ROMSO Cyprus Knowledge Base
10 november in sport
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November 10 (day of the year or in case of a leap year) in sport.
9 November in sport - in sport - 11 November in sport
Events
1878:
(Baseball): The San Francisco Athletics are Pacific Coast champions. They won the final against the San Francisco Cailfornias ahead.
1901-1950
1951-2000
2014:
(Sail): Loïck Peyron wins the tenth edition of the Route du Rhum in the ultimate category. A leader since the first day, the skipper of Banque Populaire VII crossed the finish line at Pointe-à-Pitre at 00:10 local time after 7 days, 15 hours, 8 minutes and 32 seconds of racing. He set a new test record. The old reference time was held by Lionel Lemonchois since 2006 (7 days, 17 hours, 19 minutes, 6 seconds). Yann Guichard, at the helm of the giant trimaran Spindlift 2 takes second place after 8 days 5 hours 18 minutes and 46 seconds of navigation.
2017:
(Football /World /Player Dams): dams in the Europe zone, dams in North America, Central and Caribbean - Asia, South America dams - Oceania and Oceania dams - South America of the 2018 World Cup of Football In the Africa zone, Senegal qualifies for the final tournament.
2019:
(Tennis)
(Fed Cup): in Perth, Australia, thanks to the victory in the double decisive of the Caroline Garcia-Kristina Mladenovic pair, France won the third Fed Cup in its history (6-4, 6-3).
(Masters): in London, UK, the beginning of the Men's Tennis Masters that bring together the top eight players available from the 2019 ATP Season in single and double.
Births
1865:
Étienne Giraud, French racing driver, aviator and eclectic sportsman. († 7 November 1920).
1894:
Charles Mantelet, cyclist on French road. Winner of Paris-Tours 1918. († 2 May 1955).
1896:
Jimmy Dykes, baseball player and then American leader. († 15 June 1976).
1901-1950
1910:
Raoul Diagne, footballer and then French coach. (18 French team selections). Selection of the Senegal team from 1960 to 1962. († 12 November 2002)
1912:
Birdie Tebbetts, baseball player and then American leader. († 24 March 1999).
1914:
Edmund Conen, footballer and then German coach. (28 national team selections). († 5 March 1990).
1923:
Óscar González, Uruguayan car racing driver. († 5 November 2006).
1933:
Don Clarke, New Zealand's XV rugby player. (31 national team selections). († 29 December 2002).
1934:
Lucien Bianchi, driver of F1 and endurance racing Italian then Belgian. Winner of the 24 Hours of Le Mans 1968. († 30 March 1969).
1938:
Jannie Engelbrecht, South African rugby player XV. (33 national team selections).
1939:
Allan Moffat, Australo-Canadian racing driver.
1949:
Mustafa Denizli, Turkish footballer and coach