Jump to content

September 2004 in sports

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<< September 2004 >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30  

Deaths

[edit]

September 30, 2004 (Thursday)

[edit]

September 29, 2004 (Wednesday)

[edit]

September 28, 2004 (Tuesday)

[edit]

September 27, 2004 (Monday)

[edit]
Sue Bird, on offense

September 26, 2004 (Sunday)

[edit]

September 25, 2004 (Saturday)

[edit]

September 24, 2004 (Friday)

[edit]

September 23, 2004 (Thursday)

[edit]

September 22, 2004 (Wednesday)

[edit]

September 21, 2004 (Tuesday)

[edit]

September 20, 2004 (Monday)

[edit]

September 19, 2004 (Sunday)

[edit]

September 18, 2004 (Saturday)

[edit]

Science

[edit]
  • Las Vegas, Nevada. It is de la Hoya's first career knockout loss.
  • Golf: After the second day's play in the 2004 Ryder Cup, Europe leads the United States 11–5. The U.S. took the morning's fourballs 2½ to 1½, and Europe won the afternoon's foursomes 3–1. Europe needs just three points from Sunday's twelve singles matches to retain the trophy. (BBC)
  • Cricket, ICC Champions Trophy: In pool D, England beat Sri Lanka by 49 runs on the Duckworth–Lewis method after rain caused the match to be abandoned before Sri Lanka's innings was complete. England now qualify for the semi-finals. The pool B match between South Africa and the West Indies is also interrupted by rain and will conclude tomorrow. (BBC)

September 17, 2004 (Friday)

[edit]

September 16, 2004 (Thursday)

[edit]

September 15, 2004 (Wednesday)

[edit]

September 14, 2004 (Tuesday)

[edit]

September 13, 2004 (Monday)

[edit]

September 12, 2004 (Sunday)

[edit]

September 11, 2004 (Saturday)

[edit]

September 10, 2004 (Friday)

[edit]

September 9, 2004 (Thursday)

[edit]

September 8, 2004 (Wednesday)

[edit]

September 7, 2004 (Tuesday)

[edit]

September 6, 2004 (Monday)

[edit]

September 5, 2004 (Sunday)

[edit]
  • World Cup of Hockey: In the final North American group match, Russia defeats Slovakia 5–2 in Toronto. The Russians finish 2–1 and will travel to St. Paul, Minnesota to play the United States in the quarter-finals. The Slovaks finish 0–3 and will remain in Toronto to face Canada in the other quarter-final match. (WCH website)

September 4, 2004 (Saturday)

[edit]

September 3, 2004 (Friday)

[edit]
  • World Cup of Hockey: In the North American pool, the United States defeats Slovakia 3–1 in St. Paul, Minnesota. The Americans finish the group stage with a 1–2 record, while the Slovaks drop to 0–2. In the European pool, the Czech Republic also earn their first win of the tournamentwith a 7–2 win over Germany in Prague. The Czechs finish round-robin play with a 1–2 record, while the Germans finish 0–3. (WCH website)(WCH website)

September 2, 2004 (Thursday)

[edit]
  • Rugby union: England national team coach Sir Clive Woodward resigns, after having been dissuaded from doing so yesterday. Andy Robinson is named acting coach of England. Woodward has expressed his interest in switching codes to soccer. The media reports that he may be appointed to a role at Southampton Football Club. (BBC (1)), (BBC (2))
  • World Cup of Hockey: Russia wins its opening North American pool match against the United States by a 3–1 score in St. Paul, Minnesota, dropping the Americans to 0–2. Finland records a 3–0 win against Germany in a European group match in Cologne, improving the Finns to 2–0 and ensuring home-ice advantage for themselves and Sweden in the quarter-finals. The Germans drop to 0–2. (AP)(CP)

September 1, 2004 (Wednesday)

[edit]
  • Horse racing: In early morning raids by 130 officers in three counties, British police arrest three jockeys including champion jockey Kieren Fallon, a trainer, and twelve other people as part of a long-running investigation into race-fixing. (BBC)
  • World Cup of Hockey: Canada defeats Slovakia 5–1 in a North American pool match in Montreal, improving the Canadians to 2–0 and dropping the Slovaks to 0–1. In the European group match in Stockholm, Sweden defeats the Czech Republic 4–3 and moves to 2–0, while the Czechs drop to 0–2. (AP)[usurped]

References

[edit]