2002 in sports
2002 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
Years in sports: | 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 |
Centuries: | 20th century · 21st century · 22nd century |
Decades: | 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 2030s |
Years: | 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 |
Contents
1 Alpine skiing
2 American football
3 Association football
4 Athletics
5 Australian rules football
6 Baseball
7 Basketball
8 Boxing
9 Canadian football
10 Cricket
11 Cycle racing
12 Dogsled racing
13 Field hockey
14 Figure skating
15 Gaelic Athletic Association
16 Golf
17 Handball
18 Harness racing
19 Horse racing
20 Ice hockey
21 Lacrosse
22 Mixed martial arts
23 Motorsport
24 Orienteering
25 Radiosport
26 Rugby league
27 Rugby union
28 Ski mountaineering
29 Snooker
30 Swimming
31 Tennis
32 Volleyball
33 Water polo
34 Winter Olympics
35 Multi-sport events
36 Awards
37 References
Alpine skiing
Alpine Skiing World Cup
- Women's overall season champion: Michaela Dorfmeister, Austria
American football
- January 6 – New England defeated the Carolina Panthers to hand them their 15th straight loss.
Super Bowl XXXVI – New England Patriots win 20-17 over the St. Louis Rams
NCAA Football Championship (2001 season) – Miami Hurricanes win 37-14 over the Nebraska Cornhuskers at the Rose Bowl
ArenaBowl XVI – San Jose SaberCats win 52-14 over the Arizona Rattlers
- The Houston Texans become the NFL's 32nd active franchise.
Association football
2002 FIFA World Cup is held from May 31 to June 30 in South Korea and Japan, the first time a World Cup is held in Asia and by two countries simultaneously. Brazil wins its fifth title, defeating Germany 2-0 in the final. Surprisingly, Turkey and host nation South Korea take 3rd and 4th.
Champions' League – Real Madrid beats Bayer Leverkusen 2-1 in the final. This was Real Madrid's 9th European Cup.
UEFA Cup – Feyenoord wins 3-2 in the final against Borussia Dortmund, winning the cup for the second time.
European Super Cup – Real Madrid wins 3-1 over Feyenoord, winning the cup for the first time.
Intercontinental Cup – Real Madrid beats Olimpia Asunción 2-0, winning the cup for the third time.
Athletics
- July – 2002 Commonwealth Games held in Manchester
- August – 2002 European Championships in Athletics held in Munich
- October – 2002 Asian Games held in South Korea
Australian rules football
Australian Football League
- The Brisbane Lions win the 106th AFL premiership (Brisbane Lions 10.15 (75) d Collingwood 9.12 (66))
Brownlow Medal awarded to Simon Black (Brisbane Lions)- See also Australian Football League season 2002
- Inaugural Australian Football International Cup, the 2002 International Cup won by Ireland
Baseball
World Series – Anaheim Angels win 4 games to 3 over the San Francisco Giants
Basketball
NBA Finals –
Los Angeles Lakers sweep the New Jersey Nets to win their third straight NBA title. Shaquille O'Neal wins his third straight NBA Finals MVP award, and coach Phil Jackson wins his ninth title, and his third three-peat.- NBA's Charlotte Hornets moved to New Orleans.
NCAA Men's Basketball Championship –
Maryland Terrapins win 64-52 over the Indiana Hoosiers
WNBA finals
Los Angeles Sparks win 2 games to 0 over the New York Liberty
FIBA World Championship won by Yugoslavia
FIBA World Championship for Women won by USA
Chinese Basketball Association finals:
Yao Ming and his Shanghai Sharks teammates defeat Bayi Rockets, 3 games to 1, snapping a string of six consecutive Bayi championships.
National Basketball League (Australia) Finals:
Adelaide 36ers defeated the West Sydney Razorbacks 2-1 in the best-of-three final series.
- October 5 – University Athletic Association of the Philippines men's division finals: The Ateneo Blue Eagles defeat the De La Salle Green Archers to end their 4-year title streak and win the school their first title in 14 years.
Boxing
- June 21 – Lennox Lewis retains boxing's WBC world Heavyweight crown with an eight-round knockout over Mike Tyson
- April – The Ring Magazine released its new championship policy, "The Ring's Championship Policy"
- July 12 to July 21 – 34th European Amateur Boxing Championships held in Perm, Russia
Canadian football
- November 24 – the Montreal Alouettes win the 90th Grey Cup game, defeating the Edmonton Eskimos 25-16 at Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton.
- November 23 – Saint Mary's Huskies win the Vanier Cup game, defeating the Saskatchewan Huskies 39-23.
Cricket
- March 23 – death of Ben Hollioake, Surrey and England player, in a car crash
- June 1 – death of Hansie Cronje, South African player still involved in match-fixing controversy, in an air crash
- New Zealand are forced to abandon their tour of Pakistan after a bomb explodes outside their hotel in Karachi
County Championship (England and Wales) – Surrey CCC
Cycle racing
Road bicycle racing
Giro d'Italia won by Paolo Savoldelli of Italy
Tour de France – Lance Armstrong of the United States (Rescinded)
UCI Road World Championships – Men's road race – Mario Cipollini, of Italy
Cyclo-cross
- 2–3 February – UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships held in Zolder, Belgium
- men's competition won by Mario De Clercq
- women's competition won by Laurence Leboucher
- men's competition won by Mario De Clercq
Dogsled racing
Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race Champion
Martin Buser wins with lead dog Bronson
Field hockey
2002 Men's Hockey World Cup: Germany
2002 Women's Hockey World Cup: Argentina
Men's Hockey at the 2002 Commonwealth Games: Australia
Women's Hockey at the 2002 Commonwealth Games: India
Men's Champions Trophy: Netherlands
Women's Champions Trophy: China
Figure skating
World Figure Skating Championships –
- Men's champion: Alexei Yagudin, Russia
- Ladies' champion: Irina Slutskaya, Russia
- Pair skating champions: Shen Xue & Zhao Hongbo, China
- Ice dancing champions: Irina Lobacheva & Ilia Averbukh, Russia
2002 Winter Olympics –
- Men's champion: Alexei Yagudin, Russia
- Ladies' champion: Sarah Hughes, United States
- Pair skating champions: Yelena Berezhnaya & Anton Sikharulidze, Russia and Jamie Salé & David Pelletier, Canada
- Ice dancing champions: Marina Anissina & Gwendal Peizerat, France
Gaelic Athletic Association
Camogie
- All-Ireland Camogie Champion: Cork
- National Camogie League: Galway
- All-Ireland Camogie Champion: Cork
Gaelic football
All-Ireland Senior Football Championship – Armagh 1-12 died Kerry 0-14
National Football League – Tyrone 0-15 died Cavan 0-7
Ladies' Gaelic football
- All-Ireland Senior Football Champion: Mayo
- National Football League: Waterford
- All-Ireland Senior Football Champion: Mayo
Hurling
All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship – Kilkenny 2-20 died Clare 0-19
National Hurling League –
Golf
Men's professional
- – Masters Tournament – Tiger Woods becomes the third golfer to win The Masters in two consecutive years
- – U.S. Open – Tiger Woods is the only golfer under par for the tournament.
- – British Open – Ernie Els wins his third major and first British Open.
- – PGA Championship – Rich Beem wins by one shot over Tiger Woods.
PGA Tour money leader – Tiger Woods – $6,912,625
PGA Tour Player of the Year – Tiger Woods
PGA Tour rookie of the year – Jonathan Byrd
Senior PGA Tour money leader – Hale Irwin – $3,028,304
Ryder Cup – Europe defeats the United States 15.5-12.5.
Men's amateur
British Amateur – Alejandro Larrazabal
U.S. Amateur – Ricky Barnes
European Amateur – Raphaël Pellicioli
Women's professional
Kraft Nabisco Championship – Annika Sörenstam
LPGA Championship – Se Ri Pak
U.S. Women's Open – Juli Inkster
Women's British Open – Karrie Webb
LPGA Tour money leader – Annika Sörenstam – $2,863,904
LPGA Tour Player of the Year – Annika Sörenstam
- The United States team defeats the European team 15 ½ – 12 ½ to regain the Solheim Cup.
Handball
Men's European Championship: Sweden
Women's European Championship: Denmark
Asian Games (Men): Korea
Asian Games (Women): Korea
Harness racing
North America Cup – Red River Hanover
United States Pacing Triple Crown races –
Cane Pace won by Art Major
Little Brown Jug won by Million Dollar Cam
Messenger Stakes won by Allamerican Ingot
United States Trotting Triple Crown races –
Hambletonian won by Chip Chip Hooray
Yonkers Trot won by Bubba Dunn
Kentucky Futurity won by Like a Prayer
Horse racing
Steeplechases
Cheltenham Gold Cup – Best Mate
Grand National – Bindaree
Hurdle races
Champion Hurdle – Hors La Loi III
Flat races
- Australia – Melbourne Cup won by Media Puzzle
- Canada – Queen's Plate won by T J's Lucky Moon
- Dubai – Dubai World Cup won by Street Cry
- France – Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe won by Marienbard
- Ireland – Irish Derby Stakes won by High Chaparral
- Japan – Japan Cup won by Falbrav
English Triple Crown Races:
2,000 Guineas Stakes – Rock of Gibraltar
The Derby – High Chaparral
St. Leger Stakes – Bollin Eric
United States Triple Crown Races:
Kentucky Derby – War Emblem
Preakness Stakes – War Emblem
Belmont Stakes – Sarava
Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships:
Breeders' Cup Classic – Volponi
Breeders' Cup Distaff – Azeri
Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf – Starine
Breeders' Cup Juvenile – Vindication
Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies – Storm Flag Flying
Breeders' Cup Mile – Domedriver
Breeders' Cup Sprint – Orientate
Breeders' Cup Turf – High Chaparral
Ice hockey
- Canada defeats the United States 5-2 to win the men's Olympic Gold Medal.
- Canada defeats the United States 3-2 to win the women's Olympic Gold Medal.
World Hockey Championship
- Men's champion: Slovakia defeats Russia.
- Junior Men's champion: Russia defeats Canada.
- Women's champion: no tournament.
Stanley Cup – Detroit Red Wings win 4 games to 1 over the Carolina Hurricanes.
Art Ross Trophy as the NHL's leading scorer during the regular season: Jarome Iginla, Calgary Flames.
Hart Memorial Trophy for the NHL's Most Valuable Player:
José Théodore, Montreal Canadiens.
Lacrosse
- The Baltimore Bayhawks win the Steinfeld Cup over the Long Island Lizards.
- The Toronto Rock beat the Albany Attack, 13-12 to win the Champion's Cup.
- The 9th World Lacrosse Championship is held in Perth, Australia. The United States beat Canada 18-15 in the final.
- The Coquitlam Adanacs win the Mann Cup.
- The St. Catharines Athletics win the Minto Cup.
- The Wallaceburg Red Devils win the Founders Cup.
Mixed martial arts
The following is a list of major noteworthy MMA events during 2002 in chronological order.
| Date | Event | Alternate Name/s | Location | Attendance | PPV Buyrate | Notes |
| January 11 | UFC 35: Throwdown | N/A | 9,600 | 35,000 | N/A | |
| February 22 | Pride The Best Vol. 1 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| February 24 | Pride 19: Bad Blood | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| March 22 | UFC 36: Worlds Collide | N/A | 10,000 | 55,000 | This event featured the last UFC appearance's from Pat Miletich and Pete Williams. | |
| April 28 | Pride 20: Armed and Ready | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| May 10 | UFC 37: High Impact | N/A | 7,200 | 50,000 | N/A | |
| June 22 | UFC 37.5: As Real As It Gets | N/A | 3,700 | N/A | This event featured the first appearance of longtime UFC announcer Joe Rogan. | |
| June 23 | Pride 21: Demolition | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| July 13 | UFC 38: Brawl at the Hall | N/A | 3,800 | 45,000 | N/A | |
| July 20 | Pride The Best Vol. 2 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| August 28 | Pride Shockwave | Dynamite! | 91,108 | N/A | Event featured a Royce Gracie vs. Hidehiko Yoshida Jujutsu match and two K-1 kickboxing matches. This event holds the highest attendance for a predominately MMA event. | |
| September 27 | UFC 39: The Warriors Return | N/A | 7,800 | 45,000 | N/A | |
| September 29 | Pride 22: Beasts From The East 2 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| November 22 | UFC 40: Vendetta | N/A | 13,265 | 150,000 | This event was the first to gain mainstream converge for a MMA event in the USA. The event also was noted as an important fiscal milestone for Zuffa and the UFC. | |
| November 24 | Pride 23: Championship Chaos 2 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| December 23 | Pride 24: Cold Fury 3 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Motorsport
Orienteering
- First Mountain Bike Orienteering World Championships are held July 2–7 in Fontainebleau, France.
Radiosport
- The fourth World Radiosport Team Championship held in Helsinki, Finland. Gold medals go to Jeff Steinman N5TJ and Dan Street K1TO of the United States, the team's third victory in a row.
- Eleventh Amateur Radio Direction Finding World Championship held in Tatranske Matliare, Slovakia.
Rugby league
- The Australian Rugby League Hall of Fame is established.
- 2002 New Zealand rugby league tour of Great Britain and France
- 2002 NRL season
- 2002 State of Origin series
- Super League VII
- 2002 World Club Challenge
Rugby union
- 108th Six Nations Championship series is won by France who complete the Grand Slam
Tri Nations – New Zealand
Heineken Cup – Leicester Tigers 15–9 Munster
Ski mountaineering
- Inaugural World Championship of Skimountaineering sanctioned by the International Council for Ski Mountaineering Competitions (ICSM) was held in Serre Chevalier in France from January 24 to January 27.
Snooker
World Snooker Championship – Peter Ebdon beats Stephen Hendry 18-17
World rankings – Ronnie O'Sullivan becomes world number one for 2002–03
Swimming
- 26 January – in Berlin, Slovakian swimmer Martina Moravcová betters Jenny Thompson's world record in the women's 100m butterfly (short course) from 56:56 to 56:55
- April – 6th World Short Course Championships held at Moscow
- United States wins the most medals (26) Australia the most gold medals (10)
- July–August – 26th European LC Championships held at Berlin
- Germany wins the most medals (23) and the most gold medals (10)
- August – 9th Pan Pacific Championships held at Yokohama
- United States wins the most medals (52) and the most gold medals (21)
- 22 November – US swimmer Natalie Coughlin betters Martina Moravcová's world record in the women's 100m butterfly (short course) from 56:55 to 56:39
- December – 6th European SC Championships held at Riesa, Germany
- Germany wins the most medals (22) and the most gold medals (7)
Tennis
See also 2002 ATP Tour, 2002 WTA Tour
Grand Slam in tennis men's results:
Australian Open – Thomas Johansson
French Open – Albert Costa
Wimbledon championships – Lleyton Hewitt
US Open – Pete Sampras
- Grand Slam in tennis women's results:
Australian Open – Jennifer Capriati
French Open – Serena Williams
Wimbledon championships – Serena Williams
US Open – Serena Williams
Davis Cup – in the final, Russia defeats France 3-2 at the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris
Fed Cup – Slovakia defeats Spain 3-1 in the final at Palacio de Congresos de Maspalomas in Gran Canaria, Spain
Volleyball
2002 FIVB Men's World Championship: Brazil
2002 FIVB Women's World Championship: Italy
2002 Men's World League: Russia
2002 Women's World Grand Prix: Russia
Men's volleyball at the 2002 Asian Games: South Korea
Women's volleyball at the 2002 Asian Games: China
Water polo
2002 FINA Men's Water Polo World Cup: Russia
2002 FINA Men's Water Polo World League: Russia
2002 FINA Women's Water Polo World Cup: Hungary
Winter Olympics
2002 Winter Olympics takes place in Salt Lake City, United States
- Norway wins the most medals (25) and the most gold medals (13)
- Top performers include Janica Kostelić, Ole Einar Bjørndalen and Simon Ammann
A scandal in figure skating dominates the news.- Also on the short track, Steven Bradbury of Australia becomes the first Winter Olympic gold medalist from the Southern Hemisphere when a crash on the final corner of the men's 1000 m final leaves him the "last man standing".
Multi-sport events
2002 Commonwealth Games held in Manchester, England
2002 Asian Games held in Busan, South Korea
2002 Gay Games held in Sydney, Australia
2002 South American Games held in Sao Paulo, Brazil
2002 Central American and Caribbean Games held in San Salvador, El Salvador
Awards
Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year – Lance Armstrong, Cycling
Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year – Serena Williams, Tennis