10 things we learned about sport in 2021
The Olympic Games, Euro 2020 and the Ryder Cup were all finally held as Britain found a new golden girl and racism in cricket reared its ugly head.
2021 provided rich sporting drama as the Olympic and Paralympic Games and Euro 2020 were finally held after being delayed by coronavirus for 12 months.
Here, the PA news agency looks at 10 things we have learned about sport during an action-packed year.
Olympics can be held during a global pandemic
Exactly 12 months after they should have been held, the Tokyo Olympics went ahead amid searing heat and humidity. A rise in Covid-19 cases in the Tokyo area cast a large shadow over the ‘Ghost Games’ but relatively few cases were directly linked with the influx of athletes and other Games-related personnel, and the International Olympic Committee congratulated itself on staging the event. There were some protests from the Japanese public but the sport saved the day and showed the value of holding an Olympics during a global pandemic.
Great Britain remain an Olympic and Paralympic force
England can make major finals
Britain has a new golden girl
Emma Raducanu began 2021 wondering whether Covid-19 would allow her to sit her A Levels. After reaching the last 16 at Wimbledon, Raducanu, then 18, stunned the tennis world by winning the US Open. She won all 20 sets she played in qualifying and the main draw to become the first British woman to win a grand slam singles title since Virginia Wade lifted the Wimbledon trophy in 1977. She banked a £1.8million winner’s cheque, a spot on the red carpet at New York’s fashionable Met Gala and a place in the nation’s heart.
Cricket needs to get its house in order over racism
Tyson Fury is the heavyweight boss
2021 started with talk that Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury must meet in the boxing ring. It ends with Fury firmly established as the world’s number one heavyweight after delivering an 11th-round knockout of Deontay Wilder in their October trilogy fight. Joshua was outclassed by Oleksandr Usyk in September and the dethroned WBO, WBA, IBF and IBO champion has opted to take an immediate rematch with the wily Ukrainian southpaw. Fury meeting the winner of that one could be the blockbuster fight of 2022.
Blue is the colour
The Lions need more help
Europe’s era of Ryder Cup dominance is over
Rory McIlroy cried and Ian ‘the Postman’ Poulter failed to deliver as Europe’s Ryder Cup defence was destroyed on the Lake Michigan shoreline at Whistling Straits. The pre-match fears of many Europeans were realised as a new generation of American stars romped to a record 19-9 win. The match proved one too many for the likes of 48-year-old Lee Westwood, Poulter (45) and Paul Casey (44). With the likes of Patrick Cantlay, Collin Morikawa, Xander Schauffele, Scottie Scheffler and Daniel Berger all in their 20s, the concern for Europe is that the United States could dominate for some time to come.
Formula One needs to keep the drivers the story
Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton’s final-race shoot-out for F1 glory ended in triumph for the Dutchman, but huge controversy overshadowed the season’s thrilling conclusion in December. Verstappen overtook Hamilton on a final-lap battle after the safety car was deployed. Hamilton’s big lead was entirely wiped out and Verstappen seized full advantage given he also boasted the more appropriate tyres. And so an outright record eighth crown will remain Hamilton’s motivation heading into 2022, but the sport itself must examine the finer details of racing rules that can inhibit outright competition between all that should matter: the drivers.