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Quiz about 10 Different Sports
Quiz about 10 Different Sports

10 Different Sports Trivia Quiz


A little of this and a little of that, so a true test for your all-round sporting knowledge...

A multiple-choice quiz by EnglishJedi. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
EnglishJedi
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
296,724
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Very Difficult
Avg Score
4 / 10
Plays
1203
Last 3 plays: Guest 172 (0/10), Guest 109 (4/10), Guest 159 (5/10).
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. TENNIS: Andy Murray's appearance in the 2008 U.S. Open final was something of a rarity. Before Murray, who was the last male British tennis player to reach a Grand Slam singles final? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. SOCCER (England): which Football League team was the most successful F.A. Cup side of the 1920s, winning the trophy three times in the decade? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. HORSE RACING: In which English county is Wincanton race course? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. BOXING: Born in Wilmington, North Carolina in 1956, which boxer won World Championship titles at Welterweight, Light Middleweight, Middleweight, Light Heavyweight and Super Middleweight? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. SNOOKER: Which snooker player, World Champion in 1980, was nicknamed 'The Grinder'? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. ATHLETICS: Which Olympic sporting legend was born in Turku, Finland in 1897?
Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. BASEBALL: which MLB franchise was founded in 1871 as the Boston Red Stockings? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. GOLF: In which country was 3-time Major winner Nick Price born? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. FORMULA ONE: Which driver won the British Grand Prix a record four times in a row?
Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. CRICKET: Which nickname is shared by the Tasmania state team in Australia, the Kolkata team in the Indian Cricket League, and the Bangladesh national team? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Nov 14 2024 : Guest 172: 0/10
Nov 08 2024 : Guest 109: 4/10
Nov 06 2024 : Guest 159: 5/10
Nov 05 2024 : Guest 1: 5/10
Nov 02 2024 : triviag85: 4/10
Oct 26 2024 : r_shveik: 3/10
Oct 17 2024 : Guest 73: 4/10
Oct 10 2024 : Guest 75: 4/10
Oct 08 2024 : Guest 62: 4/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. TENNIS: Andy Murray's appearance in the 2008 U.S. Open final was something of a rarity. Before Murray, who was the last male British tennis player to reach a Grand Slam singles final?

Answer: Greg Rusedski

Although born in Montreal, Canada, Rusedski took British citizenship in 1995 (English mother, and German father). In his 26-year career as a professional prior to his retirement in 2007, he won 15 singles titles and reached #4 in the world rankings. His performance in Grand Slams was nothing special, only making it to the second week twice, both in 1997, when he reached the quarter-final at Wimbledon and the final of the US Open, where he was defeated by Pat Rafter in four sets. Nevertheless, his performance that year earned him 'The BBC Sports Personality of the Year' award.

Of the alternatives, Henman never made it to a Grand Slam final - he lost in the semi-final at Wimbledon four times between 1998-2002 and he reached the same stage in both the US Open and the French in 2004. John Lloyd is perhaps best remembered as Mr Chris Evert, but he did reach a Grand Slam final, the Australian in 1977 where he lost in five sets to Vitus Geralitus. More than 80 years on, Fred Perry remains the last Englishman to win a Grand Slam singles title, and he won eight -- Wimbledon and the US three times each and the other two each once, with his last victory coming in 1936.
2. SOCCER (England): which Football League team was the most successful F.A. Cup side of the 1920s, winning the trophy three times in the decade?

Answer: Bolton Wanderers

Bolton Wanderers have won the F.A. Cup four times, but few of their fans are even old enough to remember their victory in 1958, let alone their heyday in the 1920s. They defeated West Ham 2-0 in the historic 1923 Final, the first to be held at the then-new Wembley Stadium. Bolton-born local hero David Jack scored the opening goal of that game, the first goal ever scored at Wembley, and then won the Cup again for Bolton three years later with the only goal of the 1926 Final against Manchester City. Jack was the first player transfered for more than £10,000, more than double the previous record, when he was sold to Arsenal in 1928. Bolton completed their hat-trick of wins in 1929 with a 2-0 victory over Portsmouth in the Final.

Bolton's next appearance was in the famous 'Matthews' Final' of 1953, when they lost 5-3 to Blackpool. They produced a winning return in 1958 when Nat Lofthouse scored twice in a 2-0 defeat of Manchester United, but we have now passed the 50th anniversary of the their last appearance in the final.
3. HORSE RACING: In which English county is Wincanton race course?

Answer: Somerset

The small but historic village from which the racetrack gets its name is located just off the A303 in the southeastern corner of Somerset. Exclusively used for National Hunt racing (jumps), the course had the highest casualty rate of any British track in 2008, with nine deaths.

The biggest race on Wincanton's annual calendar is the 2-mile Kingwell Hurdle in February. Jockey Richard Dunwoody won the race five times on five different horses in the 1990s. Numerous horses (e.g. Katchit in 2008), have won the Kingwell and then gone on to win the Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham later in the year.
4. BOXING: Born in Wilmington, North Carolina in 1956, which boxer won World Championship titles at Welterweight, Light Middleweight, Middleweight, Light Heavyweight and Super Middleweight?

Answer: Sugar Ray Leonard

Ray Charles Leonard is widely considered one of the best boxers of all time. As an amateur, he won gold in the light welterweight division at the 1976 Olympics in Montreal. When he turned professional, his trainer was the legendary Angelo Dundee. He won his first 25 pro fights and finished his career with a 36-3-1 record including 25 wins by KO.

He won his first World title, at welterweight, in 1979. During the 1980s, an injury-plagued Leonard constantly retired and then returned, but that period will always be remembered by boxing fans for the 'showdowns' between Leonard, Thomas Hearns and Marvin Haggler.
5. SNOOKER: Which snooker player, World Champion in 1980, was nicknamed 'The Grinder'?

Answer: Cliff Thorburn

Clifford Charles Devlin Thorburn was born in Victoria, BC, Canada in 1946. He reached three World Championship finals, losing to John Spencer in 1977 and to Steve Davis in 1983, and scoring an 18-16 victory over Alex Higgins in the 1980 final. He was the first non-British player to win the World title in the modern (post-television, since 1969) era.
6. ATHLETICS: Which Olympic sporting legend was born in Turku, Finland in 1897?

Answer: Paavo Nurmi

Paavo Johannes Nurmi is one of the true Olympic giants. In the course of three Summer Games, 1920 in Antwerp, 1924 in Paris and 1928 in Amsterdam, Nurmi competed in a total of 12 events ranging from 1500m to 10,000m, including track, cross-country and steeplechase. He won nine of those events and collected the silver medal in the other three. In 1925 alone, Nurmi broke 39 world records in winning 53 of the 55 races he entered. He held most of the major distance running records at some point. His 10,000m world record set in 1924, stood for almost 13 years. Two annual 'Paavo Nurmi Marathons' are staged, one in his home town of Turku, Finland and the other in Iron County in northern Wisconsin. He was the final torch bearer when the Olympic Games were held in Helsinki in 1952.

Of the alternatives, all are Olympic-winning Finns... Koskenniemi was a member of the winning cross-country team along with Nurmi in 1920, Vasala won the 1500m in 1972 in Munich, and Viren won both 5,000m and 10,000m in 1972 and in 1976 in Montreal.
7. BASEBALL: which MLB franchise was founded in 1871 as the Boston Red Stockings?

Answer: Atlanta Braves

The team played as the Boston Red Stockings until changing their name to the Boston Beaneaters in 1883. Between 1906 and 1940 they went through numerous names, Doves, Rustlers, Braves and Bees, all the time remaining in Boston. They eventually settled on The Boston Braves in 1941, but 10 years later they moved more than 1,000 miles west to Wisconsin. The Milwaukee Braves lasted just 13 seasons before heading South and becoming the Atlanta Braves at the start of the 1966 season.

Of the alternatives, the Red Sox were founded in 1901 as the Boston Americans and adopted their present name in 1908. The Brewers began as the Seattle Pilots in 1969, but stayed on the West coast for just one season before morphing into the Milwaukee Brewers. The Cincinnati franchise, founded in 1882, has never moved and has only tinkered with their name ... They started as the Red Stockings but became the Reds in 1890. They changed to the Redlegs for a few years in the 1950s, but that was a short-lived aberration.
8. GOLF: In which country was 3-time Major winner Nick Price born?

Answer: South Africa

Nicholas Raymond Leigh Price was born in Durban, South Africa in 1957. His English parents moved to Rhodesia when he was young and Price grew up as a Zimbabwean citizen and even served in the army during the civil War there. He turned professional in 1977 and played his first Major, the Open, the following year.

He twice finished second in the Open (1982 and 1988) before finally winning it in 1994. His first victory in a Major had come two years earlier, in the 1992 PGA, and he repeated that success again in 1994. With two wins in Majors during the calendar year, he was the world's #1 ranked at the end of 1994.
9. FORMULA ONE: Which driver won the British Grand Prix a record four times in a row?

Answer: Jim Clark

Jim Clark was born in Fife, Scotland in 1936. He drove his entire F1 career for Lotus, debuting in the 1960 season. He was killed driving in a Formula Two race at the Hockenheimring in Germany in 1968. Clark won the driver's World Championship twice (1963 and 1965). Fittingly, he had won the only race of the 1968 season, in South Africa, when he died. He won his first British GP at the third attempt, in 1962. He then dominated the race for the rest of his career, winning four in a row (1962-65), and adding a fifth victory in 1967.

Of the alternatives, 3-time World Champion Jackie Stewart won the British Grand Prix twice (1969 and 1971) in his nine starts. Prost, like Clark, won the British GP five times, although he started 13 times to Clark's eight. He only managed a consecutive winning streak of two, though (1989 and 1990). The British GP was not Michael Schumacher's favorite - just three wins (1998, 2002 and 2004) in 14 starts.
10. CRICKET: Which nickname is shared by the Tasmania state team in Australia, the Kolkata team in the Indian Cricket League, and the Bangladesh national team?

Answer: Tigers

The Tasmanian Tigers inclusion in 1977 made the Sheffield Shield a 6-state competition. After three second-place finishes, they earned their first title in the 2006-7 season. The Kolkata Tigers are coached by South Africa's Daryl Cullinan and captained by New Zealand test star Craig McMillan. The Bangladesh Tigers became the 10th test-match country in 2000, playing their first test against India in November that year. They earned their first win in their 35th test, against Zimbabwe in 2005.

Of the alternatives, Lions is the nickname of the Chandigarh team in the ICL and the Sri Lankan national team as well as the Highveld team in South Africa; the Western Warriors are the Western Australia state team while the Chevrolet Warriors compete in the South African equivalent, and Giants is the nickname of the Delhi team in the ICL.
Source: Author EnglishJedi

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor gtho4 before going online.
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