2005 in sports
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| Years in sports: | 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 |
| Centuries: | 20th century · 21st century · 22nd century |
| Decades: | 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 2030s |
| Years: | 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 |
[edit] Athletics (track and field)
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- For an extensive coverage see 2005 in athletics (track and field)
[edit] Track
- June 14 — Men's 100 metres - Asafa Powell of Jamaica sets a new world record of 9.77 at the Athens Olympic Stadium.
- June 19 — European Cup
- World Championships - Complete results see 2005 World Championships in Athletics
- IAAF Golden League - Russian triple jumper Tatyana Lebedeva is the sole winner of the USD 1 million jackpot divided among all athletes who win their event at each of six designated meets.
- December 13: The Court of Arbitration for Sport bans American Tim Montgomery for two years in a case stemming from his involvement with the controversial "sports nutrition" center BALCO. Although Montgomery never tested positive for drugs, CAS found the circumstantial evidence against him overwhelming. It also struck all his results from 2001 on from the books, including a then world-record time of 9.78.
[edit] Marathon
[edit] International Races
- April 10 —
Rotterdam Marathon, Netherlands
- Men's Winner: Jimmy Muindi (KEN) 2:07:50
- Women's Winner: Lornah Kiplagat (MAR) 2:27:36
- May 15 —
Enschede Marathon, Netherlands
- Men's Winner: John Kelai (KEN) 2:11:44
- Women's Winner: Abidi Tigist (ETH) 2:33:01
- August 13 —
IAAF World Championships Marathon, Helsinki, Finland
- Men's Winner: Jaouad Gharib (MAR) 2:10:10
- August 14 —
IAAF World Championships Marathon, Helsinki, Finland
- Women's Winner: Paula Radcliffe (ENG) 2:20:57
- December 4 —
Fukuoka Marathon, Japan
- Men's Winner: Dimitry Baranovsky (UKR) 2:08:29
[edit] National Champions
- April 10 —
Debrecen, Hungary
- Men's Winner: Miklos Zatyko — 2:22:58
- Women's Winner: Ida Kovacs — 2:43:15
- April 10 —
Rotterdam, Netherlands
- Men's Winner: Kamiel Maase — 2:12:50
- Women's Winner: Lornah Kiplagat — 2:27:35
- April 17 —
London, England
- Men's Winner: Jonathan Brown — 2:09:31
- Women's Winner: Paula Radcliffe — 2:17:42
- April 24 —
Helsinki, Finland
- Men's Winner: Petri Saavalainen — 2:24:37
- Women's Winner: Mira Tuominen — 2:49:08
- May 29 —
Ottawa, Canada
- Men's Winner: James Finlayson — 2:18:20
- Women's Winner: Lyudmila Korchagina — 2:32:18
- July 3 —
Brisbane, Australia
- Men's Winner: Brett Cartwright — 2:18:16
- Women's Winner: Jackie Fairweather — 2:34:34
[edit] Auto Racing
- Paris Dakar Rally winners
- Motorcycle: Cyril Despres, France, KTM 660 Rally, Team Gauloises KTM, Time 47:27:31, Penalty 9:00
- Car: Stéphane Peterhansel, Jean-Paul Cottret, France, Mitsubishi Pajero Evo, Team Mitsubishi Motor Sports, Time 52:31:39, Penalty n/a
- Truck: Firdaus Kabirov, Aydar Belyaev, Andrei Mokeev, Russia, Kamaz 4911, Team Kamaz-Master, Time 71:13:55, Penalty n/a
- World Rally Championship
- Monte Carlo Rally - Won by Sébastien Loeb in a Citroën Xsara.
- Uddeholm Swedish Rally - Won by Petter Solberg in a Subaru Impreza WRC
- Corona Rally Mexico - Won by Petter Solberg in a Subaru Impreza WRC
- Championships:
- Sébastien Loeb, driver for the Citroën team, secures the World Driver's title.
- Grand-Am
- 24 Hours of Daytona
- The overall and Daytona Prototype class victories were won by Max Angelelli, Wayne Taylor, and Emmanuel Collard in the #10 Suntrust Racing Pontiac Riley.
- The GT class victory was won by Wolf Henzler, Dominik Farnbacher, Shawn Price, and Pierre Ehret in the #71 Farnbacher Racing USA Porsche GT3.
- Championships:
- Daytona Prototype - Max Angelelli & Wayne Taylor
- GT - Craig Stanton
- 24 Hours of Daytona
- NASCAR – Main articles: 2005 in NASCAR, 2005 in NASCAR Busch Series, 2005 in NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
- Daytona 500 - Won by Jeff Gordon in the #24 DuPont Chevrolet.
- Coca-Cola 600 - Won by Jimmie Johnson in the #48 Lowes Chevrolet.
- Brickyard 400 - Won by Tony Stewart in the #20 Home Depot Chevrolet.
- 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Champion - Tony Stewart.
- International Race of Champions - IROC XXIX
- Race 1 - Daytona International Speedway - won by Mark Martin.
- Race 2 - Texas Motor Speedway - won by Sébastien Bourdais.
- Race 3 - Richmond International Raceway - won by Mark Martin.
- Race 4 - Atlanta Motor Speedway - won by Martin Truex Jr.
- 2005 IROC champion - Mark Martin
- With the championship, Martin breaks the tie for most championships that he previously shared with Dale Earnhardt.
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- Australian Grand Prix - won by Giancarlo Fisichella (Renault).
- Malaysian Grand Prix - won by Fernando Alonso (Renault).
- Bahrain Grand Prix - won by Fernando Alonso (Renault).
- San Marino Grand Prix - won by Fernando Alonso (Renault).
- Spanish Grand Prix - won by Kimi Räikkönen (McLaren-Mercedes).
- Monaco Grand Prix - won by Kimi Räikkönen (McLaren-Mercedes).
- European Grand Prix - won by Fernando Alonso (Renault).
- Canadian Grand Prix - won by Kimi Räikkönen (McLaren-Mercedes).
- United States Grand Prix - won by Michael Schumacher (Scuderia Ferrari).
- This race; however, wasn't without controversy as only 6 of the 20 drivers participated. Because of safety issues with the tires, the Michelin-shod teams pulled out to the utter disappointment of the fans.
- French Grand Prix - won by Fernando Alonso (Renault).
- British Grand Prix - won by Juan Pablo Montoya (McLaren-Mercedes).
- German Grand Prix - won by Fernando Alonso (Renault).
- Hungarian Grand Prix - won by Kimi Räikkönen (McLaren-Mercedes).
- Turkish Grand Prix - won by Kimi Räikkönen (McLaren-Mercedes).
- Italian Grand Prix - won by Juan Pablo Montoya (McLaren-Mercedes).
- Brazilian Grand Prix - won by Juan Pablo Montoya (McLaren-Mercedes).
- Japanese Grand Prix - won by Kimi Räikkönen (McLaren-Mercedes).
- Chinese Grand Prix - won by Fernando Alonso (Renault).
- Fernando Alonso clinches the World Driver's Championship.
- Renault F1 clinches the Formula One constructors title.
- Le Mans Series
- American Le Mans Series
- 12 Hours of Sebring
- The overall and LMP1 class victories were won by JJ Lehto, Marco Werner, and Tom Kristensen in the #1 Champion Racing Audi R8.
- The LMP2 class was won by Ian James, Chris McMurry, and Jeff Bucknum in the #10 Miracle Motorsports Courage C65.
- The GT1 class was won by David Brabham, Peter Kox, and Darren Turner in the #57 Aston Martin Racing DBR9.
- The GT2 class was won by Lucas Luhr, Patrick Long, and Jörg Bergmeister in the #31 Petersen Motorsports/White Lightning Racing Porsche 911 GT3 RSR.
- Petit Le Mans
- The overall and LMP1 class victories were won by Emanuele Pirro and Frank Biela in the #2 Champion Racing Audi R8.
- The LMP2 class was won by Clint Field, Jon Field, and Liz Halliday in the #37 Intersport Racing Lola B05/40/AER.
- The GT1 class was won by Oliver Gavin, Olivier Beretta, and Jan Magnussen in the #4 Chevrolet Corvette C6R.
- The GT2 class was won by Craig Stanton, Patrick Long, and Jorg Bergmeister in the #31 Petersen Motorsports/White Lightning Racing Porsche 911 GT3 RSR.
- Championships:
- LMP1 - Emanuele Pirro and Frank Biela
- LMP2 - Clint Field
- GT1 - Oliver Gavin and Olivier Beretta
- GT2 - Patrick Long and Jorg Bergmeister
- 12 Hours of Sebring
- Champ Car World Series
- Long Beach Grand Prix - won by Sébastien Bourdais in the Newman/Haas Racing #1 Lola/Cosworth.
- 2005 Champ Car World Series champion - Sébastien Bourdais.
- Toyota Atlantic champion - Charles Zwolsman.
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- Indianapolis 500 - won by Dan Wheldon in the Andretti Green Racing #26 Dallara/Honda.
- Danica Patrick becomes the first woman to lead a lap in the Indianapolis 500. She wins the Indy 500 Rookie of the Year award after finishing fourth, the highest finishing position by a woman in the race's history.
- 2005 IRL IndyCar Series champion - Dan Wheldon.
- Indianapolis 500 - won by Dan Wheldon in the Andretti Green Racing #26 Dallara/Honda.
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- The overall and LMP1 class victores were won by JJ Lehto, Marco Werner, and Tom Kristensen in the #3 Champion Racing Audi R8. Kristensen becomes the only driver to have won 7 overall victories at the Le Mans 24 Hours.
- The LMP2 class was won by Thomas Erdos, Mike Newton, and Warren Hughes in the #25 RML Lola MG.
- The GT1 class was won by Oliver Gavin, Olivier Beretta, and Jan Magnussen in the #64 Chevrolet Corvette C6R.
- The GT2 class was won by Lea Hindery, Mike Rockenfeller, and Marc Lieb in the #71 Alex Job Racing/BAM! Racing Porsche 911 GT3 RSR.
- Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters
- 2005 DTM champion - Gary Paffett.
- Australian V8 Supercar
- 2005 V8 Supercar champion - Russell Ingall.
- Race of Champions
- Nations Cup
- Won by Team Scandinavia - Tom Kristensen and Mattias Ekstrom.
- Individual Race of Champions
- The 2005 Champion of Champions - Sebastien Loeb.
- Nations Cup
[edit] Baseball
- October 22 - 2005 Japan Series - The Chiba Lotte Marines sweep the Hanshin Tigers 4 games to 0.
- October 26 - 2005 MLB World Series - The Chicago White Sox sweep the Houston Astros 4 games to 0 to win the World Series for the first time since 1917.
[edit] Basketball
[edit] National Basketball Association
- The San Antonio Spurs win their third NBA title in the past seven years, defeating the Detroit Pistons in the first seven-game NBA Finals in eleven years. Tim Duncan was named NBA Finals MVP for the third time in his career. Only three others have accomplished this feat. (Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, and Shaquille O'Neal. The match-up between the Spurs and Pistons, though panned by the media and low-rated, is the first NBA Finals to match the last two NBA champions in over a decade.
- Phil Jackson comes out of retirement and rejoins the Los Angeles Lakers.
- Due to backlash against its players, the NBA institutes a controversial dress code, requiring business casual attire at all team functions.
for more, see 2005 NBA Playoffs and 2005 NBA Finals
[edit] NCAA Champions
- Men's Division I: North Carolina defeats Illinois 75-70 in the Championship Game. It is Tar Heels coach Roy Williams's first national title.
- Women's Division I: Baylor defeats Michigan State 84-62 in the final. It is the first Women's National Title game in several years to not involve either Tennessee or UConn. Baylor coach Kim Mulkey-Robertson becomes the first woman to win NCAA Division I basketball titles as a player and coach.
- Men's Division II: Virginia Union defeats Bryant 63-58 in the final.
- Women's Division II: Washburn defeats Seattle Pacific 70-53 in the final.
- Men's Division III: Wisconsin-Stevens Point defeats Rochester 73-49 in the final.
- Women's Division III: Millikin defeats Randolph-Macon 70-50 in the final.
[edit] International Competitions
- August 17 - August 21 - Australia wins the Oceania Championship
- August 15 - August 24 - Angola wins the African Championship, defeating Senegal 70-61 in final.
- September 8 - September 16 - China wins the Asia Championship
- September 16 - September 25 - Greece wins the European Championship
[edit] Other Professional competitions
- January 31 – February 11 - The Barangay Ginebra Kings defeated the Talk N' Text Phone Pals, 4 games to 2, in the 2004-05 Philippine Basketball Association All Filipino Cup Finals.
- April 13 – April 24 - Defending champions Guangdong Southern Tigers defeat the Jiangsu Dragons 3 games to 2 in the best-of-five Chinese Basketball Association finals.
- May 8 - Maccabi Tel Aviv successfully defends the Euroleague title, defeating TAU Cerámica of Spain 90-78 in the final.
- May 30 – June 5 - Maccabi Tel Aviv sweeps (3-0) the Hapoel Tel Aviv in the playoff finals of the Israel Premier League.
- June 12 - Strasbourg defeat Nancy 72-68 in the French Pro A Championship play-offs Final.
- June 8 – June 16 - Fortitudo Bologna defeat Olimpia Milano in the Italian Serie A Championship Finals: 3 games to 1.
- July 1 – July 10 - The San Miguel Beermen defeated the Talk N' Text Phone Pals, 4 games to 1, in the 2005 Philippine Basketball Association Fiesta Conference Finals.
- National Basketball League (Australia): Sydney Kings defeated the Wollongong Hawks 3-0 in a best-of-five finals series.
[edit] Boxing
- May 7 – Diego Corrales defeats José Luis Castillo by 10th round knockout, for the WBO-WBC lightweight title unification. Both men were exchanging a brutal amount of punishment throughout the fight, before a dramatic tenth round in which Corrales scored a TKO after getting knocked down twice. The fight was highly regarded as one of the greatest of all-time and won Ring Magazine fight of the year.
- July 16– Jermain Taylor, 2000 US Olympic Boxing Bronze Medalist, defeats Bernard Hopkins for the Undisputed Middleweight Title ending Hopkins' 10 year Title Rein. Hopkins made 20 successful title defenses before losing to Taylor, that is the current record in the Middleweight Division, Carlos Monzon is in second with 14 successful defenses.
- November 13 to 20 – World Amateur Boxing Championships held in Mianyang, People's Republic of China
- Light Flyweight (– 48 kg): Zou Chiming (PR China)
- Flyweight (– 51 kg): Lee Ok-Sung (South Korea)
- Bantamweight (– 54 kg): Guillermo Rigondeaux (Cuba)
- Featherweight (– 57 kg): Alexei Tichtchenko (Russia)
- Lightweight (– 60 kg): Yordanis Ugas (Cuba)
- Light Welterweight (– 64 kg): Serik Sapiyev (Kazakhstan)
- Welterweight (– 69 kg): Erislandi Lara (Cuba)
- Middleweight (– 75 kg): Matvey Korobov (Russia)
- Light Heavyweight (– 81 kg): Yerdos Dzhanabergenov (Kazakhstan)
- Heavyweight (– 91 kg): Aleksandr Alekseyev (Russia)
- Super Heavyweight (+ 91 kg): Odlanier Solis (Cuba)
[edit] Cricket
See also 2005 in cricket and 2005 English cricket season.
- January 10 - The ICC World XI (344 for 8) beat the ACC Asian XI (232) by 112 runs to win the first of two scheduled one-day internationals for the World Cricket Tsunami Appeal; the second was never played. It is the first time an ODI has been played that has not been between two cricketing nations.
- January 10 - Bangladesh beat Zimbabwe by 226 runs to record their first ever test match victory.
- July 2 - England and Australia tie the deciding NatWest Series trophy match at Lord's Cricket Ground.
- August 11 - Shane Warne becomes the first bowler to take 600 Test wickets.
- September 12 - England win The Ashes.
[edit] Cycling
[edit] Road Cycling
- Giro d'Italia - Maglia rosa (Overall winner): Paolo Savoldelli (Italy, Discovery Channel Team)
- Tour de France
- Maillot jaune (Overall winner): Lance Armstrong (USA, Discovery Channel Team)
- King of the Mountains (Polka dot jersey): Michael Rasmussen (Denmark, Rabobank)
- Points Classification (Green jersey): Thor Hushovd (Norway, Crédit Agricole)
- Young Rider (White jersey): Yaroslav Popovych (Ukraine, Discovery Channel Team)
- Team: T-Mobile Team
- Vuelta a España
- Overall winner: Denis Menchov (Russia) elevated to first after Roberto Heras (Spain) disqualified for doping
- World Championship in Madrid, Spain
- Road race: Tom Boonen, Belgium
- Time trial: Michael Rogers, Australia
- Danilo Di Luca (Liquigas-Bianchi) clinch UCI ProTour title
[edit] Cyclo-cross
- UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in Sankt Wendel, Germany (January 29–30)
- Men's Competition
- Gold – Sven Nys
- Silver – Erwin Vervecken
- Bronze – Sven Vanthourenhout
- Women's Competition
- Gold – Hanka Kupfernagel
- Silver – Sabine Spitz
- Bronze – Mirjam Melchers
[edit] Field Hockey
[edit] World Competitions
- Men's Champions Trophy in Chennai, India
- Gold Medal:
Australia - Silver Medal:
Netherlands - Bronze Medal:
Spain
- Gold Medal:
- Women's Champions Trophy in Canberra, Australia
- Gold Medal:
Netherlands - Silver Medal:
Australia - Bronze Medal:
China
- Gold Medal:
- Women's Champions Challenge in Virginia Beach, United States
- Gold Medal:
New Zealand - Silver Medal:
South Africa - Bronze Medal:
Japan
- Gold Medal:
[edit] Regional Competitions
- Men's European Nations Cup in Leipzig, Germany
- Gold Medal:
Spain - Silver Medal:
Netherlands - Bronze Medal:
Germany
- Gold Medal:
- Men's European Nations Trophy in Rome, Italy
- Gold Medal:
Ireland - Silver Medal:
Czech Republic - Bronze Medal:
Wales
- Gold Medal:
- Women's European Nations Cup in Dublin, Ireland
- Gold Medal:
Netherlands - Silver Medal:
Germany - Bronze Medal:
England
- Gold Medal:
- Women's European Nations Trophy in Baku, Azerbaijan
- Gold Medal:
Azerbaijan - Silver Medal:
Italy - Bronze Medal:
Russia
- Gold Medal:
[edit] Figure skating
- World Figure Skating Championships, Moscow, Russia
- March 16, Senior pair skating:
- Tatiana Totmianina and Maxim Marinin, Russia, 198.49
- Maria Petrova and Alexei Tikhonov, Russia, 188.21
- Zhang Dan and Zhang Hao, China, 180.22
- March 17, Senior men's singles:
- Stephane Lambiel, Switzerland, 262.46
- Jeffrey Buttle, Canada, 245.69
- Evan Lysacek, United States, 239.29
- March 18, Senior ice dancing:
- Tatiana Navka and Roman Kostomarov, Russia, 227.81
- Tanith Belbin and Benjamin Agosto, United States, 221.26
- Elena Grushina and Ruslan Goncharov, Ukraine, 213.95
- March 19, Senior ladies' singles:
- Irina Slutskaya, Russia, 222.71
- Sasha Cohen, United States, 214.39
- Carolina Kostner, Italy, 200.56
- March 16, Senior pair skating:
[edit] Football (American)
[edit] January
[edit] February
| Day | Score | Winner | Loser | Event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 24 - 21 | Patriots | Eagles | Super Bowl XXXIX in Jacksonville, Florida |
| 13 | 38 - 27 | AFC | NFC | Pro Bowl |
[edit] June
| Day | Score | Winner | Loser | Event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | 27 - 21 | Amsterdam Admirals | Berlin Thunder | World Bowl XIII in Dusseldorf, Germany |
| 11 | 16 - 16 | Toronto Argonauts | Hamilton Tiger-Cats | Touchdown Atlantic |
| 12 | 51 - 48 | Colorado Crush | Georgia Force | ArenaBowl XIX in Las Vegas |
[edit] November
| Day | Score | Winner | Loser | Event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 27 | 38 - 35 | Edmonton Eskimos | Montreal Alouettes | 93rd Grey Cup in Vancouver, British Columbia |
[edit] Football (Australian rules football)
- Australian Football League
- The Sydney Swans win the 109th AFL Premiership, defeating West Coast Eagles 8.10 (58) to 7.12 (54), the club's first premiership in 72 years
- Brownlow Medal awarded to Ben Cousins, captain of the West Coast Eagles
- Leigh Matthews Trophy also awarded to Cousins
- Coleman Medal awarded to Fraser Gehrig of St Kilda
- See also Australian Football League season 2005
- 2005 Australian Football International Cup won by New Zealand
[edit] Football (rugby league)
- World Club Challenge - Leeds Rhinos defeat Canterbury Bulldogs 39-32.
- National Rugby League - Wests Tigers claim their first title, defeating the North Queensland Cowboys 30-16.
- Super League - Bradford Bulls defeat Leeds Rhinos 15-6.
- State of Origin - The New South Wales Blues win the series 2-1 over the Queensland Maroons.
- Rugby League Tri-Nations - New Zealand defeat Australia in the Tri-Nations final 24-0.
[edit] Football (Rugby Union)
- 2005 British and Irish Lions tour to New Zealand - The Lions suffer a 3-0 whitewash to the All Blacks, as well as losing to the New Zealand Māori side. It was the first time in 22 years that a Lions side had lost every test match on tour.
- Rugby World Cup Sevens 2005 (Hong Kong Sevens) - Fiji defeat New Zealand 29-19 in the final.
- Six Nations - Wales win the Grand Slam.
- Tri Nations - New Zealand wins for the 6th time. The All Blacks also picked up the Bledisloe Cup in the process.
- Heineken Cup - Toulouse defeat Stade Français 18-12 in the final.
- World Sevens Series - New Zealand
- Super 12 - The Crusaders defeat the Waratahs 35-25 in the final.
- Zurich Premiership (England) - Leicester Tigers win the league, Wasps win the playoffs.
- Celtic League (Ireland, Scotland, Wales) - Ospreys
- Top 16 (France) - Biarritz defeat Stade Français 37-34 in the final.
- National Provincial Championship (New Zealand)
- Currie Cup (South Africa) - Cheetahs defeat Blue Bulls 29-25 in the final.
- In the November Tests, the All Blacks (New Zealand) score a "Grand Slam" by defeating all four Home Nations (Wales, Ireland, England, Scotland) while on tour. This is the first such Grand Slam for a Southern Hemisphere team since Australia did so in 1984, and the first for the All Blacks since 1978.
- International Rugby Board year-end awards:
- Player of the Year: Daniel Carter, New Zealand
- Coach of the Year: Graham Henry, New Zealand
- Team of the Year: New Zealand
[edit] Football (Soccer)
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- For an extensive coverage see 2005 in football (soccer)
- May 18: UEFA Cup Final - CSKA Moscow became the first Russian club to win a major European club competition, defeating Sporting Lisbon 3-1 at Sporting's home field in Lisbon.
- May 25: UEFA Champions League Final - Liverpool defeated A.C. Milan 3-2 on penalties after a 3-3 draw in Istanbul to win Europe's top prize for the 5th time.
- August 31: Boca Juniors (Argentina) won the Recopa Sudamericana 2005 4-3 on aggregate over Once Caldas (Colombia). (First leg in Buenos Aires 3-1, second leg in Manizales 1-2)
- December 11: Opening game of the first FIFA World Club Championship, a six team tournament replacing the former Intercontinental Cup. In the final one week later Brazilian team São Paulo won the competition narrowly beating UEFA Champions Liverpool 1-0.
- December 18: Boca Juniors defeated UNAM Pumas on penalties after the second leg game for the Copa Sudamericana 2005.
- December 19: Ronaldinho (











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