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・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's 60 metres
・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's 60 metres hurdles
・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's 800 metres
・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's high jump
・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump
・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's pentathlon
・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's pole vault
・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's shot put
・ 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's triple jump
・ 2001 IBF World Championships
・ 2001 IBF World Championships – Men's Doubles
・ 2001 IBF World Championships – Men's Singles
・ 2001 IBF World Championships – Mixed Doubles
・ 2001 IBF World Championships – Women's Doubles
・ 2001 IBF World Championships – Women's Singles
2001 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship
・ 2001 ICC Trophy
・ 2001 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships
・ 2001 Idea Prokom Open
・ 2001 Idea Prokom Open – Men's Doubles
・ 2001 Idea Prokom Open – Men's Singles
・ 2001 If Stockholm Open
・ 2001 If Stockholm Open – Doubles
・ 2001 If Stockholm Open – Singles
・ 2001 IGA U.S. Indoor Championships
・ 2001 IGA U.S. Indoor Championships – Doubles
・ 2001 IGA U.S. Indoor Championships – Singles
・ 2001 IIHF Asian Oceanic U18 Championship
・ 2001 IIHF Women's World Championship
・ 2001 IIHF World Championship


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2001 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship : ウィキペディア英語版
2001 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship

The 2001 ICC Africa Under-19 Championship was a cricket tournament held in Uganda from 5–9 January 2001. All matches were played in the capital Kampala.
The tournament was a round-robin, with five teams playing each other once. Namibia finished first, ahead of a combined East and Central Africa side, and consequently qualified for the 2002 Under-19 World Cup in New Zealand. Tanzanian batsman Utpal Patel, playing for East and Central Africa, led the tournament in runs scored. Three players, Kenya's Alfred Luseno, Namibia's Michael Durant, and Nigeria's O. Animashaun (playing for West Africa), led the tournament in wickets taken, with nine apiece.
The tournament was the inaugural edition of the ICC Africa Under-19 Championships, which provide a direct qualification route to the Under-19 World Cup for African Cricket Association members. Two other African teams, South Africa and Zimbabwe, are full members of the International Cricket Council (ICC) and thus qualify automatically. Another edition of the tournament was not held until 2007. Instead, a joint tournament was organised with ICC East Asia-Pacific teams, held on two occasions (in 2003 and 2005).
== Teams and qualification ==
Two combined regional teams, East and Central Africa and West Africa, participated in the championship for the first and only time, respectively organised by the East and Central Africa Cricket Conference and the West Africa Cricket Council.〔(Africa Under-19 Championship 2000/01 Table ) – CricketArchive. Retrieved 11 February 2015.〕 Players from Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia were eligible for East and Central Africa, while players from The Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone were eligible for West Africa.〔(17 December 2000). ("Africa: Five teams to contest inaugural under 19 titles next month" ) – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 11 February 2015.〕

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