Justin Leonard.
★ Other highlights
★
★
February 29 -
Tiger Woods wins the
WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship for the second consecutive year
★
★
September 6 -
Vijay Singh replaces
Tiger Woods at the top of the
world rankings, ending Woods' record reign of five years and four weeks.
★
★
September 17-
19 - Team Europe defeats Team USA 18½ - 9½ to retain the
Ryder Cup. See
2004 Ryder Cup for more details.
★ Awards
★
★
PGA Tour Player of the Year:
Vijay Singh
★
★
PGA Tour leading money winner:
Vijay Singh wins a record $10,905,166
★
★
PGA Tour rookie of the year:
Todd Hamilton
'Women's golf'
★
January 15-
16 - At the age of 14, golf prodigy
Michelle Wie becomes the youngest woman (and only the fourth overall) to play at a
PGA Tour event, shooting 72-68 (even par) at the Sony Open at Waialae Country Club in her hometown of
Honolulu. She missed the cut by one stroke.
★
February 29 -
Annika Sörenstam wins her third
ANZ Ladies Masters.
★
March 28 -
Grace Park wins the first major of the
LPGA season, the
Kraft Nabisco Championship, by one shot over 17-year-old
Aree Song.
Michelle Wie finished fourth, four shots behind Park.
★
June 13 -
Annika Sörenstam successfully defends her title in the second major of the
LPGA season, the
LPGA Championship.
==
Handball==
★
January 22 to
February 1 - The
European Men's Handball Championship in
Slovenia held.
==
Harness Racing==
★
Windsong's Legacy becomes the seventh horse to win the
North American
Trotting Triple Crown.
==
Thoroughbred Horse Racing==
Flat races
★ Australia
★
★
November 2 -
Makybe Diva wins the
Melbourne Cup.
★ Canada
★
★
June 27 -
Niigon wins the
Queen's Plate.
★ France
★
★
October 3 -
Bago wins the
Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.
★ Ireland
★
★
June 27 -
Grey Swallow wins the
Irish Derby.
★ English
Triple Crown
★ #
May 1 -
Haafhd wins the
2000 Guineas.
★ #
June 5 -
North Light wins the
Epsom Derby.
★ #
September 11 -
Rule of Law wins the
St. Leger Stakes.
★ Other English races
★
★
May 2 -
Attraction wins the
1000 Guineas.
★
★
June 4 -
Ouija Board wins the
Epsom Oaks.
★ United States
Triple Crown
★ #
May 1 -
Smarty Jones wins the
Kentucky Derby.
★ #
May 15 -
Smarty Jones wins the
Preakness Stakes by a record margin of 11½ lengths.
★ #
June 5 -
Birdstone wins the
Belmont Stakes.
★ Other United States races
★
★
April 30 -
Ashado wins the
Kentucky Oaks.
★
★
August 28 -
Birdstone wins the
Travers Stakes.
★
October 30 -
Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships at
Lone Star Park in
Grand Prairie,
Texas:
★
★
Ghostzapper wins the
Breeders' Cup Classic.
★
★
Ashado wins the
Breeders' Cup Distaff.
★
★
Ouija Board wins the
Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf.
★
★
Wilko wins the
Breeders' Cup Juvenile.
★
★
Sweet Catomine wins the
Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies.
★
★
Singletary wins the
Breeders' Cup Mile.
★
★
Speightstown wins the
Breeders' Cup Sprint.
★
★
Better Talk Now wins the
Breeders' Cup Turf.
Steeplechases
★ United Kingdom
★
★
March 18 -
Best Mate wins a third consecutive
Cheltenham Gold Cup.
★
★
April 3 -
Amberleigh House wins the
Grand National.
==
Ice Hockey==
★
January 4 -
Under 17 World Championship at
St. John's
★
★ Gold Medal Game:
Ontario 5,
Pacific 2
★
★ Bronze Medal Game: Team
Quebec 3,
United States 2
★
January 5 -
2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships at
Helsinki,
Finland
★
★ Gold Medal Game:
United States 4,
Canada 3
★
★ Bronze Medal Game:
Finland 2,
Czech Republic 1
★
February 12 - An independent audit by
Arthur Levitt reveals that
National Hockey League teams lost a collective US$273 million in
2003, and suggests the league is "on the road to oblivion."
★
April 6 -
2004 Women's World Ice Hockey Championships at
Halifax, Nova Scotia
★
★ Gold Medal Game: 2, 0
★
★ Bronze Medal Game: 3, 2
★
April 10 -
National Women's Hockey League championship at
Brampton, Ontario
★
★ Championship Final:
Calgary X-Treme 6,
Brampton Thunder 5 (OT)
★
April 18 -
IIHF World Under-18 Championship at
Minsk,
Belarus
★
★ Gold Medal Game:
Russia 3,
United States 2
★
★ Bronze Medal Game:
Czech Republic 3,
Canada 2
★
April 25 -
Allan Cup at
Saint-Georges, Quebec
★
★ Allan Cup Final:
Saint-Georges Garaga 5,
Ministlkwan Islanders 0
★
April 25 - Canadian
National Midget Championship at
Kenora, Ontario
★
★ Gold Medal Game:
Brandon Wheat Kings 2, College
Charles-Lemoyne 1 (OT)
★
★ Bronze Medal Game:
Red Deer Optimist Chiefs 5,
Kenora Stars 2
★
May 9 -
2004 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships at
Prague,
Czech Republic
★
★ Gold Medal Game: 5, 3
★
★ Bronze Medal Game: 1, 0 (SO)
★
May 23 -
Memorial Cup at
Kelowna, British Columbia
★
★
2004 Memorial Cup Final:
Kelowna Rockets 2,
Gatineau Olympques 1
★
June 7 -
Stanley Cup -
Tampa Bay Lightning defeat
Calgary Flames 4 games to 3 to win the
Stanley Cup.
★
September 14 -
World Cup of Hockey at
Toronto,
Canada
★
★ Final:
Canada 3,
Finland 2.
★
September 15 -
NHL collective bargaining agreement expires. Commissioner
Gary Bettman announces a
lockout of
NHLPA players (''see:
2004-05 NHL lockout'').
★
October 11 -
Jean Perron named
head coach of
Israeli national under-18 hockey team
==
Kabaddi==
★
November 21 -
India wins the first-ever World Cup kabaddi championship defeating
Iran in the final held at
Mumbai.
==
Lacrosse==
★
February 22 -
National Lacrosse League - The East Division All-Stars defeat the West Division All-Stars 19-15 in the
All Star Game.
★
May 7 -
National Lacrosse League -
Calgary Roughnecks defeat
Buffalo Bandits 14-11 to win Champion's Cup
★
May 30 -
LeMoyne College defeats
Limestone 11-10 (2OT) for first
Division II National Championship.
★
August -
European Lacrosse Championships
★
★ Men's - England defeats Germany
★
★ Women's - Wales A defeats Scotland A
★
August 22 -
Major League Lacrosse -
Philadelphia Barrage defeat
Boston Cannons 13-11 to win league championship at Boston
★ Clarington Green Gaels win the
Founders Cup
★ Peterborough Lakers win the
Mann Cup
★ Burnaby Lakers win the
Minto Cup
==
Luge==
★
January 4 -
European Luge Championships at
Oberhof,
Germany
★
★ Men's Doubles winner:
Steffen Skel and
Steffen Woeller, Germany, 1:22.633
★
★ Women's Singles winner:
Silke Kraushaar, Germany, 1:22.995
★
January 17 - World Cup event at
Winterberg,
Germany
★
★ Men's Singles winner:
Georg Hackl, Germany 1:51.211
==
Orienteering==
★ First ever World Championship in
Trail Orienteering held September 15-18 in Västerås,
Sweden.
==
Netball ==
★
5 July- World champions,
New Zealand's ''
Silver Ferns'', complete 3-0 test series win over
Australia with 53-46 win at
Hamilton, New Zealand.
==
Radiosport==
★ Twelfth
Amateur Radio Direction Finding World Championship held in
Brno,
Czech Republic.
==
Skiing &
Snowboarding==
★
Biathlon
★
★
January 10- World Cup Biathlon event at
Pokljuka,
Slovenia winner, men's 12.5 km pursuit:
Ole Einar Bjørndalen,
Norway, 36:18.8
★
★
January 14- World Cup Biathlon event at
Ruhpolding,
Germany winner, Women's 4x6K Relay winner: Germany, 1:18:37
★
★
January 15- Men's 4x7.5K Relay winner:
Belarus, 1:43:43.71
★
★
January 17- World Cup Biathlon competition Men's 10 km Sprint winner:
Halvard Hanevold, Norway 25:01.5
★
Cross-country skiing
★
★
January 10- World Cup men's cross-country skiing competition at
Otepaa,
Finland winner, 30 km mass start:
Frode Estil,
Norway, 1:15:18.1
★
★
January 17- World Cup cross-country ski meet at
Nove Mesto na Morave,
Czech Republic
★
★
★ Men's 15 km classical style winner:
Andrus Veerpalu,
Estonia 42:27.6
★
★
★ Women's 10 km classical style winner:
Gabriella Paruzzi,
Italy 31:17.6
★
Downhill skiing
★
★
January 4 - Men's World Cup Slalom Competition at
Flachau,
Austria winner:
Kalle Palander,
Finland, 1:42.24
★
★ January 4 - Women's World Cip Giant Slalom Competition at
Megeve,
France winner:
Alexandra Meissnitzer, Austria 1:24.98
★
★
January 10 - Men's World Cup downhill race at
Chamonix, France winner:
Stephane Eberharter, Austria 1:59.08
★
★ January 10- Women's World Cup downhill ski race at
Veysonnaz,
Switzerland winner:
Renate Götschl, Austria 1:38.58
★
★
January 11- Men's World Cup slalom at Chamonix, France winner:
Giorgio Rocca,
Italy 1:29.09
★
★
January 17- Women's World Cup downhill race at
Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy winner:
Hilde Gerg,
Germany 1:17.57
★
Freestyle skiing
★
★
January 10- Ericsson World Freestyle skiing competition at
Mont Tremblant, Quebec
★
★
★ Women's Moguls winner:
Stephanie St. Pierre,
Canada 24.25 points
★
★
★ Men's Moguls winner:
Marc-Andre Moreau, Canada 25.14 points
★
★
January 16- Freesyle FIS World Cup at
Lake Placid, New York
★
★
★ Women's aerials winner:
Jiao Wang,
China 183.61
★
★
★ Men's aerials winner:
Steve Omischl, Canada 246.01
★
★
January 17
★
★
★ Women's Moguls winner:
Jennifer Heil, Canada 26.77
★
★
★ Men's Moguls winner:
Janne Lahtela,
Finland 26.29
★
Giant slalom
★
★
January 3 - Men's World Cup Giant Slalom Competition at
Flachau,
Austria winner:
Benjamin Raich, Austria, 2:22.54
★
Nordic skiing
★
★
January 4 - Nordic combined World Cup event at
Schonach,
Germany winner:
Todd Lodwick,
United States, 34:29.5
★
Ski jumping
★
★
January 1 - The traditional New Year's Ski Jumping in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen,
Germany. The Large Hill event was won by
Sigurd Pettersen of
Norway with 253.8 points.
★
★
January 4 - Four Hills ski jumping tournament at
Innsbruck,
Austria. K120 winner:
Peter Zonta,
Slovenia, 265.2 points
★
Super-G
★
★
January 11 - Women's World Cup super-G at
Veysonnaz,
Switzerland winner:
Hilde Gerg,
Germany, 1:21.34
★
★
January 14 - Women's World Cup super-G at
Cortina d'Ampezzo,
Italy winner:
Genevieve Simard,
Canada, 13.05
★
★
January 16 - Women's World Cup super-G at Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy winner:
Renate Götschl,
Austria 1:10.59
★
Snowboarding
★
★
January 3 - World Cup men's "big air" snowboarding competition at
Klagenfurt,
Austria winner:
Aleksi Vanninen,
Finland, 1,000 points
★
★
January 6 - World Cup snowboard parallel slalom at
Bad Gastein, Austria
★
★
★ Men's winner:
Dejan Josir,
Slovenia, 1,000
★
★
★ Women's winner:
Jagna Kolasinska-Marczulajtis,
Poland, 1,000
★
★
January 10 - World Cup giant slalom race at
L'Alpe d'Huez,
France
★
★
★ Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Urs Eiselin,
Switzerland, 1,000
★
★
★ Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Daniela Meuli, Switzerland, 1,000
★
★
January 16 - World Cup cross at
Arosa, Switzerland
★
★
★ Men's winner:
Stefano Pozzolini,
Italy 1,000
★
★
★ Women's winner:
Karine Ruby, France 1,000
★
★
January 17 -
★
★
★ Men's winner:
Simone Malusa, Italy 1,000
★
★
★ Women's winner: Karine Ruby, France 1,000
==
Snooker==
★
World Snooker Championship:
Ronnie O'Sullivan beats
Graeme Dott 18-8
★
World rankings:
Ronnie O'Sullivan becomes
world number one for 2004/05
★
October 16: In a qualifying match for the UK Championship,
Jamie Burnett makes a
break of 148 against
Leo Fernandez and becomes the first player to achieve a break higher than the nominal maximum of 147 in a professional match.
==
Speed skating
=Long track
speed skating===
★
January 2 - Winners at the
2003 Canada Post All Round Canadian Championships at
Calgary, Alberta:
★
★ Men's 500 m:
Mike Ireland,
Winnipeg, Manitoba 34.58 seconds
★
★ Men's 1000 m:
Jeremy Wotherspoon,
Red Deer, Alberta 1:08.90
★
★ Women's 500 m:
Krisy Myers,
Lloydminster, Saskatchewan 39.43
★
★ Women's 1000 m: Kristy Myers 1:18.16
★
January 3
★
★ Men's 500 m:
Casey Fitzrandolph,
Madison, Wisconsin 35.27 seconds
★
★ Men's 1500 m:
Jay Morrison,
Fort St. John, British Columbia 1:46.96
★
★ Women's 500 m:
Kerry Simpson,
Melville, Saskatchewan 39.67
★
★ Women's 1500 m:
Kristina Groves,
Ottawa 1:59.25
★
January 17 - Winners at the
World sprint speedskating championships at
Nagano,
Japan:
★
★ Men's 500 m:
Jeremy Wotherspoon,
Canada 35.25
★
★ Women's 500 m:
Sayuri Osuga, Japan 38.79
★
February 7 -
9 - Winners at the 2004
World Allround Speed Skating Championships at
Hamar,
Norway:
★
★ Men's 500 m:
Yevgeny Lalenkov,
Russia 35.780
★
★ Men's 5000 m:
Carl Verheijen,
Netherlands 6:20.61
★
★ Ladies' 500 m:
Jennifer Rodriguez,
United States 38.740
★
★ Ladies' 3000 m
Renate Groenewold,
Netherlands 4:04.58
★
★ Men's 1500 m
Shani Davis,
United States 1:46.02
★
★ Men's 10,000 m
Carl Verheijen,
Netherlands 13:17.86
★
★ Ladies' 1500 m
Jennifer Rodriguez,
United States, 1:57.33
★
★ Ladies' 5000 m
Gretha Smit,
Netherlands 7:02.89
★
★ Men's all-around champion:
Chad Hedrick,
United States 150.478
★
★ Ladies' all-around champion:
Renate Groenewold,
Netherlands 162.573
===
Short track speed skating===
★
January 10-
World junior short-track speed skating championships at
Beijing
★
★ Men's 500 m winner:
Ho-Suk Lee,
South Korea 42.542 seconds
★
★ Women's 500 m winner:
Anouk Leblanc-Boucher,
Canada 45.689 seconds
★
January 11-
★
★ Men's 1000 m winner:
Ki-Deok Kwon, South Korea 1:28.682
★
★ Women's 1000 m winner:
Yun-Mi Kang, South Korea 1:36.040
★
January 17-
European short-track speedskating championship at
Zoetermeer,
Netherlands:
★
★ Women's 500 m:
Evgenia Radanova,
Bulgaria 44.882
★
★ Men's 500 m:
Nicola Franceschina,
Italy 42. 845
==
Swimming==
International tournaments
★
January 13 – World Cup (short course) in
Stockholm,
Sweden:
★
★ Men's 50m Butterfly:
Mike Mintenko (CAN) 23.75
★
★ Men's 100m Freestyle:
Jason Lezak (USA) 47.24
★
★ Men's 100m Individual Medley:
Kosuke Kitajima (JPN) 53.71
★
★ Men's 400m Freestyle:
Yuri Prilukov (RUS) 3:41.10
★
★ Men's 400m Individual Medley:
Brian Johns (CAN) 4:09.92
★
★ Men's 50m Breaststroke:
Ed Moses (USA) 27.10
★
★ Men's 200m Breaststroke:
Ed Moses (USA) 2:04.54
★
★ Men's 200m Butterfly:
Takeshi Matsuda (JPN) 1:52.67
★
★ Women's 50m Backstroke:
Chang Gao (CHN) 27.61
★
January 14 – World Cup (short course) in
Stockholm,
Sweden:
★
★ Men's 200m Backstroke:
Evgeny Aleshin (RUS) 1:53.21
★
★ Men's 100m Butterfly:
Andriy Serdinov (UKR) 51.66
★
★ Men's 200m Freestyle:
Ryk Neethling (RSA) 1:23.85
★
★ Men's 1500m Freestyle:
Yuri Prilukov (RUS) 14:46.59
★
★ Men's 200m Individual Medley:
Kosuke Kitajima (JPN) 1:56.68
★
27th European LC Championships in
Madrid, Spain (
May 5 –
16)
★
★ Russia wins the most medals (16), Ukraine the most gold medals (9)
★
Summer Olympics in
Athens,
Greece (
August 14 –
22)
★
★ United States wins the most medals (28), and the most gold medals (12)
★ Seventh
World Short Course Championships in
Indianapolis,
United States (
October 7 –
11)
★
★ United States wins the most medals (41), and the most gold medals (21)
★
8th European SC Championships in
Vienna, Austria (
December 9 –
12)
★
★ Germany wins the most medals (22), and the most gold medals (9)
Records
★
January 18 — Exactly four years after Australia's
Susie O'Neill set her
world record (2:04.16) in the women's 200m butterfly (short course),
Yu Yang from
PR China betters that time at a World Cup meet in
Berlin,
Germany, clocking '2:04.04'.
★
March 25 —
Frédérick Bousquet breaks the
world record in the men's 50m freestyle (short course) at a meet in
New York, United States, clocking '21.10'.
==
Tennis==
★
Australian Open
★
★ Men's Final:
Roger Federer defeats
Marat Safin, 7-6
(7-3) 6-4 6-2
★
★ Women's Final:
Justine Henin-Hardenne defeats
Kim Clijsters, 6-3 4-6 6-3
★
French Open
★
★ Men's Final:
Gastón Gaudio defeats
Guillermo Coria 0-6 3-6 6-4 6-1 8-6
★
★ Women's Final:
Anastasia Myskina defeats
Elena Dementieva 6-1 6-2
★
Wimbledon Championships
★
★ Men's Final:
Roger Federer defeats
Andy Roddick, 4-6 7-5 7-6
(7-3) 6-3
★
★ Ladies' Final:
Maria Sharapova defeats
Serena Williams, 6-1 6-4
★
US Open
★
★ Men's Final:
Roger Federer defeats
Lleyton Hewitt 6-0 7-6
(7-3) 6-0
★
★ Women's Final:
Svetlana Kuznetsova defeats
Elena Dementieva 6-3 7-5
★
2004 Summer Olympics
★
★ 'Men's Singles Competition'
★ #Gold –
Nicolás Massú
★ #Silver –
Mardy Fish
★ #Bronze –
Fernando González
★
★ 'Women's Singles Competition'
★ #Gold –
Justine Henin-Hardenne
★ #Silver –
Amélie Mauresmo
★ #Bronze –
Alicia Molik
★
★ 'Men's Doubles Competition'
★ #Gold –
Fernando González &
Nicolás Massú
★ #Silver –
Nicolas Kiefer &
Rainer Schüttler
★ #Bronze –
Mario Ančić &
Ivan Ljubičić
★
★ 'Women's Doubles Competition'
★ #Gold –
Li Ting &
Sun Tiantian
★ #Silver –
Conchita Martínez &
Virginia Ruano Pascual
★ #Bronze –
Paola Suárez &
Patricia Tarabini
==
Volleyball==
★
2004 Summer Olympics in
Athens, Greece
★
★ '
Men's Team Competition'
★
★
★ Gold Medal —
★
★
★ Silver Medal —
★
★
★ Bronze Medal —
★
★ '
Women's Team Competition'
★
★
★ Gold Medal —
★
★
★ Silver Medal —
★
★
★ Bronze Medal —
Floorball (Unihockey)
★
May 16 to
May 23 - The
Men's World Unihockey Championship in
Switzerland were won by
Sweden [1].
==
General sporting events==
★
2004 Summer Olympics held from
August 13 to
29 in
Athens, Greece
★
2004 Summer Paralympics held from
September 17 to
28 in
Athens, Greece
★ Tenth
Pan Arab Games held in
Algiers, Algeria
Awards
★
Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year:
Lance Armstrong,
Cycling
★
Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year:
Annika Sörenstam,
LPGA golf
Deaths
January-February
★
January 2 —
Paul Hopkins (99), reported to be the oldest living former
Major League Baseball player
★
January 4 —
James Counsilman, American swimming coach (b.
1920)
★
January 5 -
TG Jones, Footballer (
Soccer)
Wales and
Everton
★
January 5 -
Tug McGraw (59), former
MLB relief pitcher with the
New York Mets and the
Philadelphia Phillies who played for two World Champions in 1969 with the Mets and in 1980 with the Phillies and coined the phrase "You Gotta Believe!".
★
January 14 —
Mike Goliat (78), member of the famous
Phillies' "Whiz Kids" team that won the
1950 NL pennant
★
January 17 —
Harry "The Cat" Brecheen (89), former
MLB pitcher
★
January 19 —
David Hookes -
Australian cricketer
★
January 25 —
Fanny Blankers-Koen (85), legendary
Dutch athlete
★
January 25 —
Miklos Feher, Hungarian footballer (soccer)
★
February 1 —
Ally McLeod, footballer (soccer) and former Scottish national team manager
★
February 14 —
Marco Pantani (34), Italian cyclist, winner of
1998 Tour de France
★
February 17 —
Shirley Strickland de la Hunty -
Australian Athlete
★
February 21 —
John Charles -
Welsh Footballer (soccer) for
Leeds,
Juventus,
Roma,
Cardiff and
Wales
★
February 22 —
Andy Seminick, 83, former
MLB catcher who played for the
1950 Phillies' "Whiz Kids" team
March-April
★
March 3 —
Chris Timms, 56, New Zealand yachtsman
★ March 3 —
Luis Villalta, 34, Peruvian boxer
★
March 7 —
Jack Holden, 96, English long-distance runner (b.
1907)
★
March 18 —
Gene Bearden, 83, Major League Baseball pitcher
★
March 22 —
Peter Jackson, England and
Lions winger
★
March 30 —
Salvatore Burruni, 70, Italian boxer (b.
1933)
★
April 4 —
George Bamberger, 80, Major League Baseball pitcher and manager
★ April 4 —
Briek Schotte, 84, Belgian cyclist (b.
1919)
★
April 9 —
Julius Sang, Kenyan runner (b.
1948)
★
April 10 —
Lou Berberet, 74, Major League Baseball catcher
★
April 12 —
Frankie Narvaez, 65, Puerto Rican boxer
★
April 20 —
Ronnie Simpson, Scottish football (soccer) goalkeeper
★
April 22 —
Pat Tillman, 27, American football player who left the
NFL to enlist in the
United States Army; killed in action in
Afghanistan
★
April 23 —
Ross Rutledge, 41, Canadian field hockey player (b.
1962)
★
April 26 —
Hasse Thomsén, 62, Swedish heavyweight boxer (b.
1942)
May-June
★
May 2 —
Moe Burtschy, 82, Major League Baseball pitcher for the
Philadelphia & Kansas City Athletics
★
May 3 —
Darrell Johnson, 75, Major League Baseball catcher who was manager for the
Boston Red Sox in the
1975 World Series
★
May 13 —
Magnar Estenstad, 79, Norwegian cross country skier (b.
1924)
★
May 17 Buster Narum, 63, Major League Baseball pitcher for the
Orioles and
Senators
★
June 4 Wilmer Fields, 81, Negro League Baseball All-Star player
★
June 5 —
Jack Foster, 72, New Zealand long-distance runner (b.
1932)
★
June 8 —
Mack Jones, 65, Major League Baseball outfielder, who played for the
Milwaukee & Atlanta Braves,
Cincinnati Reds and
Montreal Expos
July-August
★
July 5 —
Rodger Ward, 83, two-time
Indianapolis 500 winner
★
July 9 —
Tony Lupien, 87, former
MLB first baseman, who also was
baseball and
basketball coach for
Dartmouth College
★
July 26 —
Rubén Gómez, 77,
Puerto Rico, former
MLB right-handed
pitcher who played for the
Giants,
Phillies,
Indians and
Twins. Gómez won baseball's first regular season game on the West Coast. He started the first game in San Francisco history, beating
Don Drysdale and the visiting
Los Angeles Dodgers in an 8-0
shutout on April 15,
1958. The two teams moved from New York after the
1957 season
★
August 23 —
Hank Borowy, 88, former
MLB pitcher, who played for the
Yankees,
Cubs,
Phillies,
Pirates and
Tigers
★
August 27 —
Willie Crawford, 57, former
MLB outfielder who played with the
Dodgers between the '60s and '70s.
September-October
★
September 4 —
Caroline Pratt, 42,
equestrian, died in an accident at the
Burghley Horse Trials
★
September 4 —
Bob Boyd, 84, former
MLB first baseman; the first
black player to sign with the
White Sox, and the first
Oriole regular to
hit over .300 in the
20th century
★
September 19 —
Line Oestvold, 26,
Norwegian snowboarder, after a crash in training in
Chile.
★
September 20 —
Brian Clough, 69, English
footballer and manager, won successive
European Cups in 1979 and 1980 as manager of
Nottingham Forest F.C.
★
September 29 -
David Jackson, 49, New Zealand boxer
★
October 2 —
Bolat Kesikhbaev, vice president of
Kazakh Boxing Federation, heart attack
★
October 3 —
John Cerutti, 44, baseball broadcaster
★
October 6 —
Johnny Kelley (97), American long-distance runner (b.
1907)
★
October 10 —
Ken Caminiti, 41, baseball player;
National League Most Valuable Player in
1996.
★
October 11 —
Keith Miller, 84,
Australian rules footballer, cricketer, fighter pilot and journalist
★
October 17 —
Ray Boone, 81,
Major League Baseball player; father of
Bob Boone, grandfather of
Aaron and
Bret Boone
★
October 23 —
Bill Nicholson, 85,
British football player, manager, coach, scout for
Tottenham Hotspur F.C.
★
October 24 —
Ricky Hendrick, 24,
NASCAR driver, in a plane crash with nine other people, including the two pilots and members of his father
Rick Hendrick's family in
Martinsville, Virginia
★
October 26 —
Beto Avila, 80, Mexican
Major League Baseball second baseman
★
October 27 —
Serginho, 30,
Brazilian
footballer, a heart attack during a ''Campeonato Brasileiro'' match
★
October 28 —
Jimmy McLarnin, 96, British boxer
★
October 29 —
Jacinto João, 60, Angola-born Portuguese football (soccer) player
November-December
★
November 2 —
Gerrie Knetemann, 53, Dutch cyclist,
heart attack
★
November 3 —
Sergei Zholtok, 32, Latvian ice hockey player,
cardiac arrythmia suffered during a match in
Belarus
★
November 8 —
Eddie Charlton, 75, Australian snooker player,
surgery complications
★
November 8 —
Lennox Miller, 58, Jamaican sprinter
★
November 9 —
Emlyn Hughes, 57,
Liverpool F.C. and
England football player,
brain tumor
★
December 16 —
Bobby Mattick, 89, manager of the
Toronto Blue Jays,
stroke
★
November 17 —
Mikael Ljungberg, 34, Swedish wrestler (b.
1970)
★
November 27 —
Gunder Hägg, 85, Swedish runner (b.
1918)
★
December 14 —
Agostino Straulino, 90, Italian sailor and sailboat racer (b.
1914)
★
December 24 —
Johnny Oates, 58, manager of the
Texas Rangers,
brain tumor
★
December 26 —
Reggie White, 43, member of the
Philadelphia Eagles,
Green Bay Packers and
Carolina Panthers