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    1971 in sports

    From Wikipedia - Reading time: 10 min

    1971 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.

    Alpine skiing

    [edit]
    • Alpine Skiing World Cup
      • Men's overall season champion: Gustav Thöni, Italy
      • Women's overall season champion: Annemarie Pröll, Austria

    American football

    [edit]
    • 17 January − Super Bowl V: the Baltimore Colts (AFC) won 16–13 over the Dallas Cowboys (NFC)
      • Location: Miami Orange Bowl
      • Attendance: 79,204
      • MVP: Chuck Howley, LB (Dallas)
    • 25 December – The Miami Dolphins defeat the Kansas City Chiefs in a divisional playoff game. The double-overtime contest is the longest game in NFL history, and the Chiefs' last home game at Municipal Stadium.
    • Orange Bowl (1970 season):
      • The Nebraska Cornhuskers won 17–12 over the Louisiana State Tigers to win the AP Poll national championship after the previous #1 Texas Longhorns lost in the Cotton Bowl and the #2 Ohio State Buckeyes lost in the Rose Bowl.
    • 24 October – death of Chuck Hughes, Detroit Lions wide receiver

    Association football

    [edit]
    • 2 January – At the end of a Rangers–Celtic match at Ibrox Park in Glasgow, barriers at Stairway 13 give way under a mass of fans, killing 66 and injuring over 200 others.
    • 30 June – death of Georgi Asparuhov (28), Bulgarian international
    • Atlético Mineiro wins the first Campeonato Brasileiro Série A
    • Arsenal are the English First Division champions
    • England – FA Cup – Arsenal won 2–1 over Liverpool to win The Double
    • European Championship Cup Final: Ajax – Panathinaikos 2–0

    Athletics

    [edit]
    • August – Athletics at the 1971 Pan American Games held in Cali, Colombia
    • August – 1971 European Athletics Championships held at Helsinki

    Australian rules football

    [edit]
    • Victorian Football League
      • Hawthorn wins the 75th VFL Premiership (Hawthorn 12.10 (82) d St Kilda 11.9 (75))
      • Brownlow Medal awarded to Ian Stewart (Richmond)
    • SANFL
      • North Adelaide 10.19 (79) defeated Port Adelaide 9.5 (59)

    Bandy

    [edit]
    • 1971 Bandy World Championship is held in Sweden and won by  Soviet Union.

    Baseball

    [edit]
    • World Series – Pittsburgh Pirates won 4 games to 3 over the Baltimore Orioles. Game four, played on 13 October at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh, was the first night game in World Series history.

    Basketball

    [edit]
    • NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship –
      • UCLA wins 68–62 over Villanova
      • Indiana University Hires Bob Knight as their head basketball coach.
    • NBA Finals –
      • Milwaukee Bucks win 4 games to 0 over the Baltimore Bullets
    • 1971 ABA Finals –
      • Utah Stars defeat Kentucky Colonels 4 games to 3; Stars defeat Indiana Pacers in division finals while Colonels defeat Virginia Squires.

    Boxing

    [edit]
    • 8 March – Joe Frazier defeats Muhammad Ali at Madison Square Garden, in the first of three epic bouts between the two, to retain the World Heavyweight Championship.

    Canadian football

    [edit]
    • Grey Cup – Calgary Stampeders won 14–11 over the Toronto Argonauts
    • Vanier Cup – Western Ontario Mustangs won 15–14 over the Alberta Golden Bears

    Cricket

    [edit]
    • 5 January, Melbourne – first-ever One Day International is played after a Test match is abandoned because of rain, Australia beating England by 5 wickets.

    Cycling

    [edit]
    • Giro d'Italia won by Gösta Pettersson of Sweden
    • Tour de France – Eddy Merckx of Belgium
    • UCI Road World Championships – Men's road race – Eddy Merckx of Belgium

    Field hockey

    [edit]
    • Men's World Cup in Barcelona, Spain
      • Gold Medal: Pakistan
      • Silver Medal: Spain
      • Bronze Medal: India
    • Pan American Games (Men's Competition) in Cali, Colombia
      • Gold Medal: Argentina
      • Silver Medal: Mexico
      • Bronze Medal: Canada

    Figure skating

    [edit]
    • World Figure Skating Championships –
      • Men's champion: Ondrej Nepela, Czechoslovakia
      • Ladies' champion: Trixi Schuba, Austria
      • Pair skating champions: Irina Rodnina & Alexei Ulyanov, Soviet Union
      • Ice dancing champions: Lyudmila Pakhomova & Alexandr Gorshkov, Soviet Union

    Golf

    [edit]

    Men's professional

    • PGA Championship – Jack Nicklaus
    • Masters Tournament – Charles Coody
    • U.S. Open – Lee Trevino
    • British Open – Lee Trevino
    • PGA Tour money leader – Jack Nicklaus – $244,491
    • Ryder Cup – United States won 18½ to 13½ over Britain in team golf

    Men's amateur

    • British Amateur – Steve Melnyk
    • U.S. Amateur – Gary Cowan

    Women's professional

    • LPGA Championship – Kathy Whitworth
    • U.S. Women's Open – JoAnne Carner – this win made her the first person to win three different USGA individual championship events.
    • Titleholders Championship – not played
    • LPGA Tour money leader – Kathy Whitworth – $41,181

    Harness racing

    [edit]
    • United States Pacing Triple Crown races –
      1. Cane Pace – Albatross
      2. Little Brown Jug – Nansemond
      3. Messenger Stakes – Albatross
    • United States Trotting Triple Crown races –
      1. Hambletonian – Speedy Crown
      2. Yonkers Trot – Quick Pride
      3. Kentucky Futurity – Savoir
    • Australian Inter Dominion Harness Racing Championship –
      • Pacers: Stella Frost
      • Trotters: Geffini

    Horse racing

    [edit]

    Steeplechases

    • Cheltenham Gold Cup – L'Escargot
    • Grand National – Specify

    Flat races

    • Australia – Melbourne Cup won by Silver Knight
    • Canada – Queen's Plate won by Kennedy Road
    • France – Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe won by Mill Reef
    • Ireland – Irish Derby Stakes won by Irish Ball
    • English Triple Crown Races:
      1. 2,000 Guineas Stakes – Brigadier Gerard
      2. The Derby – Mill Reef[1]
      3. St. Leger Stakes – Athens Wood
    • United States Triple Crown Races:
      1. Kentucky Derby – Canonero II
      2. Preakness Stakes – Canonero II
      3. Belmont Stakes – Pass Catcher

    Ice hockey

    [edit]
    • 13 April – death of Michel Brière (21), Canadian player with Pittsburgh Penguins
    • Art Ross Trophy as the NHL's leading scorer during the regular season: Phil Esposito, Boston Bruins
    • Hart Memorial Trophy for the NHL's Most Valuable Player: Bobby Orr, Boston Bruins
    • Stanley Cup – Montreal Canadiens win 4 games to 3 over the Chicago Black Hawks
    • World Hockey Championship
      • Men's champion: Soviet Union defeated Czechoslovakia
    • NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship – Boston University Terriers defeat University of Minnesota-Twin Cities Golden Gophers 4–2 in Syracuse, New York
    • World Hockey Association (WHA) is formed as an alternative North American professional hockey league to the NHL

    Lacrosse

    [edit]
    • Cornell beats Maryland 12–6 to win the first NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship.
    • The Brantford Warriors win the Mann Cup.
    • The Richmond Roadrunners win the Minto Cup.
    • The Victoria McDonalds win the Castrol Cup.

    Motorsport

    [edit]

    Radiosport

    [edit]
    • Sixth Amateur Radio Direction Finding European Championship held in Duisburg, Federal Republic of Germany.

    Rugby league

    [edit]
    • 18 September – the 1971 NSWRFL season culminates in a Grand Final victory for South Sydney, defeating St George 16–10
    • 1971 New Zealand rugby league season
    • 1970–71 Northern Rugby Football League season / 1971–72 Northern Rugby Football League season

    Rugby union

    [edit]
    • 77th Five Nations Championship series is won by Wales who complete the Grand Slam

    Snooker

    [edit]
    • World Snooker Championship – John Spencer beats Warren Simpson 37–29

    Swimming

    [edit]
    • 27 August – US swimmer Mark Spitz recaptures the world record in the men's 200m butterfly (long course), clocking 2:03.9 at a meet in Houston, Texas.
    • 31 August – Four days after Mark Spitz broke the world record in the men's 200m butterfly (long course), West Germany's Hans-Joachim Fassnacht betters the time to 2:03.3 at a meet in Landskrona, Sweden.

    Tennis

    [edit]
    • Grand Slam in tennis men's results:
      1. Australian Open – Ken Rosewall
      2. French Open – Jan Kodeš
      3. Wimbledon championships – John Newcombe
      4. U.S. Open – Stan Smith
    • Grand Slam in tennis women's results:
      1. Australian Open – Margaret Court
      2. French Open – Evonne Goolagong
      3. Wimbledon championships – Evonne Goolagong
      4. U.S. Open – Billie Jean King
    • Davis Cup – United States wins 3–2 over Romania in world tennis.
    • Sixteen-year-old Chris Evert makes her US Open debut reaching the semifinals where she is defeated by eventual champion Billie Jean King.
    • First time in 16 years that Americans won both the men's and women's title at the US Open.

    Volleyball

    [edit]
    • Men and Women's European Volleyball Championship held in Italy
      • 1971 Men's European Volleyball Championship won by the USSR
      • 1971 Women's European Volleyball Championship won by the USSR
    • Volleyball at the 1971 Pan American Games held in Cali, Colombia
      • Men's and women's tournaments both won by Cuba

    Multi-sport events

    [edit]
    • Sixth Pan American Games held in Cali, Colombia[2]
    • Sixth Mediterranean Games held in İzmir, Turkey

    Awards

    [edit]
    • ABC's Wide World of Sports Athlete of the Year: Lee Trevino, PGA Golf
    • Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year – Lee Trevino, PGA golf
    • Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year – Evonne Goolagong, Tennis
    • Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year - Lee Trevino, PGA golf

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ "Epsom Derby | History, Winners, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
    2. ^ "FAQ: What are the Pan American Games?". Team Canada - Official Olympic Team Website. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
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