February 2008 in sports

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

See also: 2008 in sports, Portal:Sports and games

Visit Wikinews to read and write news articles in more detail.

<< February 2008 >>
S M T W T F S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29
edit box
Other events in February 2008

World - Sci-Tech - Sports - Wikinews

Southeast Asia

2008 developments by topic

[edit] Deaths in February

Deaths in February 2008:

[edit] Current sporting seasons

[edit] Related pages

Other years in sports

[edit] 29 February 2008 (Friday)

[edit] 28 February 2008 (Thursday)

[edit] 27 February 2008 (Wednesday)

[edit] 26 February 2008 (Tuesday)

[edit] 25 February 2008 (Monday)

Carl Edwards, Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon

[edit] 24 February 2008 (Sunday)

[edit] 23 February 2008 (Saturday)

  • U.S. college basketball:
    • In a showdown between the two top-ranked teams in the country in Memphis, second-ranked Tennessee beats top-ranked Memphis 66-62. The result ends the Tigers' regular-season winning streak at 45 games and their home winning streak at 47, and will almost certainly elevate the Volunteers to #1 for the first time in school history.
    • The only other game today to feature two ranked teams, the showpiece of ESPN's annual BracketBusters event, sees Drake (#16 AP, #18 Coaches) travel to Indianapolis and surprise Butler (#8 in both polls) 71-64. This is Drake's first win over a top-10 team since 1982.
    • At the other end of the men's Division I spectrum, NJIT loses 76-50 to Utah Valley, completing an 0-29 season. This sets a new Division I record for losses in a winless season.

[edit] 22 February 2008 (Friday)

[edit] 21 February 2008 (Thursday)

[edit] 20 February 2008 (Wednesday)

[edit] 19 February 2008 (Tuesday)

[edit] 18 February 2008 (Monday)

[edit] 17 February 2008 (Sunday)

Ryan Newman, Kurt Busch, Tony Stewart

[edit] 16 February 2008 (Saturday)

[edit] 15 February 2008 (Friday)

[edit] 14 February 2008 (Thursday)

[edit] 13 February 2008 (Wednesday)

[edit] 12 February 2008 (Tuesday)

[edit] 11 February 2008 (Monday)

[edit] 10 February 2008 (Sunday)

[edit] 9 February 2008 (Saturday)

[edit] 8 February 2008 (Friday)

[edit] 7 February 2008 (Thursday)

[edit] 6 February 2008 (Wednesday)

[edit] 5 February 2008 (Tuesday)

[edit] 4 February 2008 (Monday)

[edit] 3 February 2008 (Sunday)

  • American football:
    • Super Bowl XLII at Glendale, Arizona: New York Giants 17, New England Patriots 14
      • With a fierce defense led by defensive linemen Michael Strahan and Justin Tuck and a productive final drive fueled by wide receiver David Tyree, the Giants shock the heavily favored and previously unbeaten Patriots and become World Champions. After three quarters dominated by defensive play, New England goes ahead, 14-10, on a Tom Brady touchdown pass to Randy Moss with 2:42 left. The Giants reach striking range on a circus catch by the little-used Tyree, setting up the game-winning touchdown pass from quarterback Eli Manning to a wide-open Plaxico Burress with 35 seconds left in the game. Manning finishes 19-for-34 for 255 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. Even though many observers consider Tuck to be more deserving, Manning is selected Most Valuable Player. With the upset, the 1972 Miami Dolphins remain the only NFL team to complete a season undefeated from opening regular season game to the Super Bowl.
        • With 97.5 million viewers, Super Bowl XLII is the most-watched Super Bowl in history, and the second-most watched television event in American television history.[2]


[edit] 2 February 2008 (Saturday)

[edit] 1 February 2008 (Friday)


[edit] Events in sports by month

2008 in sports: January February March April May
2007 in sports: January February March April May June July August September October November December
2006 in sports: January February March April May June July August September October November December
2005 in sports: January February March April May June July August September October November December
2004 in sports: June July August September October November December
(For earlier sports events, see May 2004 and preceding months and also the list of 'years in sports'.)