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This Day in Sports History: November 7

Kyle Larson speaks during the NASCAR Champion's Banquet at the Music City Center
Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images

Sports in November are all about the NBA and NHL seasons, the end-of-season college football games, the NASCAR Cup Series Championship, ATP World Tour Finals, UFC Fight Nights, and the start of college basketball. Over the years, Nov. 7 has witnessed many notable moments and stories involving sporting legends. Here are some of them.

Unforgettable Games and Remarkable Records

Great moments in sports history from Nov. 7 included:

  • 1942: Fausto Coppi set a world hour record cycling 45.798 km.
  • 1943: The Detroit Lions and New York Giants played out the last scoreless tie in the NFL.
  • 1954: Chet Hanulak set a club record with seven punt returns for the Cleveland Browns, who also achieved their largest margin of victory, defeating Washington 62-3.
  • 1957: Phillies pitcher Jack Sanford won the National League Rookie of the Year award.
  • 1959: The U.S. golf team won the Ryder Cup.
  • 1962: Goalkeeper Glenn Hall set an NHL record of 502 games played consecutively.
  • 1963: New York Yankees' catcher Elston Howard became the first African-American to win the American League's most valuable player award.
  • 1967: Cardinals infielder Orlando Cepeda was the first unanimous National League MVP.
  • 1970: Carlos Monzon upset the defending champion Nino Benvenuti in a 12th-round knockout to win the WBC and WBA middleweight titles.
  • 1978: Boston Red Sox player Jim Rice won the American League MVP award.
  • 1979: Chicago Cubs relief pitcher Bruce Sutter won the National League Cy Young award.
  • 1987: Notre Dame defeated Boston College 32-25 in the third college football "Holy War."
  • 1988: Sugar Ray Leonard defeated Donny LaLonde by a technical knockout to win the WBC light heavyweight and inaugural WBC super middleweight titles.
  • 1989: Baltimore Orioles player Gregg Olson was the first relief pitcher to win the American League's Rookie of the Year award.
  • 1993: Alain Prost claimed his fourth F1 World Drivers' Championship.
  • 1999: Dale Jarrett won the NASCAR Winston Cup Series championship.
  • 2009: Jerry Sloan became the first coach in NBA history to achieve 1,000 wins with one team.
  • 2010: Flavia Pennetta beat Coco Vandeweghe 6-1, 6-2 to win the third Federation Cup of Women's Tennis for Italy.
  • 2017: Joseph O'Brien became the youngest trainer to win the Melbourne Cup with Rekindling, ridden by Corey Brown.
  • 2021: Kyle Larson won his first NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race.

Three athletes who stood out on Nov. 7 were Glenn Hall, Orlando Cepeda, and Jerry Sloan.

Hall was a former ice hockey goalkeeper known for his durability, pioneering style, and numerous accolades. Cepeda was a powerful hitter, an 11-time All-Star, and 1967 National League MVP, which he won with the St. Louis Cardinals during their World Series-winning season. Sloan had a legendary NBA career with the Chicago Bulls and later as the highly successful and long-tenured head coach of the Utah Jazz.