December 2011 in sports

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Deaths in December[]

Current sporting seasons[]

American football 2011[]

Auto racing 2011[]

  • V8 Supercar

Basketball 2011-2012[]

Cricket 2011-2012[]

Football (soccer) 2011-2012[]

National teams competitions
International clubs competitions
Domestic (national) competitions

Golf 2011[]

  • European Tour

Ice hockey 2011-2012[]

Rugby union 2011-2012[]

Snooker 2011-2012[]

  • Players Tour Championship

Volleyball 2011-2012[]

International clubs competitions

Winter sports[]

Days of the month[]

December 31, 2011 (Saturday)[]

Cross-country skiing[]

  • Tour de Ski:
    • Stage 3 in Oberstdorf, Germany:
      • Men's sprint classic (all RUS): 1st place, gold medalist(s) Nikita Kriukov 2:28.6 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Alexey Petukhov +0.7 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Nikolay Morilov +1.2 [1]
      • Women's sprint classic: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Justyna Kowalczyk (POL) 2:45.3 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Marit Bjørgen (NOR) +3.2 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen (NOR) +6.3 [2]

Ice hockey[]

December 30, 2011 (Friday)[]

Cross-country skiing[]

  • Tour de Ski:
    • Stage 2 in Oberhof, Germany:
      • Men's 15 km classic handicap start: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Axel Teichmann (GER) 46:03.3 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Petter Northug (NOR) 46:05.6 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Dario Cologna (SUI) 46:06.2 [5]
      • Women's 10 km classic handicap start: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Justyna Kowalczyk (POL) 32:02.4 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Therese Johaug (NOR) 32:02.6 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Marit Bjørgen (NOR) 32:11.5 [6]

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England, quarter-finals: [7]
    • Andy Hamilton (ENG) 5–2 Kim Huybrechts (BEL)
    • John Part (CAN) 4–5 James Wade (ENG)
    • Simon Whitlock (AUS) 5–1 Gary Anderson (SCO)
    • Adrian Lewis (ENG) 5–3 Terry Jenkins (ENG)

Equestrianism[]

  • Show jumpingWorld Cup, Western European League:
    • 8th competition in Mechelen, Belgium: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Gregory Wathelet (BEL) on Copin van de Broy 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Kevin Staut (FRA) on Silvana 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Rik Hemeryck (BEL) on Quarco de Kerambars[citation needed]

Ice hockey[]

Mixed martial arts[]

  • UFC 141 in Las Vegas, United States:[1]
    • Featherweight bout: Jimy Hettes (USA) def. Nam Phan (USA) via unanimous decision (30–25, 30–25, 30–26)
    • Light Heavyweight bout: Alexander Gustafsson (SWE) def. Vladimir Matyushenko (BLR) via TKO (punches)
    • Welterweight bout: Johny Hendricks (USA) def. Jon Fitch (USA) via KO (punch)
    • Lightweight bout: Nate Diaz (USA) def. Donald Cerrone (USA) via unanimous decision (30–27, 30–27, 29–28)
    • Heavyweight bout: Alistair Overeem (NED) def. Brock Lesnar (USA) via TKO (strikes)

Ski jumping[]

  • Four Hills Tournament:
    • Stage 1 in Oberstdorf, Germany:
      • HS 137 (all AUT): 1st place, gold medalist(s) Gregor Schlierenzauer 283.3 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Andreas Kofler 265.2 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Thomas Morgenstern 264.3 [9]

December 29, 2011 (Thursday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

Cricket[]

Cross-country skiing[]

  • Tour de Ski:
    • Stage 1 in Oberhof, Germany:
      • Men's 3.75 km free prologue: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Petter Northug (NOR) 7:58.3 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dario Cologna (SUI) 7:59.0 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Maurice Manificat (FRA) 8:02.3[2]
      • Women's 2.5 km free prologue: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Justyna Kowalczyk (POL) 7:03.7 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Marit Bjørgen (NOR) 7:04.1 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Hanna Brodin (SWE) 7:07.7[3]

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England, third round:[4]
    • John Part (CAN) 4–2 Kevin Painter (ENG)
    • James Wade (ENG) 4–0 Steve Farmer (ENG)
    • Kim Huybrechts (BEL) 4–1 Paul Nicholson (AUS)
    • Simon Whitlock (AUS) 4–3 Michael van Gerwen (NED)
    • Dave Chisnall (ENG) 0–4 Andy Hamilton (ENG)
    • Gary Anderson (SCO) 4–1 Colin Lloyd (ENG)

Football (soccer)[]

Ice hockey[]

December 28, 2011 (Wednesday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Women's World Cup in Lienz, Austria:
    • Giant slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Anna Fenninger (AUT) 2:16.08 (1:06.85, 1:09.23) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Federica Brignone (ITA) 2:16.28 (1:06.78, 1:09.50) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Tessa Worley (FRA) 2:16.47 (1:07.26, 1:09.21)

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England (ENG unless stated):
    • Second round:
      • Mervyn King 1–4 Michael van Gerwen (NLD)
      • Simon Whitlock (AUS) 4–1 Steve Beaton
      • Colin Lloyd 4–1 Scott Rand
      • Gary Anderson (SCO) 4–2 Devon Petersen (RSA)
    • Third round:
      • Adrian Lewis 4–0 Wayne Jones
      • Justin Pipe 1–4 Terry Jenkins

Ice hockey[]

December 27, 2011 (Tuesday)[]

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England, second round:
    • Terry Jenkins (ENG) 4–1 Co Stompé (NLD)
    • Richie Burnett (WAL) 1–4 John Part (CAN)
    • Vincent van der Voort (NLD) 3–4 Andy Hamilton (ENG)
    • James Richardson (ENG) 1–4 Kim Huybrechts (BEL)
    • Phil Taylor (ENG) 1–4 Dave Chisnall (ENG)
    • Paul Nicholson (AUS) 4–0 Alan Tabern (ENG)

Figure skating[]

  • Russian Championships in Saransk:[5]
    • Pairs: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov 194.86 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Ksenia Stolbova / Fedor Klimov 182.13 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anastasia Martiusheva / Alexei Rogonov 179.94
      • Bazarova & Larionov win their first national title.
    • Ladies: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Adelina Sotnikova 193.71 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Yulia Lipnitskaya 191.65 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Alena Leonova 178.15
      • Sotnikova wins her third national title.

Ice hockey[]

December 26, 2011 (Monday)[]

American football[]

  • NFL Monday Night Football, Week 16: New Orleans Saints 45, Atlanta Falcons 16
    • With 307 passing yards in the game, Saints quarterback Drew Brees breaks Dan Marino's single-season record from the 1984 season, of 5,084 yards.[6]

Cricket[]

Figure skating[]

  • Russian Championships in Saransk:[5]
    • Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Evgeni Plushenko 259.67 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Artur Gachinski 249.58 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Sergei Voronov 240.79
      • Plushenko wins the title for the ninth time.
    • Ice dancing: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ekaterina Bobrova / Dmitri Soloviev 171.47 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Elena Ilinykh / Nikita Katsalapov 161.94 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ekaterina Riazanova / Ilia Tkachenko 154.65
      • Bobrova & Soloviev win the title for the second time.

Football (soccer)[]

Ice hockey[]

December 25, 2011 (Sunday)[]

American football[]

  • NFL Christmas game, Week 16: Green Bay Packers 35, Chicago Bears 21
    • The Packers' victory ensures home-field advantage throughout the playoffs, and allows the Atlanta Falcons to claim an NFC Wild Card place at the expense of the Bears, who are eliminated.

Basketball[]

  • NBA season opening day:
    • New York Knicks 106, Boston Celtics 104
    • Miami Heat 105, Dallas Mavericks 94
    • Chicago Bulls 88, Los Angeles Lakers 87
    • Oklahoma City Thunder 97, Orlando Magic 89
    • Los Angeles Clippers 105, Golden State Warriors 86

December 24, 2011 (Saturday)[]

December 23, 2011 (Friday)[]

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England, second round:
    • Mark Walsh (ENG) 3–4 Kevin Painter (ENG)
    • James Wade (ENG) 4–0 Jelle Klaasen (NED)
    • Steve Farmer (ENG) 4–2 Kevin Münch (GER)

December 22, 2011 (Thursday)[]

Basketball[]

  • Euroleague Regular Season Matchday 10 (teams in bold advance to the Top 16):
    • Group A:
      • Bennet Cantù Italy 76–83 Turkey Fenerbahçe Ülker
      • Gescrap Bizkaia Spain 77–72 Spain Caja Laboral
      • SLUC Nancy France 74–79 Greece Olympiacos
        • Final standings: Fenerbahçe Ülker, Olympiacos 6–4, Bennet Cantù, Gescrap Bizkaia, Caja Laboral 5–5, SLUC Nancy 3–7.
    • Group C:
      • Anadolu Efes Turkey 66–75 Spain Real Madrid
      • Spirou Charleroi Belgium 69–86 Israel Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv
      • Partizan Mt:s Belgrade Serbia 66–72 Italy EA7 Emporio Armani
        • Final standings: Real Madrid 8–2, Maccabi Tel Aviv 7–3, Anadolu Efes 5–5, EA7 Emporio Armani, Partizan Mt:s Belgrade 4–6, Spirou Charleroi 2–8.

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England, second round:
    • Wayne Jones (ENG) 4–0 Roland Scholten (NLD)
    • Adrian Lewis (ENG) 4–2 Robert Thornton (SCO)
    • Wes Newton (ENG) 3–4 Justin Pipe (ENG)

Football (soccer)[]

Snowboarding[]

  • World Cup in Carezza, Italy:
    • Slalom men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Benjamin Karl (AUT) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Simon Schoch (SUI) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Siegfried Grabner (AUT)
      • Parallel slalom standings (after 4 of 11 events) & Overall standings: (1) Karl 3250 points (2) Roland Fischnaller (ITA) 2530 (3) Andreas Prommegger (AUT) 2350
    • Slalom women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Patrizia Kummer (SUI) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Isabella Laböck (GER) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anke Karstens (GER)

December 21, 2011 (Wednesday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Flachau, Austria:
    • Slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ivica Kostelić (CRO) 1:48.94 (55.11, 53.83) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) André Myhrer (SWE) 1:49.01 (55.46, 53.55) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Cristian Deville (ITA) 1:49.03 (55.25, 53.78)
      • Slalom standings (after 3 of 11 races): (1) Kostelić 245 points (2) Deville 180 (3) Myhrer 170
      • Overall standings (after 12 of 45 races): (1) Marcel Hirscher (AUT) 425 points (2) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 416 (3) Ted Ligety (USA) 385

Basketball[]

  • Euroleague Regular Season Matchday 10 (teams in bold advance to the Top 16):
    • Group B:
      • Žalgiris Kaunas Lithuania 87–76 Croatia KK Zagreb
      • Panathinaikos Greece 71–66 Germany Brose Baskets
      • Unicaja Spain 83–91 Russia CSKA Moscow
        • Final standings: CSKA Moscow 10–0, Panathinaikos 7–3, Žalgiris Kaunas, Unicaja 4–6, Brose Baskets 3–7, KK Zagreb 2–8.
    • Group D:
      • Asseco Prokom Gdynia Poland 53–79 Italy Montepaschi Siena
      • Union Olimpija Ljubljana Slovenia 63–76 Russia UNICS Kazan
      • FC Barcelona Regal Spain 79–50 Turkey Galatasaray Medical Park
        • Final standings: FC Barcelona Regal 9–1, Montepaschi Siena 8–2, UNICS Kazan 7–3, Galatasaray Medical Park 4–6, Asseco Prokom Gdynia, Union Olimpija Ljubljana 1–9.
  • FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup in Salé, Morocco:

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 2nd Test in Mirpur, day 5:  Bangladesh 338 & 234 (82.1 overs);  Pakistan 470 & 107/3 (20.5 overs). Pakistan win by 7 wickets; win 2-match series 2–0.

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England:
    • Preliminary round: Devon Petersen (RSA) 4–3 José Oliveira de Sousa (POR)
    • First round:
      • Andy Smith (ENG) 0–3 Scott Rand (ENG)
      • John Part (CAN) 3–0 John Henderson (SCO)
      • Simon Whitlock (AUS) 3–0 Dennis Smith (ENG)
      • Steve Brown (ENG) 2–3 Petersen

Football (soccer)[]

  • Colombia Categoría Primera A Torneo Finalización Final, second leg (first leg score in parentheses): Once Caldas 2–1 (2–3) Junior. 3–3 on points, 4–4 on aggregate; Junior win 4–2 on penalties.
    • Junior win their seventh league title.

Snowboarding[]

December 20, 2011 (Tuesday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Women's World Cup in Flachau, Austria:
    • Slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Marlies Schild (AUT) 1:51.53 (55.48, 56.05) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Maria Höfl-Riesch (GER) 1:51.99 (56.01, 55.98) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Tina Maze (SLO) 1:52.35 (55.77, 56.58)
      • Slalom standings (after 3 of 10 races): (1) Schild 300 points (2) Kathrin Zettel (AUT) 155 (3) Höfl-Riesch 140
      • Overall standings (after 9 of 40 races): (1) Lindsey Vonn (USA) 554 points (2) Schild 324 (3) Viktoria Rebensburg (GER) 286

Basketball[]

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 2nd Test in Mirpur, day 4:  Bangladesh 338 & 114/5 (35 overs);  Pakistan 470 (154.5 overs; Shakib Al Hasan 6/82). Bangladesh trail by 18 runs with 5 wickets remaining.
      • Shakib becomes the first Bangladesh player to score a hundred and take five wickets in an innings, in the same Test match.

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England:
    • Preliminary round: Joe Cullen (ENG) 4–2 Oliver Ferenc (SRB)
    • First round:
      • Colin Lloyd (ENG) 3–1 Darin Young (USA)
      • Colin Osborne (ENG) 1–3 Michael van Gerwen (NLD)
      • Gary Anderson (SCO) 3–2 Jyhan Artut (GER)
      • Terry Jenkins (ENG) 3–0 Cullen

Freestyle skiing[]

  • World Cup in Méribel, France:
    • Dual moguls men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Mikaël Kingsbury (CAN) 20 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Anthony Benna (FRA) 15 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Sho Kashima (USA) 21
      • Moguls standings (after 2 of 13 events): (1) Kingsbury 200 points (2) Kashima & Benna 140
      • Overall standings: (1) Kingsbury 40 points (2) Egor Korotkov (RUS) 32 (3) Benna & Kashima 28
    • Dual moguls women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Hannah Kearney (USA) 21 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Justine Dufour-Lapointe (CAN) 14 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Heather McPhie (USA) 18
      • Moguls standings (after 2 of 13 events): (1) Kearney 200 points (2) Eliza Outtrim (USA) 106 (3) Nikola Sudová (CZE) 105
      • Overall standings: (1) Kearney & Kelsey Serwa (CAN) 40 points (3) Sanna Lüdi (SUI) 32

December 19, 2011 (Monday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Alta Badia, Italy:
    • Slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Marcel Hirscher (AUT) 1:47.16 (53.50, 53.66) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Giuliano Razzoli (ITA) 1:47.72 (53.95, 53.77) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Felix Neureuther (GER) 1:47.76 (54.04, 53.72)
      • Slalom standings (after 2 of 11 races): (1) Hirscher 160 points (2) Ivica Kostelić (CRO) 145 (3) Cristian Deville (ITA) 120
      • Overall standings (after 11 of 45 races): (1) Hirscher 425 points (2) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 416 (3) Ted Ligety (USA) 385

Basketball[]

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 2nd Test in Mirpur, day 3:  Bangladesh 338;  Pakistan 292/3 (96 overs; Taufeeq Umar 130). Pakistan trail by 46 runs with 7 wickets remaining in the 1st innings.

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England:
    • Preliminary round: Per Laursen (DEN) 3–4 Petri Korte (FIN)
    • First round:
      • Andy Hamilton (ENG) 3–2 Antonio Alcinas (ESP)
      • Mervyn King (ENG) 3–0 Geoff Kime (AUS)
      • Kevin Painter (ENG) 3–1 Arron Monk (ENG)
      • James Wade (ENG) 3–1 Korte

Snooker[]

December 18, 2011 (Sunday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Alta Badia, Italy (AUT unless stated):
    • Giant slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Massimiliano Blardone (ITA) 2:46.49 (1:29.07, 1:17.42) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Hannes Reichelt 2:46.84 (1:28.91, 1:17.93) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Philipp Schörghofer 2:47.06 (1:28.78, 1:18.28)
      • Giant slalom standings (after 4 of 9 races): (1) Ted Ligety (USA) 330 points (2) Marcel Hirscher 265 (3) Schörghofer 182
      • Overall standings (after 10 of 45 races): (1) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 416 points (2) Beat Feuz (SUI) 360 (3) Ligety 359
  • Women's World Cup in Courchevel, France:
    • Slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Marlies Schild 1:42.64 (52.28, 50.36) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tanja Poutiainen (FIN) 1:44.51 (53.08, 51.43) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Kathrin Zettel 1:44.83 (54.03, 50.80)
      • Slalom standings (after 2 of 10 races): (1) Schild 200 points (2) Poutiainen 130 (3) Zettel 105
      • Overall standings (after 8 of 40 races): (1) Lindsey Vonn (USA) 522 points (2) Viktoria Rebensburg (GER) 286 (3) Elisabeth Görgl 269

American football[]

  • NFL, Week 15:
    • Kansas City Chiefs 19, Green Bay Packers 14
      • The Packers suffer their first loss of the season, thus ending their bid to become the second team in NFL history with a perfect season, after the 1972 Miami Dolphins.
    • Indianapolis Colts 27, Tennessee Titans 13
      • The Colts win their first game of the season, and avoid becoming the second team in NFL history to have a winless 0–16 record.

Badminton[]

  • BWF Super Series:
    • Super Series Masters Finals in Liuzhou, China (CHN unless stated):
      • Women's Doubles: Wang Xiaoli/Yu Yang def. Ha Jung-eun/Kim Min-jung (KOR) 21–8, 21–12
      • Mixed Doubles: Zhang Nan/Zhao Yunlei def. Xu Chen/Ma Jin 21–13, 21–15
      • Men's Doubles: Mathias Boe/Carsten Mogensen (DEN) def. Chai Biao / Guo Zhendong 25–23, 21–7
      • Women's Singles: Wang Yihan def. Saina Nehwal (IND) 18–21, 21–13, 21–13
      • Men's Singles: Lin Dan def. Chen Long 21–12, 21–16

Biathlon[]

Bobsleigh[]

  • World Cup in Winterberg, Germany:
    • 4-men: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Germany (Thomas Florschütz, Gino Gerhardi, Kevin Kuske, Thomas Blaschek) 1:50.52 (55.39, 55.13) 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Russia (Alexandr Zubkov, Filipp Yegorov, Dmitry Trunenkov, Nikolay Hrenkov) 1:50.54 (55.38, 55.16) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Latvia (Oskars Melbārdis, Helvijs Lusis, Arvis Vilkaste, Janis Strenga) 1:50.65 (55.39, 55.26)
      • Standings (after 3 of 8 races): (1) Florschütz 625 points (2) Zubkov 619 (3) Steven Holcomb (USA) 578

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 2nd Test in Mirpur, day 2:  Bangladesh 338 (107.2 overs; Shakib Al Hasan 144);  Pakistan 87/1 (27 overs). Pakistan trail by 251 runs with 9 wickets remaining in the 1st innings.

Cross-country skiing[]

  • World Cup in Rogla, Slovenia:
    • Men's sprint freestyle: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Dario Cologna (SUI) 2:27.7 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Nikolay Morilov (RUS) 2:28.0 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anders Gløersen (NOR) 2:29.0
      • Sprint standings (after 4 of 13 races): (1) Alexei Petukhov (RUS) 237 points (2) Teodor Peterson (SWE) 207 (3) Cologna 160
      • Overall standings (after 10 of 37 races): (1) Petter Northug (NOR) 600 points (2) Cologna 508 (3) Maurice Manificat (FRA) 266
    • Women's sprint freestyle: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Maiken Caspersen Falla (NOR) 2:15.8 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Chandra Crawford (CAN) 2:16.2 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ida Ingemarsdotter (SWE) 2:17.3
      • Sprint standings (after 4 of 13 races): (1) Kikkan Randall (USA) 280 points (2) Falla 216 (3) Natalya Matveyeva (RUS) 212
      • Overall standings (after 10 of 37 races, all NOR): (1) Marit Bjørgen 582 points (2) Vibeke Skofterud 479 (3) Therese Johaug 471

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England:
    • Preliminary round: Connie Finnan (IRL) 3–4 Warren French (NZL)
    • First round:
      • Brendan Dolan (NIR) 0–3 Kim Huybrechts (BEL)
      • Mark Dudbridge (ENG) 0–3 Dave Chisnall (ENG)
      • Raymond van Barneveld (NLD) 0–3 James Richardson (ENG)
      • Mark Walsh (ENG) 3–1 French

Equestrianism[]

  • Show jumpingWorld Cup, Western European League:
    • 7th competition in London, United Kingdom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ben Maher (GBR) on Tripple X III 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Marcus Ehning (GER) on Sabrina 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Dermott Lennon (IRL) on Hallmark Elite
      • Standings (after 7 of 12 competitions): (1) Rolf-Göran Bengtsson (SWE) 71 points (2) Steve Guerdat (SUI) 51 (3) Nick Skelton (GBR) 48

Football (soccer)[]

Freestyle skiing[]

  • World Cup in Innichen, Italy:
    • Ski cross men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Andreas Matt (AUT) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Egor Korotkov (RUS) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Alex Fiva (SUI)
      • Ski cross standings (after 2 of 11 races): (1) Korotkov 160 points (2) Matt 132 (3) David Duncan (CAN) 110
      • Overall standings: (1) Korotkov 32 points (2) Matt 26 (3) Duncan 22
    • Ski cross women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Kelsey Serwa (CAN) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sanna Lüdi (SUI) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Katrin Müller (SUI)
      • Ski cross standings (after 2 of 11 races): (1) Serwa 200 points (2) Lüdi 160 (3) Müller 86
      • Overall standings: (1) Serwa 40 points (2) Lüdi 32 (3) Hannah Kearney (USA) & (USA) 20

Handball[]

Nordic combined[]

  • World Cup in Seefeld, Austria:
    • HS 109 / 10 km: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Jason Lamy-Chappuis (FRA) 27:41.9 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Alessandro Pittin (ITA) 27:45.8 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Jørgen Graabak (NOR) 27:49.0
      • Standings (after 8 of 23 races): (1) Lamy-Chappuis 554 points (2) Tino Edelmann (GER) 381 (3) Akito Watabe (JPN) 361

Rugby union[]

  • Heineken Cup pool stage Matchday 4:
    • Pool 1:
      • Munster Ireland 19–13 Wales Scarlets
      • Northampton Saints England 45–0 France Castres
        • Standings (after 4 matches): Munster 16 points, Scarlets 11, Northampton Saints 8, Castres 6.
    • Pool 6: Toulouse France 24–31 England Harlequins
      • Standings (after 4 matches): Toulouse 13 points, Harlequins 12, England Gloucester 9, Ireland Connacht 2.
  • Amlin Challenge Cup pool stage Matchday 4:
    • Pool 4: Newport Gwent Dragons Wales 19–23 England Exeter Chiefs
      • Standings (after 4 matches): France Perpignan, Exeter Chiefs 14 points, Newport Gwent Dragons 10, Italy Cavalieri Prato 0.
    • Pool 5: Sale Sharks England 41–21 France Agen
      • Standings (after 4 matches): France Brive 18 points, Sale Sharks 15, Agen 5, Spain La Vila 0.

Sailing[]

  • World Championships in Perth, Australia:
    • Women's 470: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Tara Pacheco, Berta Betanzos (ESP) 63 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Hannah Mills, Saskia Clark (GBR) 68 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Jo Aleh, Polly Powrie (NZL) 73
    • Men's 49er: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Nathan Outteridge, Iain Jensen (AUS) 91 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Peter Burling, Blair Tuke (NZL) 112 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) , (DEN) 112
    • Men's RS:X: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Dorian van Rijsselberghe (NED) 33 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Piotr Myszka (POL) 40 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Nimrod Mashiach (ISR) 52
    • Men's Laser: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Tom Slingsby (AUS) 37 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Nick Thompson (GBR) 56 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Andrew Murdock (NZL) 59

Snooker[]

Ski jumping[]

  • Men's World Cup in Engelberg, Switzerland:
    • HS 137: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Andreas Kofler (AUT) 264.7 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Kamil Stoch (POL) 260.8 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anders Bardal (NOR) 260.5
      • Standings (after 7 of 27 events): (1) Kofler 508 points (2) Bardal 390 (3) Gregor Schlierenzauer (AUT) 376

December 17, 2011 (Saturday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Val Gardena, Italy:
    • Downhill: Cancelled due to strong winds.
  • Women's World Cup in Courchevel, France:
    • Giant slalom: Cancelled due to heavy snow.

Basketball[]

  • FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup in Salé, Morocco (teams in bold advance to the quarterfinals):
    • Group A:
      • ASB Mazembe Democratic Republic of the Congo 74–62 Burundi
      • Union Bank Nigeria 72–93 Morocco AS Salé
      • Al Ahly Libya 72–85 Angola C.R.D. Libolo
        • Final standings: AS Salé 10 points, C.R.D. Libolo 9, Union Bank 8, ASB Mazembe 7, Al Ahly 6, Urunani 5.
    • Group B:
      • Royal Hoopers Nigeria 63–88 Angola Petro Atlético
      • Étoile Sportive du Sahel Tunisia 127–61 Equatorial Guinea
      • C.R. Al Hoceima Morocco 62–70 Angola Primeiro de Agosto
        • Final standings: Primeiro de Agosto 10 points, Étoile Sportive du Sahel 9, Petro Atlético 8, C.R. Al Hoceima 7, Malabo Kings 6, Royal Hoopers 4.

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 3 in Hochfilzen, Austria:
    • 12.5 km pursuit men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Andreas Birnbacher (GER) 35:40.3 (0+0+0+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Ole Einar Bjørndalen (NOR) 35:40.5 (0+0+0+0) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Simon Fourcade (FRA) 35:41.6 (1+0+0+0)
      • Pursuit standings (after 3 of 8 races): (1) Tarjei Bø (NOR) 140 points (2) Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 131 (3) Birnbacher & Benjamin Weger (SUI) 124
      • Overall standings (after 7 of 26 races): (1) Bø 308 points (2) Martin Fourcade (FRA) 289 (3) Svendsen 242
    • 10 km pursuit women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Olga Zaitseva (RUS) 31:52.2 (0+0+0+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Helena Ekholm (SWE) 32:21.3 (0+0+0+1) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Darya Domracheva (BLR) 32:36.9 (1+1+0+1)
      • Pursuit standings (after 3 of 8 races): (1) Zaitseva 140 points (2) Tora Berger (NOR) 135 (3) Domracheva 133
      • Overall standings (after 7 of 26 races): (1) Magdalena Neuner (GER) 336 points (2) Domracheva 327 (3) Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN) 301

Bobsleigh[]

Cricket[]

  • Sri Lanka in South Africa:
    • 1st Test in Centurion, day 3:  Sri Lanka 180 & 150 (39.1 overs; Vernon Philander 5/49);  South Africa 411 (122 overs). South Africa win by an innings & 81 runs; lead 3-match series 1–0.
  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 2nd Test in Mirpur, day 1:  Bangladesh 234/5 (68 overs; Shakib Al Hasan 108*);  Pakistan.

Cross-country skiing[]

  • World Cup in Rogla, Slovenia:
    • Men's 15 km classic mass start: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Petter Northug (NOR) 42:42.7 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dario Cologna (SUI) 42:42.9 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Alexey Poltoranin (KAZ) 42:43.8
      • Distance standings (after 5 of 21 races): (1) Northug 340 points (2) Maurice Manificat (FRA) 202 (3) Cologna 188
      • Overall standings (after 9 of 37 races): (1) Northug 600 points (2) Cologna 408 (3) Manificat 266
    • Women's 10 km classic mass start: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Justyna Kowalczyk (POL) 32:49.7 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Therese Johaug (NOR) 33:11.8 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Vibeke Skofterud (NOR) 33:17.1
      • Distance standings (after 5 of 21 races): (1) Marit Bjørgen (NOR) 296 points (2) Skofterud 294 (3) Johaug 281
      • Overall standings (after 9 of 37 races): (1) Bjørgen 582 points (2) Skofterud 479 (3) Johaug 471

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England:
    • Preliminary round:
      • Dietmar Burger (AUT) 0–4 Christian Perez (PHI)
      • Kevin Münch (GER) 4–2 Lee Choon Peng (MYS)
    • First round:
      • Peter Wright (SCO) 1–3 Jelle Klaasen (NLD)
      • Ronnie Baxter (ENG) 2–3 Steve Farmer (ENG)
      • Robert Thornton (SCO) 3–1 Ian White (ENG)
      • Alan Tabern (ENG) 3–1 Perez
      • Steve Beaton (ENG) 3–2 Magnus Caris (SWE)
      • Vincent van der Voort (NLD) 3–2 Mark Hylton (ENG)
      • Paul Nicholson (AUS) 3–1 Mensur Suljović (AUT)
      • Denis Ovens (ENG) w/d–w/o Münch

Football (soccer)[]

Freestyle skiing[]

  • World Cup in Innichen, Italy:
    • Ski cross men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Brady Leman (CAN) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Egor Korotkov (RUS) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) David Duncan (CAN)
    • Ski cross women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Kelsey Serwa (CAN) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sanna Lüdi (SUI) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Marielle Thompson (CAN)

Luge[]

  • World Cup 3 in Calgary, Canada (GER unless stated):
    • Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Andi Langenhan 1:29.406 (44.716, 44.690) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Felix Loch 1:29.500 (44.947, 44.553) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) David Möller 1:29.657 (44.808, 44.849)
      • Standings (after 3 of 9 races): (1) Loch 285 points (2) Möller 225 (3) Langenhan 210
    • Doubles: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Tobias Wendl/Tobias Arlt 1:27.661 (43.795, 43.866) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Andreas Linger/Wolfgang Linger (AUT) 1:27.693 (43.831, 43.862) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Toni Eggert/Sascha Benecken 1:27.829 (43.912, 43.917)
      • Standings (after 3 of 9 races): (1) Linger/Linger 255 points (2) Peter Penz/Georg Fischler (AUT) 211 (3) Wendl/Arlt 210

Mixed martial arts[]

  • Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal in San Diego, California, United States:
    • Lightweight Championship bout: Gilbert Melendez (USA) (c) def. Jorge Masvidal (USA) via unanimous decision (50–45, 50–45, 49–46)
    • Women's Featherweight Championship bout: Cristiane Santos (BRA) (c) def. Hiroko Yamanaka (JPN) via TKO (punches)
    • Light Heavyweight bout: Gegard Mousasi (ARM) def. Ovince St. Preux (HAI) via unanimous decision (29–28, 29–28, 29–28)
    • Lightweight bout: Karl James Noons (USA) def. Billy Evangelista (USA) via unanimous decision (29–28, 29–28, 29–28)

Nordic combined[]

  • World Cup in Seefeld, Austria:
    • HS 109 / 10 km: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Jason Lamy-Chappuis (FRA) 29:14.5 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Akito Watabe (JPN) 29:15.5 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Alessandro Pittin (ITA) 29:18.0
      • Standings (after 7 of 23 races): (1) Lamy-Chappuis 454 points (2) Tino Edelmann (GER) 368 (3) Watabe 316

Rugby union[]

  • Heineken Cup pool stage Matchday 4:
    • Pool 2: London Irish England 19–25 France Racing Métro
      • Standings (after 4 matches): Wales Cardiff Blues, Scotland Edinburgh 13 points, London Irish 8, Racing Métro 7.
    • Pool 3:
      • Montpellier France 13–13 Scotland Glasgow Warriors
      • Leinster Ireland 52–27 England Bath
        • Standings (after 4 matches): Leinster 16 points, Glasgow Warriors 10, Bath, Montpellier 6.
    • Pool 4:
      • Leicester Tigers England 23–19 France Clermont
      • Aironi Italy 20–46 Ireland Ulster
        • Standings (after 4 matches): Ulster 14 points, Leicester Tigers 12, Clermont 11, Aironi 0.
    • Pool 6: Gloucester England 23–19 Ireland Connacht
      • Standings: France Toulouse 12 points (3 matches), Gloucester 9 (4), England Harlequins 8 (3), Connacht 2 (4).
  • Amlin Challenge Cup pool stage Matchday 4:
    • Pool 1: Worcester Warriors England 57–13 Romania București Wolves
    • Pool 2:
      • Petrarca Padova Italy 3–43 France Lyon
      • Toulon France 36–10 England Newcastle Falcons
        • Standings (after 4 matches): Toulon 15 points, Newcastle Falcons 13, Lyon 10, Petrarca Padova 0.
    • Pool 4: Cavalieri Prato Italy 13–30 France Perpignan
      • Standings: Perpignan 14 points (4 matches), Exeter Chiefs 10 (3), Newport Gwent Dragons 9 (3), Cavalieri Prato 0 (4).

Sailing[]

  • World Championships in Perth, Australia:
    • Men's Star: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Robert Scheidt, Bruno Prada (BRA) 45 points, 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Robert Stanjek, Frithjof Kleen (GER) 61 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mark Mendelblatt, Brian Fatih (USA) 73

Skeleton[]

  • World Cup in Winterberg, Germany:
    • Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Martins Dukurs (LAT) 57.90 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Frank Rommel (GER) 58.22 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Aleksandr Tretyakov (RUS) 58.29
      • Standings (after 3 of 8 races): (1) Dukurs 675 points (2) Tretyakov 610 (3) Rommel 586
    • Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Amy Gough (CAN) 1:00.16 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Katharina Heinz (GER) 1:00.24 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Marion Thees (GER) 1:00.26
      • Standings (after 3 of 8 races): (1) Olga Potylitsina (RUS) 585 points (2) Mellisa Hollingsworth (CAN) 545 (3) Thees 536

Ski jumping[]

  • Men's World Cup in Engelberg, Switzerland (AUT unless stated):
    • HS 137: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Anders Bardal (NOR) 266.2 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Martin Koch 258.1 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Thomas Morgenstern 257.4
      • Standings (after 6 of 27 events): (1) Andreas Kofler 408 points (2) Bardal 330 (3) Gregor Schlierenzauer 326

Snooker[]

Snowboarding[]

  • World Cup in Telluride, United States:
  • World Cup in Ruka, Finland:
    • Halfpipe men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Markus Malin (SWE) 94.0 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) (NED) 88.0 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) (FIN) 83.3
      • Halfpipe standings: (1) Janne Korpi (FIN) 1600 points (2) Malin 1150 (3) Ryō Aono (JPN) 1040
      • Freestyle Overall standings: (1) Korpi 2620 points (2) Dimi de Jong (NED) 1480 (3) Niklas Mattsson (SWE) 1160
    • Halfpipe women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) (FRA) 81.3 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) (FRA) 80.0 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ella Suitiala (FIN) 67.3
      • Halfpipe standings & Freestyle Overall standings: (1) Lefèvre 1290 points (2) Ursina Haller (SUI) 1200 (3) Queralt Castellet (ESP) 1180

December 16, 2011 (Friday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Val Gardena, Italy:
    • Super giant slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Beat Feuz (SUI) 1:21.51 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Bode Miller (USA) 1:21.81 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Kjetil Jansrud (NOR) 1:21.95
      • Super-G standings (after 3 of 8 races): (1) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 230 points (2) Feuz 171 (3) Didier Cuche (SUI) 121
      • Overall standings (after 9 of 45 races): (1) Svindal 384 points (2) Feuz 360 (3) Ted Ligety (USA) 309

Basketball[]

  • FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup in Salé, Morocco:
    • Group A:
      • C.R.D. Libolo Angola 83–56 Burundi
      • Al Ahly Libya 61–83 Nigeria Union Bank
      • AS Salé Morocco 70–56 Democratic Republic of the Congo ASB Mazembe
        • Standings (after 4 games): AS Salé 8 points, C.R.D. Libolo, Union Bank 7, ASB Mazembe, Al Ahly 5, Urunani 4.
    • Group B:
      • Equatorial Guinea 51–101 Angola Petro Atlético
      • Étoile Sportive du Sahel Tunisia 84–62 Morocco C.R. Al Hoceima
      • Primeiro de Agosto Angola 95–69 Nigeria Royal Hoopers
        • Standings (after 4 games): Primeiro de Agosto 8 points, Étoile Sportive du Sahel 7, Petro Atlético, C.R. Al Hoceima 6, Malabo Kings 5, Royal Hoopers 3.

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 3 in Hochfilzen, Austria:
    • 7.5 km sprint women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Olga Zaitseva (RUS) 20:36.6 (0+1) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Darya Domracheva (BLR) 20:50.5 (1+1) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Helena Ekholm (SWE) 21:06.8 (1+0)
      • Sprint standings (after 3 of 10 races): (1) Magdalena Neuner (GER) 163 points (2) Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN) & Domracheva 134
      • Overall standings (after 6 of 26 races): (1) Neuner 307 points (2) Domracheva 279 (3) Mäkäräinen 261

Cricket[]

  • Sri Lanka in South Africa:
    • 1st Test in Centurion, day 2:  Sri Lanka 180;  South Africa 389/9 (118 overs). South Africa lead by 209 runs with 1 wicket remaining in the 1st innings.

Darts[]

  • PDC World Championship in London, England:
    • Preliminary round: Haruki Muramatsu (JPN) 4–2 Dennis Nilsson (SWE)
    • First round:
      • Justin Pipe (ENG) 3–1 Sean Reed (AUS)
      • Co Stompé (NED) 3–0 Michael Smith (ENG)
      • Wes Newton (ENG) 3–0 Kurt van de Rijck (BEL)
      • Phil Taylor (ENG) 3–0 Muramatsu

Handball[]

Luge[]

  • World Cup 3 in Calgary, Canada:
    • Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Alex Gough (CAN) 1:34.212 (47.153, 47.059) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tatjana Hüfner (GER) 1:34.324 (47.176, 47.148) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Tatiana Ivanova (RUS) 1:34.724 (47.290, 47.434)
      • Standings (after 3 of 9 races): (1) Hüfner 270 points (2) Gough 230 (3) Natalie Geisenberger (GER) 210

Nordic combined[]

Rugby union[]

  • Heineken Cup pool stage Matchday 4:
    • Pool 2: Edinburgh Scotland 19–12 Wales Cardiff Blues
      • Standings: Edinburgh, Cardiff Blues 13 points (4 matches), England London Irish 7 (3), France Racing Métro 3 (3).
    • Pool 5:
      • Ospreys Wales 13–16 England Saracens
      • Biarritz France 29–12 Italy Benetton Treviso
        • Standings (after 4 matches): Saracens 14 points, Biarritz 12, Ospreys 8, Benetton Treviso 6.

Sailing[]

  • World Championships in Perth, Australia:
    • Women's match racing:
      • Petite final: Ekaterina Skudina, Elena Siuzeva, Elena Oblova (RUS) 1–3 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Claire Leroy, Elodie Bertrand, Marie Riou (FRA)
      • Final: 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Lucy MacGregor, Annie Lush, (GBR) 0–4 1st place, gold medalist(s) Anna Tunnicliffe, Deborah Capozzi, Molly Vandemoer (USA)

Snowboarding[]

  • World Cup in Telluride, United States:
    • Snowboard cross men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Pierre Vaultier (FRA) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Christopher Robanske (CAN) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Nick Baumgartner (USA)
    • Snowboard cross women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Lindsey Jacobellis (USA) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dominique Maltais (CAN) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Déborah Anthonioz (FRA)

December 15, 2011 (Thursday)[]

Basketball[]

  • Euroleague Regular Season Matchday 9 (teams in bold advance to the Top 16):
    • Group A:
    • Group B: Brose Baskets Germany 68–82 Lithuania Žalgiris Kaunas
      • Standings: Russia CSKA Moscow 9–0, Greece Panathinaikos 6–3, Spain Unicaja 4–5, Žalgiris Kaunas, Brose Baskets 3–6, Croatia KK Zagreb 2–7.
    • Group C: Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv Israel 96–57 Turkey Anadolu Efes
      • Standings: Spain Real Madrid 7–2, Maccabi Tel Aviv 6–3, Anadolu Efes 5–4, Serbia Partizan Mt:s Belgrade 4–5, Italy EA7 Emporio Armani 3–6, Belgium Spirou Charleroi 2–7.
    • Group D:
      • UNICS Kazan Russia 68–41 Poland Asseco Prokom Gdynia
      • Montepaschi Siena Italy 77–74 Spain FC Barcelona Regal
        • Standings: FC Barcelona Regal 8���1, Montepaschi Siena 7–2, UNICS Kazan 6–3, Turkey Galatasaray Medical Park 4–5, Asseco Prokom Gdynia, Slovenia Union Olimpija Ljubljana 1–8.
  • FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup in Salé, Morocco:
    • Group A: ASB Mazembe Democratic Republic of the Congo 75–62 Libya Al Ahly
      • Standings (after 3 games): Morocco AS Salé 6 points, Angola C.R.D. Libolo, Nigeria Union Bank 5, ASB Mazembe, Al Ahly 4, Burundi 3.
    • Group B:
      • Royal Hoopers Nigeria 57–73 Tunisia Étoile Sportive du Sahel
      • C.R. Al Hoceima Morocco 66–60 Nigeria Royal Hoopers
        • Standings (after 3 games): Angola Primeiro de Agosto 6 points, C.R. Al Hoceima, Étoile Sportive du Sahel 5, Angola Petro Atlético, Equatorial Guinea 4, Royal Hoopers 2.

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 3 in Hochfilzen, Austria:
    • 10 km sprint men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Tarjei Bø (NOR) 23:57.2 (1+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Martin Fourcade (FRA) 24:01.2 (1+1) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Timofey Lapshin (RUS) 24:14.4 (0+0)
      • Sprint standings (after 3 of 10 races): (1) Bø 152 points (2) Carl Johan Bergman (SWE) 120 (3) Fourcade 116
      • Overall standings (after 6 of 26 races): (1) Bø 265 points (2) Fourcade 253 (3) Bergman & Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 225

Cricket[]

  • Sri Lanka in South Africa:
    • 1st Test in Centurion, day 1:  Sri Lanka 180 (47.4 overs; Vernon Philander 5/53);  South Africa 90/1 (34 overs). South Africa trail by 90 runs with 9 wickets remaining in the 1st innings.

Darts[]

  • 2012 World Championship in London, England:
    • Preliminary round: Paul Barham (ENG) 2–4 Scott MacKenzie (HKG)
    • First round:
      • Jamie Caven (ENG) 1–3 Roland Scholten (NLD)
      • Mark Webster (WAL) 2–3 Richie Burnett (WAL)
      • Adrian Lewis (ENG) 3–2 Nigel Heydon (ENG)
      • Wayne Jones (ENG) 3–1 MacKenzie

Football (soccer)[]

  • FIFA Club World Cup in Yokohama, Japan:
    • Semi-finals: Al-Sadd Qatar 0–4 Spain Barcelona
  • UEFA Europa League group stage Matchday 6 (teams in bold advance to the round of 32):
    • Group A:
      • P.A.O.K. Greece 1–1 Russia Rubin Kazan
      • Shamrock Rovers Republic of Ireland 0–4 England Tottenham Hotspur
        • Final standings: P.A.O.K. 12 points, Rubin Kazan 11, Tottenham Hotspur 10, Shamrock Rovers 0.
    • Group B:
      • Hannover 96 Germany 3–1 Ukraine Vorskla Poltava
      • Copenhagen Denmark 0–1 Belgium Standard Liège
        • Final standings: Standard Liège 14 points, Hannover 96 11, Copenhagen 5, Vorskla Poltava 2.
    • Group C:
      • Hapoel Tel Aviv Israel 2–0 Poland Legia Warsaw
      • PSV Eindhoven Netherlands 2–1 Romania Rapid București
        • Final standings: PSV Eindhoven 16 points, Legia Warsaw 9, Hapoel Tel Aviv 7, Rapid București 3.
    • Group G:
      • AZ Netherlands 1–1 Ukraine Metalist Kharkiv
      • Austria Wien Austria 2–0 Sweden Malmö FF
        • Final standings: Metalist Kharkiv 14 points, AZ, Austria Wien 8, Malmö FF 1.
    • Group H:
      • Club Brugge Belgium 1–1 Portugal Braga
      • Birmingham City England 1–0 Slovenia Maribor
        • Final standings: Club Brugge, Braga 11 points, Birmingham City 10, Maribor 1.
    • Group I:
      • Udinese Italy 1–1 Scotland Celtic
      • Atlético Madrid Spain 3–1 France Rennes
        • Final standings: Atlético Madrid 13 points, Udinese 9, Celtic 6, Rennes 3.

Rugby union[]

Snooker[]

  • For the first time in professional snooker, two maximum breaks are compiled on the same day, at the FFB Open. Matthew Stevens (WAL) compiles the 82nd and Ding Junhui (CHN) the 83rd; Ding also becomes the fifth person to compile more than two official maximum breaks.

Snowboarding[]

  • World Cup in Telluride, United States:
    • Giant slalom men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Benjamin Karl (AUT) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Andreas Prommegger (AUT) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Simon Schoch (SUI)
      • Giant slalom standings (after 2 of 11 events) & Overall standings: (1) Karl 1450 points (2) Prommegger 1400 (3) Aaron March (ITA) 1250
    • Giant slalom women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Julia Dujmovits (AUT) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Fränzi Mägert-Kohli (SUI) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Amelie Kober (GER)
      • Giant slalom standings (after 2 of 11 events) & Overall standings: (1) Mägert-Kohli 1800 points (2) Dujmovits 1360 (3) Yekaterina Tudegesheva (RUS) 1090

December 14, 2011 (Wednesday)[]

Basketball[]

  • Euroleague Regular Season Matchday 9 (teams in bold advance to the Top 16):
    • Group A: Caja Laboral Spain 90–55 France SLUC Nancy
    • Group B:
      • CSKA Moscow Russia 91–75 Greece Panathinaikos
      • KK Zagreb Croatia 67–82 Spain Unicaja
        • Standings: CSKA Moscow 9–0, Panathinaikos 6–3, Unicaja 4–5, Germany Brose Baskets 3–5, Lithuania Žalgiris Kaunas 2–6, KK Zagreb 2–7.
    • Group C:
      • EA7 Emporio Armani Italy 88–53 Belgium Spirou Charleroi
      • Real Madrid Spain 101–83 Serbia Partizan Mt:s Belgrade
        • Standings: Real Madrid 7–2, Turkey Anadolu Efes, Israel Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 5–3, Partizan Mt:s Belgrade 4–5, EA7 Emporio Armani 3–6, Spirou Charleroi 2–7.
    • Group D: Galatasaray Medical Park Turkey 80–59 Slovenia Union Olimpija Ljubljana
      • Standings: Spain FC Barcelona Regal 8–0, Italy Montepaschi Siena 6–2, Russia UNICS Kazan 5–3, Galatasaray Medical Park 4–5, Poland Asseco Prokom Gdynia 1–7, Union Olimpija Ljubljana 1–8.
  • FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup in Salé, Morocco:
    • Group A:
      • Burundi 44–84 Nigeria Union Bank
      • C.R.D. Libolo Angola 64–62 Democratic Republic of the Congo ASB Mazembe
      • AS Salé Morocco 87–83 Libya Al Ahly
        • Standings: AS Salé 6 points (3 games), C.R.D. Libolo, Union Bank 5 (3), Al Ahly 3 (2), Urunani 3 (3), ASB Mazembe 2 (2).
    • Group B:
      • Equatorial Guinea 20–0 Nigeria Royal Hoopers
      • Petro Atlético Angola 74–59 Morocco C.R. Al Hoceima
      • Primeiro de Agosto Angola 79–62 Tunisia Étoile Sportive du Sahel
        • Standings: Primeiro de Agosto 6 points (3 games), Petro Atlético, Malabo Kings 4 (3), C.R. Al Hoceima, Étoile Sportive du Sahel 3 (2), Royal Hoopers 0 (1).

Football (soccer)[]

  • FIFA Club World Cup in Toyota, Japan:
    • Match for fifth place: Espérance Tunisia 2–3 Mexico Monterrey
    • Semi-finals: Kashiwa Reysol Japan 1–3 Brazil Santos
  • Copa Sudamericana Finals second leg (first leg score in parentheses): Universidad de Chile Chile 3–0 (1–0) Ecuador LDU Quito. Universidad de Chile win 6–0 on points.
    • Universidad become the first Chilean team to win the Copa Sudamericana.
  • UEFA Europa League group stage Matchday 6 (teams in bold advance to the round of 32):
    • Group D:
      • Zürich Switzerland 2–0 Romania Vaslui
      • Lazio Italy 2–0 Portugal Sporting CP
        • Final standings: Sporting CP 12 points, Lazio 9, Vaslui 6, Zürich 3.
    • Group E:
      • Dynamo Kyiv Ukraine 3–3 Israel Maccabi Tel Aviv
      • Beşiktaş Turkey 3–1 England Stoke City
        • Final standings: Beşiktaş 12 points, Stoke City 11, Dynamo Kyiv 7, Maccabi Tel Aviv 2.
    • Group F:
      • Slovan Bratislava Slovakia 2–3 Austria Red Bull Salzburg
      • Paris Saint-Germain France 4–2 Spain Athletic Bilbao
        • Final standings: Athletic Bilbao 13 points, Red Bull Salzburg, Paris Saint-Germain 10, Slovan Bratislava 1.
    • Group J:
      • Maccabi Haifa Israel 0–3 Germany Schalke 04
      • Steaua București Romania 3–1 Cyprus AEK Larnaca
        • Final standings: Schalke 04 14 points, Steaua București 8, Maccabi Haifa 6, AEK Larnaca 5.
    • Group K:
      • Wisła Kraków Poland 2–1 Netherlands Twente
      • Fulham England 2–2 Denmark Odense
        • Final standings: Twente 13 points, Wisła Kraków 9, Fulham 8, Odense 4.
    • Group L:
      • Sturm Graz Austria 1–3 Greece AEK Athens
      • Anderlecht Belgium 5–3 Russia Lokomotiv Moscow
        • Final standings: Anderlecht 18 points, Lokomotiv Moscow 12, AEK Athens, Sturm Graz 3.
  • Peru Torneo Descentralizado Play-offs, third leg: Juan Aurich 0–0 Alianza Lima. 2–2 on aggregate, Juan Aurich win 3–1 on penalties.
    • Juan Aurich win the title for the first time.

Handball[]

December 13, 2011 (Tuesday)[]

Basketball[]

December 12, 2011 (Monday)[]

Basketball[]

  • FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup in Salé, Morocco:
    • Group A:
      • Union Bank Nigeria 80–85 Angola C.R.D. Libolo
      • AS Salé Morocco 110–43 Burundi
    • Group B:

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 1st Test in Chittagong, day 4:  Bangladesh 135 & 275 (82.3 overs);  Pakistan 594/5d. Pakistan win by an innings & 184 runs; lead 2-match series 1–0.
  • New Zealand in Australia:
    • 2nd Test in Hobart, day 4:  New Zealand 150 & 226;  Australia 136 & 233 (63.4 overs; David Warner 123*, Doug Bracewell 6/40). New Zealand win by 7 runs; 2-match series drawn 1–1.
      • Australia retain the Trans-Tasman Trophy.

Handball[]

December 11, 2011 (Sunday)[]

Athletics[]

  • European Cross Country Championships in Velenje, Slovenia:
    • Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Atelaw Yeshetela (BEL) 29:15 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Ayad Lamdassem (ESP) 29:20 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) José Rocha (POR) 29:21
    • Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Fionnuala Britton (IRL) 25:55 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Ana Dulce Félix (POR) 26:02 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Gemma Steel (GBR) 26:04

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 2 in Hochfilzen, Austria:
    • 4×7.5 km Relay Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Norway (Rune Brattsveen, Lars Berger, Emil Hegle Svendsen, Tarjei Bø) 1:14:52.9 (1+7) 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Russia (Anton Shipulin, Andrei Makoveev, Evgeny Ustyugov, Dmitry Malyshko) 1:15:06.8 (0+5) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  France (Vincent Jay, Simon Fourcade, Alexis Bœuf, Martin Fourcade) 1:15:23.9 (0+6)
    • 4×6 km Relay Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Norway (Fanny Welle-Strand Horn, Elise Ringen, Synnøve Solemdal, Tora Berger) 1:07:13.3 (0+10) 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  France (Marie-Laure Brunet, Anaïs Bescond, Sophie Boilley, Marie Dorin Habert) 1:07:26.9 (0+3) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Russia (Svetlana Sleptsova, Natalia Guseva, Anna Bogaliy-Titovets, Olga Zaitseva) 1:07:42.7 (0+6)

Bobsleigh[]

  • World Cup in La Plagne, France (GER unless stated):
    • Four-man: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Manuel Machata/Florian Becke/Andreas Bredau/Christian Poser 1:57.00 (58.48, 58.52) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Maximilian Arndt/Rene Tiefert//Martin Putze 1:57.24 (58.58, 58.66) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Thomas Florschütz/Gino Gerhardi/Kevin Kuske/Thomas Blaschek 1:57.26 (58.66, 58.60)
      • Standings (after 2 of 8 races): (1) Alexandr Zubkov (RUS) 409 points (2) Machata 401 (3) Florschütz 400

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 1st Test in Chittagong, day 3:  Bangladesh 135 & 134/4 (39 overs);  Pakistan 594/5d (176.5 overs; Younis Khan 200*, Asad Shafiq 104). Bangladesh trail by 325 runs with 6 wickets remaining.
  • New Zealand in Australia:
    • 2nd Test in Hobart, day 3:  New Zealand 150 & 226 (78.3 overs);  Australia 136 & 72/0 (19 overs). Australia require another 169 runs with 10 wickets remaining.
  • West Indies in India:
    • 5th ODI in Chennai:  India 267/6 (50 overs; Manoj Tiwary 104 r/h);  West Indies 233 (44.1 overs; Kieron Pollard 119). India win by 34 runs; win 5-match series 4–1.

Cross-country skiing[]

  • World Cup in Davos, Switzerland:
    • Men's Sprint Freestyle: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Alexei Petukhov (RUS) 2:41.7 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Teodor Peterson (SWE) 2:42.0 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Emil Jönsson (SWE) 2:42.1
      • Sprint standings (after 3 of 13 races): (1) Petukhov 208 points (2) Peterson 175 (3) Ola Vigen Hattestad (NOR) 111
      • Overall standings (after 8 of 37 races): (1) Petter Northug (NOR) 500 points (2) Dario Cologna (SUI) 322 (3) Johan Olsson (SWE) 259
    • Women's Sprint Freestyle: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Kikkan Randall (USA) 3:02.4 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Natalya Matveyeva (RUS) 3:04.1 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Maiken Caspersen Falla (NOR) 3:04.1
      • Sprint standings (after 3 of 13 races): (1) Randall 240 points (2) Matveyeva 194 (3) Hanna Brodin (SWE) 121
      • Overall standings (after 8 of 37 races): (1) Marit Bjørgen (NOR) 582 points (2) Vibeke Skofterud (NOR) 411 (3) Randall 393

Equestrianism[]

  • Show jumpingWorld Cup:
    • Western European League, 6th competition in Geneva, Switzerland: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Álvaro de Miranda Neto (BRA) on Ashleigh Drossel Dan 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Rolf-Göran Bengtsson (SWE) on Casall 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Patrice Delaveau (FRA) on Orient Express
      • Standings (after 6 of 12 competitions): (1) Bengtsson 59 points (2) Steve Guerdat (SUI) 51 (3) Nick Skelton (GBR) 48
    • Central European League – North Sub-League, 11th competition in Poznań, Poland: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Jörne Sprehe (GER) on Contifax 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Camila Mazza de Benedicto (BRA) on Willink 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Henk van de Pol (NED) on Chesterfield
    • Pacific League – Australia, 13th competition in Sydney: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Billy Raymont (AUS) on Ocean Beach NZPH 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Thomas McDermott (AUS) on Limerick 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Catherine Green (AUS) on Da Vinci's Pride

Field hockey[]

Figure skating[]

Football (soccer)[]

Golf[]

  • European Tour:
    • Dubai World Championship in Dubai, United Arab Emirates:
      • Winner: Álvaro Quirós (ESP) 269 (−19)
        • Quirós wins his sixth European Tour title.
      • Final Race to Dubai standings (prize money in ): (1) Luke Donald (ENG) 5,323,400 (2) Rory McIlroy (NIR) 4,002,168 (3) Martin Kaymer (GER) 3,489,033
        • Donald becomes the first player to finish top of the money list on the PGA and European Tours in the same season.[8]

Handball[]

Nine-ball pool[]

  • Mosconi Cup in Las Vegas, United States:
    • Team Europe Europe 11–7 United States Team USA
      • Nick van den Berg (NLD) 2–6 Shane Van Boening (USA)
      • Darren Appleton (ENG) 3–6 Johnny Archer (USA)
      • Niels Feijen (NLD) 6–4 Rodney Morris (USA)
        • Europe win the title for the second consecutive time and sixth time overall.

Nordic combined[]

  • World Cup in Ramsau, Austria:
    • HS 98 / 10 km: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Jason Lamy-Chappuis (FRA) 22:07.4 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Magnus Krog (NOR) 22:07.8 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mario Stecher (AUT) 22:08.0
      • Standings (after 6 of 23 races): (1) Lamy-Chappuis 354 points (2) Tino Edelmann (GER) 350 (3) Krog 275

Rugby union[]

Sailing[]

  • World Championships in Perth, Australia:
    • Men's 470: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Mathew Belcher / Malcolm Page (AUS) 28 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Luke Patience / Stuart Bithell (GBR) 40 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Sime Fantela / Igor Marenic (CRO) 62
    • Men's Finn: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Giles Scott (GBR) 30 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Pieter-Jan Postma (NED) 31 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) (GBR) 45
    • Women's Laser Radial: 1st place, gold medalist(s) (NED) 49 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Evi Van Acker (BEL) 53 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Paige Railey (USA) 71
    • Women's RS:X: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Lee Korzits (ISR) 31 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Zofia Noceti-Klepacka (POL) 33 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Marina Alabau (ESP) 45
      • Korzits wins the title for the second time and becomes the first Israeli in any sport to win multiple world championships.

Short track speed skating[]

  • World Cup 4 in Shanghai, China:
    • 500m men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Charles Hamelin (CAN) 40.905 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jon Eley (GBR) 41.054 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Liang Wenhao (CHN) 41.178
      • Standings (after 6 of 8 races): (1) Olivier Jean (CAN) 3000 points (2) Liang 2804 (3) Eley 2719
    • 1000m men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Kwak Yoon-Gy (KOR) 1:25.300 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jean 1:25.451 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Noh Jin-Kyu (KOR) 1:25.971
      • Standings (after 5 of 8 races): (1) Kwak 4312 points (2) Noh 2096 (3) Hamelin 2000
    • 5000m relay men: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  China (Liang, Song Weilong, , Wu Dajing) 6:38.567 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Canada (Hamelin, Michael Gilday, Jean, ) 6:48.858 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Great Britain (Jack Whelbourne, Eley, Paul Stanley, Richard Shoebridge) 7:02.363
      • Standings (after 4 of 6 races): (1)  Korea 2664 points (2) Canada 2650 (3) China 2538
    • 500m women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Arianna Fontana (ITA) 44.026 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Liu Qiuhong (CHN) 44.111 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Fan Kexin (CHN) 44.320
      • Standings (after 6 of 8 races): (1) Martina Valcepina (ITA) 3470 points (2) Liu 3294 (3) Fontana 3000
    • 1000m women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Katherine Reutter (USA) 1:32.721 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Li Jianrou (CHN) 1:32.864 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Yui Sakai (JPN) 1:32.882
      • Standings (after 5 of 8 races): (1) Sakai 3050 points (2) Elise Christie (GBR) 2230 (3) Li 1962
    • 3000m relay Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  China (Liu, Li, Xiao Han, Fan) 4:12.394 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  United States (Lana Gehring, Alyson Dudek, Reutter, Jessica Smith) 4:13.000 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Japan (Ayuko Ito, Sayuri Shimizu, Sakai, ) 4:13.763
      • Standings (after 4 of 6 races): (1) China 3640 points (2) Japan 2408 (3)  Korea 1948

Ski jumping[]

  • Men's World Cup in Harrachov, Czech Republic:
    • HS 142: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Richard Freitag (GER) 292.4 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Thomas Morgenstern (AUT) 283.9 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Severin Freund (GER) 277.8
      • Standings (after 5 of 27 events): (1) Andreas Kofler (AUT) 358 points (2) Gregor Schlierenzauer (AUT) 302 (3) Freitag 294

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship Final in York, England: Judd Trump (ENG) 10–8 Mark Allen (NIR)
    • Trump wins his second ranking title, and the seventh professional title of his career.

Swimming[]

  • European Short Course Championships in Szczecin, Poland:
    • 200m freestyle men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Paul Biedermann (GER) 1:42.92 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Filippo Magnini (ITA) 1:43.20 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) László Cseh (HUN) 1:43.71
    • 100m backstroke men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) (POL) 50.43 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Aschwin Wildeboer (ESP) 50.61 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Pavel Sankovich (BLR) 51.14
    • 200m breaststroke men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Dániel Gyurta (HUN) 2:02.37 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Vyacheslav Sinkevich (RUS) 2:03.61 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Michael Jamieson (GBR) 2:03.77
    • 50m butterfly men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Andriy Govorov (UKR) 22.70 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Amaury Leveaux (FRA) 22.74 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Konrad Czerniak (POL) 22.77
    • 100m individual medley men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Peter Mankoč (SLO) 52.70 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Markus Deibler (GER) 53.04 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Martti Aljand (EST) 53.37
    • 4×50m freestyle relay men: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Italy (Luca Dotto, Marco Orsi, Federico Bocchia, Andrea Rolla) 1:24.82 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Russia (Sergey Fesikov, Yevgeny Lagunov, Andrey Grechin, Nikita Konovalov) 1:25.11 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Belgium (François Heersbrandt, Emmanuel Vanluchene, Louis Croenen, Jasper Aerents) 1:25.83
    • 50m freestyle women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Britta Steffen (GER) 24.01 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jeanette Ottesen (DEN) 24.11 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Triin Aljand (EST) 24.23
    • 200m freestyle women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Silke Lippok (GER) 1:54.08 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Melanie Costa Schmid (ESP) 1:54.31 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Evelyn Verrasztó (HUN) 1:54.55
    • 200m backstroke women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Daryna Zevina (UKR) 2:02.25 (CR) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) (ESP) 2:03.32 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Melanie Nocher (IRL) 2:04.29
    • 100m breaststroke women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Valentina Artemyeva (RUS) 1:05.19 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Rikke Møller Pedersen (DEN) 1:05.23 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Daria Deeva (RUS) 1:05.83
    • 100m butterfly women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ottesen 56.22 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jemma Lowe (GBR) 56.67 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ilaria Bianchi (ITA) 57.42
    • 400m individual medley women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Mireia Belmonte García (ESP) 4:24.55 (CR) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Hannah Miley (GBR) 4:26.06 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Zsuzsanna Jakabos (HUN) 4:27.86

December 10, 2011 (Saturday)[]

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 2 in Hochfilzen, Austria:
    • 12.5 km Pursuit Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 33:09.0 (1+0+1+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tarjei Bø (NOR) 33:09.1 (0+0+1+0) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Benjamin Weger (SUI) 33:13.9 (1+0+0+0)
      • Pursuit standings (after 2 of 8 races): (1) Svendsen 114 points (2) Bø 97 (3) Weger 84
      • Overall standings (after 5 of 26 races): (1) Carl Johan Bergman (SWE) & Svendsen 225 points (3) Bø 205
    • 10 km Pursuit Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Darya Domracheva (BLR) 29:34.4 (1+0+1+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Olga Zaitseva (RUS) 29:34.7 (0+0+0+1) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Magdalena Neuner (GER) 29:37.5 (0+0+0+2)
      • Pursuit standings (after 2 of 8 races): (1) Neuner 96 points (2) Tora Berger (NOR) 92 (3) Domracheva 85
      • Overall standings (after 5 of 26 races): (1) Neuner 264 points (2) Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN) 229 (3) Domracheva 225

Bobsleigh[]

  • World Cup in La Plagne, France:
    • Two-man: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Thomas Florschütz/Kevin Kuske (GER) 1:58.50 (59.39, 59.11) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Steven Holcomb/Steven Langton (USA) 1:58.85 (59.48, 59.37) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Beat Hefti/Thomas Lamparter (SUI) 1:58.91 (59.53, 59.38)
      • Standings (after 2 of 8 races): (1) Florschütz 435 points (2) Hefti 425 (3) Holcomb 410

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 1st Test in Chittagong, day 2:  Bangladesh 135;  Pakistan 415/4 (128 overs; Mohammad Hafeez 143). Pakistan lead by 280 runs with 6 wickets remaining in the 1st innings.
  • New Zealand in Australia:
    • 2nd Test in Hobart, day 2:  New Zealand 150 & 139/3 (44 overs);  Australia 136 (51 overs). New Zealand lead by 153 runs with 7 wickets remaining.

Cross-country skiing[]

  • World Cup in Davos, Switzerland (NOR unless stated):
    • Men's 30 km Freestyle Individual: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Petter Northug 1:07:43.8 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Maurice Manificat (FRA) 1:08:35.2 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Lukáš Bauer (CZE) 1:08:43.3
      • Distance standings (after 4 of 21 races): (1) Northug 240 points (2) Johan Olsson (SWE) 169 (3) Manificat 151
      • Overall standings (after 7 of 37 races): (1) Northug 455 points (2) Dario Cologna (SUI) 286 (3) Olsson 259
    • Women's 15 km Freestyle Individual: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Marit Bjørgen 35:59.5 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Vibeke Skofterud 36:41.3 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Therese Johaug 36:41.7
      • Distance standings (after 4 of 21 races): (1) Bjørgen 296 points (2) Skofterud 226 (3) Johaug 186
      • Overall standings (after 7 of 37 races): (1) Bjørgen 546 points (2) Skofterud 389 (3) Johaug 376

Curling[]

Field hockey[]

Figure skating[]

  • ISU Grand Prix:
    • Grand Prix Final and Junior Grand Prix Final in Quebec City, Canada:
      • Ladies: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Carolina Kostner (ITA) 187.48 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Akiko Suzuki (JPN) 179.76 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Alena Leonova (RUS) 176.42
      • Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Patrick Chan (CAN) 260.30 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Daisuke Takahashi (JPN) 249.12 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Javier Fernández (ESP) 247.55
      • Pairs: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Aliona Savchenko/Robin Szolkowy (GER) 212.26 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tatiana Volosozhar/Maxim Trankov (RUS) 212.08 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Yuko Kavaguti/Alexander Smirnov (RUS) 187.77
      • Junior ice dancing (all RUS): 1st place, gold medalist(s) Victoria Sinitsina / Ruslan Zhiganshin 147.53 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Anna Yanovskaia / Sergei Mozgov 136.61 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Alexandra Stepanova / Ivan Bukin 135.17
      • Junior men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Jason Brown (USA) 208.41 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Yan Han (CHN) 205.93 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Joshua Farris (USA) 203.98

Football (soccer)[]

  • CAF U-23 Championship in Marrakech, Morocco:
    • Third Place Play-off: Senegal  0–2 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Egypt
    • Final: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Gabon  2–1 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Morocco
      • Gabon win the title for the first time.
      • Gabon, Morocco and Egypt qualify for 2012 Olympics, Senegal advances to AFC-CAF playoffs.
  • CECAFA Cup in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania:
    • Third place play-off: 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Sudan  1–0  Tanzania
    • Final: 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Rwanda  2–2 (2–3 pen.) 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Uganda
      • Uganda win the Cup for the 12th time.
  • OFC Champions League group stage Matchday 3:
    • Group B: Hekari United Papua New Guinea 3–1 Solomon Islands Koloale
      • Standings: New Zealand Auckland City 6 points (2 matches), Vanuatu Amicale 4 (2), Hekari United 4 (3), Koloale 0 (3).

Freestyle skiing[]

  • World Cup in Rukatunturi, Finland (USA unless stated):
    • Moguls men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Mikaël Kingsbury (CAN) 25.00 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sho Kashima 21.71 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anthony Benna (FRA) 16.28
      • Overall standings: (1) Kingsbury & 20 points (3) Kashima & Torin Yater-Wallace 16
    • Muguls women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Hannah Kearney 24.70 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Eliza Outtrim 22.25 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Nikola Sudová (CZE) 21.70
      • Overall standings: (1) Kearney & Brita Sigourney 20 points (3) Outtrim & Rosalind Groenewoud (CAN) 16

Luge[]

  • World Cup 2 in Whistler, Canada:
    • Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Natalie Geisenberger (GER) 1:23.439 (41.748, 41.691) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tatjana Hüfner (GER) 1:23.482 (41.700, 41.782) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Tatiana Ivanova (RUS) 1:23.606 (41.796, 41.810)
      • Standings (after 2 of 9 races): (1) Hüfner 185 points (2) Geisenberger 160 (3) Anke Wischnewski (GER) 140
    • Team relay: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Germany (Geisenberger, Felix Loch, /) 2:18.773 (45.026, 46.717, 47.030) 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Canada (Alex Gough, Samuel Edney, Tristan Walker/Justin Snith 2:19.001 (45.073, 46.681, 47.247) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Russia (Ivanova, Albert Demtschenko, Vladislav Yuzhakov/Vladimir Makhnutin) 2:19.162 (45.130, 46.822, 47.210)
      • Standings (after 2 of 6 races): (1) Canada & Germany 185 points (3) Russia 140

Mixed martial arts[]

  • UFC 140 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada:
    • Featherweight bout: Jung Chan-Sung (KOR) def. Mark Hominick (CAN) via KO (punches)
    • Welterweight bout: Brian Ebersole (USA) def. Claude Patrick (CAN) via split decision (29–28, 28–29, 29–28)
    • Light Heavyweight bout: Antônio Rogério Nogueira (BRA) def. Tito Ortiz (USA) via TKO (strikes to the body)
    • Heavyweight bout: Frank Mir (USA) def. Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira (BRA) via submission (kimura)
    • Light Heavyweight Championship bout: Jon Jones (USA) (c) def. Lyoto Machida (BRA) via technical submission (guillotine choke)

Nine-ball pool[]

  • Mosconi Cup in Las Vegas, United States:
    • Team Europe Europe 10–5 United States Team USA
      • Darren Appleton (ENG)/Niels Feijen (NLD) 6–3 (USA)/Mike Dechaine (USA)
      • Appleton 6–2 Putnam
      • Ralf Souquet (GER)/Feijen 6–2 Johnny Archer (USA)/Rodney Morris (USA)
      • Nick van den Berg (NLD) 5–6 Shane Van Boening (USA)
      • Chris Melling (ENG) 6–2 Dechaine

Nordic combined[]

  • World Cup in Ramsau, Austria:
    • HS 98 / 10 km: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Jan Schmid (NOR) 22:05.8 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jason Lamy-Chappuis (FRA) 22:08.2 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Tino Edelmann (GER) 22:08.8
      • Standings (after 5 of 23 races): (1) Edelmann 300 points (2) Lamy-Chappuis 254 (3) Håvard Klemetsen (NOR) 239

Rugby union[]

  • IRB Sevens World Series:
    • South Africa Sevens in Port Elizabeth:
      • Shield: Zimbabwe  19–12  Kenya
      • Bowl: Canada  19–22  Scotland
      • Plate: Wales  48–0  Fiji
      • Cup: South Africa  26–31  New Zealand
        • Standings (after 3 of 9 competitions): (1) Fiji & New Zealand 51 points (3) South Africa 48
  • Heineken Cup pool stage Matchday 3:
    • Pool 1:
      • Scarlets Wales 14–17 Ireland Munster
      • Castres France 41–22 England Northampton Saints
        • Standings (after 3 matches): Munster 12 points, Scarlets 10, Castres 6, Northampton Saints 3.
    • Pool 2: Racing Métro France 14–34 England London Irish
      • Standings (after 3 matches): Wales Cardiff Blues 12 points, Scotland Edinburgh 9, London Irish 7, Racing Métro 3.
    • Pool 5:
      • Benetton Treviso Italy 30–26 France Biarritz
      • Saracens England 31–26 Wales Ospreys
        • Standings (after 3 matches): Saracens 10 points, Ospreys, Biarritz 7, Benetton Treviso 6.
    • Pool 6: Connacht Ireland 10–14 England Gloucester
      • Standings (after 3 matches): France Toulouse 12 points, England Harlequins 8, Gloucester 5, Connacht 1.
  • Amlin Challenge Cup pool stage Matchday 3:
    • Pool 1: Crociati Parma Italy 0–57 France Stade Français
      • Standings: Stade Français 14 points (3 matches), England Worcester Warriors, Romania București Wolves 5 (2), Crociati Parma 0 (3).
    • Pool 2: Lyon France 31–16 Italy Petrarca Padova
      • Standings (after 3 matches): England Newcastle Falcons 13 points, France Toulon 10, Lyon 5, Petrarca Padova 0.
    • Pool 3:
      • Rovigo Italy 7–31 France Bordeaux Bègles
      • Bayonne France 19–11 England London Wasps
        • Standings (after 3 matches): Bayonne 13 points, London Wasps 10, Bordeaux Bègles 5, Rovigo 0.
    • Pool 5: La Vila Spain 18–47 France Brive
      • Standings (after 3 matches): Brive 13 points, England Sale Sharks 10, France Agen 5, La Vila 0.

Short track speed skating[]

  • World Cup 4 in Shanghai, China (CHN unless stated):
    • 500m men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Olivier Jean (CAN) 41.073 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 41.516 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Daan Breeuwsma (NED) 41.667
      • Standings (after 5 of 8 races): (1) Jean 3000 points (2) Liang Wenhao 2164 (3) Jon Eley (GBR) 1919
    • 1500m men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Noh Jin-Kyu (KOR) 2:09.041 (WR) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Charles Hamelin (CAN) 2:09.098 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Kwak Yoon-Gy (KOR) 2:09.548
      • Standings (after 5 of 8 races): (1) Noh 4000 points (2) Kwak 2240 (3) Hamelin 1826
    • 500m women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Fan Kexin 43.873 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Liu Qiuhong 43.959 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Jessica Smith (USA) 45.338
      • Standings (after 5 of 8 races): (1) Martina Valcepina (ITA) 3302 points (2) Liu 2494 (3) Fan 2050
    • 1500m women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Cho Ha-Ri (KOR) 2:22.473 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Katherine Reutter (USA) 2:22.764 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Xiao Han 2:23.061
      • Standings (after 5 of 8 races): (1) Cho 2952 points (2) Reutter 2800 (3) Lee Eun-Byul (KOR) 2537

Skeleton[]

  • World Cup in La Plagne, France:
    • Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Mellisa Hollingsworth (CAN) 2:06.09 (1:03.00, 1:03.09) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Anne O'Shea (USA) 2:06.46 (1:03.27, 1:03.19) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Katie Uhlaender (USA) 2:06.64 (1:03.43, 1:03.21)
      • Standings (after 2 of 8 races): (1) Hollingsworth 425 points (2) Olga Potylitsina (RUS) 393 (3) Anja Huber (GER) 384

Ski jumping[]

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship in York, England, Semi-finals: Ricky Walden (ENG) 7–9 Mark Allen (NIR)

Surfing[]

  • Men's World Tour:
    • Billabong Pipeline Masters in Pipeline, Hawaii, United States: (1) (AUS) (2) Joel Parkinson (AUS) (3) Michel Bourez (PYF) & Kelly Slater (USA)
      • Final Standings: (1) Slater 67,100 points (2) Parkinson 56,100 (3) Owen Wright (AUS) 47,900

Swimming[]

  • European Short Course Championships in Szczecin, Poland:

December 9, 2011 (Friday)[]

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 2 in Hochfilzen, Austria:
    • 10 km Sprint Men (all 0+0): 1st place, gold medalist(s) Carl Johan Bergman (SWE) 24:41.9 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Andrei Makoveev (RUS) 24:51.1 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Benjamin Weger (SUI) 25:01.5
      • Sprint standings (after 2 of 10 races): (1) Bergman 120 points (2) Tarjei Bø (NOR) 92 (3) Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 91
      • Overall standings (after 4 of 26 races): (1) Martin Fourcade (FRA) & Bergman 182 points (3) Svendsen 165
    • 7.5 km Sprint Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Magdalena Neuner (GER) 21:09.2 (0+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN) 21:24.1 (1+0) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Olga Zaitseva (RUS) 21:31.9 (1+0)
      • Sprint standings (after 2 of 10 races): (1) Neuner 120 points (2) Mäkäräinen 102 (3) Darya Domracheva (BLR) 80
      • Overall standings (after 4 of 26 races): (1) Neuner 216 points (2) Mäkäräinen 199 (3) Domracheva 165

Bobsleigh[]

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 1st Test in Chittagong, day 1:  Bangladesh 135 (51.2 overs);  Pakistan 132/0 (38 overs). Pakistan trail by 3 runs with 10 wickets remaining in the 1st innings.
  • New Zealand in Australia:
    • 2nd Test in Hobart, day 1:  New Zealand 150 (45.5 overs; James Pattinson 5/51);  Australia 12/1 (4.2 overs). Australia trail by 138 runs with 9 wickets remaining in the 1st innings.

Curling[]

Figure skating[]

Freestyle skiing[]

  • World Cup in Copper Mountain, United States (USA unless stated):
    • Halfpipe men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) 87.2 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Torin Yater-Wallace 84.6 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 83.8
    • Halfpipe women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Brita Sigourney 86.6 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Rosalind Groenewoud (CAN) 81.4 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Virginie Faivre (SUI) 77.4

Handball[]

Luge[]

  • World Cup 2 in Whistler, Canada:
    • Men (all GER): 1st place, gold medalist(s) Felix Loch 1:36.480 (48.263, 48.217) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Johannes Ludwig 1:36.758 (48.406, 48.352) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) David Möller 1:36.778 (48.361, 48.417)
      • Standings (after 2 of 9 races): (1) Loch 200 points (2) Möller 155 (3) Ludwig 145
    • Doubles: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Andreas Linger/Wolfgang Linger (AUT) 1:22.644 (41.255, 41.389) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Peter Penz/Georg Fischler (AUT) 1:22.888 (41.331, 41.557) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Christian Oberstolz/Patrick Gruber (ITA) 1:22.943 (41.380, 41.563)
      • Standings (after 2 of 9 races): (1) Penz/Fischler 185 points (2) Linger/Linger 170 (3) Vladislav YuzhakovVladimir Makhnutin (RUS) 127

Nine-ball pool[]

  • Mosconi Cup in Las Vegas, United States:
    • Team Europe Europe 6–4 United States Team USA
      • Nick van den Berg (NLD)/Niels Feijen (NLD) 5–6 Shane Van Boening (USA)/Johnny Archer (USA)
      • Ralf Souquet (GER) 1–6 Mike Dechaine (USA)
      • Darren Appleton (ENG)/Chris Melling (ENG) 5–6 (USA)/Rodney Morris (USA)
      • van den Berg 6–1 Archer
      • Souquet/Melling (ENG) 6–2 Van Boening/Morris

Rugby union[]

  • Heineken Cup pool stage Matchday 3:
    • Pool 2: Cardiff Blues Wales 25–8 Scotland Edinburgh
      • Standings: Cardiff Blues 12 points (3 matches), Edinburgh 9 (3), France Racing Métro 3 (2), England London Irish 2 (2).
    • Pool 4: Ulster Ireland 31–10 Italy Aironi
      • Standings: Ulster 9 points (3 matches), England Leicester Tigers 8 (2), France Clermont 6 (2), Aironi 0 (3).
    • Pool 6: Harlequins England 10–21 France Toulouse
      • Standings: Toulouse 12 points (3 matches), Harlequins 8 (3), England Gloucester 1 (2), Ireland Connacht 0 (2).
  • Amlin Challenge Cup pool stage Matchday 3:
    • Pool 4: Perpignan France 54–20 Italy Cavalieri Prato
      • Standings: Perpignan 9 points (3 matches), Wales Newport Gwent Dragons 9 (2), England Exeter Chiefs 6 (2), Cavalieri Prato 0 (3).

Skeleton[]

  • World Cup in La Plagne, France:
    • Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Martins Dukurs (LAT) 2:01.25 (1:00.51, 1:00.74) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tomass Dukurs (LAT) 2:02.23 (1:01.01, 1:01.22) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Aleksandr Tretyakov (RUS) 2:02.42 (1:01.09, 1:01.33)
      • Standings (after 2 of 8 races): (1) Martins Dukurs 450 points (2) Tomass Dukurs & Tretyakov 410

Ski jumping[]

  • Men's World Cup in Harrachov, Czech Republic:
    • HS 142: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Gregor Schlierenzauer (AUT) 246.8 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Daiki Ito (JPN) 245.8 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anders Bardal (NOR) 245.0
      • Standings (after 4 of 27 events): (1) Andreas Kofler (AUT) 313 points (2) Schlierenzauer 270 (3) Richard Freitag (GER) 194

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship in York, England, Semi-finals: Judd Trump (ENG) 9–7 Neil Robertson (AUS)

Swimming[]

  • European Short Course Championships in Szczecin, Poland:
    • 50m backstroke men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Aschwin Wildeboer (ESP) 23.43 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Flori Lang (SUI) 23.57 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Pavel Sankovich (BLR) 23.64
    • 100m breaststroke men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Alexander Dale Oen (NOR) 57.05 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Damir Dugonjič (SLO) 57.29 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Fabio Scozzoli (ITA) 57.30
    • 100m butterfly men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Konrad Czerniak (POL) 49.62 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Yevgeny Korotyshkin (RUS) 49.88 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) François Heersbrandt (BEL) 50.44
    • 400m individual medley men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) László Cseh (HUN) 4:01.68 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dávid Verrasztó (HUN) 4:03.03 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Gal Nevo (ISR) 4:04.49
    • 100m freestyle women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Britta Steffen (GER) 51.94 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jeanette Ottesen (DEN) 52.05 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Amy Smith (GBR) 52.77
    • 800m freestyle women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Lotte Friis (DEN) 8:07.53 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Erika Villaécija García (ESP) 8:12.23 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Melanie Costa Schmid (ESP) 8:16.28
    • 100m backstroke women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Daryna Zevina (UKR) 56.96 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Anastasia Zuyeva (RUS) 57.12 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mie Østergaard Nielsen (DEN) 57.57
    • 200m breaststroke women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Rikke Møller Pedersen (DEN) 2:19.55 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Anastasia Chaun (RUS) 2:20.84 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Fanny Lecluyse (BEL) 2:21.14
    • 50m butterfly women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ottesen 24.92 (CR) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Triin Aljand (EST) 25.51 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Sviatlana Khakhlova (BLR) 25.96
    • 4×50m freestyle relay women: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Germany (Steffen, Dorothea Brandt, Paulina Schmiedel, Daniela Schreiber) 1:37.29 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Denmark (Nielsen, Pernille Blume, , Ottesen) 1:37.63 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Italy (Erika Ferraioli, Erica Buratto, Federica Pellegrini, Laura Letrari) 1:38.12

December 8, 2011 (Thursday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Beaver Creek, United States:
    • Slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ivica Kostelić (CRO) 1:50.20 (54.64, 55.56) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Cristian Deville (ITA) 1:50.34 (54.64, 55.70) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Marcel Hirscher (AUT) 1:50.68 (54.50, 56.18)
      • Overall standings (after 8 of 45 races): (1) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 334 points (2) Ted Ligety (USA) 309 (3) Hirscher 280

Basketball[]

  • Euroleague Regular Season Matchday 8 (teams in bold advance to Top 16):
    • Group A: Olympiacos Greece 84–82 Spain Caja Laboral
    • Group B: Unicaja Spain 79–90 Germany Brose Baskets
      • Standings: Russia CSKA Moscow 8–0, Greece Panathinaikos 6–2, Brose Baskets, Unicaja 3–5, Lithuania Žalgiris Kaunas, Croatia KK Zagreb 2–6.
    • Group C:
      • Spirou Basket Belgium 84–79 Serbia Partizan Mt:s Belgrade
      • Real Madrid Spain 88–64 Israel Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv
        • Standings: Real Madrid 6–2, Turkey Anadolu Efes, Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 5–3, Partizan Mt:s Belgrade 4–4, Italy EA7 Emporio Armani, Spirou Basket 2–6.
    • Group D:
      • Galatasaray Medical Park Turkey 63–67 Italy Montepaschi Siena
      • FC Barcelona Regal Spain 63–50 Russia UNICS Kazan
        • Standings: FC Barcelona Regal 8–0, Montepaschi Siena 6–2, UNICS Kazan 5–3, Galatasaray Medical Park 3–5, Slovenia Union Olimpija Ljubljana, Poland Asseco Prokom Gdynia 1–7.

Cricket[]

  • West Indies in India:
    • 4th ODI in Indore:  India 418/5 (50 overs; Virender Sehwag 219);  West Indies 265 (49.2 overs). India win by 153 runs; lead 5-match series 3–1.
      • Sehwag hits the highest individual score in a One Day International, surpassing 200* set by teammate Sachin Tendulkar in 2010.

Curling[]

  • European Championships in Moscow, Russia:
    • Men:
      • Tiebreakers:
        • Round 1:
          •   Switzerland 2–8  Scotland
          •  Germany 4–7  Czech Republic
        • Round 2:  Scotland 5–7  Czech Republic
      • Playoffs:
        •  Sweden 5–4  Norway
        •  Denmark 8–9  Czech Republic
    • Women:
      • Tiebreaker:  Russia 6–5  Germany
      • Playoffs:
        •  Sweden 12–6  Denmark
        •  Scotland 9–6  Russia

Field hockey[]

Football (soccer)[]

Handball[]

Nine-ball pool[]

  • Mosconi Cup in Las Vegas, United States:
    • Team Europe Europe 4–1 United States Team USA
      • Team Europe 6–4 Team USA
      • Chris Melling (ENG)/Nick van den Berg (NLD) 3–6 Johnny Archer (USA)/ (USA)
      • Niels Feijen (NLD) 6–0 Rodney Morris (USA)
      • Darren Appleton (ENG)/Ralf Souquet (GER) 6–4 Shane Van Boening (USA)/Mike Dechaine (USA)
      • Melling 6–5 Van Boening

Rugby union[]

  • Amlin Challenge Cup pool stage Matchday 3:
    • Pool 2: Newcastle Falcons England 6–3 France Toulon
      • Standings: Newcastle Falcons 13 points (3 matches), Toulon 10 (3), France Lyon 1 (2), Italy Petrarca Padova 0 (2).
    • Pool 5: Agen France 14–29 England Sale Sharks
      • Standings: Sale Sharks 10 points (3 matches), France Brive 8 (2), Agen 5 (3), Spain La Vila 0 (2).

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship in York, England, quarter-finals:
    • Stephen Maguire (SCO) 3–6 Judd Trump (ENG)
    • Ding Junhui (CHN) 2–6 Neil Robertson (AUS)
    • Ricky Walden (ENG) 6–3 Shaun Murphy (ENG)
    • Mark Allen (NIR) 6–5 Marco Fu (HKG)

Swimming[]

  • European Short Course Championships in Szczecin, Poland:
    • 50m freestyle men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Konrad Czerniak (POL) 20.88 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sergey Fesikov (RUS) 20.95 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Marco Orsi (ITA) 21.01
    • 400m freestyle men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Paul Biedermann (GER) 3:38.65 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Mads Glæsner (DEN) 3:39.30 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Paweł Korzeniowski (POL) 3:40.54
    • 200m backstroke men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Radoslaw Kawecki (POL) 1:49.15 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Aschwin Wildeboer (ESP) 1:50.63 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Péter Bernek (HUN) 1:51.21
    • 200m individual medley men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) László Cseh (HUN) 1:53.43 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Markus Rogan (AUT) 1:53.63 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Gal Nevo (ISR) 1:54.87
    • 4×50m medley men: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Italy (Mirco Di Tora, Fabio Scozzoli, , Orsi) 1:33.18 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Russia (, , Yevgeny Korotyshkin, Fesikov) 1:33.86 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Germany (Christian Diener, , Steffen Deibler, Stefan Herbst) 1:34.41
    • 50m breaststroke women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Valentina Artemyeva (RUS) 30.06 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dorothea Brandt (GER) 30.17 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Daria Deeva (RUS) 30.63
    • 200m butterfly women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Mireia Belmonte García (ESP) 2:03.37 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jemma Lowe (GBR) 2:04.04 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) (GBR) 2:04.80
    • 200m individual medley women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Belmonte García 2:07.06 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Evelyn Verrasztó (HUN) 2:08.28 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Hannah Miley (GBR) 2:08.34

December 7, 2011 (Wednesday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Women's World Cup in Beaver Creek, United States:
    • Super Giant Slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Lindsey Vonn (USA) 1:10.68 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Fabienne Suter (SUI) 1:11.05 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anna Fenninger (AUT) 1:11.09
      • Super-G standings (after 2 of 7 races): (1) Vonn 200 points (2) Fenninger 140 (3) Suter 94
      • Overall standings (after 7 of 40 races): (1) Vonn 522 points (2) Viktoria Rebensburg (GER) 286 (3) Elisabeth Görgl (AUT) 269

Basketball[]

  • Euroleague Regular Season Matchday 8 (teams in bold advance to Top 16):
    • Group A:
    • Group B:
      • CSKA Moscow Russia 87–74 Croatia KK Zagreb
      • Žalgiris Kaunas Lithuania 59–94 Greece Panathinaikos
        • Standings: CSKA Moscow 8–0, Panathinaikos 6–2, Spain Unicaja 3–4, Germany Brose Baskets 2–5, Žalgiris Kaunas, KK Zagreb 2–6.
    • Group C: Anadolu Efes Turkey 84–70 Italy EA7 Emporio Armani
      • Standings: Spain Real Madrid, Israel Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv 5–2, Anadolu Efes 5–3, Serbia Partizan Mt:s Belgrade 4–3, EA7 Emporio Armani 2–6, Belgium Spirou Charleroi 1–6.
    • Group D: Asseco Prokom Gdynia Poland 67–52 Slovenia Union Olimpija Ljubljana

Curling[]

  • European Championships in Moscow, Russia (teams in bold advance to the playoffs; teams in italics advance to tiebreaker):
    • Men:
      • Draw 8:
        •  Latvia 4–6  Germany
        •  Czech Republic 6–4  Sweden
        •  Norway 9–4  Italy
        •  Scotland 7–9  France
        •  Denmark 6–7   Switzerland
      • Draw 9:
        •  Czech Republic 7–6  Italy
        •  Germany 3–4   Switzerland
        •  France 10–6  Latvia
        •  Denmark 4–6  Norway
        •  Scotland 9–3  Sweden
          • Final standings: Sweden, Norway, Denmark 6–3, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Germany, Scotland 5–4, France 4–5, Latvia 2–7, Italy 1–8.
    • Women:
      • Draw 8:
        •  Denmark 6–5   Switzerland
        •  Norway 5–9  Italy
        •  Sweden 8–4  Russia
        •  Czech Republic 3–5  Germany
        •  Latvia 6–9  Scotland
      • Draw 9:
        •  Norway 4–7  Russia
        •   Switzerland 7–10  Scotland
        •  Germany 4–6  Denmark
        •  Latvia 2–14  Sweden
        •  Czech Republic 8–4  Italy
          • Final standings: Sweden 9–0, Denmark 8–1, Scotland 7–2, Russia, Germany 5–4, Italy, Switzerland, Czech Republic 3–6, Latvia, Norway 1–8.

Football (soccer)[]

  • CAF U-23 Championship in Marrakech, Morocco (winner qualifies for 2012 Olympics):
    • Semi-finals: Egypt  2–3  Morocco
  • UEFA Champions League group stage, Matchday 6 (teams in bold qualify for Round of 16, teams in italics qualify for Europa League Round of 32):
    • Group A:
      • Manchester City England 2–0 Germany Bayern Munich
      • Villarreal Spain 0–2 Italy Napoli
        • Final standings: Bayern Munich 13 points, Napoli 11, Manchester City 10, Villarreal 0.
    • Group B:
      • Lille France 0–0 Turkey Trabzonspor
      • Internazionale Italy 1–2 Russia CSKA Moscow
        • Final standings: Internazionale 10 points, CSKA Moscow 8, Trabzonspor 7, Lille 6.
    • Group C:
      • Basel Switzerland 2–1 England Manchester United
      • Benfica Portugal 1–0 Romania Oțelul Galați
        • Final standings: Benfica 12 points, Basel 11, Manchester United 9, Oțelul Galați 0.
    • Group D:
      • Dinamo Zagreb Croatia 1–7 France Lyon
      • Ajax Netherlands 0–3 Spain Real Madrid
        • Final standings: Real Madrid 18 points, Lyon, Ajax 8, Dinamo Zagreb 0.

Handball[]

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship in York, England, last 16 (ENG unless stated):
    • Mark Williams (WAL) 3–6 Ricky Walden
    • Martin Gould 4–6 Shaun Murphy
    • Ali Carter 2–6 Mark Allen (NIR)
    • Marco Fu (HKG) 6–3 Mark Selby

December 6, 2011 (Tuesday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Beaver Creek, United States:
    • Giant slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ted Ligety (USA) 2:40.01 (1:20.42, 1:19.59) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Marcel Hirscher (AUT) 2:40.70 (1:20.39, 1:20.31) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Kjetil Jansrud (NOR) 2:40.79 (1:20.78, 1:20.01)
      • Giant slalom standings (after 3 of 9 races): (1) Ligety 280 points (2) Hirscher 220 (3) Alexis Pinturault (FRA) 159
      • Overall standings (after 7 of 45 races): (1) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 334 points (2) Ligety 289 (3) Didier Cuche (SUI) 268

Cricket[]

  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 3rd ODI in Chittagong:  Pakistan 177 (46.1 overs);  Bangladesh 119 (38 overs). Pakistan win by 58 runs; win 3-match series 3–0.

Curling[]

  • European Championships in Moscow, Russia (teams in bold advance to the playoffs):
    • Men:
      • Draw 6:
        •  Scotland 2–5  Denmark
        •  France 2–5  Norway
        •   Switzerland 7–8  Sweden
        •  Czech Republic 7–4  Germany
        •  Latvia 5–4  Italy
      • Draw 7:
        •  Sweden 9–8  Norway
        •  Latvia 4–8  Scotland
        •  Denmark 8–6  Germany
        •  Italy 9–4   Switzerland
        •  France 7–2  Czech Republic
          • Standings (after 7 draws): Denmark, Sweden 6–1, Germany, Norway, Scotland 4–3, Czech Republic, Switzerland 3–4, France, Latvia 2–5, Italy 1–6.
    • Women:
      • Draw 7:
        •  Italy 3–8  Sweden
        •  Denmark 11–1  Czech Republic
        •  Latvia 4–11   Switzerland
        •  Russia 4–7  Scotland
        •  Germany 8–4  Norway
          • Standings (after 7 draws): Sweden 7–0, Denmark 6–1, Scotland 5–2, Germany, Russia 4–3, Switzerland 3–4, Czech Republic, Italy 2–5, Latvia, Norway 1–6.

Field hockey[]

Football (soccer)[]

  • CAF U-23 Championship in Tangiers, Morocco (winner qualifies for 2012 Olympics):
    • Semi-finals: Senegal  0–1 (a.e.t.)  Gabon
  • UEFA Champions League group stage, Matchday 6 (teams in bold qualify for Round of 16, teams in italics qualify for Europa League Round of 32):
    • Group E:
      • Chelsea England 3–0 Spain Valencia
      • Genk Belgium 1–1 Germany Bayer Leverkusen
        • Final standings: Chelsea 11 points, Bayer Leverkusen 10, Valencia 8, Genk 3.
    • Group F:
      • Olympiacos Greece 3–1 England Arsenal
      • Borussia Dortmund Germany 2–3 France Marseille
        • Final standings: Arsenal 11 points, Marseille 10, Olympiacos 9, Borussia Dortmund 4.
    • Group G:
      • Porto Portugal 0–0 Russia Zenit St. Petersburg
      • APOEL Cyprus 0–2 Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk
        • Final standings: APOEL, Zenit St. Petersburg 9 points, Porto 8, Shakhtar Donetsk 5.
    • Group H:
      • Barcelona Spain 4–0 Belarus BATE Borisov
      • Viktoria Plzeň Czech Republic 2–2 Italy Milan
        • Final standings: Barcelona 16 points, Milan 9, Viktoria Plzeň 5, BATE Borisov 2.

Handball[]

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship in York, England, last 16:
    • Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG) 5–6 Judd Trump (ENG)
    • Ding Junhui (CHN) 6–5 Matthew Stevens (WAL)
    • John Higgins (SCO) 4–6 Stephen Maguire (SCO)
    • Graeme Dott (SCO) 3–6 Neil Robertson (AUS)

December 5, 2011 (Monday)[]

Cricket[]

  • West Indies in India:
    • 3rd ODI in Ahmedabad:  West Indies 260/5 (50 overs);  India 244 (46.5 overs). West Indies win by 16 runs; India lead 5-match series 2–1.

Curling[]

  • European Championships in Moscow, Russia:
    • Men:
      • Draw 4:
        •  Italy 4–9  Sweden
        •   Switzerland 7–6  Latvia
        •  Germany 7–4  France
        •  Norway 7–8  Scotland
        •  Czech Republic 5–6  Denmark
      • Draw 5:
        •  France 3–8   Switzerland
        •  Denmark 8–3  Italy
        •  Czech Republic 8–4  Scotland
        •  Sweden 6–5  Latvia
        •  Norway 10–3  Germany
          • Standings (after 5 draws): Denmark, Germany, Sweden 4–1, Norway, Scotland, Switzerland 3–2, Czech Republic 2–3, France, Latvia, 1–4, Italy 0–5.
    • Women:
      • Draw 5:
        •  Germany 5–7  Scotland
        •  Latvia 2–10  Russia
        •  Norway 6–5  Czech Republic
        •  Italy 7–13  Denmark
        •  Sweden 5–4   Switzerland
      • Draw 6:
        •  Czech Republic 10–1  Latvia
        •  Germany 6–9  Sweden
        •  Scotland 5–4  Italy
        •  Norway 3–8   Switzerland
        •  Denmark 8–7  Russia
          • Standings (after 6 draws): Sweden 6–0, Denmark 5–1, Russia, Scotland 4–2, Germany 3–3, Czech Republic, Italy, Switzerland 2–4, Latvia, Norway 1–5.

Field hockey[]

Handball[]

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship in York, England, last 32 (ENG unless stated):
    • Judd Trump 6–4 Dominic Dale (WAL)
    • Mark Allen (NIR) 6–3 Adrian Gunnell
    • Stephen Lee 3–6 Ricky Walden
    • Mark Williams (WAL) 6–4 Joe Jogia

December 4, 2011 (Sunday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Beaver Creek, United States:
    • Giant slalom: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Marcel Hirscher (AUT) 2:38.45 (1:18.74, 1:19.71) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Ted Ligety (USA) 2:38.61 (1:18.53, 1:20.08) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Fritz Dopfer (GER) 2:39.07 (1:19.12, 1:19.95)
      • Giant slalom standings (after 2 of 8 races): (1) Ligety 180 points (2) Hirscher 140 (3) Alexis Pinturault (FRA) 109
      • Overall standings (after 6 of 45 races): (1) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 294 points (2) Didier Cuche (SUI) 260 (3) Beat Feuz (SUI) 246
  • Women's World Cup in Lake Louise, Canada:
    • Super-G: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Lindsey Vonn (USA) 1:20.21 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Anna Fenninger (AUT) 1:20.40 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Julia Mancuso (USA) 1:20.92
      • Overall standings (after 6 of 40 races): (1) Vonn 422 points (2) Viktoria Rebensburg (GER) 286 (3) Elisabeth Görgl (AUT) 243

American football[]

  • 2011 NCAA Division I FBS football season:
    • The 2012 Bowl Championship Series pairings are announced:
      • Rose Bowl, Jan. 2: (10) Wisconsin vs. (5) Oregon
      • Fiesta Bowl, Jan. 2: (3) Oklahoma State vs. (4) Stanford
      • Sugar Bowl, Jan. 3: (13) Michigan vs. (11) Virginia Tech
      • Orange Bowl, Jan. 4: (15) Clemson vs. (23) West Virginia
      • BCS National Championship Game, Jan. 9: (1) LSU vs. (2) Alabama

Auto racing[]

  • V8 Supercars:
    • Sydney Telstra 500 in Sydney, New South Wales (AUS unless stated):
      • Race 28: (1) Mark Winterbottom (Ford Performance Racing; Ford FG Falcon) (2) Craig Lowndes (Triple Eight Race Engineering; Holden VE Commodore) (3) Shane van Gisbergen (NZL) (Stone Brothers Racing; Ford FG Falcon)
        • Final drivers' championship standings: (1) Jamie Whincup (Triple Eight Race Engineering; Holden VE Commodore) 3168 points (2) Lowndes 3133 (3) Winterbottom 2710
          • Whincup wins the title for the third time.

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 1 in Östersund, Sweden:
    • Men's 12.5 km Pursuit: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Martin Fourcade (FRA) 32:56.0 (0+0+0+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 33:21.5 (0+0+1+1) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Jaroslav Soukup (CZE) 33:22.9 (0+1+0+0)
      • Overall standings (after 3 of 26 races): (1) Fourcade 163 points (2) Carl Johan Bergman (SWE) & Svendsen 122
    • Women's 10 km Pursuit: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Tora Berger (NOR) 33:56.9 (0+0+0+1) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN) 34:30.1 (0+1+0+1) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Magdalena Neuner (GER) 35:21.3 (0+1+2+1)
      • Overall standings (after 3 of 26 races): (1) Neuner 156 points (2) Mäkäräinen 145 (3) Berger 126

Bobsleigh[]

  • World Cup in Igls, Austria:
    • Four-man: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Russia (Alexandr Zubkov, Filipp Yegorov, Dmitry Trunenkov, Nikolay Hrenkov) 1:43.05 (51.56, 51.49) 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  United States (Steven Holcomb, Justin Olsen, Steven Langton, Curtis Tomasevicz) 1:43.11 (51.65, 51.46) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Germany (Thomas Florschütz, , Kevin Kuske, Thomas Blaschek) 1:43.41 (51.77, 51.64)

Cricket[]

  • New Zealand in Australia:
    • 1st Test in Woolloongabba, Brisbane, day 4:  New Zealand 295 & 150 (49.4 overs; James Pattinson 5/27);  Australia 427 & 19/1 (2.2 overs). Australia win by 9 wickets; lead 2-match series 1–0.

Cross-country skiing[]

  • World Cup in Düsseldorf, Germany:
    • Men's Team Sprint F: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Jesper Modin/Teodor Peterson (SWE) 18:22.7 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Nikita Kriukov/Alexei Petukhov (RUS) 18:22.9 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Pål Golberg/Ola Vigen Hattestad (NOR) 18:23.4
    • Women's Team Sprint F: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Mari Eide/Maiken Caspersen Falla (NOR) 9:57.0 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sadie Bjornsen/Kikkan Randall (USA) 9:58.6 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Natalya Korostelyova/Natalya Matveyeva (RUS) 9:59.1

Curling[]

  • European Championships in Moscow, Russia:
    • Men:
      • Draw 2:
        •  Denmark 7–3  Latvia
        •  Norway 6–3  Czech Republic
        •  Scotland 6–5   Switzerland
        •  Germany 7–4  Italy
        •  Sweden 8–2  France
      • Draw 3:
        •  Germany 10–6  Scotland
        •  Italy 4–7  France
        •  Sweden 8–3  Denmark
        •  Latvia 8–11  Czech Republic
        •   Switzerland 5–9  Norway
          • Standings (after 3 draws): Germany 3–0, Denmark, Norway, Scotland, Sweden 2–1, Czech Republic, France, Latvia, Switzerland 1–2, Italy 0–3.
    • Women:
      • Draw 3:
        •   Switzerland 9–7  Czech Republic
        •  Russia 8–3  Germany
        •  Italy 11–4  Latvia
        •  Denmark 11–2  Norway
        •  Scotland 5–8  Sweden
      • Draw 4:
        •  Latvia 5–6  Denmark
        •  Sweden 8–2  Norway
        •  Czech Republic 6–10  Scotland
        •   Switzerland 5–11  Russia
        •  Italy 6–7  Germany
          • Standings (after 4 draws): Sweden 4–0, Denmark, Germany, Russia 3–1, Italy, Scotland 2–2, Czech Republic, Latvia, Switzerland 1–3, Norway 0–4.

Field hockey[]

Football (soccer)[]

  • CAF Confederation Cup Final second leg (first leg score in parentheses): Maghreb de Fès Morocco 1–0 (0–1) Tunisia Club Africain. 1–1 on aggregate, Maghreb de Fès win 6–5 on penalties.
    • Magreb de Fès win the Cup for the first time.
  • Brazil Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, final matchday:
    • Corinthians 0–0 Palmeiras
    • Vasco da Gama 1–1 Flamengo
      • Final standings: Corinthians 71 points, Vasco da Gama 69.
      • Corinthians win the title for the fifth time.
  • Argentina Argentine Primera División Torneo Apertura, matchday 17:
    • Boca Juniors 3–0 Banfield
      • Standings (after 17 matches): Boca Juniors 39 points, Racing 28, Tigre 27 (16).
      • Boca Juniors win the title for the 24th time.
  • Uruguay Uruguayan Primera División Torneo Apertura, final matchday:
    • Liverpool 0–1 Nacional
    • Danubio 4–1 Bella Vista
      • Final standings: Nacional 32 points, Danubio 31.
      • Nacional qualify for the championship playoff.

Golf[]

  • European Tour:
    • UBS Hong Kong Open in Sheung Shui, Hong Kong:
      • Winner: Rory McIlroy (NIR) 268 (−12)
        • McIlroy wins his third European Tour title.
  • Chevron World Challenge in Thousand Oaks, California, United States:
    • Winner: Tiger Woods (USA) 278 (−10)
      • Woods wins his first tournament in over two years.

Handball[]

Nordic combined[]

  • World Cup in Lillehammer, Norway:
    • HS 138 / 10 km: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Eric Frenzel (GER) 28:38.5 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jason Lamy-Chappuis (FRA) 28:55.9 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Björn Kircheisen (NOR) 28:59.1
      • Standings (after 4 of 23 races): (1) Tino Edelmann (GER) 240 points (2) Håvard Klemetsen (NOR) 189 (3) Alessandro Pittin (ITA) 180

Short track speed skating[]

  • World Cup 3 in Nagoya, Japan (CHN unless stated):
    • Men's 500m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Olivier Jean (CAN) 41.491 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Liang Wenhao 41.738 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 42.815
      • Standings (after 4 of 8 races): (1) Jean 2000 points (2) Jon Eley (GBR) 1875 (3) Liang 1652
    • Men's 1000m (2): 1st place, gold medalist(s) Charles Hamelin (CAN) 1:28.270 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Kwak Yoon-Gy (KOR) 1:28.365 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Michael Gilday (CAN) 1:28.939
      • Standings (after 4 of 8 races): (1) Kwak 3312 points (2) Hamelin 2000 (3) Noh Jin-Kyu (KOR) 1456
    • Men's 5000m relay: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  China (Liang, Song Weilong, Wu Dajing, ) 6:50.562 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Russia (Semen Elistratov, , Viacheslav Kurginian, Vladimir Grigorev) 6:53.481 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Japan (Yuzo Takamido, , , ) 6:53.557
      • Standings (after 3 of 6 races): (1)  South Korea 2152 points (2) Russia 2010 (3)  Canada 1850
    • Women's 500m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Arianna Fontana (ITA) 44.479 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Yui Sakai (JPN) 44.566 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Martina Valcepina (ITA) 44.667
      • Standings (after 4 of 8 races): (1) Valcepina 3040 points (2) Fontana & Marianne St-Gelais (CAN) 2000
    • Women's 1000m (2): 1st place, gold medalist(s) Li Jianrou 1:32.708 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Lin Meng 1:33.226 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Xiao Han 1:33.334
      • Standings (after 4 of 8 races): (1) Sakai 2410 points (2) Elise Christie (GBR) 2096 (3) Li 1162
    • Women's 3000m relay: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Italy (Fontana, Cecilia Maffei, Arianna Valcepina, Martina Valcepina) 4:19.970 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Japan (Ayuko Ito, Sayuri Shimizu, Sakai, ) 4:20.041 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  China (Liu Qiuhong, Fan Kexin, Lin, Xiao) 4:20.122
      • Standings (after 3 of 6 races): (1) China 2640 points (2) Japan 1768 (3)  South Korea 1620

Ski jumping[]

  • Men's World Cup in Lillehammer, Norway:
    • HS 138: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Andreas Kofler (AUT) 252.0 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Severin Freund (GER) 249.2 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Anders Bardal (NOR) 249.2
      • Standings (after 3 of 27 events): (1) Kofler 300 points (2) Gregor Schlierenzauer (AUT) 170 (3) Richard Freitag (GER) 154

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship in York, England, last 32 (ENG unless stated):
    • Mark Selby 6–0 Ryan Day (WAL)
    • Stuart Bingham 4–6 Marco Fu (HKG)
    • Ronnie O'Sullivan 6–1 Steve Davis
    • Ali Carter 6–4 Robert Milkins
    • Martin Gould 6–2 Peter Lines
    • Shaun Murphy 6–3 Li Yan (CHN)

Speed skating[]

  • World Cup 3 in Heerenveen, Netherlands (NED unless stated):
    • Men's 1000 m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Kjeld Nuis 1:08.64, 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 1:09.14, 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mo Tae-bum (KOR) 1:09.18
      • Standings (after 3 of 6 races): (1) Nuis & Stefan Groothuis 260 points, (3) de Vries 180
    • Men's team pursuit: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Netherlands (Sven Kramer, Wouter olde Heuvel, Jan Blokhuijsen) 3:42.35, 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Korea (Lee Seung-hoon, Joo Hyong-jun, Ko Byung-wook) 3:43.82, 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Germany (Patrick Beckert, Marco Weber, Alexej Baumgärtner) 3:45.28
      • Standings (after 2 of 4 races): (1) Netherlands 200 points, (2) Korea & Germany 140
    • Women's 1000 m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Christine Nesbitt (CAN) 1:15.32, 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Yu Jing (CHN) 1:15.85, 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Yekaterina Shikhova (RUS) 1:16.16
      • Standings (after 3 of 6 races): (1) Nesbitt 300 points, (2) Marrit Leenstra 180, (3) Margot Boer 166
    • Women's team pursuit: 1st place, gold medalist(s)  Canada (Brittany Schussler, Nesbitt, Cindy Klassen) 3:00.01, 2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Russia (Yekaterina Lobysheva, Shikhova, Yuliya Skokova) 3:02.38, 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Korea (Lee Ju-yeon, Noh Seon-yeong, Kim Bo-reum) 3:03.18
      • Standings (after 2 of 4 races): (1) Canada 200 points, (2) Russia 150, (3) Korea 130

Tennis[]

Volleyball[]

December 3, 2011 (Saturday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Beaver Creek, United States:
    • Super-G: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Sandro Viletta (SUI) 1:18.71 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 1:18.91 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Beat Feuz (SUI) 1:18.97
      • Super-G standings (after 2 of 8 races): (1) Svindal 180 points (2) Didier Cuche (SUI) 109 (3) Viletta 108
      • Overall standings (after 5 of 45 races): (1) Svindal 265 points (2) Cuche 238 (3) Feuz 231
  • Women's World Cup in Lake Louise, Canada:
    • Downhill: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Lindsey Vonn (USA) 1:51.35 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Marie Marchand-Arvier (FRA) 1:53.03 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Elisabeth Görgl (AUT) 1:53.26
      • Downhill standings (after 2 of 9 races): (1) Vonn 200 points (2) Tina Weirather (LIE) 106 (3) Dominique Gisin (SUI) 105
      • Overall standings (after 5 of 40 races): (1) Vonn 322 points (2) Viktoria Rebensburg (GER) 280 (3) Görgl 211

American football[]

  • NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Championship Games:
    • Conference USA in Houston: (24) Southern Miss 49, (7) Houston 28
    • SEC in Atlanta: (1) LSU 41, (12) Georgia 10
      • The Tigers advance to the BCS National Championship Game.
    • ACC in Charlotte, North Carolina: (21) Clemson 38, (5) Virginia Tech 10
      • Clemson will play in the Orange Bowl.
    • Big Ten in Indianapolis: (15) Wisconsin 42, (11) Michigan State 39
      • The Badgers will play Oregon in the Rose Bowl.
    • Bedlam Series: (3) Oklahoma State 44, (13) Oklahoma 10
      • Oklahoma State advances to the Fiesta Bowl or BCS National Championship Game.

Auto racing[]

  • V8 Supercars:
    • Sydney Telstra 500 in Sydney, New South Wales (AUS unless stated):
      • Race 27: (1) Craig Lowndes (Triple Eight Race Engineering; Holden VE Commodore) (2) Garth Tander (Holden Racing Team; Holden VE Commodore) (3) Shane van Gisbergen (NZL) (Stone Brothers Racing; Ford FG Falcon)
        • Drivers' championship standings: (1) Jamie Whincup (Triple Eight Race Engineering; Holden VE Commodore) 3078 points (2) Lowndes 2995 (3) Mark Winterbottom (Ford Performance Racing; Ford FG Falcon) 2560

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 1 in Östersund, Sweden:
    • Women's 7.5 km Sprint: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Magdalena Neuner (GER) 22:01.7 (0+1) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tora Berger (NOR) 22:01.9 (0+1) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN) 22:16.9 (2+0)
      • Overall standings (after 2 of 26 races): (1) Neuner 108 points (2) Darya Domracheva (BLR) 100 (3) Mäkäräinen 91

Bobsleigh[]

Cricket[]

  • New Zealand in Australia:
    • 1st Test in Woolloongabba, Brisbane, day 3:  New Zealand 295 & 10/1 (7 overs);  Australia 427 (129.2 overs; Michael Clarke 139). New Zealand trail by 122 runs with 9 wickets remaining.
  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 2nd ODI in Mirpur:  Pakistan 262/7 (50 overs);  Bangladesh 186/7 (50 overs; Nasir Hossain 100). Pakistan win by 76 runs; lead 3-match series 2–0.

Cross-country skiing[]

  • World Cup in Düsseldorf, Germany (NOR unless stated):
    • Men's Sprint F: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ola Vigen Hattestad 2:57.5 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Alexei Petukhov (RUS) 2:57.6 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Pål Golberg 2:57.6
      • Sprint standings (after 2 of 13 races): (1) Hattestad 111 points (2) Petukhov 108 (3) Teodor Peterson (SWE) 95
      • Overall standings (after 6 of 38 races): (1) Petter Northug 355 points (2) Dario Cologna (SUI) 278 (3) Johan Olsson (SWE) 259
    • Women's Sprint F: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Kikkan Randall (USA) 1:44.7 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Natalya Matveyeva (RUS) 1:45.1 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) (SUI) 1:45.7
      • Sprint standings (after 2 of 13 races): (1) Randall 140 points (2) Matveyeva 114 (3) Hanna Brodin (SWE) 71
      • Overall standings (after 6 of 38 races): (1) Marit Bjørgen 446 points (2) Therese Johaug 316 (3) Vibeke Skofterud 309

Curling[]

  • European Championships in Moscow, Russia:
    • Men, Draw 1:
      •   Switzerland 7–3  Czech Republic
      •  Sweden 5–7  Germany
      •  Latvia 8–5  Norway
      •  France 3–11  Denmark
      •  Italy 4–6  Scotland
    • Women:
      • Draw 1:
        •  Scotland 8–6  Norway
        •  Italy 8–4   Switzerland
        •  Denmark 6–9  Sweden
        •  Germany 7–5  Latvia
        •  Russia 10–12  Czech Republic
      • Draw 2:
        •  Russia 7–5  Italy
        •  Scotland 2–12  Denmark
        •   Switzerland 5–7  Germany
        •  Sweden 12–0  Czech Republic
        •  Norway 6–8  Latvia
          • Standings (after 2 draws): Sweden, Germany 2–0, Scotland, Czech Republic, Italy, Russia, Denmark, Latvia 1–1, Norway, Switzerland 0–2.

Field hockey[]

Football (soccer)[]

  • CAF U-23 Championship in Morocco (teams in bold qualify for the semifinals):
    • Group B:
      • Egypt  2–0  South Africa
      • Gabon  3–1  Ivory Coast
        • Final standings: Egypt 6 points, Gabon, Côte d'Ivoire 4, South Africa 2.
  • OFC Champions League group stage Matchday 3:
    • Group A: Mont-Dore New Caledonia 0–1 New Zealand Waitakere United
      • Standings (after 3 matches): Waitakere United 9 points, French Polynesia Tefana 4, Fiji Ba 3, Mont-Dore 1.
  • Japan J. League Division 1, final matchday (teams in bold qualify for the AFC Champions League):
    • Urawa Red Diamonds 1–3 Kashiwa Reysol
    • Albirex Niigata 0–1 Nagoya Grampus
    • Shimizu S-Pulse 1–3 Gamba Osaka
      • Standings: Kashiwa Reysol 72 points, Nagoya Grampus 71, Gamba Osaka 70.
      • Kashiwa Reysol win the title for the first time, and will represent Japan at the FIFA Club World Cup.

Handball[]

Nordic combined[]

  • World Cup in Lillehammer, Norway:
    • HS 100 / 10 km: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Håvard Klemetsen (NOR) 27:44.4 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Alessandro Pittin (ITA) 27:44.6 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Tino Edelmann (GER) 27:53.0
      • Standings (after 3 of 23 races): (1) Edelmann 220 points (2) Magnus Krog (NOR) 169 (3) Klemetsen 165

Rugby union[]

  • IRB Sevens World Series:
    • Dubai Sevens in Dubai, United Arab Emirates:
      • Shield: Samoa  31–17  Kenya
      • Bowl: United States  0–26  Scotland
      • Plate: Australia  17–14  South Africa
      • Cup: England  29–12  France
        • Standings (after 2 of 9 competitions): (1)  Fiji 39 points (2) England 32 (3) France,  New Zealand & South Africa 29
  • in Cardiff: Wales  18–24  Australia

Short track speed skating[]

  • World Cup 3 in Nagoya, Japan (KOR unless stated):
    • Men's 1000m (1): Kwak Yoon-Gy 1:29.743 2nd place, silver medalist(s) J. R. Celski (USA) 1:29.828 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Seo Yi-Ra 1:29.899
      • Standings (after 3 of 8 races): (1) Kwak 2512 points (2) Celski 1312 (3) Olivier Jean (CAN) 1152
    • Men's 1500m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Noh Jin-Kyu 2:14.941 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Lee Ho-Suk 2:15.127 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Charle Cournoyer (CAN) 2:15.392
      • Standings (after 4 of 8 races): (1) Noh 3000 points (2) Lee & Kwak 1600
    • Women's 1000m (1): 1st place, gold medalist(s) Yui Sakai (JPN) 1:32.713 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Elise Christie (GBR) 1:32.786 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Katherine Reutter (USA) 1:32.945
      • Standings (after 3 of 8 races): (1) Sakai 2410 points (2) Christie 1928 (3) Marianne St-Gelais (CAN) 1035
    • Women's 1500m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Arianna Fontana (ITA) 2:24.329 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Cho Ha-Ri 2:24.423 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Lana Gehring (USA) 2:24.721
      • Standings (after 4 of 8 races): (1) Lee Eun-Byul 2502 points (2) Fontana 2262 (3) Reutter 2000

Skeleton[]

Ski jumping[]

  • World Cup in Lillehammer, Norway:
    • Men's HS 100: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Andreas Kofler (AUT) 279.3 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Richard Freitag (GER) 273.3 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Kamil Stoch (POL) 249.6
      • Standings (after 2 of 27 events): (1) Kofler 200 points (2) Gregor Schlierenzauer (AUT) 120 (3) Stoch 110
    • Women's HS 100: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Sarah Hendrickson (USA) 277.0 points 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Coline Mattel (FRA) 247.7 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Melanie Faisst (GER) 245.5

Snooker[]

  • UK Championship in York, England, last 32:
    • Ding Junhui (CHN) 6–5 Mark Davis (ENG)
    • John Higgins (SCO) 6–5 Rory McLeod (ENG)
    • Graeme Dott (SCO) 6–1 Matthew Selt (ENG)
    • Neil Robertson (AUS) 6–1 Tom Ford (ENG)
    • Matthew Stevens (WAL) 6–2 Marcus Campbell (SCO)
    • Stephen Maguire (SCO) 6–3 Stephen Hendry (SCO)

Speed skating[]

  • World Cup 3 in Heerenveen, Netherlands (NED unless stated):
    • Men's 500m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Pekka Koskela (FIN) 35.01 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Joji Kato (JPN) 35.02 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 35.06
      • Standings (after 6 of 12 races): (1) Mo Tae-Bum (KOR) 400 points (2) Kato 373 (3) Tucker Fredricks (USA) 348
    • Men's 10,000m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Jorrit Bergsma 12:50.33 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Bob de Jong 12:55.11 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Bob de Vries 13:03.41
      • Standings (after 3 of 6 races): (1) Bergsma 280 points (2) Sven Kramer 210 (3) de Jong 190
    • Women's 500m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Yu Jing (CHN) 37.67 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jenny Wolf (GER) 38.19 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Laurine van Riessen 38.20
      • Standings (after 6 of 12 races): (1) Lee Sang-Hwa (KOR) 450 points (2) Wolf 420 (3) Yu 400
    • Women's 1500m: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Christine Nesbitt (CAN) 1:55.68 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Ireen Wüst 1:57.15 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Yekaterina Shikhova (RUS) 1:57.17
      • Standings (after 3 of 6 races): (1) Nesbitt 280 points (2) Wüst 250 (3) Shikhova 148

Tennis[]

Volleyball[]

December 2, 2011 (Friday)[]

Alpine skiing[]

  • Men's World Cup in Beaver Creek, United States:
    • Downhill: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Bode Miller (USA) 1:43.82 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Beat Feuz (SUI) 1:43.86 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Klaus Kröll (AUT) 1:43.96
      • Downhill standings (after 2 of 11 races): (1) Feuz 160 points (2) Didier Cuche (SUI) & Miller 129
      • Overall standings (after 4 of 45 races): (1) Cuche 209 points (2) Miller 187 (3) Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 185
  • Women's World Cup in Lake Louise, Canada:
    • Downhill: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Lindsey Vonn (USA) 1:53.19 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tina Weirather (LIE) 1:55.14 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Dominique Gisin (SUI) 1:55.25
      • Overall standings (after 4 of 40 races): (1) Viktoria Rebensburg (GER) 230 points (2) Vonn 222 (3) Elisabeth Görgl (AUT) 151

American football[]

  • NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Championship Games:
    • Pac-12 in Eugene, Oregon: Oregon 49, UCLA 31
      • The Ducks will play in the Rose Bowl.
    • MAC in Detroit, Michigan: Northern Illinois 23, Ohio 20.

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 1 in Östersund, Sweden:
    • Men's 10 km Sprint: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Carl Johan Bergman (SWE) 24:22.5 (0+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tarjei Bø (NOR) 24:30.1 (0+0) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 24:35.5 (0+1)
      • Overall standings (after 2 of 26 races): (1) Martin Fourcade (FRA) 103 points (2) Michal Šlesingr (CZE) 88 (3) Bergman 82

Bobsleigh[]

  • World Cup in Igls, Austria:
    • Two-woman: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Anja Schneiderheinze-Stöckel/ (GER) 1:47.26 (53.69, 53.57) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sandra Kiriasis/Petra Lammert (GER) 1:47.44 (53.82, 53.62) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Elana Meyers/Katie Eberling (USA) 1:47.82 (53.90, 53.92) & Christina Hengster/ (AUT) 1:47.82 (53.95, 53.87)

Cricket[]

  • New Zealand in Australia:
    • 1st Test in Woolloongabba, Brisbane, day 2:  New Zealand 295 (82.5 overs);  Australia 154/3 (46 overs). Australia trail by 141 runs with 7 wickets remaining in the 1st innings.
  • West Indies in India:
    • 2nd ODI in Visakhapatnam:  West Indies 269/9 (50 overs);  India 270/5 (48.1 overs; Virat Kohli 117). India win by 5 wickets; lead 5-match series 2–0.

Football (soccer)[]

  • CAF U-23 Championship in Morocco (teams in bold advance to the semifinals):
    • Group A:
      • Nigeria  4–1  Algeria
      • Morocco  0–1  Senegal
        • Final standings: Senegal, Morocco 6 points, Nigeria, Algeria 3.
  • OFC Champions League group stage Matchday 3:
    • Group A: Tefana French Polynesia 4–1 Fiji Ba
      • Standings: New Zealand Waitakere United 6 points (2 matches), Tefana 4 (3), Ba 3 (3), New Caledonia Mont-Dore 1 (2).

Handball[]

Skeleton[]

Speed skating[]

  • World Cup 3 in Heerenveen, Netherlands:
    • 500m Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Yu Jing (CHN) 37.84 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Lee Sang-Hwa (KOR) 37.91 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Wang Beixing (CHN) 38.17
      • Standings (after 5 of 12 races): (1) Lee 390 points (2) Jenny Wolf (GER) 340 (3) Yu 300
    • 500m Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Tucker Fredricks (USA) 34.98 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Joji Kato (JPN) 35.07 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mo Tae-Bum (KOR) 35.08
      • Standings (after 5 of 12 races): (1) Mo 355 points (2) Kato 293 (3) Fredricks 288
    • 5000m Women: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Martina Sáblíková (CZE) 6:58.87 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Claudia Pechstein (GER) 7:02.92 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Stephanie Beckert (GER) 7:04.77
      • Standings (after 3 of 6 races): (1) Sáblíková 300 points (2) Pechstein 230 (3) Linda de Vries (NED) 156
    • 1500m Men: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Ivan Skobrev (RUS) 1:45.81 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Kjeld Nuis (NED) 1:45.99 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Håvard Bøkko (NOR) 1:46.49
      • Standings (after 3 of 6 races): (1) Skobrev 202 points (2) Nuis 190 (3) Denny Morrison (CAN) & Shani Davis (USA) 180

Tennis[]

Volleyball[]

December 1, 2011 (Thursday)[]

Baseball[]

  • Nippon Professional Baseball awards:
    • Most Valuable Players:
      • Central League: Takuya Asao, Chunichi Dragons
      • Pacific League: Seiichi Uchikawa, Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks

Basketball[]

  • Euroleague Regular Season Matchday 7 (team in bold qualify for Top 16):
    • Group A:
    • Group C:
      • EA7 Emporio Armani Italy 65–72 Spain Real Madrid
      • Partizan Mt:s Belgrade Serbia 74–71 Israel Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv
        • Standings: Maccabi Electra Tel Aviv, Real Madrid 5–2, Turkey Anadolu Efes, Partizan Mt:s Belgrade 4–3, EA7 Emporio Armani 2–5, Belgium Spirou Charleroi 1–6.
    • Group D:
      • UNICS Kazan Russia 72–61 Turkey Galatasaray Medical Park
      • Union Olimpija Ljubljana Slovenia 57–63 Italy Montepaschi Siena
      • Asseco Prokom Gdynia Poland 45–76 Spain FC Barcelona Regal
        • Standings: FC Barcelona Regal 7–0, Montepaschi Siena, UNICS Kazan 5–2, Galatasaray Medical Park 3–4, Union Olimpija Ljubljana 1–6, Asseco Prokom Gdynia 0–7.

Biathlon[]

  • World Cup 1 in Östersund, Sweden:
    • Women's 15 km Individual: 1st place, gold medalist(s) Darya Domracheva (BLR) 47:15.6 (1+1+0+0) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) Anna Maria Nilsson (SWE) 48:24.1 (1+0+0+0) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Magdalena Neuner (GER) 48:57.3 (0+1+0+2)

Cricket[]

  • New Zealand in Australia:
    • 1st Test in Woolloongabba, Brisbane, day 1:  New Zealand 176/5 (51 overs);  Australia.
  • Pakistan in Bangladesh:
    • 1st ODI in Mirpur:  Bangladesh 91 (30.3 overs; Shahid Afridi 5/23);  Pakistan 93/5 (25.4 overs). Pakistan win by 5 wickets; lead 3-match series 1–0.

Football (soccer)[]

  • UEFA Europa League group stage Matchday 5 (teams in bold qualify for Round of 32):
    • Group D:
      • Sporting CP Portugal 2–0 Switzerland Zürich
      • Vaslui Romania 0–0 Italy Lazio
        • Standings (after 5 matches): Sporting CP 12 points, Vaslui, Lazio 6, Zürich 2.
    • Group E:
      • Stoke City England 1–1 Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv
      • Maccabi Tel Aviv Israel 2–3 Turkey Beşiktaş
        • Standings (after 5 matches): Stoke City 11 points, Beşiktaş 9, Dynamo Kyiv 6, Maccabi Tel Aviv 1.
    • Group F:
      • Athletic Bilbao Spain 2–1 Slovakia Slovan Bratislava
      • Red Bull Salzburg Austria 2–0 France Paris Saint-Germain
        • Standings (after 5 matches): Athletic Bilbao 13 points, Red Bull Salzburg, Paris Saint-Germain 7, Slovan Bratislava 1.
    • Group J:
      • AEK Larnaca Cyprus 2–1 Israel Maccabi Haifa
      • Schalke 04 Germany 2–1 Romania Steaua București
        • Standings (after 5 matches): Schalke 04 11 points, Maccabi Haifa 6, Steaua București, AEK Larnaca 5.
    • Group K:
      • Odense Denmark 1–2 Poland Wisła Kraków
      • Twente Netherlands 1–0 England Fulham
        • Standings (after 5 matches): Twente 13 points, Fulham 7, Wisła Kraków 6, Odense 3.
    • Group L:
      • Lokomotiv Moscow Russia 3–1 Austria Sturm Graz
      • AEK Athens Greece 1–2 Belgium Anderlecht
        • Standings (after 5 matches): Anderlecht 15 points, Lokomotiv Moscow 12, Sturm Graz 3, AEK Athens 0.

References[]

  1. ^ "UFC 141 Live on Pay-Per-View results". UFC. Retrieved December 31, 2011.
  2. ^ "Petter Northug opens his account in Tour de Ski with a victory". Archived from the original on 2012-04-07. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  3. ^ "Justyna Kowalczyk comes through to take the win in Stage 1 of Tour de Ski". Archived from the original on 2012-04-07. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  4. ^ "World Championship – Day 12". PDC. Archived from the original on January 8, 2012. Retrieved December 29, 2011.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "Russian Figure Skating Championships results". Archived from the original on 2012-04-14. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  6. ^ Florio, Mike (December 26, 2011). "Brees breaks Marino's record, but Brady's not far behind". Profootballtalk.com. NBC Sports. Retrieved December 27, 2011.
  7. ^ Ramakrishnan, Madhusudhan (December 26, 2011). "Dominant at home, vulnerable away". ESPNcricinfo. ESPN. Retrieved December 26, 2011.
  8. ^ "Luke Donald seals US & Europe double". BBC Sport. BBC. December 11, 2011. Retrieved December 11, 2011.
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