2021 in sports

2021 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.

Major sports news

  • In mountain running, the Gansu ultramarathon disaster in the Yellow River Stone Forest, China led 21 runners to die from hypothermia. The poor organization of this government-run race led to a national outcry on the regulations of the sport.[1]
  • In sprinting, during the Olympics, Krystsina Tsimanouskaya criticised her Belarusian coaches for entering her in the 4 × 400 m relay, a distance she had never contested, without her consent, after others missed doping tests and were disqualified.[2] Her coaches forced her to fly back to Belarus. She entered the Polish embassy in Tokyo and was granted a humanitarian visa.[3][4] The International Olympic Committee revoked the accreditation of her coaches and expelled them from the Olympic Village.[5]

World records

In chronological order

Deaths

Air sports

  • 10 – 24 July: 5th FAI Junior European Gliding Championships in Lithuania Pociūnai
  • 28 July – 6 August: 23rd FAI World Glider Aerobatic Championships and 11th FAI World Advanced Glider Aerobatic Championships in Poland Leszno
  • 29 July – 7 August: 14th FAI World Advanced Aerobatic Championships in Poland Toruń
  • 7 – 21 August: 36th FAI World Gliding Championships in France Montluçon – Guéret
  • 9 – 21 August: 2020 FAI World Parachuting Championships in Russia Tanay-Kemerovo
  • 2 – 8 October: 2021 FAI S World Championships for Space Models in Romania Buzău

Alpine skiing

FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2021

World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2021

  • 2 – 10 March: in Bulgaria Bansko
    • Super G winners: Italy Giovanni Franzoni (m) / Austria Lena Wechner (f)
    • Giant Slalom winners: Austria Lukas Fuerstein (m) / Sweden Hanna Aronsson Elfman (f)
    • Slalom winners: United States Benjamin Ritchie (m) / Italy Sophie Mathiou (f)

2020–21 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup

Men's
Women's
  • 21 & 22 November 2020: World Cup #1 in Finland Levi
  • 12 – 14 December 2020: World Cup #2 in France Courchevel
  • 16 – 20 December 2020: World Cup #3 in France Val-d'Isère
  • 28 & 29 December 2020: WC #4 in Austria Semmering
    • Here, the Giant Slalom competition is cancelled.
  • 7 – 10 January: WC #5 in Austria St Anton am Arlberg
  • 12 January: WC #6 in Austria Flachau
    • Women's Slalom winner: United States Mikaela Shiffrin
  • 16 & 17 January: WC #7 in Slovenia Kranjska Gora
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Italy Marta Bassino (2 times)
  • 20 – 24 January: WC #8 in Switzerland Crans-Montana
    • Women's Downhill winners: Italy Sofia Goggia (2 times)
    • Women's Super G winner: Switzerland Lara Gut-Behrami
  • 26 January: WC #9 in Italy Kronplatz
    • Women's Giant Slalom winner: France Tessa Worley
  • 28 – 31 January: WC #10 in Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen
    • Women's Super G winners: Switzerland Lara Gut-Behrami (2 times)
  • 24 – 27 February: WC #11 in Italy Val di Fassa
    • Women's Downhill winners: Switzerland Lara Gut-Behrami (2 times)
    • Women's Super G winner: Italy Federica Brignone
  • 6 & 7 March: WC #12 in Slovakia Jasná
  • 12 & 13 March: WC #13 in Sweden Åre
    • Women's Slalom winners: Slovakia Petra Vlhová (No. 1) / Austria Katharina Liensberger (No. 2)
Mixed
  • 17 & 18 October 2020: World Cup #1 in Austria Sölden
  • 26 & 27 November 2020: World Cup #2 in Austria Lech/Zürs
  • 3 – 6 January: WC #3 in Croatia Zagreb
    • Slalom winners: Germany Linus Straßer (m) / Slovakia Petra Vlhová (f)
  • 12 – 17 January: WC #4 in Switzerland Wengen
    • Event cancelled.
  • 15 – 21 March: WC #5 in Switzerland Lenzerheide
    • Downhill and Super G events here are cancelled.
    • Slalom winners: Austria Manuel Feller (m) / Austria Katharina Liensberger (f)
    • Giant Slalom winners: France Alexis Pinturault (m) / New Zealand Alice Robinson (f)
    • Team Parallel winners:  Norway (Kristina Riis-Johannessen, Leif Kristian Nestvold-Haugen, Kristin Lysdahl, Sebastian Foss-Solevåg)

2020–21 Citizen World Cup

  • 2 & 3 January: WC #1 in Switzerland Pontresina
    • Event cancelled
  • 7 – 9 January: WC #2 in Italy Falcade/Moena
    • Men's Super G winners: Italy Francesco Gatto (No. 1) / Italy Matteo Pradal (No. 2)
    • Women's Super G winners: Canada Katrina van Soest (2 times)
  • 9 & 10 January: WC #3 in Germany Lenggries/Brauneck
    • Event cancelled
  • 9 & 10 January: WC #4 in Austria Turnau
    • Men's Slalom winners: Czech Republic Michał Staszowski (No. 1) / Slovakia Filip Botka (No. 2)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Slovakia Petra Hromcová (2 times)
  • 16 & 17 January: WC #5 in Austria Reiteralm
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Austria Jakob Greber (No. 1) / Austria Max Greber (No. 2)
  • 28 – 31 January: WC #6 in Italy Passo San Pellegrino
    • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Czech Republic Jan Koula (2 times)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Canada Caroline Beauchamp (No. 1) / Italy Carlotta De Leonardis (No. 2)
  • 9 – 12 February: WC #7 in Italy Abetone
    • Slalom winners: United Kingdom Toby Case (m) / Italy Lisa Rodari (f)
    • Giant Slalom winners: Italy Thomas Meraner (m) / Italy Camilla Furletti (f)
  • 18 February 20: WC #8 in Switzerland Sils/Furtschellas
    • Men's Slalom winners: Switzerland Luc Herrmann (2 times)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Italy Carlotta Maria Clara Marcora (2 times)
  • 20 & 21 February: WC #9 in Spain La Molina
    • Giant Slalom winners: Spain Andrés García (m) / Spain Inês Araújo (f)
    • Slalom winners: Spain Samuel Beso (m) / Spain Inés Sanmartín Arbones (f)
  • 1 – 3 March: WC #10 in Austria Hinterreit
    • Men's Super G winners: Austria Luis Tritscher (2 times)
    • Women's Super G winners: Austria Florentina Schnittler (No. 1) / Germany Chantal-Isell Laszlo (No. 2)
  • 6 & 7 March: WC #11 in Spain Espot
    • Men's Slalom winners: Spain Aniol Torres Casas (No. 1) / Spain Alejandro Miquel (No. 2)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Spain Inés Sanmartín Arbones (No. 1) / Spain Noelia Gasienica-Kotelnicka (No. 2)
  • 6 & 7 March: WC #11 in Switzerland Tschappina
    • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Austria Martin-Luis Walch (No. 1) / Switzerland Dario Büschlen (No. 2)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Switzerland Selina Gadient (2 times)
  • 15 March: WC #12 in Italy Santa Caterina di Valfurva
    • Super G winners: Italy Luca Resinelli (m) / Switzerland Flavia Lüönd (f)

2020–21 FIS Alpine Ski Europa Cup

  • 2 & 3 November 2020: EC #1 in Austria Obergurgl
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Austria Raphael Haaser (No. 1) / Germany Julian Rauchfuss (No. 2)
  • 7 – 9 December 2020: EC #2 in Switzerland Zinal (Men's only)
    • Men's Super G winner: Switzerland Ralph Weber
    • Men's Alpine Combined winner: Switzerland Joel Lütolf
    • Men's Giant Slalom winner: France Cyprien Sarrazin
  • 12 & 13 December 2020: EC #3 in Italy Cadipietra (Women's only)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Italy Lara Della Mea (No. 1) / Czech Republic Martina Dubovská (f)
  • 12 – 15 December 2020: EC #4 in Italy Santa Caterina di Valfurva (Men's only)
    • Men's Downhill winners: Austria Maximilian Lahnsteiner (No. 1) / Austria Clemens Nocker (No. 2)
  • 16 & 17 December 2020: EC #5 in Austria Hippach (Women's only)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Poland Maryna Gąsienica-Daniel (2 times)
  • 17 & 18 December 2020: EC #6 in Italy Val di Fassa (Men's only)
  • 20 & 21 December 2020: EC #7 in Italy Andalo (Women's only)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Norway Mina Fürst Holtmann (No. 1) / Second here is cancelled.
  • 21 & 22 December 2020: EC #8 in Austria Altenmarkt (Men's only)
    • Men's Super G winners: Austria Raphael Haaser (No. 1) / France Roy Piccard (No. 2)
  • 4 & 5 January: EC #9 in Switzerland Zinal (Women's only)
    • Women's Super G winners: Switzerland Stephanie Jenal (No. 1) / Austria Lisa Grill (No. 2)
  • 6 & 7 January: EC #10 in France Val Cenis (Men's only)
    • Men's Slalom winners: United Kingdom Laurie Taylor (No. 1) / United Kingdom Billy Major (No. 2)
  • 9 & 10 January: EC #11 in France Vaujany (Women's only)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Sweden Elsa Håkansson-Fermbäck (No. 1) / Slovenia Andreja Slokar (No. 2)
  • 14 – 17 January: EC #12 in Switzerland Crans-Montana
    • Women's Downhill winners: Switzerland Jasmine Flury (No. 1) / Second here is cancelled.
  • 18 & 19 January: EC #13 in Switzerland Zinal (Men's only)
    • Men's Super G winners: Switzerland Lars Rösti (No. 1) / Switzerland Joshua Mettler (No. 2)
  • 20 & 21 January: EC #14 in Switzerland Gstaad (Women's only)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Austria Marie-Therese Sporer (No. 1) / Slovenia Andreja Slokar (No. 2)
  • 25 & 26 January: EC #15 in Austria Zell am See (Women's only)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Germany Lena Dürr (No. 1) / Croatia Zrinka Ljutić (No. 2)
  • 25 – 30 January: EC #16 in France Orcières-Merlette (Men's only)
    • Men's Downhill winners: United States Erik Arvidsson (No. 1) / France Victor Schuller (No. 2)
    • Men's Super G winner: Austria Maximilian Lahnsteiner
  • 2 & 3 February: EC #17 in Italy Folgaria (Men's only)
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Switzerland Semyel Bissig (No. 1) / Norway Timon Haugan (No. 2)
  • 2 & 3 February: EC #18 in Slovenia Krvavec (Women's only)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Croatia Zrinka Ljutić
  • 6 & 7 February: EC #19 in Germany Berchtesgaden (Men's only)
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Austria Dominik Raschner (No. 1) / Austria Stefan Brennsteiner (No. 2)
  • 9 – 11 February: EC #20 in Italy Santa Caterina di Valfurva (Women's only)
    • Downhill winners: Austria Lisa Grill (2 times)
  • 13 – 15 February: EC #21 in Germany Berchtesgaden (Women's only)
    • Giant Slalom winners: Austria Elisa Mörzinger (No. 1) / Sweden Hilma Loevblom (No. 2) / (No. 3)
  • 18 & 19 February: EC #22 in Switzerland Hasliberg (Men's only)
    • Men's Slalom winners: United Kingdom Billy Major (No. 1) / United States Ben Ritchie (No. 2)
  • 22 – 25 February: EC #23 in Italy Sella Nevea (Men's only)
    • Men's Downhill winners: France Victor Schuller (No. 1) / United States Erik Arvidsson (No. 2)
  • 27 & 28 February: EC #24 in Germany Oberjoch (Men's only)
    • Men's Slalom winners: Norway Jonathan Nordbotten (No. 1) / Second Slalom competition is cancelled.
  • 27 & 28 February: EC #25 in Italy Livigno (Women's only)
    • Giant Slalom winners: Germany Jessica Hilzinger (No. 1) / Norway Marte Monsen (No. 2)
  • 2 & 3 March: EC #26 in Italy Val di Fassa (Women's only)
    • Women's Super G winners: Switzerland Jasmina Suter (No. 1) / Russia Iulija Pleshkova (No. 2)
  • 10 – 18 March: EC #27 in Austria Saalbach-Hinterglemm
    • Downhill and Women's Super G events here are cancelled.
    • Men's Super G winner: Switzerland Stefan Rogentin
  • 18 – 21 March: EC #28 in Austria Reiteralm
    • Giant Slalom winners: Italy Hannes Zingerle (m) / Norway Marte Monsen (f)
    • Slalom winners: Norway Alexander Steen Olsen (m) / United Kingdom Charlie Guest (f)

American football

National Football League

2020–21 NCAA football bowl games

  • 21 December 2020: Myrtle Beach Bowl in South Carolina Conway
    • North Carolina Appalachian State Mountaineers defeated Texas North Texas Mean Green, 56–28.
  • 22 December 2020: Famous Idaho Potato Bowl in Idaho Boise
    • Nevada Nevada Wolf Pack defeated Louisiana Tulane Green Wave, 38–27.
  • 22 December 2020: Boca Raton Bowl in Florida Boca Raton
  • 23 December 2020: New Orleans Bowl in Louisiana New Orleans
    • Georgia (U.S. state) Georgia Southern Eagles defeated Louisiana Louisiana Tech Bulldogs, 38–3.
  • 23 December 2020: Montgomery Bowl in Alabama Montgomery
    • Tennessee Memphis Tigers defeated Florida Florida Atlantic Owls, 25–10.
  • 24 December 2020: New Mexico Bowl in Texas Frisco
    • Hawaii Hawaii Rainbow Warriors defeated Texas Houston Cougars, 28–14.
  • 25 December 2020: Camellia Bowl in Alabama Montgomery
    • New York (state) Buffalo Bulls defeated West Virginia Marshall Thundering Herd, 17–10.
  • 26 December 2020: First Responder Bowl Texas Dallas
    • Louisiana Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns defeated Texas UTSA Roadrunners, 31–24.
  • 26 December 2020: LendingTree Bowl in Alabama Mobile
    • Georgia (U.S. state) Georgia State Panthers defeated Kentucky Western Kentucky Hilltoppers, 39–21.
  • 26 December 2020: Cure Bowl in Florida Orlando
    • Virginia Liberty Flames defeated South Carolina Coastal Carolina Chanticleers, 37–34, after overtime.
  • 29 December 2020: Cheez-It Bowl in Florida Orlando
    • Oklahoma Oklahoma State Cowboys defeated Florida Miami Hurricanes, 37–34.
  • 29 December 2020: Alamo Bowl in Texas San Antonio
  • 30 December 2020: Duke's Mayo Bowl in North Carolina Charlotte
    • Wisconsin Wisconsin Badgers defeated North Carolina Wake Forest Demon Deacons, 42–28.
  • 30 December 2020: Cotton Bowl Classic in Texas Arlington
    • Oklahoma Oklahoma Sooners defeated Florida Florida Gators, 55–20.
  • 31 December 2020: Armed Forces Bowl in Texas Fort Worth
    • Mississippi Mississippi State Bulldogs defeated Oklahoma Tulsa Golden Hurricane, 28–26.
  • 31 December 2020: Arizona Bowl in Arizona Tucson
    • Indiana Ball State Cardinals defeated California San Jose State Spartans, 34–13.
  • 31 December 2020: Liberty Bowl in Tennessee Memphis
    • West Virginia West Virginia Mountaineers defeated New York (state) Army Black Knights, 24–21.
  • 1 January: Peach Bowl in Georgia (U.S. state) Atlanta
  • 1 January: Citrus Bowl in Florida Orlando
    • Illinois Northwestern Wildcats defeated Alabama Auburn Tigers, 35–19.
  • 1 January: Rose Bowl in Texas Arlington
  • 1 January: Sugar Bowl in Louisiana New Orleans
  • 2 January: Gator Bowl in Florida Jacksonville
    • Kentucky Kentucky Wildcats defeated North Carolina NC State Wolfpack, 23–21.
  • 2 January: Outback Bowl in Florida Tampa
    • Mississippi Ole Miss Rebels defeated Indiana Indiana Hoosiers, 26–20.
  • 2 January: Fiesta Bowl in Arizona Glendale
    • Iowa Iowa State Cyclones defeated Oregon Oregon Ducks, 34–17.
  • 2 January: Orange Bowl in Florida Miami Gardens
    • Texas Texas A&M Aggies defeated North Carolina North Carolina Tar Heels, 41–27.
  • 11 January: College Football Playoff National Championship at the Florida Hard Rock Stadium

Aquatics

  • Japan 2021 FINA Diving World Cup in Tokyo, Japan.
  • 2021 FINA Swimming World Cup.
  • United Arab Emirates 2021 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m) in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
  • TBD: 2021 World Para Swimming Championships.
  • TBD: 2021 FINA World Junior Open Water Swimming Championships
  • TBD: 2021 FINA World Men's Youth Water Polo Championships
  • 2021 FINA World Women's Youth Water Polo Championships
  • 2021 FINA World Junior Synchronised Swimming Championships
  • 2021 FINA World Junior Diving Championships

Archery

  • 16–26 September: 2021 World Archery Championships in United States Yankton, SD
  • 4–10 October: 2021 World Youth Archery Championships in Australia Perth
  • 2021 World Indoor Archery Championships
  • 2021 World 3D Archery Championships
  • 2021 World Para Archery Championship delayed until 2022

2021 Archery World Cup

2020–21 Indoor World Series

  • 21 – 22 November 2020: Stage #1 (Worldwide Online)
    • Recurve winners: Germany Felix Wieser (m) / South Korea Jung-ah Oh (f)
    • Compound winners: Slovenia Staš Modic (m) / Belgium Sarah Prieels (f)
    • Barebow winners: Sweden Erik Jonsson (m) / Italy Cinzia Noziglia (f)
  • 18 – 20 December 2020: Stage #2 (Worldwide Online)
    • Recurve winners: United States Brady Ellison (m) / South Korea Wi Nayeon (f)
    • Compound winners: United States Dave Cousins (m) / United Kingdom Bayley Sargeant (f)
    • Barebow winners: Sweden Erik Jonsson (m) / Sweden Lina Bjorklund
  • 15 – 17 January: Stage #3 (Worldwide Online)
    • Recurve winners: United States Brady Ellison (m) / South Korea Jang Yoo-jung (f)
    • Compound winners: France Jean-Philippe Boulch (m) / Mexico Fátima Neri (f)
    • Barebow winners: Sweden Erik Jonsson (m) / Sweden Lina Bjorklund
  • 12 – 14 February: Stage #4 (Worldwide Online)
  • 27 & 28 February: Stage #5 (Worldwide Online, finals, Only for teams)

Archery Americas

  • 8 – 14 March: City of Medellín World Ranking Event in Colombia Medellín
  • 22 – 28 March: 2021 Pan American Archery Championships in Mexico Monterrey

Archery Europe

  • 22–27 February: 2021 Archery European Indoor Championships in Slovenia Koper
  • 16–21 March: European Grand Prix in Croatia Poreč
  • 6–11 April: European Grand Prix in Turkey Antalya
  • 30 April – 9 May: European Para-Archery Championships 2021 + Tokyo Paralympics CQT in Italy Olbia
  • 17–22 May: European Youth Cup 1st leg in Slovenia Čatež ob Savi
  • 21 May – 6 June: 2021 Archery European Outdoor Championships in Turkey Antalya
  • 5–11 July: Para-Archery European Cup 2021 – Tokyo Paralympic FQT in Czech Republic Nové Město nad Metují
  • 2–7 August: European Youth Cup – 2nd leg in Romania Bucharest
  • 30 August – 4 September: European 3D Championships in Slovenia Maribor
  • 5–12 September: European Field Championships in Croatia Zagreb
  • 9 & 10 October: Run-Archery European Cup in Czech Republic Nové Město nad Metují

Arm wrestling

  • 24 November – 3 December: 2021 World Armwrestling Championship in Romania Bucharest

Association football

National Teams

Clubs

National Teams

Clubs

National Teams

Clubs

  • 23 February – 20 November: 2021 Copa Libertadores
  • 16 March – 6 November: 2021 Copa Sudamericana
  • 7 April: 2021 Recopa Sudamericana Argentina Defensa y Justicia defeated Brazil Palmeiras, 4–3 on penalties after tied 3–3 on aggregate to win their first Recopa Sudamericana.
  • 30 September – 16 October: 2021 Copa Libertadores Femenina

National Teams

  • 28 April – 8 May: 2021 AFC Beach Soccer Asian Cup in Thailand Thailand (cancelled)

Clubs

National Teams

Clubs

National Teams

Clubs

  • 6 April – 28 October: 2021 CONCACAF Champions League
  • 3 August – 15 December: 2021 CONCACAF League
  • 15 – 25 May: 2021 Caribbean Club Championship Haiti Cavaly defeated Suriname Inter Moengotapoe 2–0 in the final to win their first title.
  • 23 April – May: 2021 Caribbean Club Shield Cancelled.

Clubs

  • TBD: 2021 OFC Champions League Cancelled

Athletics

2021 World Athletics Label Road Races

Elite

2021 World Athletics Indoor Tour

Gold
Silver
Bronze
  • 5 February: Hvězdy v Nehvizdech in Czech Republic Nehvizdy
    • High Jump winners: Belgium Thomas Carmoy (m) / Saint Lucia Levern Spencer (f)
    • Long Jump winners: United Kingdom Reynold Banigo (m) / Slovenia Neja Filipič (f)
    • Men's Shot Put winner: Czech Republic Tomáš Staněk
  • 6 & 7 February: Tallinn Indoor Meeting in Estonia Tallinn
    • Men's Heptathlon winner: Estonia Risto Lillemets
    • Women's Pentathlon winner: Poland Adrianna Sułek
  • 7 February: PSD Bank Meeting in Germany Dortmund
    • 60 m winners: Netherlands Joris van Gool (m) / Germany Jennifer Montag (f)
    • Women's 400 m winner: Germany Laura Müller
    • 800 m winners: Sweden Andreas Kramer (m) / Germany Julia Swelam (f)
    • 1500 m winners: Kenya Kumari Taki (m) / Germany Caterina Granz (f)
    • Women's 2000 m Steeplechase winner: Germany Gesa Felicitas Krause
    • 60 m Hurdles winners: Spain Orlando Ortega (m) / Belgium Eline Berings (f)
    • Men's Pole Vault winner: Philippines Ernest Obiena
    • Women's Long Jump winner: Sweden Khaddi Sagnia
  • 12 February: Orlen Cup in Poland Łódź
  • 13 February: CMCM Indoor Meeting in  Luxembourg
    • Women's 50 m winner: France Floriane Gnafoua
    • Women's 60 m winner: Germany Jennifer Montag
    • 800 m winners: Kenya Collins Kipruto (m) / Germany Christina Hering (f)
    • 1500 m winners: Luxembourg Charles Grethen (m) / Kenya Josephine Chelangat Kiplangat (f)
    • 60 m Hurdles winners: United Kingdom Andrew Pozzi (m) / Germany Ricarda Lobe (f)
    • Men's High Jump winner: Belgium Thomas Carmoy
    • Women's Long Jump winner: France Hilary Kpatcha
    • Men's Shot Put winner: Luxembourg Bob Bertemes
  • 13 February: IFAM Gent Indoor in Belgium Ghent
    • 60 m winners: Denmark Kojo Musah (m) / Belgium Rani Rosius (f)
    • 400 m winners: Italy Vladimir Aceti (m) / Romania Andrea Miklós (f)
    • Men's 600 m winner: France Pierre-Ambroise Bosse
    • 800 m winners: France Benjamin Robert (m) / Republic of Ireland Nadia Power (f)
    • 1500 m winners: Kenya Vincent Kibet Keter (m) / Belgium Elise Vanderelst (f)
    • Men's 3000 m winner: Belgium Isaac Kimeli
    • 60 m Hurdles winners: Netherlands Liam Van Der Schaaf (m) / Spain Teresa Errandonea (f)
    • Long Jump winners: Spain Eusebio Cáceres (m) / Cyprus Filippa Fotopoulou (f)
    • High Jump winners: Bulgaria Tihomir Ivanov (m) / Belgium Merel Maes (f)
    • Pole Vault winners: United States Cole Walsh (m) / Slovenia Tina Šutej (f)
  • 14 February: Meeting de l'Eure in France Val-de-Reuil
    • 60 m winners: United States Mike Rodgers (m) / United States Javianne Oliver (f)
    • 400 m winners: Chad Bachir Mahamat (m) / Belgium Cynthia Bolingo (f)
    • Women's 800 m winner: Ethiopia Kudaf Tsegay
    • 1500 m winners: Ethiopia Getnet Wale (m) / Republic of Ireland Michelle Finn (f)
    • 60 m Hurdles winners: United States Grant Holloway (m) / Belarus Elvira Herman (f)
    • Men's Long Jump winner: France Grégoire Villain
    • Men's Triple Jump winner: Burkina Faso Hugues Fabrice Zango
    • High Jump winners: France Sébastien Micheau (m) / Ukraine Iryna Herashchenko
    • Men's Pole Vault winner: United States Chris Nilsen
  • 24 February: Serbian Open Indoor Meeting 2021 in Serbia Belgrade
    • 60 m winners: Italy Massimiliano Ferraro (m) / Switzerland Salomé Kora (f)
    • 400 m winners: Romania Robert Parge (m) / Romania Andrea Miklós (f)
    • Men's 1500 m winner: Bulgaria Mitko Tsenov
    • 60 m Hurdles winners: Serbia Luca Trgovčević (m) / Romania Anamaria Nesteriuc (f)
    • Long Jump winners: Albania Izmir Smajlaj (m) / Serbia Ivana Španović (f)
    • Women's High Jump winner: United Kingdom Morgan Lake
    • Men's Shot Put winner: Serbia Armin Sinančević
    • Men's Pole Vault winner: Sweden Armand Duplantis

2021 World Athletics Continental Tour

Bronze
  • 6 February: International Track Meet in New Zealand Christchurch
    • 200 m winners: New Zealand Edward Osei-Nketia (m) / New Zealand Georgia Hulls (f)
    • Women's 800 m winner: New Zealand Camille Buscomb
    • Men's 1500 m winner: New Zealand Hamish Carson
    • 400 m Hurdles winners: New Zealand Cameron French (m) / New Zealand Portia Bing (f)
    • Men's 3000 m Steeplechase winner: New Zealand Niam Macdonald
    • Women's Long Jump winner: New Zealand Tegan Duffy
    • Men's Triple Jump winner: New Zealand Andrew Allan
    • High Jump winners: New Zealand Hamish Kerr (m) / New Zealand Keeley O'Hagan (f)
    • Shot Put winners: New Zealand Jacko Gill (m) / New Zealand Valerie Adams (f)
    • Discus Throw winners: New Zealand Connor Bell (m) / New Zealand Savannah Scheen (f)
    • Hammer Throw winners: New Zealand Anthony Nobilo (m) / New Zealand Lauren Bruce (f)
  • 27 February: Sir Graeme Douglas International in New Zealand Auckland
    • 100 m winners: New Zealand Edward Osei-Nketia (m) / New Zealand Zoe Hobbs (f)
    • 400 m winners: New Zealand Hamish Gill (m) / New Zealand Jordyn Blake (f)
    • Men's 800 m winner: New Zealand James Preston
    • Women's 1500 m winner: New Zealand Camille Buscomb
    • Men's 110 m Hurdles winner: New Zealand Tom Moloney
    • Women's 100 m Hurdles winner: New Zealand Amy Robertson
    • Men's Long Jump winner: New Zealand Felix McDonald
    • Women's Triple Jump winner: New Zealand Anna Thomson
    • Men's High Jump winner: New Zealand Hamish Kerr
    • Pole Vault winners: New Zealand Ettiene Du Preez (m) / New Zealand Imogen Ayris (f)
    • Shot Put winners: New Zealand Tom Walsh (m) / New Zealand Valerie Adams (f)
    • Women's Javelin Throw winner: New Zealand Tori Peeters
  • 11 March: Canberra Track Classic in Australia Canberra
    • 100 m winners: Australia Rohan Browning (m) / Australia Hana Basic (f)
    • 400 m winners: Australia Alex Beck (m) / Australia Angeline Blackburn (f)
    • 800 m winners: Australia Peter Bol (m) / Australia Catriona Bisset (f)
    • 1500 m winners: Australia Jye Edwards (m) / Australia Linden Hall (f)
    • Men's 110 m Hurdles winner: Australia Nicholas Hough
    • Women's 100 m Hurdles winner: Australia Abbie Taddeo
    • 400 m Hurdles winner: Australia Chris Douglas (m) / Australia Lauren Wells (f)
    • Long Jump winners: Australia Chris Mitrevski (m) / Australia Annie Mcguire (f)
    • High Jump winners: Australia Joel Baden (m) / Australia Nicola McDermott (f)
    • Javelin Throw winners: Australia Liam O'Brien (m) / Australia Mackenzie Little (f)

NACAC

  • 23 & 24 April: 2021 NACAC Cross Country Championships and 2021 Central American Race Walking Championships in Guatemala Guatemala City

NACAC Area Permit Meetings

  • 18 – 20 March: Spring Break Classic Invitational in Puerto Rico Carolina (APM #1)
  • 20 March: Velocity Fest #8 in Jamaica Kingston (APM #2)
  • 17 April: Velocity Fest #9 in Jamaica Kingston (APM #3)

EA Athletics

  • 13 February: Balkan U20 Indoor Championships in Bulgaria Sofia
    • 60 m winners: Romania Beniamin Duicu (m) / Slovenia Zala Istenič (f)
    • 400 m winners: Romania Denis Simon Toma (m) / Ukraine Tatiana Kharashchuk (f)
    • 800 m winners: Romania Márk Fándly (m) / Slovenia Veronika Sadek (f)
    • 1500 m winners: Turkey Devrim Kazan (m) / Romania Talida Sfârghiu (f)
    • 3000 m winners: Austria Emil Bezecny (m) / Romania Mădălina Sîrbu (f)
    • 60 m Hurdles winners: Turkey Demir Ayetullah (m) / Croatia Klara Koščak (f)
    • Long Jump winners: Armenia Gor Beglaryan (m) / Ukraine Mariia Horielova (f)
    • Triple Jump winners: Ukraine Oleksandr Aiko (m) / Serbia Jovana Gnjatović (f)
    • High Jump winners: Ukraine Roman Petruk (m) / Cyprus Styliana Ioannidou (f)
    • Pole Vault winners: Turkey Sedat Cacim (m) / Slovenia Ula Bohorč (f)
    • Shot Put winners: Kosovo Muhamet Ramadani (m) / Turkey Akyol Pınar (f)
    • 4 × 400 m winners:  Turkey (m) /  Slovenia (f)
  • 20 February: 2021 Balkan Athletics Indoor Championships in Turkey Istanbul
    • 60 m winners: Turkey Kayhan Özer (m) / Bulgaria Inna Eftimova (f)
    • 400 m winners: Turkey İlyas Çanakçı (m) / Romania Andrea Miklós (f)
    • 800 m winners: Ukraine Oleh Myronets (m) / Ukraine Svitlana Zhulzhyk (f)
    • 1500 m winners: Bulgaria Mitko Tsenov (m) / Slovenia Maruša Mišmaš (f)
    • 3000 m winners: North Macedonia Dario Ivanovski (m) / Slovenia Klara Lukan (f)
    • 60 m Hurdles winners: Turkey Mikdat Sevler (m) / Romania Anamaria Nesteriuc (f)
    • Long Jump winners: Albania Izmir Smajlaj (m) / Serbia Ivana Španović (f)
    • Triple Jump winners: Azerbaijan Nazim Babayev (m) / Turkey Tuğba Danışmaz (f)
    • High Jump winners: Bulgaria Tihomir Ivanov (m) / Montenegro Marija Vuković (f)
    • Pole Vault winners: Turkey Ersu Şaşma (m) / Ukraine Iana Gladiichuk (f)
    • Shot Put winners: Serbia Armin Sinančević (m) / Turkey Emel Dereli (f)
    • 4 × 400 m winners:  Turkey (Akın Özyürek, Ismail Nezir, Ali Aksu, Oğuzhan Kaya) (m) /  Ukraine (Alina Lohvynenko, Viktoriya Tkachuk, Anastasiia Bryzgina, Anna Ryzhykova) (f)
  • 4 – 7 March: 2021 European Athletics Indoor Championships in Poland Toruń

2021 European Athletics Outdoor Area Permit Meetings

  • 24 May: 36eme Meeting International Athletisme Montgeron-Essonne in France Montgeron (APM No. 1)

2020–2021 Oceania Area Permit Meetings

  • 18 December 2020: Night of 5's in New Zealand Auckland (APM No. 1)
    • 100 m winners: New Zealand Edward Osei-Nketia (m) / New Zealand Zoe Hobbs (f)
    • 800 m winners: New Zealand James Harding (m) / New Zealand Joanna Poland (f)
    • 5000 m winners: New Zealand Eric Speakman (m) / New Zealand Lydia O'Donnell (f)
    • 400 m Hurdles winners: New Zealand Cameron French (m) / New Zealand Anna Percy (f)
    • High Jump winners: New Zealand Hamish Kerr (m) / New Zealand Josie Taylor (f)
    • Pole Vault winners: New Zealand Max Attwell (m) / New Zealand Olivia McTaggart (f)
    • Shot Put winners: New Zealand Jacko Gill (m) / New Zealand Maddi Wesche (f)
    • Discus Throw winners: New Zealand Alexander Parkinson (m) / New Zealand Savannah Scheen (f)
    • Hammer Throw winners: New Zealand Anthony Nobilo (m) / New Zealand Julia Ratcliffe (f)
  • 23 January: Potts Classic in New Zealand Hastings (APM No. 2)
    • 100 m winners: New Zealand Tiaan Whelpton (m) / New Zealand Zoe Hobbs (f)
    • 800 m winners: New Zealand James Preston (m) / New Zealand Rebekah Greene (f)
    • 3000m Steeplechase winners: New Zealand Samuel Tanner (m) / New Zealand Kara MacDermid (f)
    • Long Jump winners: New Zealand Angus Lyver (m) / New Zealand Mariah Ririnui (f)
    • Pole Vault winners: New Zealand James Steyn (m) / New Zealand Olivia McTaggart (f)
    • Shot Put winners: New Zealand Tom Walsh (m) / New Zealand Valerie Adams (f)
    • Discus Throw winners: New Zealand Connor Bell (m) / New Zealand Savannah Scheen (f)
    • Hammer Throw winners: New Zealand Anthony Nobilo (m) / New Zealand Lauren Bruce (f)
  • 26 January: Zatopek Classic in Australia Melbourne (APM No. 3)
    • 800 m winners: Australia Jeffrey Riseley (m) / Australia Catriona Bisset (f)
    • 1500 m winners: Australia Jordan Williamsz (m) / Australia Linden Hall
    • 3000 m winners: Australia Adam Spencer (m) / Australia Abbey Caldwell (f)
    • 10000 m winners: Australia Brett Robinson (m) / Australia Rose Davies (f)
    • 400 m Hurdles winners: Australia Conor Fry (m) / Australia Sara Klein (f)
    • Pole Vault winners: Australia James Woods (m) / Australia Cassidy Bradshaw (f)
    • Long Jump winners: Australia Darcy Roper (m) / Australia Mia Scerri (f)
  • 30 January: Cooks Classic in New Zealand Whanganui (APM No. 4)
    • 200 m winners: New Zealand Edward Osei-Nketia (m) / New Zealand Natasha Eady (f)
    • 400 m winners: New Zealand James Robertson (m) / New Zealand Camryn Smart (f)
    • 1 Mile Run winners: New Zealand Samuel Tanner (m) / New Zealand Camille Buscomb (f)
    • 400 m Hurdles winners: New Zealand Cameron French (m) / New Zealand Portia Bing (f)
    • High Jump winners: New Zealand Hamish Kerr (m) / New Zealand Josie Taylor (f)
    • Triple Jump winners: New Zealand Scott Thomson (m) / New Zealand Anna Thomsom (f)
    • Shot Put winners: New Zealand Jacko Gill (m) / New Zealand Lisa Adams (f)
    • Women's Hammer Throw winner: New Zealand Lauren Bruce
    • Javelin Throw winners: New Zealand Ben Langton Burnell (m) / New Zealand Tori Peeters (f)
  • 13 February: Porritt Classic in New Zealand Hamilton (APM No. 5)
    • 200 m winners: New Zealand Edward Osei-Nketia (m) / New Zealand Georgia Hulls (f)
    • Men's 800 m winner: New Zealand James Preston
    • Women's 1500 m winner: New Zealand Camille Buscomb
    • Men's 5000 m winner: New Zealand Hayden Wilde
    • Men's 110 m Hurdles winner: New Zealand Joshua Hawkins
    • Women's 100 m Hurdles winner: New Zealand Amy Robertson
    • 400 m Hurdles winners: New Zealand Cameron French (m) / New Zealand Portia Bing (f)
    • Men's Long Jump winner: New Zealand Shay Veitch
    • Women's Triple Jump winner: New Zealand Anna Thomson
    • Shot Put winners: New Zealand Jacko Gill (m) / New Zealand Valerie Adams (f)
    • Women's Hammer Throw winner: New Zealand Lauren Bruce
    • Javelin Throw winners: New Zealand Ben Langton Burnell (m) / New Zealand Tori Peeters (f)
  • 20 February: Capital Classic in New Zealand Wellington (APM No. 6)
    • 100 m winners: New Zealand Edward Osei-Nketia (m) / New Zealand Natasha Eady (f)
    • 400 m winners: New Zealand Hamish Gill (m) / New Zealand Camryn Smart (f)
    • Women's 800 m winner: New Zealand Katherine Camp
    • Men's 1500 m winner: New Zealand Julian Oakley
    • Men's 110 m Hurdles winner: New Zealand James Sandilands
    • Women's 100 m Hurdles winner: New Zealand Amy Robertson
    • Women's Long Jump winner: New Zealand Lili Szabó (f)
    • Men's Triple Jump winner: New Zealand Andrew Allan
    • High Jump winners: New Zealand Hamish Kerr (m) / New Zealand Keeley O'Hagan (f)
    • Pole Vault winners: New Zealand Ettiene du Preez (m) / New Zealand Olivia McTaggart (f)
    • Discus Throw winners: New Zealand Connor Bell (m) / New Zealand Savannah Scheen (f)
    • Hammer Throw winners: New Zealand Antony Nobilo (m) / New Zealand Lauren Bruce (f)
  • 25 February: Summer Super Series in Australia Canberra (APM No. 7)
    • 100 m winners: Australia Jack Hale (m) / Australia Hana Basic (f)
    • Men's 200 m winner: Australia Alex Hartmann
    • 800 m winners: Australia Peter Bol (m) / Australia Catriona Bisset (f)
    • Men's 110 m Hurdles winner: Australia Nicholas Hough
    • Women's 100 m Hurdles winner: Australia Hannah Jones
    • 3000 m Steeplechase winners: Australia Ben Buckingham (m) / Australia Cara Feain-Ryan (f)
    • Long Jump winners: Australia Chris Mitrevski (m) / Australia Annie McGuire (f)
    • Triple Jump winners: Australia Ayo Ore (m) / Australia Chloe Grenade (f)
    • High Jump winners: Australia Brandon Starc (m) / Australia Nicola McDermott (f)
    • Men's Shot Put winner: Australia Damien Birkinhead
    • Hammer Throw winners: Australia Costa Kousparis (m) / Australia Alexandra Hulley (f)
    • Women's Javelin Throw winner: Australia Mackenzie Little

Badminton

  • 16 – 20 February: 2021 European Mixed Team Badminton Championships in Finland Vantaa
    • In the final,  Denmark defeated  France, 3–0, to win their eightteeth European Mixed Team Badminton Championships.
  • 26 – 29 April: 2021 All Africa Mixed Team Championships in South Africa TBD
  • 27 April – 2 May: 2021 Badminton Asia Championships in China TBD
  • 27 April – 2 May: 2021 European Badminton Championships in Ukraine Kyiv
  • 27 April – 2 May: 2021 Pan Am Badminton Championships in Guatemala Guatemala City
  • 30 April – 2 May: 2021 African Badminton Championships in South Africa TBD
  • 12 – 19 December: 2021 BWF World Championships in Spain Huelva
  • Japan 2021 BWF Para-Badminton World Championships in Japan
  • China 2021 BWF World Junior Championships in Chengdu, China

2021 BWF World Tour

Super 1000
  • 17 – 21 March: 2021 All England Open in United Kingdom Birmingham
Super 750
Super 500
  • 6 – 11 April: 2021 Malaysia Masters in Malaysia Kuala Lumpur
  • 13 – 18 April: 2021 Singapore Open in  Singapore
Super 300
Super 100
  • 23 – 28 March: 2021 Orléans Masters in  France

2021 BWF Continental Circuit

Africa
  • 25 – 28 February: Uganda International in Uganda Kampala
    • Men's Singles: India Varun Kapur defeated India S. Sankar Muthusamy Subramanian, 21–18, 16–21, 21–17.
    • Women's Singles: India Malvika Bansod defeated India Anupama Upadhyaya, 17–21, 25–23, 21–10.
    • Men's Doubles: No competition
    • Women's Doubles: Uganda Husina Kobugabe & Uganda Mable Namakoye defeated Uganda Fadilah Mohamed Rafi & Uganda Tracy Naluwooza, 21–9, 21–17.
    • Mixed Doubles: Uganda Israel Wanagalya & Uganda Betty Apio defeated Uganda Brian Kasirye & Uganda Husina Kobugabe, 21–13, 22–20.

Bandy

  • 2021 Bandy World Championship
  • 2021 Bandy World Cup
  • Bandy World Championship U-21 2021
  • Bandy World Championship U-19 2021
  • Bandy World Championship U-17 2021
  • Bandy World Championship U-15 2021
  • Bandy World Championships for Girls U-17 2021

Baseball

  • 2021 U-23 Baseball World Cup
  • 2021 World Junior Baseball Championship
  • 2021 World Youth Baseball Championship
  • 2021 World 12U Baseball Championship

Major League Baseball

2021 Little League Baseball World Series

Basketball

National Basketball Association

National Collegiate Athletic Association

FIBA

  • 17–29 August: 2021 FIBA Asia Cup
  • 17–29 August: AfroBasket 2021 in Rwanda Rwanda
  • 6 February: 2021 FIBA Intercontinental Cup
  • 3–11 July: 2021 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup
  • 7–15 August: 2021 FIBA Under-19 Women's Basketball World Cup

FIBA Europe

National teams
Club teams
  • 15 September 2020 – 9 May: 2020–21 Basketball Champions League
  • 29 September 2020 – 14 April: 2020–21 EuroCup Basketball
  • 1 October 2020 – 9 April: 2020–21 EuroLeague (Regular season)
  • 28 October 2020 – 18 April: 2020–21 EuroLeague Women
  • 9 December 2020 – 11 April: 2020–21 EuroCup Women
    • In the final, Spain Valencia Basket defeated Italy Reyer Venezia, 82–81, to win their 1st Women EuroCup.
    • Hungary Atomerőmű KSC Szekszárd took third place.
  • 6 January – TBD 2020–21 FIBA Europe Cup
Regional competitions
  • 2 October 2020 – 16 April: 2020–21 ABA League First Division (Regular season)
  • 3 October 2020 – 11 April: 2020–21 Latvian–Estonian Basketball League
    • In the final, Estonia BC Kalev/Cramo defeated Latvia VEF Rīga, 86–75, to win their 1st Latvian–Estonian Basketball League.
    • Latvia BK Ogre took third place.
  • 13 October 2020 – April: 2020–21 BIBL season
  • 14 October 2020 – 3 March: 2020–21 WABA League (Regular season)
    • 20–21 March: WABA League (Final Four)
  • 9 November 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 ABA League Second Division
  • TBD: 2020–21 Alpe Adria Cup
  • 6 – 14 April: 2020–21 Liga Unike

FIBA Americas

National teams
  • 24 – 28 March: 2021 Centrobasket Women in  El Salvador
    • Round Robin Final Placements: 1st.  Puerto Rico, 2nd.  Virgin Islands, 3rd.  Dominican Republic, 4th.  El Salvador, 5th.  Costa Rica
Club teams
  • 31 January – 14 April: 2020–21 BCLA season

FIBA 3X3

  • 10 – 12 September: 2021 FIBA 3x3 Europe Cup in France Paris
  • 12–14 November: 2021 FIBA 3x3 AmeriCup in United States Miami, Florida

Beach handball

  • 2021 IHF Youth Beach Handball World Championship (Postponed to 2022)

Beach soccer

  • Russia 2021 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup (Russia)

Beach tennis

2021 ITF Beach Tennis World Tour

B10
  • 15 January: BTWT #1 in United Arab Emirates Dubai
    • Men's: Puerto Rico Vladimir Helmut & Puerto Rico Javier Méndez defeated South Africa Tiaan Bredenkamp & Spain Emilio Misas, 6–1, 6–0.
    • Women's: Spain Marta Apraiz & Morocco Safaa Bahman defeated Venezuela Jessica Palma & Slovakia Rebeka Zálešáková, 6–3, 6–3.
  • 16 January: BTWT #2 in United States Clearwater #1
    • Men's: Venezuela Diego Guzmán & Aruba Aksel Samardzic defeated Puerto Rico Luis Miguel Reyes Peñalverty & United States Carlos Rivera, 6–3, 1–6, [12–10].
    • Women's: United States Angela Bemquerer & United States Larissa Boechat defeated Brazil Mayra Kaefer & United States Emilie Katz, 4–6, 7–6(7–5), [10–8].
  • 17 January: BTWT #3 in United States Clearwater #2
    • Men's: Venezuela Diego Guzmán & Aruba Aksel Samardzic defeated Puerto Rico Luis Miguel Reyes Peñalverty & United States Carlos Rivera, 6–1, 6–3.
    • Women's: Brazil Mayra Kaefer & United States Emilie Katz defeated Venezuela Mariandreina Morales & United States Sherilyn Villalobos, 6–1, 6–3.
  • 15 & 16 February: BTWT #4 in Spain Las Palmas
    • Men's: Spain Javier González Rosales & Spain Santi Puente defeated Spain Alvaro García González & Spain Carlos Rodríguez Perera, 7–6(7–3), 7–5.
    • Women's: Spain Inés León Ojeda & Spain Daniela Rodríguez Perera defeated Poland Nicole Borzęcka & Poland Alina Robok, 6–3, 7–6(7–1).
  • 13 March: BTWT #5 in Portugal Ponta Delgada
  • 20 March: BTWT #6 in Portugal Angra do Heroísmo
B50
  • 22 & 23 January: BTWT #1 in United Arab Emirates Dubai
    • Men's: Russia Nikita Burmakin & Italy Paolo Tronci defeated Puerto Rico Vladimir Helmut & Puerto Rico Javier Méndez, 6–1, 6–2.
    • Women's: Spain Marta Apraiz & Slovakia Katarína Páleníková defeated Russia Ekaterina Kamenetckaia & Russia Elena Koval, 6–2, 6–4.
  • 12 – 14 February: BTWT #2 in Spain Las Palmas
    • Men's: Spain Victor López Rubio & Spain Saulo Tejada Dámaso defeated Netherlands Joeri Ertner & Netherlands Bo Groot Antink, 6–4, 6–3.
    • Women's: Spain Ariadna Costa Graell & Spain Eva Fernández Palos defeated Spain Carolina Miranda Naranjo & Spain Anely Ruiz Campos, 6–2, 6–3.

Beach volleyball

  • 2021 FIVB Beach Volleyball U21 World Championships
  • 2021 FIVB Beach Volleyball U19 World Championships

2021 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour

1 Star
  • 26 – 28 February: #1 Competition in Qatar Doha (Men's only)
    • Winners: Qatar Cherif Younousse & Qatar Ahmed Tijan
4 Stars
  • 8 – 13 March: #1 Competition in Qatar Doha

Biathlon

  • 24 – 31 January: Biathlon European Championships 2021 in Poland Duszniki-Zdrój
    • Men's 20 km Individual winner: Latvia Andrejs Rastorgujevs
    • Women's 15 km Individual winner: Poland Monika Hojnisz
    • Men's 10 km Sprint winner: Switzerland Martin Jäger
    • Women's 7.5 Sprint winner: Latvia Baiba Bendika
    • Men's 12.5 km Pursuit winner: Ukraine Artem Pryma
    • Women's 10 km Pursuit winner: Poland Kamila Żuk
    • Single Mixed Relay winners:  Germany (Stefanie Scherer & Justus Strelow)
    • 4x6 km Mixed Relay winners:  Norway (Emilie Ågheim Kalkenberg, Åsne Skrede, Erlend Bjøntegaard, Sivert Guttorm Bakken)
  • 9 – 21 February: Biathlon World Championships 2021 in Slovenia Pokljuka
  • 24 February – 7 March: Biathlon Junior World Championships 2021 in Austria Obertilliach
  • Czech Republic 2021 Summer Biathlon World Championships in Nove Mesto na Morave, Czech Republic

2020–21 Biathlon World Cup

  • 27 – 29 November 2020: WC #1 in Finland Kontiolahti #1
  • 30 November – 6 December 2020: WC #2 in Finland Kontiolahti #2
  • 11 – 13 December 2020: WC #3 in Austria Hochfilzen #1
  • 17 – 20 December 2020: WC #4 in Austria Hochfilzen #2
    • Men's 10 km Sprint winner: Norway Sturla Holm Lægreid
    • Women's 7.5 Sprint winner: Norway Tiril Eckhoff
    • Men's 12.5 km Pursuit winner: Norway Sturla Holm Lægreid
    • Women's 10 km Pursuit winner: Norway Tiril Eckhoff
    • Men's 15 km Mass Start winner: Germany Arnd Peiffer
    • Women's 12.5 km Mass Start winner: Norway Marte Olsbu Røiseland
  • 4 – 10 January: WC #5 in Germany Oberhof #1
    • Men's 10 km Sprint winner: Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø
    • Women's 7.5 km Sprint winner: Norway Tiril Eckhoff
    • Men's 12.5 km Pursuit winner: Norway Sturla Holm Lægreid
    • Women's 10 km Pursuit winner: Norway Tiril Eckhoff
    • Single Mixed Relay winners:  France (Julia Simon & Émilien Jacquelin)
    • 4x6 km Mixed Relay winners:  Russia (Uliana Kaisheva, Svetlana Mironova, Alexander Loginov, Eduard Latypov)
  • 11 – 17 January: WC #5 in Germany Oberhof #2
    • Men's 10 km Sprint winner: Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø
    • Women's 7.5 km Sprint winner: Norway Tiril Eckhoff
    • Men's 15 km Mass Start winner: Norway Tarjei Bø
    • Women's 12.5 km Mass Start winner: France Julia Simon
    • Men's 4x7.5 km Relay winners:  France Simon Desthieux, Quentin Fillon Maillet, Fabien Claude, Émilien Jacquelin)
    • Women's 4x6 km Relay winners:  Germany (Vanessa Hinz, Janina Hettich, Denise Herrmann, Franziska Preuß)
  • 18 – 24 January: WC #6 in Italy Antholz-Anterselva
    • Men's 20 km Individual winner: Russia Alexander Loginov
    • Women's 15 km Individual winner: Austria Lisa Hauser
    • Men's 15 km Mass Start winner: Norway Johannes Thingnes Bø
    • Women's 12.5 km Mass Start winner: France Julia Simon
    • Men's 4x7.5 km Relay winners:  France Simon Desthieux, Quentin Fillon Maillet, Antonin Guigonnat, Émilien Jacquelin)
    • Women's 4x6 km Relay winners:  Russia (Evgeniya Pavlova, Tatiana Akimova, Svetlana Mironova, Uliana Kaisheva)

2020–21 IBU Cup

  • 11 – 17 January: IBU Cup #1 in Germany Arber #1
    • Men's 10 km Sprint winners: Norway Aleksander Fjeld Andersen (No. 1) / Norway Filip Fjeld Andersen (No. 2)
    • Women's 7.5 km Sprint winners: Russia Tatiana Akimova (2 times)
    • Men's 4x7.5 km Relay winners:  Germany (Justus Strelow, Dominic Schmuck, Danilo Riethmüller, Philipp Nawrath)
    • Women's 4x6 km Relay winners:  Russia (Valeriia Vasnetcova, Anastasiia Goreeva, Anastasia Shevchenko, Tatiana Akimova)
  • 18 – 23 January: IBU Cup #2 in Germany Arber #2
    • Men's 15 km Short Individual winner: Norway Endre Strømsheim
    • Women's 12.5 km Short Individual winner: Austria Tamara Steiner
    • Men's 10 km Sprint winner: Norway Filip Fjeld Andersen
    • Women's 7.5 km Sprint winner: Russia Valeriia Vasnetcova
    • Single Mixed Relay winners:  Norway (Endre Strømsheim & Karoline Erdal)
    • 4x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners:  Russia (Said Karimulla Khalili, Daniil Serokhvostov, Anastasiia Goreeva, Valeriia Vasnetcova)

Bobsleigh & Skeleton

  • 8 – 10 January: IBSF European Championships 2021 in Germany Winterberg
  • 22 – 24 January: IBSF Junior World Championships 2021 in Switzerland St. Moritz
    • U23 Two-man winners:  Romania (Mihai Cristian Tentea & Nicolae Ciprian Daroczi)
    • U23 Two-woman winners:  France (Margot Boch & Madison Stringer)
    • Junior Two-man winners:  Germany (Hans Peter Hannighofer & Christian Röder)
    • Junior Two-woman winners:  Germany (Laura Nolte & Deborah Levi)
    • U23 Four-man winners:  Russia (Vyacheslav Popov, Dmitrii Abramov, Andrey Andriyanov, Egor Gryaznov)
    • Junior Four-man winners:  Switzerland (Michael Vogt, Silvio Weber, Sandro Michel, Andreas Haas)
    • U20 Skeleton winners: Germany Lukas Nydegger (m) / Russia Anastasiia Tsyganova (f)
    • Junior Skeleton winners: Russia Evgeniy Rukosuev (m) / Germany Hannah Neise (f)
  • 5 – 14 February: IBSF World Championships 2021 in United States Lake Placid
  • 2021 IBSF Para Sport World Championship
  • 2021 World Junior Bobsleigh Championships
  • 2021 World Junior Skeleton Championships

2020–21 Bobsleigh World Cup

  • 20 & 21 November 2020: World Cup #1 in Latvia Sigulda #1
  • 28 & 29 November 2020: World Cup #2 in Latvia Sigulda #2
    • Two-man winners:  Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Thorsten Margis) (No. 1) /  Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Alexander Schüller) (No. 2)
    • Two-woman winners:  Germany (Laura Nolte & Leonie Fiebig)
  • 12 & 13 December 2020: World Cup #3 in Austria Innsbruck #1
    • Two-man winners:  Germany (Johannes Lochner & Eric Franke) (No. 1) /  Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Thorsten Margis) (No. 2)
  • 19 & 20 December 2020: World Cup #4 in Austria Innsbruck #2
    • Two-man winners:  Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Thorsten Margis) (2 times)
    • Two-women winners:  Germany (Stephanie Schneider & Leonie Fiebig)
  • 8 – 10 January: World Cup #5 in Germany Winterberg
    • Two-man winners:  Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Thorsten Margis)
    • Four-man winners:  Germany (Francesco Friedrich, Thorsten Margis, Candy Bauer, Alexander Schüller)
    • Two-woman winners:  Germany (Laura Nolte & Deborah Levi)
  • 16 & 17 January: World Cup #6 in Switzerland St. Moritz
    • Two-man winners:  Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Alexander Schüller)
    • Four-man winners:  Germany (Francesco Friedrich, Thorsten Margis, Martin Grothkopp, Alexander Schüller)
    • Two-women winners:  Germany (Stephanie Schneider & Leonie Fiebig)
  • 23 & 24 January: World Cup #7 in Germany Königssee
    • Two-man winners:  Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Thorsten Margis)
    • Four-man winners:  Germany (Francesco Friedrich, Thorsten Margis, Martin Grothkopp, Alexander Schüller)
    • Two-women winners:  Germany (Kim Kalicki & Ann-Christin Strack)
  • 30 & 31 January: World Cup #8 in Austria Innsbruck #3 (final)

2020–21 Skeleton World Cup

2020–21 Bobsleigh Europe Cup

  • 5 & 6 December 2020: EC #1 in Germany Winterberg
    • Two-man winners:  Germany (Hans Peter Hannighofer & Christian Roeder) (2 times)
    • Two-women winners:  Germany (Stephanie Schneider & Tamara Seer)
  • 19 & 20 December 2020: EC #2 in Latvia Sigulda
    • Two-man winners:  Latvia (Dāvis Kaufmanis & Krists Lindenblats) (No. 1) /  Russia (Maksim Andrianov & Maxim Belugin) (No. 2)
    • Two-women winners:  Russia (Alena Osipenko & Aleksandra Tarasova) (2 times)
  • 7 – 9 January: EC #3 in Germany Altenberg
    • Two-man winners:  Germany (Hans Peter Hannighofer & Christian Roeder) (2 times)
    • Two-women winners:  Germany (Stephanie Schneider & Claudia Schüßler)
    • Four-man winners:  Canada (Christopher Spring, Mark Mlakar, Shaquille Murray-Lawrence, Mike Evelyn)
  • 13 – 15 January: EC #4 in Austria Innsbruck
    • Two-man winners:  Switzerland (Michael Kuonen & Marco Tanner)
    • Two-women winners:  Germany (Lisa Buckwitz & Cynthia Kwofie)
    • Four-man winners:  Germany (Philipp Zielasko, Joshua Kossmann, Benedikt Hertel, Erec Maximilian Bruckert) (2 times)
  • 20 & 21 February: EC #5 in Germany Königssee (final)
    • Two-man winners:  Romania (Mihai Cristian Tentea & Nicolae Ciprian Daroczi)
    • Two-women winners:
    • Four-man winners:

2021 Bobsleigh North American Cup

  • 15 – 17 January: NAC #1 in United States Park City #1
  • 21 – 23 January: NAC #2 in United States Park City #2
    • Two-women winners:  United States (Nicole Vogt & Kaysha Love) (No. 1) /  United States (Nicole Vogt & Kelsey Kiel) (No. 2) /  United States (Nicole Vogt & Colleen Fotsch) (No. 3)
    • Four-man winners:  United States (Hunter Church, Charles Volker, Joshua Williamson, Hakeem Abdul-Saboor) (3 times)
  • 1 – 4 February: NAC #3 in United States Lake Placid
    • Two-man winners:  United States (Hunter Church & Hakeem Abdul-Saboor) (No. 1) /  United States (Hunter Church & Joshua Williamson)
    • Two-women winners:
    • Four-man winners:  United States (Hunter Church, Charles Volker, Joshua Williamson, Hakeem Abdul-Saboor) (2 times)

2020–21 Skeleton Europe Cup

  • 27 & 28 November 2020: EC #1 in Germany Winterberg
    • Men's winners: Germany Felix Seibel (No. 1) / Germany Kilian von Schleinitz (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Germany Sarah Wimmer (2 times)
  • 19 December 2020: EC #2 in Latvia Sigulda
    • Winners: Latvia Krists Netlaus (m) / Germany Stefanie Votz (f)
  • 13 January: EC #3 in Germany Altenberg
    • Winners: United Kingdom Matt Weston (m) / Germany Corinna Leipold (f)
  • 6 February: EC #4 in Germany Königssee
    • Winners: Germany Cedric Renner (m) / Germany Stefanie Votz (f)
  • 19 February: EC #5 in Austria Innsbruck (final)
    • Winners: Russia Evgeniy Rukosuev (m) / Russia Alina Tararychenkova (f)

2021 Skeleton Intercontinental Cup

2021 Skeleton North American Cup

  • 26 – 28 January: NAC #1 in United States Park City #1
    • Men's winners: United States John Daly (3 times)
    • Women's winners: United States Megan Henry (3 times)
    • 4 & 5 February: NAC #2 in United States Lake Placid (final)
    • Men's winners: United States John Daly (2 times)
    • Women's winners: United States Savannah Graybill (No. 1) / United States Mystique Ro (No. 2)

2020–21 Women's Monobob World Series

  • 5 December 2020: World Series #1 in Germany Winterberg
    • Women's Monobob winner: Russia Nadezhda Sergeeva
  • 12 December 2020: World Series #2 in Austria Innsbruck
    • Women's Monobob winner: Australia Breeana Walker
  • 14 January: World Series #3 in Austria Innsbruck
    • Women's Monobob winner: Austria Melissa Lotholz
  • 15 – 17 January: World Series #4 in United States Park City
    • Women's Monobob winners: United States Nicole Vogt (2 times) / Jamaica Carrie Russell (No. 3)
  • 16 January: World Series #5 in Switzerland St. Moritz
  • 23 January: World Series #6 in Germany Königssee
    • Women's Monobob winner: United States Kaillie Humphries
  • 30 January: World Series #7 in Austria Innsbruck
    • Women's Monobob winner: Australia Breeana Walker
  • 1 & 2 February: World Series #8 in United States Lake Placid
    • Women's Monobob winners: United States Nicole Vogt (2 times)
  • 13 & 14 February: World Series #9 in Germany Altenberg
    • Women's Monobob winner: United States Kaillie Humphries
  • 20 February: World Series #10 in Germany Königssee
    • Women's Monobob winners: Switzerland Martina Fontanive / Switzerland Melanie Hasler

Bowling

  • 24 January – 21 February: 27th PBA Players Championship in Jupiter, FL (winner: Kyle Troup)
  • 28 February: 56th PBA Tournament of Champions in Jupiter, FL (winner: Francois Lavoie)
  • 13 March: 61st PBA Guaranteed Rate World Championship in Tampa, FL (winner: Tom Daugherty)
  • 13 March: WSOB XII PBA Roth/Holman Doubles Championship (winners: Andrew Anderson/Kris Prather)
  • 6–15 November: 2021 WTBA World Tenpin Bowling Championships

Bowls

  • 7 – 19 September: 2021 World Bowls Championship in Australia Gold Coast , cancelled
  • 8 – 24 January: 2021 World Indoor Bowls Championship in England Norfolk

Boxing

  • 10 – 24 April: 2021 AIBA Youth World Boxing Championships in Poland Kielce
  • 21 – 31 May: 2021 Asian Amateur Boxing Championships in India New Delhi
  • 26 October – 6 November: 2021 AIBA World Boxing Championships in Serbia Belgrade
  • October: 2021 AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships in TBD

Elite tournaments

  • 11 – 16 January: Women's Boxing EUBC European Nations Cup 2021 in Serbia Sombor (Women's Elite Only)
  • 7 – 13 February: 65th Bocskai István Memorial International Boxing Tournament in Hungary Debrecen
  • Women's
  • Men's
  • 21 – 28 February: 72nd International Boxing Tournament STRANDJA 2021 in Bulgaria Sofia
  • Women's
  • Men's
Women
  • Men's
  • 10 – 14 March: Cologne Boxing World Cup in Germany Köln
Women
  • Men's
  • 15 – 21 March: International Elite Men & Women Istanbul Bosphorus Boxing Tournament in Turkey Istanbul
Women
  • Men's
  • 1 – 7 April: International boxing tournament (group A) dedicated to the memory of the honored coach of Ukraine Nikolai Manger in Ukraine Kherson
  • 18 – 26 April: International Boxing Tournament "St. Petersburg Governor's Cup" in Russia Saint Petersburg
  • 22 – 28 April: 58th Belgrade Winner in Serbia Belgrade
  • 3 – 5 May: Open regional Boxing Tournament devoted to Victory Day in Belarus Gomel

Canadian football

Canoeing

  • 12 – 14 March: 2021 Oceania Canoe Slalom Championships in New Zealand Auckland
  • 6 – 9 May: 2021 European Canoe Slalom Championships in Italy Ivrea
    • K1 winners: Czech Republic Vít Přindiš (m) / Austria Corinna Kuhnle (f)
    • C1 winners: France Denis Gargaud Chanut (m) / Spain Miren Lazkano (f)
    • Extreme winners: Czech Republic Vít Přindiš (m) / Czech Republic Kateřina Minařík Kudějová (f)
  • 11 June – 12 September: 2021 Canoe Slalom World Cup
    • K1 winners: Czech Republic Vít Přindiš (m) / Australia Jessica Fox (f)
    • C1 winners: France Denis Gargaud Chanut (m) / Czech Republic Tereza Fišerová (f)
    • Extreme winners: Czech Republic Vít Přindiš (m) / Germany Caroline Trompeter (f)
  • 6 – 11 July: 2021 World Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships in Slovenia Ljubljana
    • K1 winners: Czech Republic Jakub Krejčí (m U23) / France Titouan Castryck (m jr) / France Coline Charel (f U23) / France Evy Leibfarth (f jr)
    • C1 winners: France Nicolas Gestin (m U23) / Italy Martino Barzon (m jr) / United Kingdom Bethan Forrow (f U23) / Czech Republic Klára Kneblová (f jr)
    • Extreme winners: Switzerland Dimitri Marx (m U23) / United States Kaelin Friedenson (m jr) / United Kingdom Nikita Setchell (f U23) / Switzerland Jessica Duc (f jr)
  • 3 – 6 September: 2021 ICF World Junior and U23 Canoe Sprint Championships in Portugal Montemor-o-Velho
  • 16 – 19 September: 2021 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Denmark Copenhagen
  • 22 – 26 September: 2021 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Slovakia Bratislava
    • K1 winners: France Boris Neveu (m) / Germany Ricarda Funk (f)
    • C1 winners: Czech Republic Václav Chaloupka (m) / Germany Elena Apel (f)
    • Extreme winners: United Kingdom Joe Clarke (m) / Australia Jessica Fox (f)
  • 22 – 26 September: 2021 Wildwater Canoeing World Championships in Slovakia Bratislava
  • 30 September – 3 October: 2021 ICF Canoe Marathon World Championships in Romania Pitesti
  • Cancelled: 2021 ICF Canoe Polo World Championships in Italy Rome

Cheerleading

  • TBD: 2021 The Cheerleading Worlds

Chess

Cricket

Cross-country skiing

  • 8 – 14 February: 2021 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in Finland Vuokatti
    • Junior Sprint Classic winners: Finland Niilo Moilainen (m) / Poland Monika Skinder (f)
    • U23 Sprint Classic winners: Russia Alexander Terentev (m) / Germany Lisa Lohmann (f)
    • Men's Junior 10 km Freestyle winner: Norway Martin Kirkeberg Mørk
    • Women's Junior 5 km Freestyle winner: Russia Veronika Stepanova
    • Men's U23 15 km Freestyle winner: France Hugo Lapalus
    • Women's U23 10 km Freestyle winner: Poland Izabela Marcisz
    • Men's Junior 30 km Mass Start Classic winner: Russia Alexander Ivshin
    • Women's Junior 15 km Mass Start Classic winner: Norway Margrethe Bergane
    • Mixed U23 4x5 km Relay winners:  Norway
    • Men's Junior 4x5 km Relay winners:  Norway
    • Women's Junior 4x3.3 km Relay winners:  Sweden
  • 24 February – 7 March: FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2021 in Germany Oberstdorf

2021 Tour de Ski

  • 1 – 3 January: TdS #1 in Switzerland Val Müstair
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Italy Federico Pellegrino (m) / Sweden Linn Svahn (f)
    • Men's 15 km Classic Mass Start winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km Classic Mass Start winner: Sweden Linn Svahn
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: United States Jessie Diggins
  • 5 & 6 January: TdS #2 in Italy Toblach
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: United States Jessie Diggins
    • Men's 15 km Classic Pursuit winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km Classic Pursuit winner: Russia Yuliya Stupak
  • 8 – 10 January: TdS #3 in Italy Val di Fiemme
    • Men's 15 km Classic Mass Start winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km Classic Mass Start winner: Russia Natalya Nepryayeva
    • Sprint Classic winners: Sweden Oskar Svensson (m) / Sweden Linn Svahn
    • Men's 10 km Classic Mass Start Climb winner: Russia Denis Spitsov
    • Women's 10 km Classic Mass Start Climb winner: Sweden Ebba Andersson
  • Overall winners: Russia Alexander Bolshunov (m) / United States Jessie Diggins (f)

2020–21 FIS Cross-Country World Cup

  • 27–29 November 2020: WC #1 in Finland Ruka
  • 12 & 13 December 2020: WC #2 in Switzerland Davos
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Italy Federico Pellegrino (m) / United States Rosie Brennan (f)
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: United States Rosie Brennan
  • 19 & 20 December 2020: WC #3 in Germany Dresden
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Italy Federico Pellegrino (m) / Switzerland Nadine Fähndrich (f)
    • Team Sprint Freestyle winners:  Russia I (Alexander Bolshunov, Gleb Retivykh) (m) /  Switzerland I (Laurien van der Graaff, Nadine Fähndrich)
  • 23 & 24 January: WC #7 in Finland Lahti
    • Men's 30 km Skiathlon winner: Norway Emil Iversen
    • Women's 15 km Skiathlon winner: Norway Therese Johaug
    • Men's 4 × 7.5 km Relay C/F winners:  Norway (Pål Golberg, Emil Iversen, Sjur Røthe, Simen Hegstad Krüger)
    • Women's 4 × 5 km Relay C/F winners:  Norway (Tiril Udnes Weng, Therese Johaug, Helene Marie Fossesholm, Heidi Weng)
  • 29 – 31 January: WC #8 in Sweden Falun
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: United States Jessie Diggins
    • Men's 15 km Classic Mass Start winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km Classic Mass Start winner: Sweden Linn Svahn
    • Sprint Classic winners: Norway Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Sweden Linn Svahn
  • 6 & 7 February: WC #9 in Sweden Ulricehamn
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Sweden Oskar Svensson (m) / Sweden Maja Dahlqvist (f)
    • Team Sprint Freestyle winners:  Italy I (Francesco de Fabiani, Federico Pellegrino) (m) /  Slovenia (Eva Urevc, Anamarija Lampič)
  • 13 & 14 March: WC #10 in Switzerland Engadin (final)
    • Men's 15 km C Mass Start winner: Russia Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 10 km C Mass Start winner: Russia Yuliya Stupak
    • Men's 50 km F Pursuit winner: Norway Simen Hegstad Krüger
    • Women's 30 km F Pursuit: Norway Heidi Weng

2020–21 OPA Alpen Cross Country Cup

  • 5 & 6 December 2020: OPA #1 in Switzerland Ulrichen
    • Men's 1.5 Sprint Freestyle winner: Russia Artem Maltsev
    • Women's 1.3 Sprint Freestyle winner: Switzerland Nadine Fähndrich
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Russia Artem Maltsev
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Italy Francesca Franchi
  • 18 – 20 December 2020: OPA #2 in Italy Formazza
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Spain Imanol Rojo
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Italy Anna Comarella
    • Men's 20 km Freestyle Must Start winner: France Adrien Backscheider
    • Women's 15 km Freestyle Must Start winner: Italy Ilaria Debertolis
  • 6 & 7 March: OPA #3 in France Prémanon
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: France Gérard Agnellet
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: France Coralie Bentz
    • Men's 15 km Classic Pursuit winner: Switzerland Cedric Steiner
    • Women's 10 km Classic Pursuit winner: France Coralie Bentz
  • 12 – 14 March: OPA #4 in Slovenia Pokljuka
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: France Lucas Chanavat (m) / Germany Coletta Rydzek (f)
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Germany Andreas Katz
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Germany Katherine Sauerbrey
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Germany Friedrich Moch
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Germany Lisa Lohmann

2021 FIS Cross Country Balkan Cup

  • 16 & 17 January: BC #1 in Croatia Ravna Gora
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Romania Paul Constantin Pepene
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Croatia Vedrana Malec
    • 1.5 Sprint Freestyle winners: Romania Raul Mihai Popa (m) / Croatia Nika Jagečić (f)
  • 30 & 31 January: BC #2 in Serbia Zlatibor
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Romania Paul Constantin Pepene
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Russia Varvara Prokhorova
  • 3 & 4 February: BC #3 in North Macedonia Mavrovo
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winners: Croatia Krešimir Crnković (2 times)
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winners: Croatia Vedrana Malec (2 times)
  • 6 & 7 February: BC #4 in Greece 3–5 Pigadia
    • Event cancelled.
  • 19 & 20 February: BC #5 in Bosnia and Herzegovina Dvorista/Pale
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winners: Croatia Krešimir Crnković (2 times)
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winners: Croatia Anika Kožica (No. 1) / Croatia Tena Hadžić (No. 2)
  • 13 & 14 March: BC #6 in Romania Fundata
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Romania Paul Constantin Pepene
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Romania Tímea Lőrincz
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Romania Paul Constantin Pepene
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner Romania Tímea Lőrincz
  • 18 – 20 March: BC #7 in Turkey Bolu-Gerede (final)
    • Men's 10 km C winner: Romania Paul Constantin Pepene
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Estonia Kaidy Kaasiku
    • Men's 10 km F Freestyle winner: Romania Paul Constantin Pepene
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner Estonia Kaidy Kaasiku
    • Men's Sprint F winner: Romania Paul Constantin Pepene
    • Women's 5 km C winner: Estonia Kaidy Kaasiku

2020–21 East European Cup

  • 29 November – 2 December 2020: EEC #1 in Russia Vershina Tea
    • Men's 1.7 Sprint Freestyle winner: Russia Denis Filimonov
    • Women's 1.5 Sprint Freestyle winner: Russia Marina Chernousova
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Russia Ivan Kirillov
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Russia Liliya Vasilyeva
    • Men's 1.7 Sprint Classic winner: Russia Andrey Kuznetsov
    • Women's 1.5 Sprint Classic winner: Russia Anastasiya Faleeva
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Russia Artem Nikolaev
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Russia Liliya Vasilyeva
  • 23 – 27 December 2020: EEC #2 in Russia Krasnogorsk
    • 1.4 km Freestyle winners: Russia Denis Filimonov (m) / Belarus Anastasia Kirillova (f)
    • 1.4 Sprint Classic winners: Russia Sergey Ardashev (m) / Russia Olga Tsareva (f)
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Russia Dmitriy Bagrashov
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Russia Ekaterina Smirnova
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Russia Ilia Poroshkin
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Russia Nataliya Mekryukova
  • 4 – 7 January: EEC #3 in Belarus Minsk/Raubichi
    • 1.5 km Sprint Classic winners: Russia Anton Timashov (m) / Belarus Anastasia Kirillova (f)
    • Men's 10.0 km Classic winner: Russia Andrey Larkov
    • Women's 5.0 km Classic winner: Belarus Anastasia Kirillova
    • Men's 10.0 km Freestyle winner: Russia Anton Timashov
    • Women's 5.0 km Freestyle winner: Russia Liliya Vasilyeva
  • 22 January: EEC #4 in Russia Krasnogorsk
    • 1.4 km Freestyle winners: Russia Andrey Krasnov (m) / Belarus Anastasia Kirillova (f)
  • 5 – 7 February: EEC #5 in Russia Krasnogorsk
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Russia Andrey Larkov
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Russia Lidia Durkina
    • 1.5 Sprint Freestyle winners: Russia Andrey Krasnov (m) / Russia Elizaveta Shalaboda (f)
  • 11 – 13 February: EEC #6 in Kazakhstan Almaty
    • Men's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winner: Russia Andrey Krasnov
    • Women's 1.1 km Sprint Classic winner: Russia Lilia Vasilieva
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Russia Artem Nikolaev
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Russia Lilia Vasilieva
    • Men's 20 km Freestyle Mass Start winner: Russia Ivan Kirillov
    • Women's 15 km Freestyle Mass Start winner: Russia Lilia Vasilieva
  • 27 February – 3 March: EEC #7 in Russia Syktyvkar (final)
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Russia Ilya Poroshkin
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Russia Alija Iksanova
    • 1.39 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Russia Fyodor Nazarov (m) / Russia Anna Grukhvina (f)
    • Skiathlon winners: Russia Anton Timashov (m) / Russia Ekaterina Smirnova (f)

2021 FIS Cross Country Far East Cup

  • 19 & 20 December 2020: FEC #1 in South Korea Alpencia
    • Event cancelled.
  • 25 – 27 December 2020: FEC #2 in Japan Otoineppu
    • Event cancelled.
  • 6 January: FEC #3 in Japan Sapporo
    • Event cancelled.
  • 3 & 4 February: FEC #4 in South Korea Alpencia
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: South Korea Lee Jin-bok
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: South Korea Lee Chae-won
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: South Korea Kim Eun-ho
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: South Korea Lee Chae-won
  • 12 & 13 February: FEC #5 in Japan Hakusan Shiramine Onsen (final)
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Japan Takatsugu Uda
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Japan Rin Sobue

2020–21 FIS Cross Country Slavic Cup

  • 19 & 20 December 2020: SC #1 in Poland Zakopane #1
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Romania Paul Constantin Pepene
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Latvia Patrīcija Eiduka
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Czech Republic Petr Knop
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Latvia Patrīcija Eiduka
  • 29 & 30 December 2020: SC #2 in Slovakia Štrbské Pleso #1
    • Event cancelled.
  • 20 & 21 February: SC #3 in Slovakia Štrbské Pleso #2
    • Event cancelled.
  • 20 & 21 March: SC #4 in Poland Zakopane #2
    • 1.2 Sprint Classic winners: Czech Republic Tomáš Kalivoda (m) / Slovakia Alena Procházková (f)
    • Men's 30 km Freestyle Must Start winner: Czech Republic Petr Knop
    • Women's 15 km Freestyle Must Start winner: Slovakia Alena Procházková
  • 27 March: SC #5 in Slovakia Kremnica (final)
    • Event cancelled.

2021 FIS Cross Country North American Cup

Cue sports

  • 7 – 11 December: 2021 UMB World Three-cushion Championship in Egypt Sharm el-Sheikh
    • Netherlands Dick Jaspers defeated Turkey Murat Naci Çoklu, 50–47.

Curling

  • 2 – 11 April 2021: 2021 World Men's Curling Championship in Canada Calgary, Canada
    •  Sweden defeated  Scotland, 10–5, to win Sweden's third consecutive and tenth overall World Men's Curling Championship title.
  • 30 April – 9 May 2021: 2021 World Women's Curling Championship in Canada Calgary, Canada
  • 17 – 23 May 2021: 2021 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship in Scotland Aberdeen, Scotland

Cycling – BMX

Cycling – Cross

Continental and World Championships
  • 7 & 8 November 2020: 2020 UEC Cyclo-cross European Championships in Netherlands 's-Hertogenbosch
    • Elite winners: Belgium Eli Iserbyt (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)
    • U23 winners: Netherlands Ryan Kamp (m) / Netherlands Puck Pieterse (f)
  • 30 & 31 January: 2021 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in Belgium Ostend

2020–21 UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup

  • 29 November 2020: WC #1 in Czech Republic Tábor
    • Elite winners: Belgium Michael Vanthourenhout (m) / Netherlands Lucinda Brand (f)
    • U23 winner: United Kingdom Thomas Mein
    • Juniors winners: Czech Republic Matěj Stránský (b) / United Kingdom Zoe Backstedt (f)
  • 20 December 2020: WC #2 in Belgium Namur
  • 27 December 2020: WC #3 in Belgium Dendermonde
  • 3 January: WC #4 in Netherlands Hulst
    • Elite winners: Netherlands Mathieu van der Poel (m) / Netherlands Denise Betsema
  • 24 January: WC #5 in Belgium Overijse (final)
    • Elite winners: Belgium Wout van Aert (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)

2020–21 Cyclo-cross Superprestige

  • 11 October 2020: Superprestige #1 in Netherlands Gieten
    • Elite winners: Belgium Toon Aerts (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)
  • 24 October 2020: Superprestige #2 in Belgium Oostkamp
    • Elite winners: Belgium Eli Iserbyt (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)
    • Juniors winner: Belgium Jente Michels
  • 11 November 2020: Superprestige #3 in Belgium Niel
  • 22 November 2020: Superprestige #4 in Belgium Merksplas
    • Elite winners: Belgium Michael Vanthourenhout (m) / Netherlands Lucinda Brand (f)
  • 6 December 2020: Superprestige #5 in Belgium Boom
    • Elite winners: Belgium Eli Iserbyt (m) / Netherlands Lucinda Brand (f)
  • 13 December 2020: Superprestige #6 in Belgium Gavere
  • 26 December 2020: Superprestige #7 in Belgium Heusden-Zolder
  • 6 February: Superprestige #8 in Belgium Middelkerke (final)
    • Winners: Belgium Laurens Sweeck (m) / Netherlands Denise Betsema (f)

EKZ CrossTour 2020-2021

  • 13 September 2020: EKZ CrossTour #1 in Switzerland Baden
    • Elite winners: Switzerland Lars Forster (m) / Germany Elisabeth Brandau (f)
    • Juniors winner: Belgium Aaron Dockx
  • 18 October 2020: EKZ CrossTour #2 in Switzerland Bern
    • Elite winners: Belgium Michael Vanthourenhout (m) / Netherlands Denise Betsema (f)
    • Juniors winner: Switzerland Nils Aebersold
  • 2 January: EKZ CrossTour #3 in Switzerland Hittnau (final)

Ethias Cross 2020-2021

  • 26 September 2020: Ethias Cross #1 in Belgium Lokeren
    • Elite winners: Belgium Eli Iserbyt (m) / Netherlands Aniek van Alphen (f)
  • 3 October 2020: Ethias Cross #2 in Belgium Kruibeke
  • 17 October 2020: Ethias Cross #3 in Belgium Beringen
    • Elite winners: Belgium Toon Aerts (m) / Netherlands Denise Betsema (f)
    • Juniors winner: Italy Lorenzo Masciarelli
  • 14 November 2020: Ethias Cross #4 in Belgium Leuven
    • Elite winners: Belgium Laurens Sweeck (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)
  • 22 December 2020: Ethias Cross #5 in Belgium Essen
  • 30 December 2020: Ethias Cross #6 in Belgium Bredene
    • Elite winners: Netherlands Mathieu van der Poel (m) / Hungary Kata Blanka Vas (f)
  • 13 February: Ethias Cross #7 in Belgium Eeklo
    • Elite winners: Belgium Quinten Hermans (m) / Netherlands Denise Betsema (f)
  • 20 February: Ethias Cross #8 in Belgium Sint-Niklaas (final)
    • Elite winners: Belgium Eli Iserbyt (m) / Netherlands Denise Betsema (f)

Toi Toi Cup 2020-2021

  • 26 September 2020: Toi Toi Cup #1 in Czech Republic Mladá Boleslav
    • Elite winners: Czech Republic Michael Boroš (m) / Italy Sara Casasola (f)
    • Juniors winners: Czech Republic Matěj Stránský (b) / Czech Republic Julia Kopecky (g)
  • 27 September 2020: Toi Toi Cup #2 in Czech Republic Holé Vrchy
    • Elite winners: Belgium Lander Loockx (m) / Italy Sara Casasola (f)
    • Juniors winners: Czech Republic Matěj Stránský (b) / Czech Republic Julia Kopecky (g)
  • 15 November 2020: Toi Toi Cup #3 in Czech Republic Hlinsko
    • Cancelled.
  • 17 November 2020: Toi Toi Cup #4 in Czech Republic Rýmařov
    • Elite winners: Czech Republic Michael Boroš (m) / Hungary Kata Blanka Vas (f)
    • Juniors winners: Czech Republic Matěj Stránský (b) / Czech Republic Anna Růžičková (g)
  • 22 November 2020: Toi Toi Cup #5 in Czech Republic Jičín
    • Elite winners: Italy Jakob Dorigoni (m) / Belgium Joyce Vanderbeken (f)
    • Juniors winners: Czech Republic Matěj Stránský (b) / Czech Republic Julia Kopecky (g)
  • 12 December 2020: Toi Toi Cup #6 in Czech Republic Kolín (final)
    • Elite winners: Poland Marek Konwa (m) / Czech Republic Pavla Havlíková (f)

X2O Badkamers Trofee 2020-2021

  • 31 October 2020: X2O Badkamers Trofee #1 in Belgium Oudenaarde
    • Elite winners: Belgium Eli Iserbyt (m) / Netherlands Annemarie Worst (f)
  • 28 November 2020: X2O Badkamers Trofee #2 in Belgium Kortrijk
  • 12 December 2020: X2O Badkamers Trofee #3 in Belgium Antwerp
  • 23 December 2020: X2O Badkamers Trofee #4 in Belgium Herentals
    • Elite winners: Belgium Wout van Aert (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)
  • 1 January: X20 Badkamers Trofee #5 in Belgium Baal
    • Elite winners: Netherlands Mathieu van der Poel (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)
  • 23 January: X2O Badkamers Trofee #6 in Belgium Hamme
    • Elite winners: Netherlands Mathieu van der Poel (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)
  • 7 February: X2O Badkamers Trofee #7 in Belgium Lille
    • Elite winners: Belgium Laurens Sweeck (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)
  • 14 February: X2O Badkamers Trofee #8 in Belgium Brussels (final)
    • Elite winners: Belgium Toon Aerts (m) / Netherlands Ceylin del Carmen Alvarado (f)

Cycling – Mountain Bike

2020 Summer Olympics

  • 26 & 27 July: Mountain Bike ath 2020 Summer Olimpics in Japan Tokyo

International mountain biking events

  • 24 – 28 March: American Mountain Bike Continental Championships in Puerto Rico Salinas (XCO/XCR/XCE)
    • Elite XCO winners: Mexico Gerardo Ulloa (m) / Mexico Daniela Campuzano (f)
    • U23 XCO winners: Chile Martín Vidaurre Kossman (m) / United States Savilia Blunk (f)
    • Junior XCO winners: Puerto Rico Camilo Gómez (m) / United States Ruth Holcomb (f)
    • Elite XCE winners: Puerto Rico Jacob Morales Ortega (m) / Puerto Rico Kiara Marrero (f)
    • Elite XCC winners: Mexico Gerardo Ulloa (m) / United States Kelsey Urban (f)
    • XCR winners:  United States (Russell Finsterwald, Bradyn Lange, Ruth Holcomb, Ethan Villaneda, Madigan Munro, Savilia Blunk)
  • 23 April: American Mountain Bike Continental Championships in Chile San Pedro de Atacama and Antofagasta (XCM)
  • 2 May: 2021 UCI Mountain Bike World Championships in Austria Graz (XCE)
  • 20 June: European Continental Championships in Switzerland Evolène (XCM)
  • 26 June: European Continental Championships in Spain Val d'Aran (Ultra XCM)
  • 8 – 11 July: European Continental Championships in Serbia Novi Sad (XCO/XCR/XCE)
  • 27 July – 1 August: European Continental Championships in Slovenia Maribor (DHI)
  • 17 – 22 August: UCI Mountain Bike Masters World Championships in France Pra-Loup
  • 25 – 29 August: 2021 UCI Mountain Bike World Championships in Italy Val di Sole (XCO/XCC/XCR/DHI/E-MTB/4X)
  • 25 & 26 September: UCI Mountain Bike Masters World Championships in Italy II Ciocco
  • 2 October: UCI Mountain Bike Marathon World Championships in Italy Capoliveri
  • 22 – 24 October: Asian Continental Championships in  Myanmar (XCO/DHI/XCR/XCE)

2021 UCI Mountain Bike World Cup

Cycling – Para-cycling

  • TBD: 2021 UCI Para-cycling Track World Championships
  • TBD: 2021 UCI Para-cycling Road World Championships

Cycling – Road

  • 2 – 6 March: 2021 African Road Championships in Egypt Giza
    • Senior Road Race winners: South Africa Ryan Gibbons (m) / South Africa Carla Oberholzer (f)
    • Junior Road Race winners: Rwanda Etienne Tuyizere (m) / South Africa Chanté Olivier (f)
    • Senior ITT winners: South Africa Ryan Gibbons (m) / South Africa Carla Oberholzer (f)
    • Junior ITT winners: South Africa Pedri Crause (m) / South Africa Chanté Olivier (f)
    • Senior TTT winners:  South Africa (Ryan Gibbons, Kent Main, Gustav Basson, Jason Oosthuizen) (m) /  South Africa (Frances Janse van Rensburg, Carla Oberholzer, Hayley Preen, Maroesjka Matthee) (f)
    • Junior TTT winners:  Algeria (Salah Eddine Ayoubi Cherki, Abdelkrim Ferkous, Mohamed Redouane Brinis, Khaled Mansouri) (m) /  South Africa (Chanté Olivier, Ainsli de Beer, Amber Hindmarch, McKenzie Pedro) (f)
    • Mixed TTT winners:  South Africa (Gustav Basson, Carla Oberholzer, Frances Janse van Rensburg, Hayley Preen, Ryan Gibbons, Kent Main)
  • TBD: 2021 UCI Road World Championships in Bruges and Leuven, Belgium

2021 UCI World Tour

2021 UCI Women's World Tour

Cycling – Track

  • 10 – 13 March: 2021 African Track Cycling Championships in Egypt Cairo
    •  South Africa won overall gold medals tally and overall medal tally.
  • 13–17 October: 2021 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in France Roubaix

Darts

Professional Darts Corporation

Dance sport

  • TBD: DanceSport at the 2021 World Games

Dodgeball

  • TBD: 2021 World Dodgeball Championships

Disc golf

PDGA Majors:

21–23 May: California United States Women's Disc Golf Championship: Texas Paige Pierce

22–26 June: Utah Professional Disc Golf World Championships: Men's: Virginia James Conrad Women's: Minnesota Catrina Allen

6–9 October: South Carolina United States Disc Golf Championship:

Disc Golf Pro Tour:

25–28 February: Nevada Las Vegas Challenge: Men's: Colorado Eagle McMahon Women's: Texas Paige Pierce

12–14 March: Texas Waco Annual Charity Open: Men's: Missouri Nikko Locastro Women's: California Kona Star Panis

16–18 April: Arkansas Jonesboro Open: Men's: South Carolina Ricky Wysocki Women's: Minnesota Catrina Allen

14–16 May: California OTB Open: Men's: Colorado Eagle McMahon Women's: Texas Paige Pierce

4–6 June: Oregon Portland Open: Men's: Colorado Eagle McMahon Women's: Texas Paige Pierce

9–11 July: Iowa Des Moines Challenge: Men's: California Paul McBeth Women's: New York (state) Missy Gannon

23–25 July: Michigan Discraft Great Lakes Open: Men's: Colorado Eagle McMahon Women's: Estonia Kristin Tattar

30 July – 1 August: Minnesota The Preserve Championship: Men's: South Carolina Ricky Wysocki Women's: Estonia Kristin Tattar

5–8 August: Illinois Discraft Ledgestone Insurance Open: Men's: South Carolina Ricky Wysocki and Florida Calvin Heimburg Women's: Texas Paige Pierce

13–15 August: Kentucky Idlewild Open: Men's: Michigan Kyle Klein Women's: Texas Paige Pierce

3–5 September: Massachusetts MVP Open at Maple Hill: Men's: Wisconsin Adam Hammes Women's: Minnesota Catrina Allen

9–12 September: Vermont Green Mountain Championship: Men's: Tennessee Chris Dickerson Women's: Wisconsin Hailey King

14–17 October: North Carolina Tour Championship:

PDGA National Tour:

26–28 March: Texas Texas State Disc Golf Championships: Men's: South Carolina Ricky Wysocki Women's: Wisconsin Hailey King

28 April – 1 May: Kansas Dynamic Discs Open: Men's: California Paul McBeth Women's: Wisconsin Hailey King

28–30 May: California Santa Cruz Master's Cup: Men's: Wisconsin Adam Hammes Women's: Texas Paige Pierce

27–29 August: Delaware Delaware Disc Golf Challenge: Men's: Texas Connor O'Reilly Women's: Minnesota Catrina Allen

23–26 September: Tennessee Music City Open: Men's: Women's:

Fencing

  • 3 – 11 April: 2021 Junior and Cadet World Fencing Championships in Egypt Cairo

2020-21 Fencing World Cup

Men
Sabre
  • 11 – 14 March: WC #1 in Hungary Budapest
    • Individual winner: South Korea Oh Sang-uk
    • Teams winners:  Russia
Épée
  • 19 – 23 March: WC #1 in Russia KAZ
    • Individual winner: Ukraine Ihor Reizlin
    • Teams winners:  Italy
Women
Sabre
  • 11 – 14 March: WC #1 in Hungary Budapest
    • Individual winner: Hungary Anna Márton
    • Teams winners:  Poland
Épée
  • 19 – 23 March: WC #1 in Russia KAZ
    • Individual winner: South Korea Choi In-jeong
    • Teams winners:  Poland

2021 Grand Prix

Foil

Field Hockey

  • 2021 Men's FIH Hockey Junior World Cup
  • 2021 Women's FIH Hockey Junior World Cup

EHF

  • 2 – 5 April: 2021 Women's EuroHockey Club Trophy in Belgium Boom
  • 2 – 5 April: Women's EuroHockey Club Challenge I in Czech Republic Prague
  • 2 – 5 April: EuroHockey Club Trophy I in Austria Vienna
  • 2 – 5 April: EuroHockey Club Trophy II in Czech Republic Plzeň
  • 3 – 5 April: 2021 Euro Hockey League (Final Four) in Netherlands Amsterdam
    • In the final, Netherlands HC Bloemendaal defeated Spain Club Deportiu Terrassa, 5–2, to win their 4th Euro Hockey League.
    • Belgium Royal Léopold Club took third place.
  • 3 – 5 April: 2021 Euro Hockey League Women (Final Four) in Netherlands Amsterdam
  • 20 – 23 May: EuroHockey Club Challenge I in Slovenia Lipovci

AfHF

  • 15 – 18 April: 2021 Men's Indoor African Cup and 2021 Women's Indoor African Cup in South Africa Durban
  • 27 September – 3 October: 2021 Hockey Africa Cup for Club Champions in Malawi Blantyre
  • TBD: 2021 Junior Africa Hockey Cup in TBD place

PAHF

  • 22 – 27 June: 2021 Indoor Pan American Cup in United States Philadelphia

Figure skating

2020–21 ISU Figure Skating Championships

2020–21 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating

2020–21 ISU Challenger Series

  • 23–26 September 2020: 2020 CS Nebelhorn Trophy in Germany Oberstdorf
    • Men winner: Latvia Deniss Vasiļjevs
    • Ladies winner: Estonia Eva-Lotta Kiibus
    • Pairs winners: Italy Rebecca Ghilardi / Filippo Ambrosini
    • Ice dance winners: Czech Republic Natálie Taschlerová / Filip Taschler
  • 15–17 October 2020: 2020 CS Budapest Trophy in Hungary Budapest

Other

Floorball

World

  • 25 – 29 August: 2021 Men's under-19 World Floorball Championships in Czech Republic Brno
    • In final,  Czech Republic defeated  Finland, 4–3, to win their 2nd Men's U19 World Floorball Championships.  Sweden took third place and   Switzerland fourth place.
  • 1 – 5 September: 2020 Women's under-19 World Floorball Championships in Sweden Uppsala (postponed from 2020)
    • In final,  Finland defeated  Sweden, 4–3, to win their 2th Women's U19 World Floorball Championships.  Czech Republic took third place and   Switzerland fourth place.
  • 27 November – 5 December: 2021 Women's World Floorball Championships in Sweden Uppsala
    • Champion:  Sweden
  • 3 – 11 December: 2020 Men's World Floorball Championships in Finland Helsinki (postponed from 2020)
    • Champion:  Sweden
  • Champions Cup – cancelled

Freestyle skiing

  • 9 February – 16 March: FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2021 in Sweden Idre, Slovenia Rogla, Kazakhstan Almaty and United States Aspen
    • Ski Cross winners: Switzerland Alex Fiva (m) / Sweden Sandra Näslund (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Switzerland Andri Ragettli (m) / China Gu Ailing (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: New Zealand Nico Porteous (m) / China Gu Ailing (f)
    • Big Air winners: Sweden Oliwer Magnusson (m) / RSF flag Anastasia Tatalina (f)
    • Aerials winners: RSF flag Maxim Burov (m) / Australia Laura Peel (f)
    • Team Aerials winners: RSF flag (Liubov Nikitina, Pavel Krotov, Maxim Burov)
    • Moguls winners: Canada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / France Perrine Laffont (f)
    • Dual moguls winners: Canada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / RSF flag Anastasia Smirnova (f)
  • 15 – 28 March: 2021 FIS Freestyle Junior World Ski Championships in Russia Krasnoyarsk
    • Aerials winners: Russia Artem Potapov (m) / Russia Anastasiia Prytkova (f)
    • Team aerials winners:  Russia I (Artem Potapov, Anastasiia Prytkova, Arsenii Vagin)
    • Moguls winners: Russia Nikita Andreev (m) / Japan Anri Kawamura (f)
    • Dual moguls winners: Japan Shima Kawaoka (m) / Russia Viktoriia Lazarenko (f)
    • Ski cross winners: Austria Oliver Vierthaler (m) / Russia Darya Melchakova (f)
    • Team Ski Cross winners:  Austria I (Oliver Vierthaler, Christina Födermayr)
    • Halfpipe winners: Estonia Henry Sildaru (m) / Russia Alexandra Glazkova (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Czech Republic Matěj Švancer (m) / Russia Ksenia Orlova (f)
    • Big Air winners: Czech Republic Matěj Švancer (m) / Russia Ksenia Orlova (f)

2020–21 FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup

Big Air
  • 7 & 8 January: WC #1 in Austria Kreischberg (final)
    • Winners: Norway Birk Ruud (m) / Switzerland Giulia Tanno (f)
Slopestyle
  • 19 – 21 November 2020: WC #1 in Austria Stubai
    • Winners: Switzerland Andri Ragettli (m) / France Tess Ledeux (f)
  • 18 – 20 March: WC #2 in United States Aspen
    • Winners: United States Colby Stevenson (m) / France Tess Ledeux (f)
Ski Cross
  • 14 – 16 December 2020: WC #1 in Switzerland Arosa
    • Winners #1: Sweden David Mobärg (m) / Sweden Alexandra Edebo (f)
    • Winners #2: Sweden Viktor Andersson (m) / Switzerland Fanny Smith (f)
  • 19 – 21 December 2020: WC #2 in France Val Thorens
    • Winners #1: France Jonathan Midol (m) / Switzerland Fanny Smith (f)
    • Winners #2: Canada Reece Howden (m) / Austria Katrin Ofner (f)
    • Winners #3: Canada Reece Howden (m) / Switzerland Fanny Smith (f)
  • 29 – 31 January: WC #3 in Germany Feldberg
    • Event cancelled.
  • 17 – 19 February: WC #4 in Austria Reiteralm
  • 26 – 28 February: WC #4 in Georgia (country) Bakuriani
    • Winners: Germany Florian Wilmsmann (m) / Switzerland Fanny Smith (f)
    • Team winners:  Switzerland 1
  • 12 & 13 March: WC #5 in Russia Sunny Valley
    • Winners: Canada Reece Howden (m) / Switzerland Fanny Smith (f)
  • 21 March: WC #6 in Switzerland Veysonnaz (final)
Moguls
  • 5 December 2020: WC #1 in Finland Ruka
  • 12 December 2020: WC #2 in Sweden Idre Fjäll
    • Winners: France Benjamin Cavet (m) / France Perrine Laffont (f)
  • 4 – 6 February: WC #3 in United States Deer Valley
Dual Moguls
  • 13 December 2020: WC #1 in Sweden Idre Fjäll
    • Winners: Australia Matt Graham & Sweden Ludvig Fjallstrom (m) / France Perrine Laffont (f)
  • 4 – 6 February: WC #2 in United States Deer Valley
Aerials
  • 4 December 2020: WC #1 in Finland Ruka
    • Winners: Russia Maxim Burov (m) / Australia Laura Peel (f)
  • 16 & 17 January: WC #3 in Russia Yaroslavl
    • Men's winners: Russia Maxim Burov (2 times)
    • Women's winners: Australia Laura Peel (No. 1) / United States Megan Nick (No. 2)
    • Team winners:  Russia I (Anastasiia Prytkova, Maxim Burov, Pavel Krotov)
  • 23 January: WC #3 in Russia Moscow
    • Winners: Russia Maxim Burov (m) / United States Winter Vinecki (f)
  • 30 January: WC #4 in Belarus Minsk
    • Winners: Russia Maxim Burov (m) / United States Megan Nick (f)
  • 4 – 6 February: WC #5 in United States Deer Valley
    • Winners: Switzerland Noé Roth (m) / Australia Danielle Scott (f)
  • 13 & 14 March: WC #6 in Kazakhstan Almaty (final)
    • Winners: Switzerland Pirmin Werner (m) / Canada Marion Thénault (f)
Halfpipe
  • 19 – 21 March: WC #1 in United States Aspen (final)
    • Winners: United States Aaron Blunck (m) / Canada Rachael Karker (f)

2020–21 FIS Freestyle Ski Europa Cup

Aerials
  • 11 & 12 December 2020: EC #1 in Finland Ruka
    • Men's winners: Switzerland Noé Roth (2 times)
    • Women's winners: Canada Marion Thénault (No. 1) / Australia Laura Peel (No. 2)
  • 5 – 7 February: EC #2 in Belarus Minsk
    • Men's winners: Belarus Ihar Drabiankou (No. 1) / Belarus Maxim Gustik (No. 2)
    • Women's winner: Belarus Hanna Huskova (2 times)
    • Teams winners:  Belarus II
  • 12 & 13 February: EC #3 in Ukraine Krasiya
    • Men's winner: Ukraine Maksym Kuznietsov (2 times)
    • Women's winner: Belarus Valeryia Balmatava (2 times)
  • 28 February – 3 March: EC #4 in Switzerland Airolo
    • Men's winner: Switzerland Noé Roth (2 times)
    • Women's winner: Australia Danielle Scott (2 times)
Ski Cross
  • 9 & 10 January: EC #1 in Austria Reiteralm
    • Men's winners: Germany Tim Hronek (No. 1) / Germany Tobias Müller (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Germany Daniela Maier (No. 1) / Austria Katrin Ofner (No. 2)
  • 6 & 7 February: EC #2 in Switzerland Crans-Montana
    • Winners: Austria Adam Kappacher (m) / France Mylène Ballet Baz (f)
  • 6 & 7 March: EC #3 in Austria Reiteralm
    • Men's winners: Austria Johannes Rohrweck (No. 1) / Germany Florian Wilmsmann (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Austria Katrin Ofner (No. 1) / Canada Courtney Hoffos (No. 2)
  • 12 & 13 March: EC #4 in Italy San Pellegrino Pass
    • Men's winners: France Romain Mari (No. 1) / Italy Simone Deromedis (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Switzerland Saskja Lack (2 times)
Moguls
  • 30 & 31 January: EC #1 in Sweden Åre/Duved
    • Men's winners: France James Crozet (No. 1) / France Thibaud Mouille (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: France Fantine Degroote (2 times)
  • 5 – 9 February: EC #2 in Finland Taivalkoski
    • Men's winner: Finland Johannes Suikkari (4 times)
    • Women's winners: France Fantine Degroote (3 times) / Finland Riikka Voutilainen (No. 2)
  • 13 & 14 February: EC #3 in Finland Jyväskylä
    • Men's winners: Finland Olli Penttala (No. 1) / Finland Jimi Salonen (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Russia Ekaterina Ogneva (2 times)
  • 28 February – 3 March: EC #4 in Switzerland Airolo
    • Men's winners: France Marius Bourdette (No. 1) / Finland Johannes Suikkari (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Germany Sophie Weese (No. 1) / Germany Hanna Weese (No. 2)
Halfpipe
  • 27 – 31 January: EC #1 in Switzerland Crans Montana
    • Winners: Switzerland Robin Briguet (m) / Japan Saori Suzuki (f)
  • 7 March: EC #2 in Switzerland Leysin
    • Winners: Estonia Henry Sildaru (m) / Switzerland Michelle Rageth (f)
Slopestyle
  • 9 March: EC #1 in Switzerland Leysin
    • Winners: Switzerland Valentin Morel (m) / Italy Elisa Maria Nakab (f)
Big Air
  • 6 & 7 February: EC #1 in France Les Arcs
    • Winners: France Antoine Adelisse (m) / France Bérénice Dode (f)
  • 20 February: EC #2 in Switzerland Davos
    • Winners: France Timothé Sivignon (m) / Russia Ksenia Orlova (f)
  • 5 March: EC #3 in Germany Götschen
    • Winners: Italy Miro Tabanelli (m) / Germany Muriel Mohr (f)

2020–21 FIS Freestyle Ski North American Cup

Aerials
  • 5 – 9 January: NAC #1 at the United States Utah Olympic Park #1
    • Men's winners: United States Derek Krueger (No. 1) / United States Justin Schoenefeld (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: United States Megan Smallhouse (No. 1) / United States Megan Nick (No. 2)
  • 13 & 14 February: NAC #2 at the United States Utah Olympic Park #2
    • Men's winners: Canada Émile Nadeau (No. 1) / Kazakhstan Sherzod Khashyrbayev (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Kazakhstan Zhanbota Aldabergenova (No. 1) / United States Madison Varmette (No. 2)

Futsal

Golf

Gymnastics

  • 27–29 May: 2021 Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships in Azerbaijan Baku
  • 18–20 June: 2021 Acrobatic Gymnastics World Championships in Switzerland Geneva
  • 18–24 October: 2021 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Japan Kitakyushu
  • 27–31 October: 2021 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships in Japan Kitakyushu
  • 11–14 November: 2021 Trampoline Gymnastics World Championships in Azerbaijan Baku
  • Various dates: 2021 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series
  • Various dates: 2021 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series
Europe
  • 21–25 April: 2021 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Switzerland Basel
  • 29 April-2 May: 2021 European Trampoline Championships in Russia Sochi
  • 9–13 June: 2021 Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships in Bulgaria Varna
  • 24–26 September: 2021 Aerobic Gymnastics European Championships in Italy Pesaro
  • 6–10 November: 2021 Acrobatic Gymnastics European Championships in Italy Pesaro

Handball

World

EHF

National teams
  • 7 – 17 January: 2020 European Men's Under-20 Handball Championship in Croatia Porec
    • Event cancelled.
Club teams
  • 16 September 2020 – 13 June: 2020–21 EHF Champions League (final in Germany Cologne)
  • 12 September 2020 – 30 May: 2020–21 Women's EHF Champions League (final in Hungary Budapest)
  • 20 August 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 EHF European League
  • 10 October 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 Women's EHF European League
  • 13 November 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 EHF European Cup
  • 10 October 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 Women's EHF European Cup
Regional leagues
  • 27 August 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 Mol Liga
  • 10 October 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 Bene League

Horse Racing

United States

US Triple Crown
Breeder's Cup

Ice hockey

National Hockey League

  • 13 January – 8 May: 2020-21 NHL season
  • 21 February: 2021 NHL Stadium Series
  • 23–24 July: 2021 NHL Entry Draft

Hockey Europe

  • 3 October 2020 – 21 May: 2020–21 Alps Hockey League

Indoor Soccer

  • TBD: 2021 WMF Women's World Cup
  • WMF U23 World Cup

Judo

  • 11 – 13 January: 2021 Judo World Masters in Qatar Doha
  • 6 – 13 June: 2021 World Judo Championships in Hungary Budapest

2021 IJF World Tour

  • 18 – 20 February: Israel 2021 Judo Grand Slam Tel Aviv
    • Extra-lightweight winners: Azerbaijan Davud Mammadov (m) / France Shirine Boukli (f)
    • Half-lightweight winners: Spain Alberto Gaitero (m) / United Kingdom Chelsie Giles (f)
    • Lightweight winners: Romania Alexandru Raicu (m) / Israel Timna Nelson-Levy (f)
    • Half-middleweight winners: Uzbekistan Sharofiddin Boltaboev (m) / Slovenia Tina Trstenjak (f)
    • Middleweight winners: Georgia (country) Lasha Bekauri (m) / France Margaux Pinot (f)
    • Half-heavyweight winners: Netherlands Michael Korrel (m) / Germany Anna-Maria Wagner (f)
    • Heavyweight winners: Georgia (country) Gela Zaalishvili (m) / France Romane Dicko (f)
  • 5 – 7 March: Uzbekistan 2021 Judo Grand Slam Tashkent
    • Men's Half-lightweight winner Japan Ryuju Nagayama
    • Women's Extra-lightweight winner: Mongolia Mönkhbatyn Urantsetseg
    • Lightweight winners: South Korea An Baul (m) / Japan Uta Abe (f)
    • Half-middleweight winners: Mongolia Tsend-Ochiryn Tsogtbaatar (m) / Japan Momo Tamaoki (f)
    • Middleweight winners: Italy Christian Parlati (m) / Japan Miku Tashiro (f)
    • Half-heavyweight winners: Japan Kenta Nagasawa (m) / Japan Chizuru Arai (f)
    • Heavyweight winners Japan Kokoro Kageura (m) / Japan Akira Sone (f)
  • 26 – 28 March: Georgia (country) 2021 Judo Grand Slam Tbilisi
    • Extra Lightweight winners: Georgia (country) Temur Nozadze (m) / Mongolia Mönkhbatyn Urantsetseg (f)
    • Half Lightweight winners: Uzbekistan Sardor Nurillaev (m) / Italy Odette Giuffrida (f)
    • Lightweight winners: Mongolia Tsend-Ochiryn Tsogtbaatar (m) / Kosovo Nora Gjakova (f)
    • Half Middleweight winners: Belgium Sami Chouchi (m) / Canada Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard (f)
    • Middleweight winners: Sweden Marcus Nyman (m) / Brazil Maria Portela (f)
    • Half Heavyweight winners: Canada Shady El Nahas (m) / Netherlands Natascha Ausma (f)
    • Heavyweight winners: Georgia (country) Gela Zaalishvili (m) / China Shiyan Xu (f)
  • 1 – 3 April: Turkey 2021 Judo Grand Slam Antalya
  • 5 – 7 May: Russia 2021 Judo Grand Slam Kazan
  • 24 – 26 September: Croatia 2021 Judo Grand Prix Zagreb
  • 16 & 17 October: France 2021 Judo Grand Slam Paris
  • 5 – 7 November: Azerbaijan 2021 Judo Grand Slam Baku (final)

2021 European Open

  • 27 & 28 February: European Open #1 in Czech Republic Prague
    • Extra-lightweight winners: Netherlands Emiel Jaring (m) / Romania Monica Ungureanu (f)
    • Half-lightweight winners: Romania Lucian Borş Dumitrescu (m) / Belgium Amber Ryheul (f)
    • Lightweight winners: Romania Adrian Sulca (m) / Netherlands Pleuni Cornelisse (f)
    • Half-middleweight winners: Hungary Benedek Tóth (m) / Netherlands Geke van den Berg (f)
    • Middleweight winners: Hungary Péter Sáfrány (f) / Croatia Lara Cvjetko (f)
    • Half-heavyweight winners: Hungary Zalán Ohát (m) / Netherlands Renée van Harselaar (f)
    • Heavyweight winners: Czech Republic Lukáš Krpálek (m) / Croatia Helena Vuković (f)

2021 European Cup

  • 20 & 21 March: European Cup #1 in Bosnia and Herzegovina Sarajevo

2021 Panamerican Open

  • 6 & 7 March: Panamerican Open #1 in Chile Santiago
  • 13 & 14 March: Panamerican Open #2 in Peru Lima
  • 20 & 21 March: Panamerican Open #3 in Argentina TBD

2021 Asian Open

  • 13 & 14 March: Asian Open #1 in Kazakhstan Aktau
    • Extra Lightweight winners: Kazakhstan Magzhan Shamshadin (m) / Kazakhstan Abiba Abuzhakynova (f)
    • Half Lightweight winners: Kazakhstan Yeset Kuanov (m) / Russia Liliia Nugaeva (f)
    • Lightweight winners: Uzbekistan Murodjon Yuldoshev (m) / Russia Yulia Kazarina (f)
    • Half Middleweight winners: Russia Magomed Edilbiev (m) / Russia Aigul Bagautdinova (f)
    • Middleweight winners: Kazakhstan Yersultan Muzapparov (m) / Russia Dali Liluashvili (f)
    • Half Heavyweight winners: Russia Dmitry Dovgan (m) / Russia Marina Bukreeva (f)
    • Heavyweight winners: Kazakhstan Yerassyl Kazhibayev (m) / Russia Daria Vladimirova (f)

Karate

Kendo

  • TBD: World Kendo Championship

Kurash

  • TBD: 2021 World Kurash Championships

Luge

  • 9 & 10 January: 2021 FIL European Luge Championships in Latvia Sigulda
    • Men's singles winner: Germany Felix Loch
    • Women's singles winner: Russia Tatiana Ivanova
    • Doubles winners:  Latvia (Andris Šics & Juris Šics)
    • Team relay winners:  Russia (Tatiana Ivanova, Semen Pavlichenko, Vsevolod Kashkin/Konstantin Korshunov)
  • 29 – 31 January: 2021 FIL World Luge Championships in Germany Königssee
    • Men's singles winner: Roman Repilov
    • Men's sprint winner: Austria Nico Gleirscher
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Julia Taubitz
    • Women's sprint winner: Germany Julia Taubitz
    • Doubles winners:  Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken)
    • Doubles' sprint winners:  Germany (Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt)
    • Team relay winners:  Austria (Madeleine Egle, David Gleirscher, Thomas Steu/Lorenz Koller)
  • 1 February: FIL Junior Natural Track European Championships in Italy Jaufental
    • Men's Junior Singles winner: Italy Fabian Brunner
    • Women's Junior Singles winner: Germany Lisa Walch
    • Doubles Juniors winners:  Italy (Anton Gruber Genetti & Hannes Unterholzner)
  • 12 – 14 February: 2021 FIL World Luge Natural Track Championships in Austria Umhausen
    • Men's Singles winner: Austria Thomas Kammerlander
    • Women's Singles winner: Italy Evelin Lanthaler
    • Doubles winners:  Italy (Patrick Pigneter & Florian Clara)
    • Team Relay winners:  Italy (Evelin Lanthaler & Alex Gruber)

2020–21 Luge World Cup

  • 28 & 29 November 2020: WC #1 in Austria Innsbruck
    • Men's singles winner: Germany Felix Loch
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Julia Taubitz
    • Doubles winners:  Austria (Thomas Steu & Lorenz Koller)
    • Team relay winners:  Germany (Julia Taubitz, Felix Loch, Toni Eggert/Sascha Benecken)
  • 5 & 6 December 2020: WC #2 in Germany Altenberg
    • Men's singles winner: Germany Felix Loch
    • Women's singles winner: Russia Tatiana Ivanova
    • Doubles winners:  Austria (Thomas Steu & Lorenz Koller)
    • Team relay winners:  Italy (Andrea Vötter, Kevin Fischnaller, Ludwig Rieder/Patrick Rastner)
  • 12 & 13 December 2020: WC #3 in Germany Oberhof
    • Men's singles winner: Germany Felix Loch
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Dajana Eitberger
    • Doubles winners:  Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken)
    • Team relay winners:  Germany (Dajana Eitberger, Felix Loch, Toni Eggert/Sascha Benecken)
  • 19 & 20 December 2020: WC #4 in Germany Winterberg
  • 2 & 3 January: WC #5 in Germany Königsee
    • Men's singles winner: Germany Felix Loch
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Julia Taubitz
    • Doubles winners:  Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken)
    • Team relay winners:  Austria (Madeleine Egle, Nico Gleirscher, Thomas Steu/Lorenz Koller)
  • 9 & 10 January: WC #6 in Latvia Sigulda
    • Men's singles winner: Germany Felix Loch
    • Women's singles winner: Russia Tatiana Ivanova
    • Doubles winners:  Latvia (Andris Šics & Juris Šics)
    • Team relay winners:  Russia (Tatiana Ivanova, Semen Pavlichenko, Vsevolod Kashkin/Konstantin Korshunov)
  • 16 & 17 January: WC #7 in Germany Oberhof
  • 23 & 24 January: WC #8 in Austria Innsbruck
  • 23 & 24 January: WC #9 in Switzerland St. Moritz (final)
    • Men's Singles winner: Austria Nico Gleirscher
    • Women's Singles winner: Latvia Elīna leva Vītola
    • Doubles winners:  Latvia (Mārtiņš Bots & Roberts Plūme)
    • Team relay winners: cancelled due to heavy snowfall.

2020–21 Luge Sprint World Cup

  • 28 & 29 November: WC #1 in Austria Innsbruck
    • Men's singles winner: Germany Felix Loch
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Julia Taubitz
    • Doubles winner:  Austria (Thomas Steu & Lorenz Koller)
  • 19 & 20 December 2020: WC #2 in Germany Winterberg
    • Men's singles winner: Germany Max Langenhan
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Julia Taubitz
    • Doubles winners:  Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken)
  • 23 & 24 January: WC #3 in Austria Innsbruck (final)
    • Men's singles winner: Russia Semen Pavlichenko
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Julia Taubitz
    • Doubles winners:  Latvia (Andris Šics & Juris Šics)

2021 FIL Junior Luge World Cup

  • 5 January: WC #1 in Austria Obdach #1
    • Men's singles winner: Italy Fabian Brunner
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Lisa Walch
    • Doubles winners:  Italy (Anton Gruber Genetti & Hannes Unterholzner)
  • 6 January: WC #2 in Austria Obdach #2
    • Men's singles winner: Italy Fabian Brunner
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Lisa Walch
    • Doubles winners:  Austria (Maximilian Pichler & Dominik Peter Maier)
  • 9 & 10 January: WC #3 in Austria Umhausen
    • Men's singles winner: Italy Fabian Brunner
    • Women's singles winner: Germany Lisa Walch
    • Doubles winners:  Italy (Anton Gruber Genetti & Hannes Unterholzner)
  • 30 & 31 January: WC #4 in Italy Jaufental (final)
    • Men's singles winner: Italy Fabian Brunner
    • Women's singles winner: Austria Ricarda Ruetz
    • Doubles winners:  Italy (Anton Gruber Genetti & Hannes Unterholzner)

2020–21 Luge Natural World Cup

  • 17 December 2020: WC #1 in Austria Obdach #1
    • Men's singles winner: Austria Michael Scheikl
    • Women's singles winner: Italy Evelin Lanthaler
    • Doubles winners:  Italy (Patrick Pigneter & Florian Clara)
  • 18 & 19 December 2020: WC #2 in Austria Obdach #2
    • Men's singles winner: Austria Michael Scheikl
    • Women's singles winner: Italy Evelin Lanthaler
    • Doubles winners:  Italy (Patrick Pigneter & Florian Clara)
    • Team winners:  Italy (Evelin Lanthaler & Patrick Pigneter)
  • 14 – 17 January: WC #3 in Austria Passeier #1
    • Men's singles winner: Austria Thomas Kammerlander
    • Women's singles winner: Italy Evelin Lanthaler
    • Doubles winners:  Italy (Evelin Lanthaler & Patrick Pigneter)
    • Men's Singles Nations Cup winner: Italy Mathias Troger
  • 14 – 17 January: WC #4 in Austria Passeier #2
    • Men's singles winner: Austria Thomas Kammerlander
    • Women's singles winner: Italy Evelin Lanthaler
    • Doubles winners:  Austria (Fabian Achenrainer & Simon Achenrainer)
    • Team winners:  Italy (Evelin Lanthaler & Patrick Pigneter)
    • Men's Singles Nations Cup winner: Austria Florian Markt
  • 8 – 10 February: WC #5 in Italy Laas #1
    • Men's singles winner: Austria Thomas Kammerlander
    • Women's singles winner: Italy Evelin Lanthaler
    • Doubles winners:  Italy (Evelin Lanthaler & Patrick Pigneter)
    • Men's Singles Nations Cup winner: Italy Florian Clara
  • 8 – 10 February: WC #6 in Italy Laas #2 (final)
    • Men's singles winner: Austria Thomas Kammerlander
    • Women's singles winner: Italy Evelin Lanthaler
    • Doubles winners:  Russia (Pavel Porshnev & Ivan Lazarev)

Modern Pentathlon

  • 8–13 June: 2021 World Modern Pentathlon Championships in Cairo, Egypt
  • TBD: 2021 Modern Pentathlon World Cup
  • 2021 Modern Pentathlon Junior World Championships
  • 2021 Modern Pentathlon Youth World Championships

Motorsports

2021 Formula One World Championship

2020–21 Formula E World Championship

2021 World Touring Car Cup

2021 European Autocross Championship

  • 15 & 16 May: #1 Round in Germany Seelow
  • 5 & 6 June: #2 Round in Latvia Mūša
  • 12 & 13 June: #3 Round in Lithuania Vilkyčiai
  • 26 & 27 June: #4 Round in Germany Matschenberg
  • 3 & 4 July: #5 Round in Czech Republic Nová Paka
  • 17 & 18 July: #6 Round in France Saint-Georges-de-Montaigu
  • 31 July & 1 August: #7 Round in Netherlands Toldijk
  • 21 & 22 August: #8 Round in Czech Republic Přerov
  • 18 & 19 September: #9 Round in France Saint-Igny-de-Vers
  • 25 & 26 September: #10 Round in Italy Maggiora
  • 9 & 10 October: #11 Round in Spain Mollerussa (final)

2021 European Drag Racing Championship

  • 28 – 31 May: #1 Round at the United Kingdom Santa Pod Raceway #1
  • 10 – 13 June: #2 Round at the Sweden Tierp Arena #1
  • 8 – 10 July: #3 Round in Finland Kauhava (Top Fuel and Pro Modified Competitions only)
  • 12 – 15 August: #4 Round at the Sweden Tierp Arena #2
  • 27 – 29 August: #5 Round at the Germany Hockenheimring
  • 9 – 12 September: #6 Round at the United Kingdom Santa Pod Raceway #2 (final)

2021 World Rally Championship

2021 European Rally Championship

  • 12 – 14 March: #1 Round in  Portugal (Rallye Serras de Fafe e Felgueiras)
  • 25 – 27 March: #2 Round in  Portugal (Rallye Açores)
  • 6 – 8 May: #3 Round in  Spain (Rally Islas Canarias)
  • 18 – 20 June: #4 Round in  Poland (Rally Poland)
  • 1 – 3 July: #5 Round in  Latvia (Rally Liepāja)
  • 23 – 25 July: #6 Round in  Italy (Rally di Roma Capitale)
  • 27 – 29 August: #7 Round in  Czech Republic (Barum Czech Rally Zlín)
  • 22 – 24 October: #8 Round in  Hungary (Rally Hungary) (final)

2021 European Truck Racing Championship

  • 22 & 23 May: #1 Round at the Italy Misano
  • 12 & 13 June: #2 Round at the Hungary Hungaroring
  • 17 & 18 July: #3 Round at the Germany Nürburgring
  • 28 & 29 August: #4 Round at the Czech Republic Most
  • 11 & 12 September: #5 Round at the Belgium Zolder
  • 25 & 26 September: #6 Round at the France Le Mans
  • 2 & 3 October: #7 Round at the Spain Jarama (final)

Dakar Rally

  • 3 – 15 January: 2021 Dakar Rally in  Saudi Arabia
    • Trucks winner: Russia Dmitry Sotnikov (Kamaz Master)
    • SSV/Light prototype winner: Chile Francisco López Contardo (South Racing Can-Am)
    • Cars winner: France Stéphane Peterhansel (MINI John Cooper Works Rally – X-raid)
    • Quads winner: Argentina Manuel Andújar (Team 7240)
    • Bikes winner: Argentina Kevin Benavides (Monster Energy Honda Team)
    • Classics winner: France Marc Douton (Team Sunhill-R)

2021 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas

  • 4 – 7 February: #1 Round in the Russia Baja Russia – Northern Forest Winners: Russia Vladimir Vasilyev & Alexey Kuzmich (G-Energy Team)
  • 18 – 20 February: #2 Round at the United Arab Emirates Dubai International Baja Winners: Saudi Arabia Yazeed Al-Rajhi & United Kingdom Michael Orr (Overdrive SA)
  • 4 – 6 March: #3 Round at the Saudi Arabia Sharqiya Baja Winners: Saudi Arabia Yasir Seaidan & Russia Alexey Kuzmich (Race World)
  • 18 – 20 March: #4 Round at the Jordan Jordan Baja
  • 23 & 24 July: #5 Round at the Spain Baja Aragón
  • 12 – 15 August: #6 Round at the Hungary Hungarian Baja
  • 26 – 29 August: #7 Round at the Poland Baja Poland
  • 9 – 12 September: #8 Round at the Italy Italian Baja
  • 28 – 30 October: #9 Round at the Portugal Baja Portalegre 500

2021 Extreme E Championship

Mountain running

  • 22 May: the Gansu ultramarathon disaster in the Yellow River Stone Forest, China led 21 runners to die from hypothermia.[1]
  • TBD: 2021 World Mountain Running Championships
  • TBD: 2021 World Long Distance Mountain Running Championships
  • TBD: 2021 IAU Trail World Championships
  • 2021 World Mountain & Trail Running Championships

Muay Thai

  • TBD:2021 IFMA World Muaythai Championships

Multi-sport events

Netball

  • 2 – 7 March: 2021 Constellation Cup in  New Zealand
  • 25 – 31 March: SPAR Challenge 2021 in South Africa Cape Town

Nordic Combined

  • 9 – 14 February: 2021 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in Finland Vuokatti and Lahti
    • Winners: Austria Johannes Lamparter (m) / Norway Gyda Westvold Hansen (f)
    • Team winners:  Norway (Eidar Johan Strøm, Marte Leinan Lund, Gyda Westvold Hansen, Andreas Skoglund)
  • 22 February – 7 March: FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2021 in Germany Obersdorf
    • Men's winners: Norway Jarl Magnus Riiber (No. 1) / Austria Johannes Lamparter (No. 2)
    • Women's winner: Norway Gyda Westvold Hansen
    • Men's Ski Jump Team winners:  Norway (Espen Bjørnstad, Jørgen Graabak, Jens Lurås Oftebro, Jarl Magnus Riiber)
    • Men's Team Sprint winners:  Austria (Johannes Lamparter & Lukas Greiderer)

2020–21 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup

  • 26–29 November 2020: WC #1 in Finland Ruka (Men's only)
    • Winners: Norway Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times) / Norway Jens Lurås Oftebro (No. 3)
  • 4 – 6 December 2020: WC #2 in Norway Lillehammer
    • Event cancelled.
  • 17 – 20 December 2020: WC #3 in Austria Ramsau
    • Men's winner: Germany Vinzenz Geiger (2 times)
    • Women's winner: United States Tara Geraghty-Moats
  • 2 & 3 January: WC #4 in Estonia Otepää
    • Event cancelled.
  • 14 – 17 January: WC #5 in Italy Val di Fiemme (Men's only)
    • Winners: Norway Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times)
    • Team Sprint winners:  Germany I (Eric Frenzel & Fabian Rießle)
  • 22 – 24 January: WC #6 in Finland Lahti (Men's only)
    • Winner: Japan Akito Watabe
    • Team Sprint winners:  Norway I (Jørgen Graabak & Jarl Magnus Riiber)
  • 28 – 31 January: WC #7 in Austria Seefeld
    • Winners: Norway Jarl Magnus Riiber (3 times)
  • 5 – 7 February: WC #8 in Germany Klingenthal
    • Men's winner: Germany Vinzenz Geiger (2 times)

2020–21 FIS Nordic Combined Alpen Cup

  • 17 & 18 October 2020: OPA #1 in Germany Klingenthal
    • Men's winner: Austria Fabian Hafner (2 times)
    • Women's winners: Germany Jenny Nowak (No. 1) / Austria Sigrun Kleinrath (No. 2)
  • 19 & 20 December 2020: OPA #2 in Austria Seefeld
    • Men's winners: Austria Samuel Lev (No. 1) / Italy Iacopo Bortolas (No. 2)
    • Women's winner: Austria Sigrun Kleinrath (2 times)
  • 20 & 21 February: OPA #3 in Austria Ramsau (final)
    • Men's winners: Austria Florian Kolb (No. 1) / France Marco Heinis (No. 2)

2020–21 FIS Nordic Combined Continental Cup

  • 11 – 13 December 2020: CC #1 in United States Park City
    • Men's winners: Germany Jakob Lange (No. 1) / Germany Julian Schmid (No. 2)
    • Mass Start winner: Germany Julian Schmid
  • 15 – 17 January: CC #2 in Germany Klingenthal
    • Men's winners: Norway Simen Tiller (2 times) / Austria Manuel Einkemmer (No. 2)
  • 22 – 24 January: CC #3 in Austria Eisenerz
    • Men's winners: Austria Stefan Rettenegger (No. 1) / Norway Espen Andersen (No. 2) / Norway Leif Torbjørn Næsvold (No. 3)
    • Women's winner: Norway Gyda Westvold Hansen (3 times)
  • 6 & 7 February: CC #4 in Finland Lahti
    • Winners: Norway Andreas Skoglund (No. 1) / Norway Lars Buraas (No. 2)
  • 12 – 14 March: CC #5 in Russia Nizhny Tagil
    • Men's winners: Germany Terence Weber (2 times)
    • Women's winner: United States Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
    • Mass Start winners: Germany Terence Weber (m) / United States Tara Geraghty-Moats (f)
  • 12 – 14 March: CC #6 in France Prémanon
    • Men's winners: Austria Stefan Rettenegger (2 times)
    • Women's winner: Italy Annika Sieff (2 times)

Orienteering

  • 4–9 July: 2021 World Orienteering Championships in Doksy, Czech Republic
  • TBD: 2021 World Ski Orienteering Championships
  • TBD: 2021 Orienteering World Cup
  • TBD: 2021 World Mountain Bike Orienteering Championships
  • TBD: 2021 World Trail Orienteering Championships
  • 2021 Junior World Orienteering Championships

Pickleball

Racquetball

  • 29 November – 6 December: 2021 Racquetball World Championships in Guatemala Guatemala City
    • Men's singles: United States Alejandro Landa def. Costa Rica Andrés Acuña, 15–6, 15–6.
    • Women's singles: Mexico Paola Longoria def. United States Kelani Lawrence, 15–6, 15–1.
    • Men's doubles: Mexico Javier Mar & Rodrigo Montoya def. Bolivia Koko Keller & Conrrado Moscoso, 15–10, 15–9.
    • Women's doubles: Mexico Paola Longoria & Samantha Salas def. Bolivia Koko Keller & Conrrado Moscoso, 15–10, 15–9.

IRT

Grand Slam
  • 7 – 10 January: Suivant Consulting Pro Am in Georgia (U.S. state) Lilburn
    • Singles: Canada Samuel Murray def. Bolivia Conrrado Moscoso, 15–7, 8–15, 11–9.
    • Doubles: United States Sudsy Monchik & Mexico Alejandro Landa def. Colombia Eduardo Garay & Colombia Sebastian Franco, 15–12, 14–15, 11–6.
Tier 4
  • 17 – 20 September 2020: Atlanta Open in Georgia (U.S. state) Lilburn
    • Singles: Mexico Daniel de la Rosa def. Mexico Alejandro Landa, 14–15, 15–11, 11–4.
    • Doubles: Colombia Juan Pablo Rodríguez & Colombia Eduardo Garay def. Georgia (U.S. state) Maurice Miller & Colombia Mario Mercado, 15–13, 15–8.
Tier 5
  • 25 & 26 July 2020: Georgia Games in Georgia (U.S. state) Lilburn
    • Singles: Colombia Eduardo Garay def. Georgia (U.S. state) Maurice Miller, 15–9, 15–11.
  • 23 & 24 October 2020: Warhawk Open at ULM in Louisiana Monroe
    • Singles: Georgia (U.S. state) Maurice Miller def. Texas Zachary Williams, 15–8, 15–4.
    • Doubles: Georgia (U.S. state) Maurice Miller & Georgia (U.S. state) Michael Miller Jr. def. Texas Michael Magana & Texas Zachary Williams, 15–14, 8–15, 11–3.
  • 12 – 15 November 2020: Southern Open in Georgia (U.S. state) Lilburn
    • Singles: Georgia (U.S. state) Austin Cunningham def. Florida Timothy Baghurst, No show.
  • 4 – 6 December 2020: 30th Annual Turkey Shootout Racquetball Tournament in Kansas Garden City
    • 1st. Kansas Bradly Rogers, 2nd. Colorado Nicholas Riffel, 3rd. Kansas Jared Torres
  • 19 – 21 February: 2021 Peachtree OPEN in Georgia (U.S. state) Atlanta
Outdoor
  • 14 – 18 October 2020: 2020 3WallBall World Championships in United States Las Vegas
    • Singles: Mexico Andree Parrilla def. Bolivia Marcelo Vargas Aguilar, 15–5, 15–8.
    • Doubles: Mexico Álvaro Beltrán & Mexico Daniel de la Rosa def. United States Ben Croft & Canada Kane Waselenchuk, 12–15, 15–9, 11–8.
    • Mixed Doubles: Mexico Daniel de la Rosa & United States Michelle De La Rosa def. Colombia Mario Mercado & Colombia Adriana Riveros, 15–8, 15–0.

LPRT

Super Max Slam
  • 4 – 6 December 2020: TeamRoot.com Tournament in Kansas Kansas City
    • Singles: Mexico Paola Longoria def. Bolivia Angelica Barrios, 15–5, 15–9.
    • Doubles: Argentina Natalia Méndez & Argentina Valeria Centellas def. Mexico Paola Longoria & Mexico Samantha Salas, 15–14, 3–15, 11–2.
Outdoor
  • 15 – 19 October 2020: 2020 3WallBall World Championships in United States Las Vegas
    • Singles: Mexico Paola Longoria def. United States Rhonda Rajsich, 4–15, 15–4, 11–4.
    • Doubles: Mexico Paola Longoria & United States Janel Tisinger def. Chile Carla Muñoz & United States Michelle De La Rosa, 12–15, 15–9, 11–5.
    • Mixed Doubles: Mexico Daniel de la Rosa & United States Michelle De La Rosa def. Colombia Mario Mercado & Colombia Adriana Riveros, 15–8, 15–0.

Roller skating

World Skate America

  • 4 – 14 February: Pan American of Clubs and Nations Championship in Colombia Ibagué (Speed Skating)[53]
    • Clubs winner: Colombia Tequendama AC
    • Nations:  Colombia won overall gold medals and overall medal tally.
  • 22 – 28 February: Pan American of Nations Championship in Colombia Bogotá (Inline Hockey)
  • 12 – 25 April: Pan American of Clubs and Nations Championship in Ecuador Guayaquil (Artistic Skating)
  • 16 – 26 September: Roller Hockey Pan American Championships in United States Florida

Rowing

  • TBD: 2021 World Rowing Championships in Shanghai, China
  • TBD: 2021 World Rowing Cup
  • 2021 World Rowing Junior Championships
  • 2021 World Rowing U23 Championships

Rugby league

Rugby Union

2020–21 Pro14

  • 2 October 2020 – 27 March: Republic of Ireland/Italy/Scotland/Wales 2020–21 Pro14

ECPR

  • 12 December 2020 – 22 May: 2020–21 European Rugby Champions Cup (final in France Marseille)
  • 11 December 2020 – 21 May: 2020–21 European Rugby Challenge Cup (final in France Marseille)

Sailing

  • 2020-2021 Vendee Globe
  • 16–21 August: 2021 Raceboard World Championships in Latvia Riga
  • 22–28 August: 2021 Platu 25 World Championship in Lithuania Nida
  • 29 November – 6 December: 2021 Laser Radial World Championships in Oman Al-Musannah
  • 8–12 December: 2021 Melges 20 World Championship in United States Miami

2021 World Match Racing Tour

  • 30 April – 2 May: Szczecin Match Race in Poland Szczecin

Savate

World Savate Combat Championships

  • Men's −56 kg: France Ahmad Ferradji defeated Spain Rubén Batan
  • Men's −70 kg: France Amine Feddal defeated Ukraine Oleksandr Brachykov
  • Men's −75 kg: France Damien Fabregas defeated Ukraine Mykyta Radionov
  • Men's −80 kg: France Alexis Nicolas defeated Ukraine Anton Chernikov
  • Men's −85 kg: France Christopher Brugiroux defeated Mauritius Olivier Lafleur
  • Women's −52 kg: France Marine Nicol defeated Ukraine Anastasia Konovalchuk
  • Women's −56 kg: France Mathilde Mignier defeated Croatia Lucija Regvat
  • Women's −60 kg: France Sara Tebbakh defeated Italy Chiara Vincis
  • Women's −65 kg: France Audrey Guillaume defeated Serbia Jelena Sedoglavić

Shooting Sports

2021 ISSF World Cup

  • 22 February – 5 March: WC #1 in Egypt Cairo
    • Skeet winners: Ukraine Mykola Milchev (m) / Slovakia Danka Barteková (f)

2021 ISSF Grand Prix

  • 28 January – 6 February: ISSF Grand Prix Shotgun in Morocco Rabat
    • Skeet winners: Qatar Rashid Saleh Hamad (m) / Russia Alina Fazylzyanova (f)
    • Trap winners: Russia Maxim Kabatskiy (m) / Russia Ekaterina Subbotina (f)
    • Mixed Trap winners:  Spain 1 (Alberto Fernández & Fátima Gálvez)
    • Mixed Skeet winners:  Russia 1 (Natalia Vinogradova & Aleksei Skorobogatov)

Ski jumping

Four Hills Tournament

2020–21 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup

  • 20 – 22 November 2020: World Cup #1 in Poland Wisła (Men's only)
  • 27 – 29 November 2020: World Cup #2 in Finland Ruka (Men's only)
    • Men's winners: Germany Markus Eisenbichler (No. 1) / Norway Halvor Egner Granerud (No. 2)
  • 4–6 December 2020: World Cup #3 in Russia Nizhny Tagil (Men's only)
    • Men's winner: Norway Halvor Egner Granerud (2 times)
  • 17 – 20 December 2020: World Cup #4 in Austria Ramsau (Women's only)
    • Women's winner: Austria Marita Kramer
  • 18 – 20 December 2020: World Cup #5 in Switzerland Engelberg
    • Men's winner: Norway Halvor Egner Granerud (2 times)
  • 8 – 10 January: World Cup #6 in Germany Titisee-Neustadt (Men's only)
    • Men's winners: Poland Kamil Stoch (No. 1) / Norway Halvor Egner Granerud (No. 2)
  • 15 – 17 January: World Cup #7 in Poland Zakopane (Men's only)
    • Men's winner: Norway Marius Lindvik
    • Team winners:  Austria (Michael Hayböck, Jan Hörl, Philipp Aschenwald, Daniel Huber)
  • 22 – 24 January: World Cup #8 in Finland Lahti (Men's only)
  • 22 – 24 January: World Cup #9 in Slovenia Ljubno ob Savinji (Women's only)
    • Women's winner: Norway Eirin Maria Kvandal
    • Team winners:  Slovenia (Ema Klinec, Špela Rogelj, Urša Bogataj, Nika Križnar)
  • 29 – 31 January: World Cup #10 in Germany Willingen (Men's only)
    • Men's winner: Norway Halvor Egner Granerud (2 times)
  • 30 & 31 January: World Cup #11 in Germany Titisee-Neustadt (Women's only)
    • Women's winner: Austria Marita Kramer (2 times)
  • 4 – 7 February: World Cup #12 in Austria Hinzenbach (Women's only)
  • 5 – 7 February: World Cup #13 in Germany Klingenthal
    • Men's winner: Norway Halvor Egner Granerud (2 times)
  • 12 – 14 February: World Cup #14 in Poland Zakopane (Men's only)
  • 18 – 20 February: World Cup #15 in Romania Râșnov
  • 18 – 21 March: World Cup #16 in Russia Nizhny Tagil (Women's only)
    • Winner: Austria Marita Kramer (2 times)

2020 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix

2020–21 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup

  • 18 & 19 September 2020: COC #1 in Poland Wisła (Men's only)
    • Winner: Germany Martin Hamann (2 times)
  • 18 – 20 December 2020: COC #2 in Finland Ruka (Men's only)
    • Men's winners: Austria Stefan Rainer (2 times) / Austria Jan Hörl (No. 2)
  • 27 & 28 December 2020: COC #3 in Switzerland Engelberg (Men's only)
    • Men's winners: Poland Jakub Wolny (No. 1) / Austria Maximilian Steiner (No. 2)
  • 16 & 17 January: COC #4 in Austria Innsbruck (Men's only)
    • Men's winners: Poland Aleksander Zniszczoł (No. 1) / Switzerland Simon Ammann (No. 2)
  • 5 – 7 February: COC #5 in Germany Willingen (Men's only)
    • Men's winner: Austria Ulrich Wohlgenannt (4 times)
  • 13 & 14 February: COC #6 in Germany Klingenthal (Men's only)
    • Men's winner: Austria Markus Schiffner (2 times)
  • 20 & 21 February: COC #7 in Germany Brotterode
    • Men's winners: Poland Stefan Hula Jr. (No. 1) / Poland Tomasz Pilch (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Austria Hannah Wiegele (2 times)
  • 13 & 14 March: COC #8 in Poland Zakopane
    • Men's winners: Austria Ulrich Wohlgenannt (2 times)

2020–21 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup

  • 12 & 13 September 2020: OPA #1 in Germany Berchtesgaden
    • Winners #1: Slovenia Žak Mogel (m) / Slovenia Jerneja Repinc Zupančič
    • Winners #2: Austria Niklas Bachlinger (m) / Czech Republic Klára Ulrichová
  • 18 & 19 December 2020: OPA #2 in Austria Seefeld
    • Men's winner: Austria Elias Medwed (2 times)
    • Women's winner: Slovenia Nika Prevc (2 times)
  • 23 & 24 January: OPA #3 in Germany Oberhof
    • Men's winners: Austria David Haagen (No. 1) / Austria Daniel Tschofenig (No. 2)
    • Women's winner: Austria Hannah Wiegele (2 times)
  • 20 & 21 February: OPA #4 in Austria Ramsau (Men's only)
    • Men's winners: Austria Markus Müller (No. 1) / Austria Jonas Schuster (No. 2)
  • 12 – 14 March: OPA #5 in France Prémanon
    • Men's winners: Austria Markus Müller (No. 1) / Austria Julijan Smid (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: France Joséphine Pagnier (No. 1) / Slovenia Nika Prevc (No. 2)

2020–21 FIS Ski Cup

  • 3 & 4 October 2020: FC #1 in Romania Râșnov
    • Men's winners: Ukraine Yevhen Marusiak (No. 1) / Ukraine Vitaliy Kalinichenko (No. 2)
    • Women's competitions are cancelled.
  • 11 – 13 December 2020: FC #2 in Switzerland Kandersteg
    • Men's winner: Austria Niklas Bachlinger (2 times)
    • Women's winners: France Julia Clair (No. 1) / France Joséphine Pagnier (No. 2)
  • 9 & 10 January: FC #3 in Poland Zakopane (Only men's)
    • Men's winner: Austria Elias Medwed (2 times)
  • 19 & 20 January: FC #4 in Poland Szczyrk (Only men's)
    • Men's winners: Germany Richard Freitag (No. 1) / Germany Philipp Raimund (No. 2)
  • 6 & 7 February: FC #5 in Finland Lahti (Only men's)
    • Winners: Austria Hannes Landerer (No. 1) / Switzerland Dominik Peter (No. 2)
  • 20 & 21 February: FC #6 in Austria Villach
    • Men's winner: Austria Maximilian Ortner (2 times)
    • Women's winners: Slovenia Tinkara Komar (No. 1) / Czech Republic Štěpánka Ptáčková (No. 2)
  • 26 & 27 February: FC #7 in Germany Oberhof (final)
    • Men's winners: Austria Maximilian Ortner (No. 1) / Austria Francisco Mörth (No. 2)
    • Women's winner: Slovenia Jerneja Repinc Zupančič (2 times)

Ski Mountaineering

  • 1 – 6 March:2021 World Championship of Ski Mountaineering in Andorra La Massana

2020–21 ISMF World Cup

  • 19 & 20 December 2020: WC #1 in Italy Pontedilegno Tonale
    • Sprint Race winners: France Thibault Anselmet (m) / Switzerland Marianne Fatton (f)
    • Women's Vertical Long Race winner: France Axelle Mollaret

Snooker

2020–21 snooker season
World Seniors Tour
WR
NR

Snowboard

  • 19 – 21 December 2020: FIS Snowboarding Junior World Championships in Austria Schönberg-Lachtal
    • Parallel Slalom winners: Russia Dmitry Loginov (m) / Russia Sofia Nadyrshina (f)
    • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Russia Dmitry Loginov (m) / Russia Sofia Nadyrshina (f)
  • 9 February – 16 March: FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2021 in Sweden Idre, Slovenia Rogla, Kazakhstan Almaty and United States Aspen
    • Snowboard Cross winners: Spain Lucas Eguibar (m) / United Kingdom Charlotte Bankes (f)
    • Team Snowboard Cross winners:  Australia (Jarryd Hughes & Belle Brockhoff)
    • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: RSF flag Dmitry Loginov (m) / Germany Selina Jörg (f)
    • Parallel Slalom winners: Austria Benjamin Karl (m) / RSF flag Sofia Nadyrshina (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Norway Marcus Kleveland (m) / New Zealand Zoi Sadowski-Synnott (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: Japan Yuto Totsuka (m) / United States Chloe Kim (f)
    • Big Air winners: Canada Mark McMorris (m) / Canada Laurie Blouin (f)
  • 15 – 28 March: 2021 FIS Snowboarding Junior World Championships in Russia Krasnoyarsk
    • Parallel giant slalom winners: Russia Iaroslav Stepanko (m) / Russia Sofia Nadyrshina (f)
    • Parallel team winners:  Russia I (Iaroslav Stepanko, Sofia Nadyrshina)
    • Parallel slalom winners: Russia Vsevolod Martynov (m) / Russia Sofia Nadyrshina (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: Japan Kaishu Nakagawa (m) / Japan Manon Kaji (f)
    • Snowboard cross winners: Canada Éliot Grondin (m) / Czech Republic Sára Strnadová (f)
    • Snowboard cross team winners:  Russia II (Daniil Donskikh, Valeriya Komnatnaya)
    • Big air winners: Japan Taiga Hasegawa (m) / Japan Yura Murase (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Japan Rikuto Watanabe (m) / Belgium Evy Poppe (f)

2020–21 FIS Snowboard World Cup

Snowboard Cross
  • 22 – 24 January: WC #1 in Italy Chiesa in Valmalenco
    • Men's winners: Netherlands Glenn de Blois (No. 1) / Austria Alessandro Hämmerle (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Italy Michela Moioli (No. 1) / Czech Republic Eva Samková (No. 2)
  • 16 – 18 February: WC #2 in Austria Reiteralm
  • 3 – 5 March: WC #3 in Georgia (country) Bakuriani
    • Men's winners: Canada Éliot Grondin (No. 1) / Italy Omar Visintin (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Czech Republic Eva Samková (No. 1) / United Kingdom Charlotte Bankes (No. 2)
Parallel Snowboard
  • 12 December 2020: WC #1 in Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo
  • 17 December 2020: WC #2 in Italy Carezza
    • Winners: Austria Benjamin Karl (m) / Germany Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (f)
  • 9 January: WC #3 in Switzerland Scuol
    • Winners: Russia Igor Sluev (m) / Russia Sofia Nadyrshina (f)
  • 12 & 13 January: WC #4 in Austria Bad Gastein
    • Winners: Italy Aaron March (m) / Russia Sofia Nadyrshina (f)
    • Team winners:  Austria I (Andreas Prommegger & Claudia Riegler)
  • 30 January: WC #5 in Russia Moscow
    • Winners: Russia Dmitriy Karlagachev (m) / Austria Daniela Ulbing (f)
  • 6 & 7 February: WC #6 in Russia Bannoye
    • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Russia Dmitry Loginov (m) / Germany Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (f)
    • Parallel Slalom winners: Russia Dmitry Loginov (m) / Switzerland Julie Zogg (f)
  • 6 March: WC #7 in Slovenia Rogla
    • Winners: Slovenia Žan Košir (m) / Germany Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (f)
Halfpipe
  • 19 – 23 January: WC #1 in Switzerland Laax
  • 18 – 21 March: WC #2 in United States Aspen
Slopestyle
  • 19 – 23 January: WC #1 in Switzerland Laax
  • 19 & 20 March: WC #2 in United States Aspen
Big Air

2020–21 FIS Snowboard Europa Cup

Parallel Snowboard
  • 16 & 17 January: EC #1 in Austria Simonhöhe
    • Men's winners: Austria Alexander Payer (No. 1) / Poland Michał Nowaczyk (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Japan Tsubaki Miki (No. 1) / Netherlands Michelle Dekker (No. 2)
  • 23 & 24 January: EC #2 in Switzerland Davos
    • Men's winners: United States Cody Winters (No. 1) / Austria Lukas Mathies (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Switzerland Ladina Jenny (No. 1) / Austria Claudia Riegler (No. 2)
  • 6 & 7 February: EC #3 in Switzerland Lenzerheide
    • Men's winners: Austria Dominik Burgstaller (No. 1) / Slovenia Črt Ikovic (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Ukraine Annamari Dancha (No. 1) / Switzerland Flurina Neva Bätschi (No. 2)
  • 27 & 28 February: EC #4 in Italy Villnöß
    • Men's winners: Italy Gabriel Messner (No. 1) / Austria Aron Juritz (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Italy Lucia Dalmasso (No. 1) / Switzerland Larissa Gasser (No. 2)
  • 13 & 14 March: EC #5 in Switzerland Davos
    • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Russia Iaroslav Stepanko (m) / Switzerland Ladina Jenny (f)
    • Parallel Slalom are cancelled here.
Slopestyle
  • 21 – 23 December 2020: EC #1 in Switzerland Corvatsch
    • Winners: Italy Emil Zulian (m) / Australia Tess Coady (f)
  • 28 – 31 January: EC #2 in Switzerland Crans-Montana
    • Winners: Switzerland Nicolas Huber (m) / Belgium Evy Poppe (f)
  • 21 & 22 February: EC #3 in Germany Götschen
    • Winners: Germany Leon Gütl (m) / Switzerland Livia Tannò (f)
  • 11 March: EC #4 in Switzerland Leysin
    • Winners: Switzerland Jonas Junker (m) / United Kingdom Mia Brookes (f)
Halfpipe
  • 28 – 31 January: EC #1 in Switzerland Crans-Montana
    • Winners: Germany André Höflich (m) / Canada Elizabeth Hosking (f)
  • 8 March: EC #2 in Switzerland Leysin
    • Winners: Switzerland Elias Allenspach (m) / Switzerland Elena Schütz (f)
Snowboard Cross
  • 26 January – 5 February: EC #1 in France Isola 2000
    • Men's winners: France Merlin Surget (No. 1) / France Quentin Sodogas (No. 2) / Italy Matteo Menconi (No. 3)
    • Women's winners: France Chloé Trespeuch (2 times) / Switzerland Muriel Jost (No. 3)
  • 12 & 13 February: EC #2 in Italy Chiesa in Valmalenco
    • Men's winners: Austria Luca Hämmerle (No. 1) / Austria Julian Lüftner (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: France Margaux Herpin (No. 1) / Andorra Maeva Estevez (No. 2)
  • 27 & 28 February: EC #3 in Austria Reiteralm
    • Men's winners: United States Michael Perle (No. 1) / France Guillaume Herpin (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: France Margaux Herpin (2 times)
  • 6 & 7 March: EC #4 in Austria Montafon/Gargellen
    • Men's winners: France Guillaume Herpin (No. 1) / Austria Andreas Kroh (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: France Margaux Herpin (No. 1) / United States Livia Molodyh (No. 2)
  • 12 – 14 March: EC #5 in Switzerland Lenk im Simmental
    • Men's winners: Austria Sebastian Jud (No. 1) / Second is cancelled
    • Women's winners: Canada Audrey McManiman (No. 1) / Second is cancelled
Big Air
  • 8 & 9 February: EC #1 in Serbia Kopaonik
    • Winners: Switzerland Nicolas Huber (m) / Spain Maria Hidalgo (f)
  • 19 February: EC #2 in Switzerland Davos
    • Winners: Switzerland Moritz Boll (m) / United Kingdom Mia Brookes (f)
  • 21 & 22 February: EC #3 in Germany Götschen
    • Winners: United Kingdom Gabriel Adams (m) / Switzerland Ariane Burri (f)
  • 27 February: EC #4 in Russia Moscow
    • Winners: Switzerland Nicolas Huber (m) / Russia Varvara Romanova (f)
  • 5 & 6 March: EC #5 in Germany Götschen
    • Men's winners: Slovenia Ožbe Kuhar (No. 1) / Germany Niklas Huber (No. 2)
    • Women's winners: Finland Eveliina Taka (No. 1) / United Kingdom Amber Fennell (No. 2)

Softball

  • 2021 U-23 Men's Softball World Cup
  • 2021 WBSC U-12 Softball World Cup
  • 2021 WBSC U-18 Women's Softball World Cup
  • 2021 WBSC U-15 Women's Softball World Cup

2021 Little League Baseball World Series

  • Men
  • Women

2021 Junior League Baseball World Series

  • Women

2021 Senior League Baseball World Series

  • Men
  • Women

Speed Skating

  • 16 – 17 January: 2021 European Speed Skating Championships in Netherlands Heerenveen
  • 22 – 24 January: 2021 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships in Poland Gdańsk
    • 500 m winners: Russia Konstantin Ivliev (m) / Netherlands Suzanne Schulting (f)
    • 1000 m winners: Russia Semion Elistratov (m) / Netherlands Suzanne Schulting (f)
    • 1500 m winners: Russia Semion Elistratov (m) / Netherlands Suzanne Schulting (f)
    • Men's 5000 m Relay winners:  Netherlands (Itzhak de Laat, Dylan Hoogerwerf, Sjinkie Knegt, Jens van 't Wout, Friso Emons)
    • Women's 3000 m Relay winners:  France (Gwendoline Daudet, Tifany Huot-Marchand, Aurélie Lévêque, Aurélie Monvoisin)
  • 11 – 14 February: 2021 World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships in Netherlands Heerenveen
  • 5 – 7 March: 2021 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships in Netherlands Dordrecht

2020–21 ISU Speed Skating World Cup

Speed skiing

  • 18 – 21 March: 2021 Speed Skiing World Championship in France Vars
    • Event Cancelled.

2020–21 Speed Skiing World Cup

  • 22 – 24 January: WC #1 in France Gavarnie/Gèdre
    • Event Cancelled.
  • 3 & 4 March: WC #2 in Andorra Grandvalira/Grau Roig
    • Event Cancelled.
  • 9 – 13 March: WC #3 in Sweden Idre
    • Speed Skiing #1 winners: France Simon Billy (m) / Sweden Britta Backlund (f)
    • Speed Skiing #2 winners: France Simon Billy (m) / Italy Valentina Greggio (f)
    • Speed Skiing #3 winners: France Simon Billy (m) / Sweden Britta Backlund (f)
  • 21 – 24 March: 2021 WC #4 in France Vars (final)
    • Event Cancelled.

Sport climbing

  • 2021 IFSC Climbing World Youth Championships

Squash

  • 2021 World Junior Squash Championships

2020–21 PSA World Tour

World Tour Platinum
World Tour Gold
  • 7 – 12 December 2020: CIB Black Ball Squash Open in Egypt Cairo
    • Women's: England Sarah-Jane Perry defeated Egypt Hania El Hammamy, 4–11, 9–11, 11–9, 12–10, 11–9.
  • 13 – 18 December 2020: CIB Black Ball Squash Open in Egypt Cairo
    • Men's: Egypt Fares Dessouky defeated Egypt Ali Farag, 5–11, 8–11, 11–7, 11–8, 11–8.
World Tour Silver

Surfing

  • 2021 World Junior Surfing Championships

Synchronized skating

  • 2021 ISU World Junior Synchronized Skating Championships

Table tennis

  • TBD: 2021 World Table Tennis Championships
  • TBD: 2021 World Team Table Tennis Championships
  • 2021 World Junior Table Tennis Championships

Taekwondo

  • TBD: 2021 World Taekwondo Championships in Wuxi, China

Telemark skiing

  • 15 – 21 March: 2021 World Telemarking Championships and 2021 FIS Telemark Junior World Championships in Germany Melchsee-Frutt
    • Senior Sprint winners: Switzerland Bastien Dayer (m) / Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Junior Sprint winners: France Alexis Page (m) / Norway Kaja Bjørnstad Konow (f)
    • Senior Parallel Sprint winners: Norway Trym Nygaard Løken (m) / Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Junior Parallel Sprint winners: Italy Giacomo Bormolini (m) / Norway Kaja Bjørnstad Konow (f)
    • Senior Parallel Sprint Team winners:  Switzerland
    • Junior Parallel Sprint Team winners:  France
    • Senior Classic winners: Switzerland Bastien Dayer (m) / Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Junior Classic winners: France Charly Petex (m) / Norway Kaja Bjørnstad Konow (f)

2021 Telemark Skiing World Cup

  • 21 – 25 January: WC #1 in Germany Bad Hindelang/Oberjoch
    • Men's Sprint winners: Slovenia Jure Aleš (No. 1) / Switzerland Nicolas Michel (No. 2)
    • Women's Sprint winner: Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond (2 times)
    • Men's Parallel Sprint winners: Switzerland Bastien Dayer (No. 1) / Norway Trym Nygaard Løken (No. 2)
    • Women's Parallel Sprint winners: Switzerland Beatrice Zimmermann (No. 1) / Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond (No. 2)
    • Men's Classic winners: France Noé Claye (No. 1) / Switzerland Nicolas Michel (No. 2)
    • Women's Classic winner: Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond (2 times)
  • 28 – 31 January: WC #2 in Slovenia Krvavec
    • Event Cancelled.
  • 10 – 13 February: WC #3 in France Passy Plaine-Joux
    • Men's Sprint winners: Switzerland Nicolas Michel (No. 1) / Switzerland Bastien Dayer (No. 2)
    • Women's Sprint winner: Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond (2 times)
    • Men's Classic winners: Switzerland Bastien Dayer (2 times)
    • Women's Classic winner: Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond (2 times)
  • 8 & 9 March: WC #4 in France Saint-Gervais-les-Bains
    • Event Cancelled.
  • 10 – 15 March: WC #5 in Switzerland Thyon/4 Vallèes
    • Men's Sprint winner: Switzerland Bastien Dayer
    • Women's Sprint winner: Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond
    • Men's Classic winner: Norway Trym Nygaard Løken
    • Women's Classic winner: Switzerland Amélie Wenger-Reymond

Tennis

Grand Slam

2021 ATP Tour

ATP Tour 250
Teams
  • 2 – 7 February: 2021 ATP Cup in Australia Melbourne
    • In the final,  Russia defeated  Italy, 2–0, to win their first ATP Cup.

2021 WTA Tour

WTA 500
WTA 250

Volleyball

  • 23 September – 3 October: 2021 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship
  • 24 August – 2 September: 2021 FIVB Volleyball Boys' U19 World Championship
  • 9–18 July 2021: 2021 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship Italy  defeated  Serbia 3–0 to win their 2nd title.
  • 20–29 September 2021: 2021 FIVB Volleyball Girls' U18 World Championship

AVC

  • 29 August 29 – 5 September: 2021 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship
  • 12–19 September: 2021 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship

CAVB

  • 18 – 26 February: 2020 African Volleyball Championship U21 in Egypt Cairo
    • Group Stage Format: 1st.  Egypt, 2nd.  Cameroon, 3rd.  Morocco, 4th.  DR Congo
    • Egypt qualified at the 2021 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship.
  • 1 – 9 March: Girls' Africa Volleyball Championship U18 and African Volleyball Championship U19 in Nigeria Abuja

CEV

  • 22 September 2020 – 1 May: 2020–21 CEV Champions League
  • 24 November 2020 – 1 May: 2020–21 CEV Women's Champions League
  • 8 October 2020 – 24 March: 2020–21 CEV Challenge Cup
  • 10 November 2020 – TBD 2020–21 CEV Women's Challenge Cup
  • 10 November 2020 – 23 March: 2020–21 Men's CEV Cup
  • 10 November 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 Women's CEV Cup
Regional leagues
  • 27 September 2020 – TBD: 2020–21 MEVZA League
  • 26 September 2020 – 27 February: 2020–21 Baltic Men Volleyball League

Water Polo

LEN

  • 11 November 2020 – 5 Jun: 2020–21 LEN Champions League (final 8 in Germany Hannover) ItalyPro Recco defeated Hungary FTC Telekom 9–6 to win their 9th title.
  • 13 November 2020 – 8 May: 2020–21 LEN Euro Cup Szolnok won their first title.

Weightlifting

  • 2 – 7 April: 2021 African Weightlifting Championships in Madagascar Antananarivo
  • 3 – 11 April: 2021 European Weightlifting Championships in Russia Moscow
  • 16 – 25 April: 2020 Asian Weightlifting Championships in Uzbekistan Tashkent
  • 18 – 25 April: 2020 Pan American Weightlifting Championships in Dominican Republic Santo Domingo
  • 30 April – 2 May: 7th European Union Cup in Malta Cottonera
  • 23 – 31 May: 2021 IWF Junior World Weightlifting Championships in Saudi Arabia Jeddah
  • 7 – 17 December: 2021 World Weightlifting Championships in Uzbekistan Tashkent

Wrestling

2021 Wrestling Continental Championships

  • Wrestling at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Japan Tokyo ⇒ 1–7 August
  • 2021 World Wrestling Championships in Norway Oslo ⇒ 2–10 October
  • 2021 European Wrestling Championships in Poland Warsaw ⇒ 19–25 April
  • 2021 Asian Wrestling Championships in Kazakhstan Almaty ⇒ 13–18 April
  • 2021 Pan American Wrestling Championships in Guatemala Guatemala City ⇒ 27–30 May
  • 2021 World Wrestling Olympic Qualification Tournament in Bulgaria Sofia ⇒ 6–9 May
  • 2021 European Wrestling Olympic Qualification Tournament in Hungary Budapest ⇒ 18–21 March
  • 2021 Asian Wrestling Olympic Qualification Tournament in Kazakhstan Almaty ⇒ 9–11 April
  • 2021 African & Oceania Wrestling Olympic Qualification Tournament in Tunisia Hammamet ⇒ 2–4 April
  • 2021 U23 World Wrestling Championships in Serbia Belgrade ⇒ 1–7 November
  • 2021 European U23 Wrestling Championship in North Macedonia Skopje ⇒ 17–23 May
  • 2021 World Junior Wrestling Championships in Russia Ufa ⇒ 16–22 August
  • 2021 European Juniors Wrestling Championships in Germany Dortmund ⇒ 28 June–4 July
  • Wrestling at the 2021 Junior Pan American Games in Colombia Cali ⇒ 1–4 December
  • 2021 World Cadet Wrestling Championships in Hungary Budapest ⇒ 19–25 July
  • 2021 European Cadets Wrestling Championships in Bulgaria Samokov ⇒ 14–20 June
  • 2021 Veterans World Wrestling Championships in Greece Loutraki ⇒ 19–24 October

2021 Wrestling International tournament

  • 2021 Yasar Dogu Tournament in Turkey Istanbul ⇒ 25–27 June
  • 2021 Vehbi Emre & Hamit Kaplan Tournament in Turkey Istanbul ⇒ 18–20 June
  • 2021 Dan Kolov & Nikola Petrov Tournament in Bulgaria Plovdiv ⇒ 8–11 April
  • Golden Grand Prix Ivan Yarygin 2021 in Russia Krasnoyarsk ⇒ 27–30 May
  • 2021 Grand Prix Zagreb Open in Croatia Zagreb ⇒ 16–17 January
  • Grand Prix de France Henri Deglane 2021 in France Nice ⇒ 15–17 January
  • 2021 Poland Open in Poland Warsaw ⇒ 8–13 June
  • Matteo Pellicone Ranking Series 2021 in Italy Rome ⇒ 4–7 March

Wushu

  • 2023: 2023 World Wushu Championships in United States Dallas
  • TBD: 8th World Junior Wushu Championships in  Morocco
  • TBD: 4th World Taijiquan Championships in Italy Catania

References

  1. Toropov, Pavel (28 May 2021). "China ultramarathon disaster: what happened during the storm that killed 21 runners?". South China Morning Post.
  2. Tétrault-farber, Gabrielle (2 August 2021). "Belarusian sprinter refuses to leave Tokyo". Reuters.
  3. "Belarusian sprinter enters Polish embassy after refusing to board flight". ITV News. 2 August 2021. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  4. Isachenkov, Vladimir; Keyton, David (4 August 2021). "Belarus Olympic runner who feared going home lands in Vienna". Associated Press. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  5. "Krystsina Tsimanouskaya: IOC says two Belarus coaches have been removed from the athletes village in Tokyo". Sky Sports. Retrieved 6 August 2021.
  6. "Kolesnikov blasts 50 back world record in 23.93". Swimming World Magazine. 17 May 2021.
  7. "Men's 50m Backstroke Semifinals Results" (PDF). MicroPlusTiming. 17 May 2021.
  8. "Men's 50m Backstroke Semifinal Video". JoshSwimz. 17 May 2021.
  9. "Kolesnikov breaks 50m back world record". Reuters. 18 May 2021.
  10. "Men's 50m Backstroke Final Results" (PDF). MicroPlusTiming. 18 May 2021.
  11. "Men's 50m Backstroke Final Video". RSC. 18 May 2021.
  12. "Italian teen Pilato sets new 50m breaststroke world record". AA. 23 May 2021.
  13. "Women's 50m Breaststroke Semifinals Results" (PDF). MicroPlusTiming. 22 May 2021.
  14. "Women's 50m Breastroke Semifinals Video". European Aquatics. 22 May 2021.
  15. "Kaylee McKeown breaks 100m backstroke world record at Olympic trials". The Guardian. 13 June 2021.
  16. "Women's 100m Backstroke Final Results". Swimming AU. 13 June 2021. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  17. "Tokyo 2020 round up: Crouser breaks 31-year-old shot put record". SwimSwam. 22 June 2021.
  18. Schad, Tyler Dragon and Tom (19 June 2021). "Ryan Crouser shatters world record in men's shot put at Olympic trials". USA Today.
  19. "Australia breaks its world record". NBC Olympics. 25 July 2021.
  20. "Women's 4x100m Freestyle Relay Final Results" (PDF). Olympics.com. 25 July 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 August 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  21. "4x200m Freestyle World Record". Your Swim Log. 29 July 2021.
  22. "Women's 4x200m Freestyle Relay Final Results" (PDF). Olympics.com. 29 July 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 August 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  23. "South Africa's Schoenmaker wins gold in Tokyo, breaks world record in swimming". AA. 30 July 2021.
  24. "Women's 200m Breaststroke Final Results" (PDF). Olympics.com. 30 July 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 August 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  25. "Caeleb Dressel Breaks His Own World Record in 100-Meter Butterfly at the Olympics". NPR. 30 July 2021.
  26. "Men's 100m Butterfly Final Results" (PDF). Olympics.com. 31 July 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 July 2021. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  27. "Tokyo Olympics: Great Britain win 4x100m mixed medley relay gold". BBC. 31 July 2021.
  28. "Swimming – Mixed 4×100m Medley Relay Final Results" (PDF). Olympics.com. 31 July 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 August 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  29. "Team USA break world record to win men's 4x100m medley relay". Olympics.com. 1 August 2021.
  30. "Men's 4x100m Medley Relay Final Results" (PDF). Olympics.com. 1 August 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 August 2021. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  31. "Athletics-Venezuela's Rojas smashes women's triple jump world record to take gold". Reuters. 1 August 2021.
  32. "Karsten Warholm smashes 400m hurdles world record". The Guardian. 3 August 2021.
  33. "Men's 400m Hurdles Results" (PDF). Olympics.com. 3 August 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 August 2021. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  34. "McLaughlin breaks world record to win 400 hurdles". Reuters. 4 August 2021.
  35. "Athletics – Final Results – Women's 400 m hurdles (Tokyo 2020)". IOC. 4 August 2021. Archived from the original on 9 August 2021. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  36. "Coleman Stewart smashes 100 backstroke world record in 48.33". SwimSwam. 29 August 2021.
  37. "Men's 100m Backstroke Results" (PDF). Omega Timing. 29 August 2021.
  38. "Kyle Chalmers delivers with monster 44.84 100 free world record". SwimSwam. 29 October 2021.
  39. FINA (29 October 2021). "Men's 100m Freestyle Final Results" (PDF). Omega Timing.
  40. "Kyle Chalmers breaks 100m freestyle world record at FINA Swimming World Cup in Kazan". Olympics.com. 29 October 2021.
  41. "Italy breaks 4x50 medley world record". Swimming World Magazine. 3 November 2021.
  42. "Men's 4x50m Medley Relay Final Results" (PDF). MicroPlusTiming. 3 November 2021.
  43. "Szebasztian Szabo ties world record in 50 fly". SwimSwam. 6 November 2021.
  44. "Men's 50m Butterfly Final Results" (PDF). MicroPlusTiming. 6 November 2021.
  45. "Ilya Shymanovich ties 50 breast world record". SwimSwam. 7 November 2021.
  46. "Men's 50m Breaststroke Final Results" (PDF). MicroPlusTiming. 7 November 2021.
  47. "Netherlands set world record in mixed 4x50 medley relay". Swimming World Magazine. 7 November 2021.
  48. "Mixed 4x50m Medley Relay Final Results" (PDF). MicroPlusTiming. 7 November 2021.
  49. "Belarusian swimmer Ilya Shymanovich sets new world record in 100 metre breaststroke". CBC. 19 November 2021.
  50. "Men's 100m Breaststroke Results" (PDF). Omega Timing. 19 November 2021.
  51. "Workshop Virtual untuk Persiapan Piala Dunia U-20". pssi.org (in Indonesian). Football Association of Indonesia. 17 June 2020. Archived from the original on 27 June 2020. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  52. "Hockey Canada to Host Four Additional IIHF World Junior Championships and Three IIHF World Women's Championships Through 2021". Hockey Canada. 10 May 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  53. "CIERRE DORADO DEL PANAMERICANO DE NACIONES". 15 February 2021. Archived from the original on 8 March 2021.
  54. "White Completes Epic Comeback". World Snooker. 23 August 2020. Archived from the original on 13 September 2020.
  55. "Wilson Claims Championship League Crown". World Snooker. 30 October 2020. Archived from the original on 1 November 2020.
  56. "Selby Edges Gould in Thriller". World Snooker. 27 September 2020. Archived from the original on 24 October 2020.
  57. "Trump Beats Robertson in Fantastic Final". World Snooker. 18 October 2020. Archived from the original on 19 October 2020.
  58. "Trump Completes Northern Ireland Treble". World Snooker. 22 November 2020. Archived from the original on 23 November 2020.
  59. "Robertson Edges Trump in Thrilling UK Final". World Snooker. 7 December 2020. Archived from the original on 7 December 2020.
  60. "Selby Storms to Scottish Open Title". World Snooker. 13 December 2020. Archived from the original on 13 December 2020.
  61. "Trump Beats Lisowski To Win 20th Ranking Title". World Snooker. 20 December 2020. Archived from the original on 16 January 2021.
  62. "Allen Crowned Champion of Champions". World Snooker. 8 November 2020. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.