1933 in sports
1933 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
Years in sports |
1933 in sports |
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Events calendar
Date | Sport | Venue/Event | Status | Winner/s |
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11 January - 30 May | Tennis | / North American Tour | International | 1) Bill Tilden 2) Hans Nüsslein |
21–30 January | Tennis | Australian Championships | International | Men's Singles: Jack Crawford Women's Singles: Joan Hartigan Bathurst Men's Doubles: Keith Gledhill / Ellsworth Vines Women's Doubles: Mall Molesworth / Emily Hood Westacott |
23 January | Tennis | New Courts Club Championships | International | George Lyttleton Rogers |
23 January | Tennis | German Covered Court Championships | International | Gottfried von Cramm |
23 January | Tennis | New Zealand Championships | International | Women's Singles: Dulcie Nichols Women's Doubles: Mrs R. Adams / Mrs H. Dykes Mixed Doubles: Marjorie Macfarlane / Camille Malfroy |
31 January - 5 February | Table tennis | World Table Tennis Championships | International | Hungary |
1 February | Bobsleigh | FIBT World Championships | International | Romania (Alexandru Papana / Dumitru Hubert) |
2–5 February | Multi-sport | Maccabiah Winter Games | International | Poland |
3–6 February | Speed skating | World Allround Speed Skating Championships | International | Women: Liselotte Landbeck |
4–5 February | Speed skating | European Speed Skating Championships | Continental | Men: Ivar Ballangrud |
6–10 February | Alpine skiing | FIS Alpine World Ski Championships | International | Austria |
8–12 February | Nordic skiing | FIS Nordic World Ski Championships | International | Sweden |
11–12 February | Figure skating | World Figure Skating Championships | International | Ladies' singles: Sonja Henie Pair skating: Emília Rotter / László Szollás |
18–19 February | Figure skating | World Figure Skating Championships | International | Men's singles: Karl Schäfer |
18–19 February | Speed skating | World Allround Speed Skating Championships | International | Men's singles: Hans Engnestangen |
18-26 February | Ice hockey | World Ice Hockey Championships | International | United States |
Ice hockey | Ice Hockey European Championships | Continental | Czechoslovakia | |
19 February | Motor race | II Pau Grand Prix | International | Marcel Lehoux |
26 February[1] | Motor race | III Sveriges Vinter Grand Prix | International | Per-Viktor Widengren |
20 March | Motor race | VI Australian Grand Prix | International | Bill Thompson |
26 March[2] | Motor race | V Grand Prix de Tunisie | International | Tazio Nuvolari |
Motor race | GP automobile de Tunis | International | ||
23 April | Motor race | V Grand Prix de Monaco | International | Achille Varzi |
30 April | Motor race | IX Circuito di Alessandria (Circuito Pietro Bordino) |
International | Tazio Nuvolari |
7 May | Motor race | VII Gran Premio di Tripoli (I Lotteria di Tripoli) |
International | Achille Varzi |
7 May | Motor race | II Eläintarhanajot (Djurgårdsloppet) |
International | Karl Ebb |
21 May | Motor race | III Internationales Avusrennen | International | Achille Varzi |
21 May | Motor race | IX Grand Prix de Picardie | International | Philippe Étancelin |
25 May - 5 June | Tennis | French Championships | International | Men's Singles: Jack Crawford Women's Singles: Margaret Scriven Men's Doubles: Pat Hughes / Fred Perry Women's Doubles: Simonne Mathieu / Elizabeth Ryan Mixed Doubles: Margaret Scriven / Jack Crawford |
28 May | Motor race | VII Eifelrennen | International | Tazio Nuvolari |
28 May | Motor race | XXIV Targa Florio | International | Marchese Antonio Brivio |
30 May | Motor race | XXI International 500 Mile Sweepstakes | International | Louis Meyer |
3 June - 9 September | Rugby | Australia rugby union tour of South Africa | International | Australia |
4 June | Motor race | II Trophée de Provence | International | Marcel Jacob |
4 June | Motor race | II Grand Prix de Nîmes | International | Tazio Nuvolari |
4 June | Motor race | VIII Grand Prix des Frontières | International | Willy Longueville |
11 June | Motor race | XXVII Grand Prix de l’ACF | International | Giuseppe Campari |
11 June | Motor race | III Grand Prix Lwowa (Großer Preis von Lemberg) |
International | Eugen Bjørnstad |
11 June | Motor race | Florence Circuit | International | Conde Carlo Felice Trossi |
25 June | Motor race | IV Gran Premio de Penya Rhin (I Copa Barcelona) |
International | Juan Zanelli |
26 June - 8 July | Tennis | Wimbledon Championships | International | Men's Singles: Jack Crawford Women's Singles: Helen Moody Men's Doubles: Jean Borotra / Jacques Brugnon Women's Doubles: Simonne Mathieu / Elizabeth Ryan Mixed Doubles: Gottfried von Cramm / Hilde Krahwinkel |
27 June - 23 July | Cycling | Tour de France | International | Georges Speicher |
1 July | Motor race | II British Empire Trophy | International | Stanislas Czaykowski |
2 July | Motor race | VIII Grand Prix de la Marne | International | Philippe Étancelin |
9 July | Motor race | IV Grand Prix de Belgique | International | Tazio Nuvolari |
12 July | Motor race | Mannin Beg | International | Freddie Dixon |
12–13 July | Chess | V Chess Olympiad | International | Isaac Kashdan, Frank Marshall, Reuben Fine, Arthur Dake, Albert Simonson |
12–23 July | Chess | IV Women's World Chess Championship | International | Vera Menchik |
14 July | Motor race | Mannin Moar | International | Brian Lewis, Baron Essendon |
16 July[3] | Motor race | V Grand Prix de Dieppe | International | Marcel Lehoux |
30 July | Motor race | VII Coppa Ciano | International | Tazio Nuvolari |
31 July - 5 August | Archery | World Archery Championships | International | Poland |
6 August | Motor race | II Grand Prix de Nice | International | Tazio Nuvolari |
6 August | Motor race | I Sveriges Sommer Grand Prix | International | Antonio Brivio |
11–15 August | Cycling | UCI Track Cycling World Championships | International | France |
13 August | Motor race | IX Grand Prix de la Baule | International | William Grover-Williams |
14–15 August | Cycling | UCI Road World Championships | International | France / Switzerland |
15 August[4] | Motor race | IX Coppa Acerbo | International | Luigi Fagioli |
14–19 August | Tennis | U.S. National Championships | International | Women's Singles: Helen Jacobs Women's Doubles: Betty Nuthall / Freda James Mixed Doubles: Elizabeth Ryan / Ellsworth Vines |
20 August | Motor race | IX Grand Prix du Comminges | International | Luigi Fagioli |
27 August | Motor race | II Grand Prix de Marseille | International | Louis Chiron |
27 August | Motor race | Grand Prix d’Albi | International | Louis Braillard |
2 September | Motor race | XII RAC Tourist Trophy | International | Tazio Nuvolari |
2–10 September | Tennis | U.S. National Championships | International | Men's Singles: Fred Perry Men's Doubles: George Lott / Lester Stoefen |
10 September | Motor race | XI Gran Premio d’Italia | International | Luigi Fagioli |
10 September | Motor race | VI Gran Premio di Monza | International | Marcel Lehoux |
16–17 September | Weightlifting | European Weightlifting Championships | International | Germany |
17 September | Motor race | IV Masarykuv Okruh | International | Louis Chiron |
17 September | Motor race | II Grand Prix de l'UMF | International | Raymond Sommer |
24 September | Motor race | VI Gran Premio de España | International | Louis Chiron |
1–8 October | Athletics | Balkan Games | International | Greece |
7 October | Motor race | Donington Park Trophy | International | Earl Howe |
8 October | Motor race | Grande Prêmio da Cidade de Rio de Janeiro |
International | Baron Manuel de Teffé |
Unknown date
Sport | Venue/Event | Winner/s |
---|---|---|
Figure skating | European Figure Skating Championships | Men's singles: Karl Schäfer Ladies' singles: Sonja Henie Pair skating: Idi Papez / Karl Zwack |
Golf | IV Women's Western Open | June Beebe |
Shooting | / XXIX ISSF World Shooting Championships | Sweden |
Alpine skiing
FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 3rd FIS Alpine World Ski Championships are held at Innsbruck, Austria. The events are a downhill, a slalom and a combined race in both the men's and women's categories. The winners are:
- Men's Downhill – Walter Prager (Switzerland)
- Men's Slalom – Anton Seelos (Austria)
- Men's Combined – Anton Seelos (Austria)
- Women's Downhill – Inge Wersin-Lantschner (Austria)
- Women's Slalom – Inge Wersin-Lantschner (Austria)
- Women's Combined – Inge Wersin-Lantschner (Austria)
Events
- Taft Slalom, the first racing trail in North America, is cut on Cannon Mountain in New Hampshire
American football
- NFL Championship: the Chicago Bears won 23–21 over the New York Giants at Wrigley Field
- Rose Bowl (1932 season):
- The USC Trojans won 35–0 over the Pittsburgh Panthers to share the college football national championship
- College football national championship – Michigan Wolverines
- Cincinnati Reds, Philadelphia Eagles and Pittsburgh Steelers all founded
Association football
Chile
- Chilean Primera Division, officially founded on May 31, and a first officially game held on July 22.
England
- The Football League – Arsenal 58 points, Aston Villa 54, Sheffield Wednesday 51, West Bromwich Albion 49, Newcastle United 49, Huddersfield Town 47
- FA Cup final – Everton 3–0 Manchester City at Empire Stadium, Wembley, London
Germany
- National Championship – Fortuna Düsseldorf 3–0 F.C. Schalke 04 at Köln
Italy
France
Australian rules football
- 30 September – South Melbourne wins the 37th VFL Premiership defeating Richmond 9.17 (71) to 4.5 (29) at Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) in the 1933 VFL Grand Final
Brownlow Medal
- The annual Brownlow Medal is awarded to “Chicken” Smallhorn (Fitzroy)
South Australian National Football League
- 14 October – West Torrens win their second SANFL premiership, defeating Norwood 13.10 (88) to 9.11 (65)
- Magarey Medal awarded to Keith Dunn (Sturt)
Western Australian National Football League
- 16 September – George Doig becomes the first player to score 100 goals in a WA(N)FL season, doing this in the season of his league debut. Doig would score 100 goals every season until 1941, after which World War II ended open-age football until 1945.
- 14 October – East Fremantle wins its seventeenth WANFL premiership, defeating Subiaco 10.13 (73) to 7.7 (49)
- Sandover Medal awarded to Sammy Clarke (Claremont-Cottesloe)
Baseball
World Series
- 3–7 October - New York Giants (NL) defeats Washington Senators (AL) to win the 1933 World Series by 4 games to 1
Basketball
- Northwestern University wins the Big Ten Conference Championship in men's College Basketball.
- A first year of professional basketball game in Spain, Copa del Rey de Baloncesto was held on October 15. (as predecessor of Liga ACB)
Boxing
Events
- 29 June – Primo Carnera defeats Jack Sharkey by a sixth-round knockout at Long Island City to win the World Heavyweight Championship
Lineal world champions[5]
- World Heavyweight Championship – Jack Sharkey → Primo Carnera
- World Light Heavyweight Championship – Maxie Rosenbloom
- World Middleweight Championship – vacant
- World Welterweight Championship – Jackie Fields → Young Corbett III → Jimmy McLarnin
- World Lightweight Championship – Tony Canzoneri → Barney Ross
- World Featherweight Championship – vacant
- World Bantamweight Championship – Panama Al Brown
- World Flyweight Championship – vacant
Cricket
Events
- County Championship – Yorkshire
- Minor Counties Championship – undecided[a]
- Most runs – Wally Hammond 3323 @ 67.81 (HS 264)
- Most wickets – Tich Freeman 298 @ 15.26 (BB 8–22)
- Wisden Cricketers of the Year – Fred Bakewell, George Headley, Stan Nichols, Leslie Townsend, Cyril Walters
- The West Indies make a second tour of England, and lose the three Test series two games to nil
Australia
- Sheffield Shield – New South Wales
- Most runs – Herbert Sutcliffe 1,318 @ 73.22 (HS 194)
- Most wickets – Bill O‘Reilly 62 @ 19.95 (BB 6–36)
India
- Bombay Quadrangular – not contested
New Zealand
South Africa
- Currie Cup – not contested
West Indies
- Inter-Colonial Tournament – not contested
Cycling
- Georges Speicher won the 1933 Tour de France[6]
- Alfredo Binda won the 1933 Giro d'Italia (5th win)
- Georges Speicher won the men's road race at the 1933 UCI Road World Championships
Field hockey
- September 1 – foundation of Oranje Zwart, a Dutch club located in Eindhoven
Figure skating
World Figure Skating Championships
- Men's singles – Karl Schäfer
- Ladies’ singles – Sonja Henie
- Pairs – Emília Rotter and László Szollás
Horse racing
England
- Champion Hurdle – Insurance (2nd successive win)
- Cheltenham Gold Cup – Golden Miller (2nd successive win)
- Grand National – Kellsboro Jack
- 1,000 Guineas Stakes – Brown Betty
- 2,000 Guineas Stakes – Rodosto
- The Derby – Hyperion[7]
- The Oaks – Chatelaine
- St. Leger Stakes – Hyperion
Australia
- Melbourne Cup – Hall Mark
Canada
- King's Plate – King O'Connor
France
- Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe – Crapom
Ireland
- Irish Grand National – Red Park
- Irish Derby Stakes – Harinero
USA
- Kentucky Derby – Broker's Tip
- Preakness Stakes – Head Play
- Belmont Stakes – Hurryoff
Ice hockey
- 4 April - 13 April – New York Rangers defeat Toronto Maple Leafs 3–1 in a best of five series to win their second Stanley Cup.
Motorsport
- February 22 - Malcolm Campbell sets world land speed record speed of 272.46 mph driving his famous Blue Bird car at Daytona Beach, Florida
Nordic skiing
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships
- 7th FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 1933 are held at Innsbruck, Austria
Rugby league
England
- Championship – Salford
- Challenge Cup final – at Empire Stadium, Wembley, London
- Lancashire League Championship – Salford
- Yorkshire League Championship – Castleford
- Lancashire County Cup – Warrington
- Yorkshire County Cup – Leeds
Australia
- NSW Premiership – Newtown 18–4 St. George (grand final)
- An exhibition match between Great Britain and Australia at Paris' Stade Pershing in December 1933 inspired the beginnings of rugby league in France.[8]
Snooker
World Championship
- 7th World Snooker Championship is won by Joe Davis who defeats Willie Smith 25–18
Speed skating
Speed Skating World Championships
- Men's All-round Champion – Hans Engnestangen (Norway)
Tennis
Australia
- Australian Men's Singles Championship – Jack Crawford (Australia) defeats Keith Gledhill (USA) 2–6, 7–5, 6–3, 6–2
- Australian Women's Singles Championship – Joan Hartigan Bathurst (Australia) defeats Coral Buttsworth (Australia) 6–4, 6–3
England
- Wimbledon Men's Singles Championship – Jack Crawford (Australia) defeats Ellsworth Vines (USA) 4–6, 11–9, 6–2, 2–6, 6–4
- Wimbledon Women's Singles Championship – Helen Wills Moody (USA) defeats Dorothy Round Little (Great Britain) 6–4, 6–8, 6–3
France
- French Men's Singles Championship – Jack Crawford (Australia) defeats Henri Cochet (France) 8–6, 6–1, 6–3
- French Women's Singles Championship – Margaret Scriven Vivian (Great Britain) defeats Simonne Mathieu (France) 6–2, 4–6, 6–4
USA
- American Men's Singles Championship – Fred Perry (Great Britain) defeats Jack Crawford (Australia) 6–3, 11–13, 4–6, 6–0, 6–1
- American Women's Singles Championship – Helen Jacobs (USA) defeats Helen Wills Moody (USA) 8–6, 3–6, 3–0, retired
Davis Cup
- 1933 International Lawn Tennis Challenge – Great Britain at 3–2 France at Stade Roland Garros (clay) Paris, France
Awards
Associated Press Athlete of the Year
- Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year – Carl Hubbell (baseball)
- Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year – Helen Jacobs (tennis)
Notes
a An error in calculating points caused Yorkshire Second Eleven to meet and defeat Norfolk in the Minor Counties Challenge Match when that honour should have gone to Wiltshire; by the time the error was discovered, it was October and the weather was unsuitable for cricket, so the Championship was ruled “undecided”
References
- "Golden Era of Grand Prix Racing". Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- "Golden Era of Grand Prix Racing". Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- "Golden Era of Grand Prix Racing". Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- "Golden Era of Grand Prix Racing". Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- Cyber Boxing Zone
- "Cycling-Tour de France list of winners". Eurosport UK. 26 August 2020. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
- "Epsom Derby | History, Winners, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- Lyle, Beaton (7 April 2009). "75 Years of French Rugby League". rleague.com. Archived from the original on 8 September 2012. Retrieved 30 October 2011.