|
Post by Panda on Feb 18, 2021 2:57:57 GMT 1
TEAMS THAT HAVE COMPETED IN AN ICC INTERNATIONAL CRICKET TOURNAMENT
(listed by first tournament)
1975 WORLD CUP Australia East Africa England India New Zealand Pakistan Sri Lanka West Indies
1979 WORLD CUP Canada
1983 WORLD CUP Zimbabwe
1992 WORLD CUP South Africa
1996 WORLD CUP Kenya Netherlands United Arab Emirates
1998 UNDER 19 WORLD CUP Bangladesh Denmark Ireland Namibia Papua New Guinea Scotland
2000 UNDER 19 WORLD CUP Americas XI Nepal
2004 UNDER 19 WORLD CUP Uganda
2004 CHAMPIONS TROPHY United States
2007 WORLD CUP Bermuda
2008 UNDER 19 WORLD CUP Malaysia
2010 UNDER 19 WORLD CUP Afghanistan
2014 WORLD T20 Hong Kong
2016 UNDER 19 WORLD CUP Fiji
2016 WORLD T20 Oman
2020 WOMEN'S WORLD T20 Thailand
2020 UNDER 19 WORLD CUP Japan Nigeria
2023 WOMEN'S UNDER 19 T20 WORLD CUP Indonesia Rwanda
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Feb 19, 2021 4:37:51 GMT 1
ENGLAND INTERNATIONAL FOOTBALL OPPONENTS
Listed by year of first official match
* = England Women ** = World Cup finals
1872 Scotland
1879 Wales
1882 Ireland (later Northern Ireland)
1908 Austria Hungary Bohemia
1921 Belgium
1923 France Sweden
1927 Luxembourg
1929 Spain
1930 Germany (later West Germany)
1933 Italy Switzerland
1934 Czechoslovakia (later Czech Republic)
1935 Netherlands
1937 Norway Finland
1939 Yugoslavia (later Serbia & Montenegro, then Serbia) Rumania (later Romania)
1946 Eire (later Republic of Ireland)
1947 Portugal
1948 Denmark
1950 Chile ** United States **
1951 Argentina
1953 Uruguay
1956 Brazil
1958 USSR (later CIS, then Russia)
1959 Peru Mexico
1962 Bulgaria **
1963 East Germany
1966 Poland
1970 Colombia Ecuador
1971 Malta Greece
1975 Cyprus
1980 Australia
1981 Japan *
1982 Iceland Kuwait **
1984 Turkey
1986 Egypt Israel Canada Morocco ** Paraguay **
1988 Saudi Arabia
1989 Albania
1990 Tunisia Cameroon **
1991 New Zealand Malaysia
1993 San Marino Slovenia *
1994 Nigeria
1995 Croatia *
1996 China Moldova Georgia
1997 South Africa
2000 Ukraine
2002 South Korea Slovakia Macedonia (later North Macedonia)
2003 Liechtenstein
2004 Azerbaijan
2006 Jamaica Trinidad & Tobago ** Andorra
2007 Estonia
2008 Kazakhstan Belarus
2010 Algeria ** Montenegro
2011 Ghana
2014 Honduras Costa Rica **
2015 Lithuania Bosnia & Herzegovina *
2018 Panama **
2019 Kosovo
2021 Latvia *
2022 Iran ** Senegal **
2023 Haiti * **
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Feb 22, 2021 0:41:17 GMT 1
SNOOKER RANKING EVENT WINNERS SINCE THE WORLD RANKINGS WERE INTRODUCED
(shown by year of first ranking title)
1974 Ray Reardon
1977 John Spencer
1979 Terry Griffiths
1980 Cliff Thorburn
1981 Steve Davis
1982 Alex Higgins Tony Knowles
1984 Dennis Taylor
1985 Willie Thorne Silvino Francisco
1986 Jimmy White Joe Johnson Neal Foulds
1987 Stephen Hendry
1988 Doug Mountjoy
1989 John Parrott Tony Meo Mike Hallett
1990 Steve James Bob Chaperon
1991 Tony Jones
1992 James Wattana
1993 Ken Doherty Dave Harold Peter Ebdon Ronnie O'Sullivan
1994 Alan McManus John Higgins
1996 Mark Williams Nigel Bond
1997 Dominic Dale
1998 Paul Hunter Stephen Lee
1999 Fergal O'Brien
2002 Chris Small
2003 David Gray Matthew Stevens
2004 Stephen Maguire
2005 Ding Junhui Shaun Murphy
2006 Graeme Dott Neil Robertson
2007 Marco Fu
2008 Mark Selby Ricky Walden
2009 Ali Carter
2011 Judd Trump Stuart Bingham
2012 Mark Allen Barry Hawkins
2015 Michael White Joe Perry Kyren Wilson
2016 Martin Gould Anthony McGill Liang Wenbo Mark King
2017 Anthony Hamilton Ryan Day Luca Brecel
2018 Michael Georgiou Jimmy Robertson
2019 Thepchaiya Un-Nooh Matthew Selt Yan Bingtao
2020 Michael Holt
2021 Jordan Brown David Gilbert Zhao Xintong
2022 Hossein Vafaei Fan Zhengyi Robert Milkins Gary Wilson
2023 Chris Wakelin Zhang Anda
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Mar 2, 2021 19:22:14 GMT 1
ENGLAND INTERNATIONAL RUGBY UNION OPPONENTS (not including Sevens)
Listed by year of first official match
* = England Women ** = World Cup
1871 Scotland
1875 Ireland
1881 Wales
1889 New Zealand
1906 France South Africa
1909 Australia
1971 RFU President's Overseas XV
1981 Argentina
1985 Romania
1987 Japan ** USA **
1988 Fiji Sweden *
1990 Netherlands *
1991 Spain * ** Italy * **
1992 Canada
1994 Russia * **
1995 Western Samoa (later Samoa) **
1997 Germany *
1999 Tonga **
2000 Kazakhstan *
2003 Georgia ** Uruguay **
2008 Pacific Islanders (select team comprised of players from Fiji, Samoa and Tonga)
2023 Chile **
Both the men's and women's teams have played unofficial matches against the Barbarians in recent years. The women's team also played the Nomads, which was effectively a women's equivalent of the Barbarians at the time.
The men's team faced the Netherlands in a World Cup qualifier in 1998, winning 110-0.
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Mar 8, 2021 17:00:28 GMT 1
WOMEN'S GRAND SLAM TENNIS SINGLES CHAMPIONS IN THE OPEN ERA
(by year of first title)
A = Australian Open F = French Open W = Wimbledon U = US Open
1968 Nancy Richey (F) Billie Jean King (W) Virginia Wade (U)
1969 Margaret Court (A) Ann Jones (W)
1971 Evonne Goolagong (F)
1974 Chris Evert (F)
1976 Sue Barker (F)
1977 Kerry Melville Reid (A) Mima Jausovec (F)
1978 Virginia Ruzici (F) Martina Navratilova (W) Chris O'Neil (A)
1979 Tracy Austin (U) Barbara Jordan (A)
1980 Hana Mandlikova (A)
1987 Steffi Graf (F)
1989 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario (F)
1990 Monica Seles (F) Gabriela Sabatini (U)
1994 Conchita Martinez (W)
1995 Mary Pierce (A)
1997 Martina Hingis (A) Iva Majoli (F)
1998 Jana Novotna (W) Lindsay Davenport (U)
1999 Serena Williams (U)
2000 Venus Williams (W)
2001 Jennifer Capriati (A)
2003 Justine Henin (F)
2004 Anastasia Myskina (F) Maria Sharapova (W) Svetlana Kuznetsova (U)
2005 Kim Clijsters (U)
2006 Amelie Mauresmo (A)
2008 Ana Ivanovic (F)
2010 Francesca Schiavone (F)
2011 Li Na (F) Petra Kvitova (W) Sam Stosur (U)
2012 Victoria Azarenka (A)
2013 Marion Bartoli (W)
2015 Flavia Pennetta (U)
2016 Angelique Kerber (A) Garbine Muguruza (F)
2017 Jelena Ostapenko (F) Sloane Stephens (U)
2018 Caroline Wozniacki (A) Simona Halep (F) Naomi Osaka (U)
2019 Ashleigh Barty (F) Bianca Andreescu (U)
2020 Sofia Kenin (A) Iga Swiatek (F)
2021 Barbora Krejcikova (F) Emma Raducanu (U)
2022 Elena Rybakina (W)
2023 Aryna Sabalenka (A) Marketa Vondrousova (W) Coco Gauff (U)
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Mar 9, 2021 21:34:19 GMT 1
MEN'S GRAND SLAM TENNIS SINGLES CHAMPIONS IN THE OPEN ERA
(by year of first title)
A = Australian Open F = French Open W = Wimbledon U = US Open
1968 Ken Rosewall (F) Rod Laver (W) Arthur Ashe (U)
1970 Jan Kodes (F) John Newcombe (W)
1971 Stan Smith (U)
1972 Andres Gimeno (F) Ilie Nastase (U)
1974 Jimmy Connors (A) Bjorn Borg (F)
1975 Manuel Orantes (U)
1976 Mark Edmondson (A) Adriano Panatta (F)
1977 Roscoe Tanner (A) Guillermo Vilas (F) Vitas Gerulaitis (A)
1979 John McEnroe (U)
1980 Brian Teacher (A)
1981 Johan Kriek (A)
1982 Mats Wilander (F)
1983 Yannick Noah (F)
1984 Ivan Lendl (F)
1985 Boris Becker (W) Stefan Edberg (A)
1987 Pat Cash (W)
1989 Michael Chang (F)
1990 Andres Gomez (F) Pete Sampras (U)
1991 Jim Courier (F) Michael Stich (W)
1992 Andre Agassi (W)
1993 Sergi Bruguera (F)
1995 Thomas Muster (F)
1996 Yevgeny Kafelnikov (F) Richard Krajicek (W)
1997 Gustavo Kuerten (F) Pat Rafter (U)
1998 Petr Korda (A) Carlos Moya (F)
2000 Marat Safin (U)
2001 Goran Ivanisevic (W) Lleyton Hewitt (U)
2002 Thomas Johansson (A) Albert Costa (F)
2003 Juan Carlos Ferrero (F) Roger Federer (W) Andy Roddick (U)
2004 Gaston Gaudio (F)
2005 Rafael Nadal (F)
2008 Novak Djokovic (A)
2009 Juan Martin Del Potro (U)
2012 Andy Murray (U)
2014 Stan Wawrinka (A) Marin Cilic (U)
2020 Dominic Thiem (U)
2021 Daniil Medvedev (U)
2022 Carlos Alcaraz (U)
2024 Jannik Sinner (A)
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Mar 10, 2021 18:30:54 GMT 1
ENGLAND MEN'S FOOTBALL CAPTAINS(by year of first captaincy - only matches which they started as captain count) 1872Cuthbert Ottaway 1873Alec Morten 1875Charles Alcock 1876Hubert Heron 1877William Rawson 1878Arthur Cursham 1879Henry Wace 1880Charles Wollaston Francis Sparks 1881Jack Hunter Norman Bailey 1882Charlie Bambridge 1883Jack Hudson 1886Percy Walters 1888Tinsley Lindley 1889Jack Brodie 1890Arthur Walters 1891John Goodall Billy Moon 1892Arthur Dunn 1893George Cotterill Bob Holmes 1895Charles Wreford-Brown Cunliffe Gosling 1896Gilbert Smith 1901William Oakley Ernest Needham 1902Reginald Erskine Foster Frank Forman Steve Bloomer 1903Howard Spencer Bob Crompton 1905Stanley Harris 1908Vivian Woodward 1919Arthur Knight 1920Jesse Pennington Joe McCall 1921Charlie Buchan Arthur Grimsdell Ephraim Longworth George Wilson 1922Max Woosnam 1923Basil Patchitt Graham Doggart 1924Frank Moss Sam Wadsworth Alfred George Bower 1925Billy Walker Claude Ashton 1926Thomas Lucas 1927Jack Hill Fred Kean 1928Roy Goodall Willis Edwards 1930David Jack 1931Alf Strange Ernie Blenkinsop 1934Tommy Cooper Eddie Hapgood 1936Jack Barker George Male 1937Sam Barkas 1939Stan Cullis 1946George Hardwick 1948Frank Swift Billy Wright 1950Alf Ramsey 1959Ronnie Clayton 1960Johnny Haynes 1961Jimmy Armfield 1963Bobby Moore 1964Ron Flowers 1969Bobby Charlton 1971Alan Mullery Martin Peters 1972Colin Bell 1974Emlyn Hughes 1975Alan Ball Gerry Francis 1976Kevin Keegan Mick Channon 1978Mick Mills 1979Phil Thompson 1980Trevor Cherry 1981Dave Watson Ray Clemence 1982Peter Shilton Phil Neal Ray Wilkins Bryan Robson 1986Terry Butcher 1988Peter Beardsley 1990Gary Lineker 1991Mark Wright Stuart Pearce 1993David Platt Paul Ince 1994Tony Adams 1996Alan Shearer 1997David Seaman 1998Sol Campbell 2000Martin Keown David Beckham 2002Michael Owen 2004Steven Gerrard 2006John Terry 2008Rio Ferdinand 2009Wayne Rooney 2011Frank Lampard Gareth Barry 2012Scott Parker 2013Ashley Cole 2015Gary Cahill Phil Jagielka Joe Hart 2016James Milner Chris Smalling Jordan Henderson 2017Harry Kane Eric Dier 2018Fabian Delph 2019Raheem Sterling 2020Kieran Trippier Harry Maguire 2021Marcus Rashford 2023Kyle Walker 2024Declan Rice Sources: England Football Online and my own records.
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Mar 12, 2021 15:27:18 GMT 1
TEAMS THAT HAVE WON A GOLD MEDAL AT THE COMMONWEALTH GAMES
(by year of first medal)
1930 Australia Canada England New Zealand Scotland South Africa
1934 British Guiana (later Guyana)
1938 Ceylon (later Sri Lanka) Wales
1950 Fiji Malaya (later Malaysia)
1954 Jamaica Nigeria Northern Ireland Northern Rhodesia (later Zambia) Pakistan Southern Rhodesia (later Zimbabwe) Trinidad & Tobago
1958 Bahamas Barbados India Singapore
1962 Ghana Kenya Uganda
1966 Isle Of Man
1970 British Hong Kong (later Hong Kong)
1974 Tanzania
1990 Bangladesh Bermuda Cyprus Guernsey Jersey Nauru Papua New Guinea
1994 Namibia
1998 Lesotho Mauritius Mozambique
2002 Cameroon St. Kitts & Nevis
2010 Botswana Cayman Islands St. Vincent & The Grenadines Samoa
2014 Grenada Kiribati
2018 British Virgin Islands St. Lucia
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Mar 18, 2021 19:10:31 GMT 1
BRITISH GOLD MEDALS AT THE WORLD ATHLETICS CHAMPIONSHIPS
1983 - HELSINKI Steve Cram (1500m) Daley Thompson (Decathlon)
1987 - ROME Fatima Whitbread (Javelin)
1991 - TOKYO Liz McColgan (10,000m) Roger Black, Derek Redmond, John Regis, Kriss Akabusi, Mark Richardson*, Ade Mafe* (4x400m Relay)
1993 - STUTTGART Linford Christie (100m) Colin Jackson (110m Hurdles) Sally Gunnell (400m Hurdles)
1995 - GOTHENBURG Jonathan Edwards (Triple Jump)
1997 - ATHENS Iwan Thomas, Roger Black, Jamie Baulch, Mark Richardson, Mark Hylton* (4x400m Relay **)
1999 - SEVILLE Colin Jackson (110m Hurdles)
2001 - EDMONTON Jonathan Edwards (Triple Jump)
2005 - HELSINKI Paula Radcliffe (Marathon)
2007 - OSAKA Christine Ohuruogu (400m)
2009 - BERLIN Phillips Idowu (Triple Jump) Jessica Ennis (Heptathlon)
2011 - DAEGU Mo Farah (5000m) Dai Greene (400m Hurdles) Jessica Ennis (Heptathlon **)
2013 - MOSCOW Mo Farah (5000m) Mo Farah (10,000m) Christine Ohuruogu (400m)
2015 - BEIJING Mo Farah (5000m) Mo Farah (10,000m) Greg Rutherford (Long Jump) Jessica Ennis-Hill (Heptathlon)
2017 - LONDON Mo Farah (10,000m) Chijindu Ujah, Adam Gemili, Danny Talbot, Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake (4x100m Relay)
2019 - DOHA Dina Asher-Smith (200m) Katarina Johnson-Thompson (Heptathlon)
2022 - EUGENE Jake Wightman (1500m)
2023 - BUDAPEST Josh Kerr (1500m) Katarina Johnson-Thompson (Heptathlon)
* = ran in preliminary round only ** = originally won silver but later upgraded to gold due to doping violations
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Apr 17, 2021 23:49:35 GMT 1
TEAMS THAT HAVE PLAYED AT THE AFRICA CUP OF NATIONS
(listed by first tournament)
1957 Egypt Ethiopia Sudan
1959 United Arab Republic (Egypt and Syria)
1962 Tunisia Uganda
1963 Ghana Nigeria
1966 Congo-Leopoldville (later Congo-Kinshasa, then Zaire, currently Democratic Republic of Congo) Ivory Coast Senegal
1968 Algeria Congo-Brazzaville (later Congo, officially Republic of Congo)
1970 Cameroon Guinea
1972 Kenya Mali Morocco Togo
1974 Mauritius Zambia
1978 Upper Volta (later Burkina Faso)
1980 Tanzania
1982 Libya
1984 Malawi
1986 Mozambique
1994 Gabon Sierra Leone
1996 Angola Liberia South Africa
1998 Namibia
2004 Benin Rwanda Zimbabwe
2012 Botswana Equatorial Guinea Niger
2013 Cape Verde
2017 Guinea-Bissau
2019 Burundi Madagascar Mauritania
2021 (being played in January 2022) Comoros Gambia
After next year's tournament 44 of CAF's 54 full members will have played in the finals. The 10 who haven't are:
Central African Republic Chad Djibouti Eritrea Eswatini Lesotho Sao Tome & Principe Seychelles Somalia South Sudan
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Apr 18, 2021 23:15:22 GMT 1
COLLEGES THAT HAVE HAD A PLAYER DRAFTED FIRST OVERALL IN THE NFL DRAFT
(by year of first occurrence)
1936 Chicago
1937 Nebraska
1938 Indiana
1939 Texas Christian (TCU)
1940 Tennessee
1941 Michigan
1942 Virginia
1943 Georgia
1944 Notre Dame
1947 Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State)
1948 Alabama
1949 Pennsylvania
1951 Southern Methodist (SMU)
1952 Vanderbilt
1954 Stanford
1955 Oregon
1956 Colorado A&M (now Colorado State)
1958 Rice
1959 Iowa
1960 Louisiana State (LSU)
1961 Tulane
1962 Syracuse
1963 Oregon State
1964 Texas Tech
1965 Auburn
1966 Texas
1967 Michigan State
1968 Southern California (USC)
1970 Louisiana Tech
1973 Tampa
1974 Tennessee State
1975 California
1976 Oklahoma
1979 Ohio State
1981 South Carolina
1985 Virginia Tech
1987 Miami
1989 California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
1990 Illinois
1992 Washington
1993 Washington State
1995 Penn State
1999 Kentucky
2002 Fresno State
2004 Mississippi (commonly known as Ole Miss)
2005 Utah
2006 North Carolina State
2013 Central Michigan
2015 Florida State
2017 Texas A&M
2021 Clemson
|
|
|
Post by Panda on May 5, 2021 20:50:43 GMT 1
BRITISH FOOTBALL CLUBS THAT HAVE REACHED A MAJOR EUROPEAN FINAL
(listed by year of first final)
1958 London XI (Fairs Cup)
1960 Birmingham City (Fairs Cup)
1961 Rangers (Cup Winners' Cup)
1963 Tottenham Hotspur (Cup Winners' Cup)
1965 West Ham United (Cup Winners' Cup)
1966 Liverpool (Cup Winners' Cup)
1967 Celtic (European Cup) Leeds United (Fairs Cup)
1968 Manchester United (European Cup)
1969 Newcastle United (Fairs Cup)
1970 Arsenal (Fairs Cup) Manchester City (Cup Winners' Cup)
1971 Chelsea (Cup Winners' Cup)
1972 Wolverhampton Wanderers (UEFA Cup)
1979 Nottingham Forest (European Cup)
1981 Ipswich Town (UEFA Cup)
1982 Aston Villa (European Cup)
1983 Aberdeen (Cup Winners' Cup)
1985 Everton (Cup Winners' Cup)
1987 Dundee United (UEFA Cup)
2006 Middlesbrough (UEFA Cup)
2010 Fulham (Europa League)
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Jun 2, 2021 20:42:19 GMT 1
GROUNDS THAT HAVE STAGED AN ENGLAND MEN'S HOME GAME
By year of first match:
1873 The Oval
1881 East Lancashire Cricket Club, Gawthorpe
1883 Liverpool Cricket Ground, Aigburth Bramall Lane
1885 Manchester Football Ground, Whalley Range Leamington Street, Blackburn
1889 Victoria Ground, Stoke Anfield
1891 Molineux Monkwearmouth Football Ground, Sunderland Ewood Park
1893 Wellington Road, Perry Barr Kew Foot Road, Richmond
1895 County Ground, Derby West Kensington Recreation Ground Goodison Park
1897 Trent Bridge Crystal Palace Arena
1899 Roker Park Ashton Gate Aston Lower Grounds (later Villa Park)
1901 The Dell St. James' Park
1903 Fratton Park
1905 Ayresome Park
1907 Craven Cottage
1909 Horton Park, Bradford City Ground
1911 Baseball Ground The Den
1913 Stamford Bridge
1920 Highbury Hillsborough
1922 The Hawthorns
1924 Wembley Stadium
1926 Selhurst Park Old Trafford
1927 Turf Moor
1932 Bloomfield Road
1933 White Hart Lane
1946 Maine Road Leeds Road
1995 Elland Road
1999 Stadium of Light
2001 Pride Park
2002 St. Mary's Stadium
2003 Upton Park Walkers Stadium (later King Power Stadium) Riverside Stadium Portman Road
2004 City of Manchester Stadium
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Sept 12, 2021 0:56:41 GMT 1
APPEARANCES BY BRITISH PLAYERS IN SINGLES FINALS OF GRAND SLAM TENNIS TOURNAMENTS IN THE OPEN ERA
A = Australian Open F = French Open W = Wimbledon U = US Open
1968 F - Ann Jones (L) U - Virginia Wade (W)
1969 F - Ann Jones (L) W - Ann Jones (W)
1972 A - Virginia Wade (W)
1976 F - Sue Barker (W)
1977 W - Virginia Wade (W) A - John Lloyd (L)
1997 U - Greg Rusedski (L)
2008 U - Andy Murray (L)
2010 A - Andy Murray (L)
2011 A - Andy Murray (L)
2012 W - Andy Murray (L) U - Andy Murray (W)
2013 A - Andy Murray (L) W - Andy Murray (W)
2015 A - Andy Murray (L)
2016 A - Andy Murray (L) F - Andy Murray (L) W - Andy Murray (W)
2021 U - Emma Raducanu (W)
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Oct 29, 2021 17:24:05 GMT 1
LIST OF BRITISH FORMULA ONE DRIVERS
Listed by year of first entry, based on drivers who took part in Grand Prix weekends recognised as being part of the Formula One World Championship by the FIA.
# = never qualified for or started a race ## = only took part in practice * = Grand Prix winner ** = World Champion
1950 Geoffrey Crossley Joe Fry Bob Gerard David Hampshire Cuth Harrison Leslie Johnson David Murray Reg Parnell Tony Rolt Brian Shawe-Taylor Peter Walker Peter Whitehead
1951 George Abecassis Philip Fotheringham-Parker Duncan Hamilton John James Stirling Moss * Ken Richardson #
1952 Bill Aston Eric Brandon Alan Brown Peter Collins * Tony Crook Ken Downing Mike Hawthorn ** Kenneth McAlpine Lance Macklin Robin Montgomerie-Charrington Dennis Poore Roy Salavadori Eric Thompson Ken Wharton Graham Whitehead
1953 John Barber Jack Fairman Rodney Nuckey Ian Stewart Jimmy Stewart
1954 Don Beauman Ron Flockhart Horace Gould Leslie Marr John Riseley-Prichard Leslie Thorne Bill Whitehouse
1955 Ted Whiteaway #
1956 Tony Brooks * Colin Chapman # Paul Emery Bruce Halford Les Leston Archie Scott-Brown Desmond Titterington
1957 Ivor Bueb Dick Gibson Stuart Lewis-Evans Mike MacDowel Tony Marsh Brian Naylor
1958 Cliff Allison Tom Bridger Ian Burgess Bernie Ecclestone # Graham Hill ** Alan Stacey
1959 Peter Ashdown Chris Bristow Colin Davis Keith Greene Innes Ireland * Bill Moss # Mike Parkes Tim Parnell David Piper Dennis Taylor # Henry Taylor Mike Taylor Trevor Taylor
1960 Jim Clark ** Arthur Owen John Surtees ** Vic Wilson
1961 Gerry Ashmore Jackie Lewis
1962 John Campbell-Jones
1963 Bob Anderson Peter Arundell Mike Hailwood David Prophet Ian Raby Mike Spence
1964 Richard Attwood John Taylor
1965 Brian Gubby # John Rhodes Alan Rollinson # Jackie Stewart **
1966 Piers Courage Chris Irwin Chris Lawrence Alan Rees
1967 Brian Hart David Hobbs Jackie Oliver Brian Redman Jonathan Williams
1968 Derek Bell Vic Elford Robin Widdows
1969 John Miles Peter Westbury
1970 Peter Gethin *
1971 Mike Beuttler Chris Craft
1973 James Hunt ** David Purley John Watson * Roger Williamson
1974 Ian Ashley Guy Edwards Tom Pryce Richard Robarts Mike Wilds
1975 Tony Brise Jim Crawford Bob Evans Brian Henton Damien Magee Dave Morgan Tony Trimmer #
1976 Divina Galica #
1977 Rupert Keegan Andy Sutcliffe #
1978 Geoff Lees
1980 Nigel Mansell ** Tiff Needell Stephen South #
1981 Derek Warwick
1983 Kenny Acheson Jonathan Palmer
1984 Martin Brundle
1986 Johnny Dumfries
1988 Julian Bailey
1989 Martin Donnelly Johnny Herbert *
1991 Mark Blundell
1992 Damon Hill ** Perry McCarthy #
1993 Eddie Irvine *
1994 David Coulthard *
2000 Jenson Button **
2002 Anthony Davidson Allan McNish
2003 Justin Wilson
2007 Lewis Hamilton **
2010 Paul di Resta
2012 Max Chilton
2013 James Calado ##
2014 Will Stevens Susie Wolff ##
2015 Jolyon Palmer
2016 Jordan King ##
2017 George Russell *
2018 Lando Norris
2020 Jack Aitken
2021 Callum Ilott ##
2024 Ollie Bearman
Ralph Firman, who competed in 2003, is originally from England but raced as an Irish citizen.
Alex Albon has dual British-Thai nationality but competes under the flag of Thailand.
|
|
|
Post by rubcale on Oct 29, 2021 18:12:15 GMT 1
Billie Jean King called Ann Jones "the most under-rated player of the sixties".
Over both eras she played in nine Slam finals and in three years (61, 67 and 69) was in two.
In the women's game there were very few professionals before the Open Era.
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Feb 28, 2022 19:48:04 GMT 1
TEAMS THAT HAVE PLAYED AT THE MEN'S HOCKEY WORLD CUP
(listed by first tournament)
1971 Argentina Australia France India Japan Kenya Netherlands Pakistan Spain West Germany (later Germany)
1973 Belgium England Malaysia New Zealand
1975 Ghana Poland
1978 Canada Ireland Italy
1982 USSR
1994 Belarus South Africa South Korea
2002 Cuba
2018 China
2023 Chile Wales
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Feb 28, 2022 20:00:28 GMT 1
TEAMS THAT HAVE PLAYED AT THE WOMEN'S HOCKEY WORLD CUP
(listed by first tournament)
1974 Argentina Austria Belgium France India Mexico Netherlands Spain Switzerland West Germany (later Germany)
1976 Italy Nigeria
1978 Canada Czechoslovakia (later Czech Republic) Japan
1981 Australia USSR
1983 England New Zealand Scotland USA Wales
1986 Ireland
1990 China South Korea
1994 Russia
1998 South Africa
2002 Ukraine
2022 Chile
|
|
|
Post by Panda on Aug 5, 2022 1:05:16 GMT 1
SPORTS INCLUDED AT THE COMMONWEALTH GAMES
(demonstration sports not included)
1930 - HAMILTON In: Athletics, Bowls, Boxing, Diving, Rowing, Swimming, Wrestling
1934 - LONDON In: Cycling Out: Rowing
1938 - SYDNEY In: Rowing Out: none
1950 - AUCKLAND In: Fencing, Water Polo, Weightlifting Out: none
1954 - VANCOUVER In: none Out: Water Polo
1958 - CARDIFF In: none Out: none
1962 - PERTH In: none Out: none
1966 - KINGSTON In: Badminton, Shooting Out: Bowls, Rowing
1970 - EDINBURGH In: Bowls Out: Shooting
1974 - CHRISTCHURCH In: Shooting Out: Fencing
1978 - EDMONTON In: Gymnastics
1982 - BRISBANE In: Archery Out: Gymnastics
1986 - EDINBURGH In: Rowing, Synchronised Swimming Out: Archery
1990 - AUCKLAND In: Gymnastics, Judo Out: Rowing, Wrestling
1994 - VICTORIA In: Wrestling Out: Judo
1998 - KUALA LUMPUR In: Cricket, Hockey, Netball, Rugby Sevens, Squash, Ten-Pin Bowling Out: Wrestling
2002 - MANCHESTER In: Judo, Table Tennis, Triathlon, Wrestling Out: Cricket, Ten-Pin Bowling
2006 - MELBOURNE In: Basketball Out: Bowls, Judo, Triathlon, Wrestling
2010 - DELHI In: Archery, Bowls, Tennis, Wrestling Out: Basketball
2014 - GLASGOW In: Judo, Triathlon Out: Archery, Synchronised Swimming, Tennis
2018 - GOLD COAST In: Basketball, Beach Volleyball, Para Powerlifting Out: Judo
2022 - BIRMINGHAM * In: Cricket, Judo Out: Shooting
* - 3x3 basketball replaced the full court version for the 2022 Games. An archery competition was due to be held in India that would've counted towards the medal table but it was cancelled due to Covid.
|
|
frag
Member
*Paranoid Android*
I have no idea what you're talking about, so here's a bunny with a pancake on its head.
Posts: 25,111
|
Post by frag on Aug 5, 2022 9:51:22 GMT 1
Looks like Judo is a yo-yo sport, there... Basketball and Shooting also popping in and out.
|
|