Daily Quiz Daily

Our daily general knowledge quiz

Quiz Archive Archive

A complete history of our quiz challenges

By Subject Subjects

Choose from seven quiz categories

Personalised Personalised

Build a quiz by subject and difficulty

Sport Quiz #122

Sports & Leisure Quiz for 20 May 2011

A new sport quiz is available each week. Try our daily general knowledge quiz or work through our archive of daily and themed quizzes.

0 out of ?

Q1. In Turkey, what is "Galatasaray Spor Kulübü"?

A
A music festival
B
A meal prepared on religious occasions
C
A dog obedience competition
D
A soccer club
Select from the options above.

Q2. What did Ellen MacArthur achieve with "B&Q/Castorama" on 7 February 2005?

Note: This question was updated in February 2016
A
Won the Gold Cup for Steeplechase at the Cheltenham Festival
B
Broke the world record for the fastest solo circumnavigation of the globe
C
Became the first woman to win a Scottish sheep dog trial
D
Broke the Water Speed Record at Coniston Water
Select from the options above.

Q3. Which of these terms refers to part of a cricket pitch?

A
Fold
B
Crease
C
Pleat
D
Tuck
Select from the options above.

Q4. At the 1st World Rowing Championships held at Lucerne in 1962, the International Federation of Rowing Associations did not recognise countries with similar names. Selection trials from 2 countries were held the day before the championships. Which "country" was this?

A
Korea
B
Germany
C
China
D
Pakistan
Select from the options above.

Q5. Which of these is an Olympic event?

A
Triple leap
B
Triple hop
C
Triple step
D
Triple jump
Select from the options above.

Q6. When the Winter Olympics in Italy ended in 2006, how many times had curling been an Olympic sport?

A
20
B
8
C
16
D
4
Select from the options above.

Q7. In golf, what is the term for "one stroke over par"?

A
Birdie
B
Albatross
C
Bogey
D
Eagle
Select from the options above.
0%
There are 0 questions in this quiz.
You've completed 0 questions.
You've answered 0 questions correctly.
You've answered 0 questions incorrectly.