This Day in Sports History: 4/5

by | Apr 5, 2026 | This Day in Sports History

NBA Playoff Schedule – 4/20

Raptors at Cavaliers – 6:00 (CLE leads 1-0)
Hawks at Knicks – 7:00 (NYK leads 1-0)
Timberwolves at Nuggets – 9:30 (DEN leads 1-0)

MLB Schedule – 4/20

Tigers at Red Sox – 10:10
Astros at Guardians – 5:10
Reds at Rays – 5:40
Cardinals at Marlins – 5:40
Braves at Nationals – 5:45
Orioles at Royals – 6:40
Dodgers at Rockies – 7:40
Blue Jays at Angels – 8:38
Athletics at Mariners – 8:40

NHL Schedule – 4/20

Flyers at Penguins – 6:00 (PHI leads 1-0)
Senators at Hurricanes – 6:30 (CAR leads 1-0)
Wild at Stars – 8:30 (MIN leads 1-0)
Ducks at Oilers – 9:00

1915 – In a heavyweight bout held in Havana, Cuba, Jess Willard beats Jack Johnson in the 26th round to win the title.

1927 – Swimmer Johnny Weissmuller breaks his record in the 200-meter freestyle by seven seconds, finishing in 2:08. He also breaks his record in the 100-meter freestyle by completing the swim in 51 seconds.

1973 – The NFL adopts a jersey numbering system where position groups can only wear numbers in certain ranges.

1984 – Kareem Abdul-Jabbar passes Wilt Chamberlain to become the NBA’s all-time leading scorer with 31,420 points.

1987 – Wayne Gretzky wins his seventh straight scoring title.

1990 – Utah Jazz guard John Stockton becomes the first player in NBA history to dish out 1,000 assists for three seasons in a row.

1993 – North Carolina defeats Michigan 77-71 to win the NCAA men’s basketball national championship.

2004 – The UCONN men’s basketball team beats Georgia Tech 82-73 to win the men’s basketball tournament.

2010 – Duke wins their fourth men’s college basketball national championship, beating Butler 61-59.

2016 – The UCONN women’s hoops team wins their fourth straight national championship, routing Syracuse 82-51 in the title game. Huskies coach Geno Auriemma wins his 11th national title and the program goes undefeated for the sixth time.

2019 – Russell Westbrook becomes the first player in NBA history to average a triple-double in three consecutive seasons.