2004 in sports
See also: 2003 in sports, other events of 2004, 2005 in sports, list of 'years in sports'.
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.
The 2004 Olympics opened in Athens, Greece
on August 13.
See also 2004 in baseball
- These results make UConn only the second school, and the first ever in Division I, to win NCAA men's and women's basketball
titles in the same season. Central
Missouri State accomplished the double in Division II in 1984.
see also 2004 in cricket
- February 14 - Tunisia beat Morocco 2-1 to clinch the first African Cup of Nations in the country's history.
- February 29 - Middlesbrough F.C. beat Bolton
Wanderers F.C. 2-1, to win the Carling Cup (League Cup, England), the club's first cup in their 128 year history.
- April 25 - Premier
League - Arsenal clinch the Premier League title, their second in three
years, with four games still to play.
- April 29 - San Marino record their first ever win, a 1-0 victory over Liechtenstein in a friendly.
- May 2 - AC Milan clinch the Italian
Serie A title.
- May 8 - Werder Bremen win the
German Bundesliga
- May 8 - Valencia win the Spanish Primera División
- May 8 - Ajax win the Dutch
Eredivisie
- May 15 - Arsenal complete
their last game of the Premier League season with a victory, becoming the first team to go unbeaten for a whole season in the top
division of English football since Preston North End in 1889.
- May 19 - Valencia defeat
Marseille 2-0 in the UEFA Cup final in Gothenburg, Sweden.
- May 22 - Manchester United win their record 11th FA Cup, defeating
Millwall 3-0.
- May 26 - Porto defeat AS Monaco 3-0 in the Champions League final in Gelsenkirchen, Germany.
- July 1 - Once Caldas (Colombia) defeats Boca Juniors (Argentina) 1-1 on aggregate, 2-0 on
penalties to win the Copa Libertadores.
- July 4 - Greece 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 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.
See also 2004 in golf
Flat races
- Other United States races
Steeplechases
- 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
- Ladies' all-around champion: Renate Groenewold, Netherlands
- 2004 State Farm U.S. Figure Skating Championships at Atlanta, Georgia:
- January 8:
- January 9:
- 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:
- Biathlon
- Cross-country skiing
- 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 Goetschl, 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
- Giant slalom
- Nordic skiing
- Ski jumping
- Super-G
- 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
- January 10 - World Cup giant slalom race at L'Alpe d'Huez, France
- January 16 - World Cup cross at Arosa, Switzerland
- January 17 -
- Men's winner: Simone Malusa,
Italy 1,000
- Women's winner: Karine Ruby, France 1,000
- 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.
- May 5 - May 16 - European LC Championships in Madrid. Winners are:
- Mens 50 m butterfly stroke: Sergiy Breus, Ukraine 24.02
- Mens 50 m backstroke: Stev Theloke, Germany 25.61
- Mens 50 m breaststroke: Oleg Lisogor, Ukraine 27.55
- Mens 100 m backstroke: Laszlo Cseh, Hungary 55.26
- Mens 100 m breaststroke: Oleg Lisogor, Ukraine 1:01.23
- Mens 100 m freestyle: Filippo Magnini, Italy 48.87
- Mens 100 m butterfly stroke: Andriy Serdinov, Ukraine 52.31
- Mens 200 m freestyle: Pieter van den Hoogenband, Netherlands 1:47.05
- Mens 200 m backstroke: Paolo Bossini, Italy 2:11.73
- Mens 200 m breaststroke: Markus Rogan, Austria 2:57.58
- Mens 200 m butterfly stroke: Denis Sylantyev, Ukraine 1:56.71
- Mens 200 m IM: Markus Rogan, Austria 1:59.79
- Mens 400 m freestyle: Emiliano Brembilla, Italy 3:49.14
- Mens 1500 m freestyle: Yuri Prilukov, Russia 15:04.35
- Mens 4 x 100 m freestyle relay: Italy 3:15.66
- Mens 4 x 200 m freestyle relay: Italy 7:11.93
- Womens 50 m butterfly stroke: Natalia Sutiagina, Russia 27.04
- Womens 50 m breaststroke: Maria Ostling, Sweden 31.68
- Womens 100 m butterfly stroke: Martina Moravcova, Slovakia 58.05
- Womens 100 m freestyle: Malia Metella, France 54.46
- Womens 100 m backstroke: Laure Manaudou, France 1:00.93
- Womens 100 m breastroke: Svitlana Bondarenko,
Ukraine 1:09.23
- Womens 200 m backstroke: Stanislava Komarova,
Russia 2:10.97
- Womens 200 m freestyle: Camelia Potec, Romania 1:58.20
- Womens 200 m breaststroke: Mirna Jukic, Austria 2:27.25
- Womens 200 m IM: Yana Klochkova, Ukraine 2:12.56
- Womens 400 m IM: Yana Klochkova, Ukraine 4:38.52
- Womens 800 m freestyle: Erika Villaecija, Spain 8:31.26
- Womens 4 x 100 m freestyle relay: France 3:40.67
- Womens 4 x 200 m freestyle relay: Spain 8:03.41
See also 2004 in tennis
Floorball (Unihockey)
Births
Deaths
January-February
- January 2: Paul
Hopkins, 99, reported to be the oldest living former Major League Baseball player
- January 5 - TG Jones - Footballer (Soccer) Wales and Everton
- 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 18: Gene Bearden,
83, former MLB pitcher who played for the Cleveland Indians
- March 22: Peter Jackson -
England and Lions winger
- April 4: George
Bamberger, 80, former MLB pitcher and manager
- April 10: Lou Berberet,
74, former MLB catcher who played for the Yankees, Senators, Red Sox and Tigers
- April 12: Frankie
Narvaez, 65, Puerto Rican boxer
- April 20: Ronnie Simpson - Newcastle, Celtic and Scotland 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
May-June
- May 2: Moe Burtschy, 82, former
MLB pitcher
for the Philadelphia & Kansas City Athletics
- May 3: Darrell Johnson,
75, former MLB catcher who was manager for the Boston Red Sox in the 1975 World Series
- May 17 Buster Narum, 63,
former MLB pitcher for the Orioles and Senators
- June 4 Wilmer Fields, 81,
former Negro League Baseball All-Star
- June 8: Mack Jones, 65, former
MLB outfielder, who played for the Milwaukee & Atlanta
Braves, Cincinnati Reds and Montreal Expos
July-August