24 for 2024: unmissable sporting events to get you through the January blues

An Olympic year that also includes football's Euro 2024, a pair of club finals on our doorstep, Cheltenham, the Masters, and a fight for heavyweight supremacy
Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs will be hoping to return to the Super Bowl in February.

Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs will be hoping to return to the Super Bowl in February.

1) Africa Cup of Nations January 13-February 11.

The 34th edition of Africa’s biggest sporting event was meant to be held in Ivory Coast between June and July 2023 but was moved after somebody realised it rains a lot in the country at that time of the year.

So it takes place at the start of 2024 instead and for Mohamed Salah the target is redemption having been part of the Egypt team that suffered the pain of penalty shootout defeat to Senegal in the 2022 final. A host of other big names will also be at the tournament, including André Onana (Cameroon), Achraf Hakimi (Morocco) and Victor Osimhen (Nigeria).

The African Cup of Nations kicks off this month in the Ivory Coast.
The African Cup of Nations kicks off this month in the Ivory Coast.

2) Australian Open January 14-January 28.

Melbourne could be the scene of tennis history given Novak Djokovic will arrive there looking to win a 25th grand slam title, taking him past Australia’s Margaret Court as the single most successful player tennis has seen.

Few would bet against the world No 1 achieving his ambition at a tournament where Rafael Nadal is set to feature having been sidelined for 12 months with a hip injury. In the women’s draw, Aryna Sabalenka will be seeking to retain the title she won with a show of power, determination and class against Elena Rybakina in the 2023 final.

3) GAA Club All-Ireland finals January 21.

Over the past few years, this day has become one of the most dramatic in the GAA calendar. In 2023 there was a prolonged 16th man controversy. The hurling decider in 2022 provided Harry Ruddle’s last-gasp goal to stun Ballyhale Shamrocks. The same day Kilcoo and Kilmacud Crokes brought drama of their own as it took extra-time to separate them.

O’Loughlin Gaels and St Thomas have already booked their spots in the hurling final. The football semi-finals take place this weekend.

4) Men’s and Women’s Six Nations, February 2-March 16, and March 23-April 27.

Four months after suffering various forms of heartbreak at the Rugby World Cup, the northern hemisphere’s biggest and best gather to compete for the Six Nations. Grand slam winners Ireland travel to Marseille for a mouth-watering opening game while England, minus captain Owen Farrell, head to Rome a day later, when Wales and Scotland will also do battle in Cardiff.

A week after the men are done the women get going, and for England that means building on the glory of 2023, when they sealed the grand slam in front of 58,498 spectators at Twickenham, a record crowd for a women’s game.

5) Davis Cup Ireland v Austria, February 3-4th.

For the first time in nine years, Ireland will have a home tie in the Davis Cup. Top class international Tennis is coming to the University of Limerick Arena. Austria are likely to have Former World No 3 Dominic Thiem in their team. There will be two singles on Saturday 3rd, with a doubles and two further singles being played on Sunday 4th. Ireland has successfully progressed from World Group III into World Group II and now to the World Group I playoffs through wins over Georgia, Barbados and El Salvador.

6) Super Bowl LVIII February 11.

The Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada hosts the 58th edition of American Football’s showpiece event. The Kansas City Chiefs, led by Andy Reid and armed with Patrick Mahomes, will be seeking to make it four Super Bowl appearances in the past five years and, more importantly, retain the trophy they won with a thrilling 38-35 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles in Arizona last time out. All eyes will also, of course, be on the halftime show, which in 2024 comes courtesy of Usher. “Yeah!” as his fans no doubt screamed upon hearing the news.

7) Tyson Fury v Oleksandr Usyk February 17.

A case of better late than never in regards to the fight everybody has wanted to see and thought they were finally going to get just before Christmas. It didn’t happen, however, after Fury suffered the shock and embarrassment of requiring a split decision verdict to overcome the UFC’s Francis Ngannou in Riyadh in October.

A period of regrouping was required and Fury will go again in the Saudi Arabian capital against arguably the best pound-for-pound fighter on the planet, with both men seeking to become boxing’s first undisputed heavyweight champion since 1999. The location is a shame; the contest should be a cracker.

8) Formula One World Championship races, March 2nd-December 8.

The new Formula One season will be one of significant change. Firstly, the calendar stretches to a record 24 races, the maximum number the sport believes is feasible for both teams and personnel, and then there is the opening two races, in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, being held on back-to-back Saturdays.

F1 has also confirmed there will be six sprint races – in China, Miami, Austria, Austin, Brazil and Qatar. Once the action gets going it is possible little will change: Max Verstappen and Red Bull were imperious in 2023 and everything points to that being the case again in 2024.

Irish eyes smiling again: Cheltenham is an annual pilgrimage for many green-clad punters
Irish eyes smiling again: Cheltenham is an annual pilgrimage for many green-clad punters

9) Cheltenham Festival, March 12-15

The festive period saw the likes of Galopin Des Champs and Gaelic Warrior establish their credentials. Attention now turns to the biggest jumps meeting of the year. It kicks off on Champion Day.

In the Champion Hurdle, we’re likely to get a rematch between unbeaten star Constitution Hill and the terrific State Man. As for the overall ‘Prestbury Cup’, the ongoing Irish dominance means the famous Anglo-Irish rivalry has turned into a total mismatch.

10) The Masters April 11-14

John Rahm will arrive in Augusta seeking to retain the title he won on an enthralling final day in 2023. The Spaniard, competing at his first major since his controversial switch to LIV Golf, should be full of belief given he was also part of the European team that regained the Ryder Cup in Rome a few months ago, which should be the case, too, for Rory McIlroy as he seeks to win a first major in a decade. From a US perspective, world No 1 Scottie Scheffler is sure to mount a strong challenge, while there could also be the intriguing prospect of Tiger Woods making a return to Masters action.

11) Europa League final, Aviva Stadium May 22.

For the second time, the Aviva Stadium will host the UEFA Europa League final. In 2011, Porto beat fellow Portuguese side Braga 1-0 in the decider. Premier League teams Brighton & Hove Albion, Liverpool and West Ham have all qualified for the last 16 while heavy hitters like AC Milan, Benfica and Roma are in the play-offs. Those ties take place on February 15 while last-16 qualified teams will be out next on March 7.

12) Champions League final, Wembley June 1.

Can Manchester City reach Wembley and retain the crown that completed last season’s treble? Current form suggests possibly not, but City tend to get stronger in the new year and will be delighted to have once again been handed a very kind last-16 draw.

Pep Guardiola’s men take on FC Copenhagen in the next round, while Arsenal, seeking to win a first Champions League title, face Porto. Bayern Munich and Real Madrid are among the other contenders in a competition being contested in its current format for a final time before next year’s less-than-popular switch to the so-called “Swiss model”.

13) Men’s Twenty20 World Cup June 4-June 30.

The United States of America hosts a cricket World Cup for the first time. They do so alongside the West Indies in a move designed to extend the game beyond its traditional borders and, as such, it will be intriguing to see how cities such as Dallas and New York take to the event. This World Cup will also be bigger than ever before given the involvement of 20 teams, and for England the aim is to avoid the horrors of the recent 50-over tournament in India and make a decent fist of retaining their 20-over crown.

Albert, the official mascot of UEFA EURO 2024
Albert, the official mascot of UEFA EURO 2024

14) Euro 2024 June 14-July 14.

Germany hosts a major men’s football tournament for the first time since the 2006 World Cup and the hope for all concerned is that this one is as good as that one. It is certainly open in regards to who will be crowned champions at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium on July 14, with England very much a serious contender.

Scotland, having qualified for a second successive Euros, face the hosts in the opening game while Wales require a playoff to make the finals. Should they prevail, Robert Page’s men will be in the same group as France and Netherlands.

15) Royal Ascot June 18-June 22.

Auguste Rodin had a distinctly hit-and-miss three-year-old career but he achieved something that Aidan O’Brien’s last three Derby winners all failed to do when he added a subsequent Group One success to his Epsom victory and finished with a flourish in the Breeders’ Cup Turf.

He is the best Ballydoyle Derby winner to stay in training since High Chaparral in 2002-03, and there was even talk of running him in the Breeders’ Cup Classic. Even if that proves wide of the mark he will be a fixture in the big all-aged events in 2024, starting with the Prince Of Wales’s Stakes at Royal Ascot.

16) Tour de France & Tour de France Femmes June 29-July 21; August 12-18th.

The 111th edition of cycling’s most prestigious event will be one of firsts, namely the staging of the Grand Départ in Italy (in Florence, to be precise) and the end of the race taking place in Nice, as opposed to Paris.

Denmark’s Jonas Vingegaard will be seeking to win a third successive title while Mark Cavendish aims to break the record of 34 Tour stage wins he shares with Eddy Merckx having delayed his plans to retire from the sport. The third edition of the Tour de France Femmes, meanwhile, will commence in Rotterdam and has been delayed due to the Olympics.

17) Ireland tour South Africa, July 6 and 13.

Ireland will take on world champions South Africa in a two-match tour next summer. The Tests in Pretoria and Durban will mark the Springboks’ return to action for the first time since their World Cup success in France.

18) Wimbledon July 1-14th.

The 2024 Championships will have to go some way to match the drama of the 2023 edition given it climaxed with Marketa Vondrousova becoming the first unseeded player to win the women’s singles title via victory over Ons Jabeur and then, 24 hours later, Carlos Alcaraz securing his second grand slam title with victory over Novak Djokovic in an epic men’s final.

The ingredients should be there for more of the same, with a host of British players primed to go deep into the second week of the tournament, most notably Katie Boulter and Cameron Norrie.

The Open Championship returns to Troon for the first time in eight years in July.
The Open Championship returns to Troon for the first time in eight years in July.

19) The Open Championship, July 18-21.

Royal Troon hosts the Open for the first time since 2016, when Henrik Stenson landed the Claret Jug following an enthralling final-round tussle with Phil Mickelson. The hope is for more of that and less of what took place in 2023, when Brian Harman won the Championship at a canter on a rain-lashed last day at Royal Liverpool.

Sizzling-hot entertainment, it was not. Those who love a bit of sentiment will be pleased to know Colin Montgomerie plans on competing at a course that is a stone’s throw from where he grew up. “This is where I started playing,” he said. “This is home.” 

20) Olympics Games July 26-August 11.

“We want a huge party,” declared Étienne Thobois, chief executive of the Paris 2024 organising committee, and the first Olympics to be held in Europe since London 2012 is certainly set to get off to a spectacular start given the plan for the opening ceremony is for competing athletes to travel along the Seine in a huge flotilla.

Once on dry land they will take part in the usual sports plus four new ones, including breakdancing and skateboarding. All in all it should be quite the Games, with British hopes for glory, on the Stade de France track at least, resting with the likes of Keely Hodgkinson, Katarina Johnson-Thompson and Zharnel Hughes.

21) Paralympics August 28-September 8.

As was the case in Tokyo three years earlier, there will be 22 sports at the Paris Paralympics, with 4,400 athletes set to be involved across 11 days of competition. Wheelchair rugby gets things going on day one, with Great Britain looking to defend the gold medal they won with a 54-49 victory over the United States at the Yoyogi National Stadium in late August 2021, one of 124 medals, 41 of which were gold, ParalympicsGB secured in Japan. The closing weekend, meanwhile, includes wheelchair fencing under the dome of the Grand Palais.

The "Phryges" mascot for the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games. (Photo by THOMAS SAMSON/AFP via Getty Images)
The "Phryges" mascot for the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games. (Photo by THOMAS SAMSON/AFP via Getty Images)

22) Solheim Cup September 10-15th.

No, your eyes are not deceiving you – the Solheim Cup returns 12 months after it was staged at Finca Cortesín, the intention from organisers being to permanently shift the event to even-number years in order to avoid a clash with the Ryder Cup.

That process begins at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Gainesville, Virginia, where Europe will be aiming to lift the trophy for a fourth time in succession. Again they will be captained by Suzann Pettersen, with the US again being led by Stacy Lewis.

23) Amgen Irish Open, September 12-15th.

The historic tournament returns to Royal County Down and past champion Shane Lowry has already confirmed his attendance. The venue first hosted the Irish Open in 2015. Last year, Sweden’s Vincent Norrman won it out as he came through the field with a final round 65 at The K Club to see off Hurly Long by one stroke.

24) Cycling World Championships October 16-20.

The Ballerup Super Arena hosts this event for a third time, having also done so in 2002 and 2010, meaning it should proceed smoothly and successfully.

Organisers are confident that will be the case – “Everything is proceeding according to plan” declared project coordinator, Andreas Juul Ingvartsen, in October – with day one action kicking off with qualifying in the women’s and men’s team pursuit.

Great Britain will travel to Denmark looking to build on the table-topping 56 medals, 23 of which were gold, they secured at the 2023 Championships in Glasgow.

Guardian/Examiner

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