The Greatest Sports Documentaries
By Adrian Musolino, 29 Dec 2008 Adrian Musolino is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- America, ARL, Basketball, Valentino Rossi, Yamaha
If you’re still recovering from unwrapping presents and singing Christmas carols, fear not. There is an escape from the boredom of the season: five great documentaries that not only entertain but also enlighten us about what makes sport so great.
1. Once in a Lifetime (2006)
Narrated by actor Matt Dillon and featuring a groovy 70s soundtrack, this doco charts the spectacular rise and fall of the New York Cosmos and the North American Soccer League. It’s a fascinating story of a movie studio executive who saw the potential of the world game and successfully turned the Cosmos and soccer into the hottest ticket in the Big Apple. The film centres around the impact Pele had during his spell with the club including the following scene that looks at how the club wooed the greatest ever player to North America.
There are several parallels that can be drawn between the development of the sport in both North America and Australia so it provides an interesting avenue for comparison.
It’s a great tale told in a thoroughly entertaining manner.
2. The History of Football (2002)
This epic 13 episode series charts the history of the world game from its origins, evolution and future. It also contains episodes about Brazil, Africa and a particularly moving episode entitled “The Dark Side” on the sad history of hooliganism and other tragedies.
Not only is it informative, it also portrays the game in a way few documentaries have achieved – full of emotion, perspective and depth.
With over thirty hours of extras this is the definitive history of the game.
3. When We Were Kings (1997)
The story of the Rumble in the Jungle between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman is brilliantly told in this documentary.
Not only do you gain inside access to one of the most incredible sporting events, it also demonstrates why Ali is an icon of the 20th century. His bravado is on display throughout as well as his philosophies and relationship with the people of Zaire.
4. Faster (2004)
What motivates motorbike racers to risk life and limb every fortnight?
Faster, narrated by bike nut Ewan McGregor, explores their world. What motivates them to race and what it’s like to be part of the globetrotting MotoGP circus.
I suggest you also check out the short sequel film that updates the story of the sport up until 2004 and Valentino Rossi’s move to Yamaha.
It also contains this scene that explores the ultimate price the riders risk each time they get on the bike.
A very well made doco that gives you a historical perspective of the sports recent history.
5. Hoop Dreams (1994)
An American classic that explores the hopes and dreams of two African–American boys playing high school basketball trying to make it into the pro leagues.
The story is about so much more than basketball.
It’s about the struggle of the working class in inner city America and sport as an escape from this world. The hope it provides but also the devastation when it doesn’t happen.
There are plenty more great sporting documentaries out there. Please add your own favourites to the list.
Recommend this story.
- Explore:
- America, ARL, Basketball, Valentino Rossi, Yamaha

December 29th 2008 @ 8:25pm
Alex Moore said | December 29th 2008 @ 8:25pm | Report comment
What about “Year of the Dogs” (“I’ll spew up!”)
Mike Bassett: England Manager for best mocumentary. (You tell me where on that team list it says Benson and Hedges?!”)
Loved Hoop Dreams and Faster.
Remember that old Eddie Irvine doco?
December 29th 2008 @ 8:44pm
Adrian Musolino said | December 29th 2008 @ 8:44pm | Report comment
Eddie Irvine – Living the Fast Life. An inside look at the lifestyle of a Formula 1 driver. Very funny.
December 29th 2008 @ 9:31pm
OldManEmu said | December 29th 2008 @ 9:31pm | Report comment
Not strictly a sports doco but there is a show about the Munich Olympic games that brings it all into pretty sharp focus……..particularly the fact that they kept bloody jumping and running and throwing and swimming and so on.
Its why I love so much watching my little boys play with abandon and why I very nearly punch in the nose the multitude of pushy parents that seem to proliferate the pre-schools these days. Sport is sport is spor tand it is a beautiful thing until adults and men with money and governments get involved.
Sheek, bottom bar Noble stand day three, tea time for a beer – I’ll be the bloke running down the straight like Kingston Town on his third Cox Plate. Despite your pathological hatred of Gregan with a palpable love of the nags youmust be a bloke worth having a cascade light with.
December 29th 2008 @ 10:06pm
sheek said | December 29th 2008 @ 10:06pm | Report comment
OME,
Thanks for the compliment. Hopefully, we can suck a few beers together one day.
Point of order though. I don’t have a pathological hatred of Gregan. I think he just overstayed his welcome a little. Not his fault, of course. I’ve always admired his courage. I thought he was a great rugby player. But technically, he was a flawed scrumhalf.
But then, I would also say Mark Ella was a flawed flyhalf, but I just love the guy! Horses for courses, I guess.
Trivia. I can name every Melbourne Cup winner from 1929 to 2008, & plenty of others before that here & there. Before I die I want to be able to name the whole lot from 1861 without fail. Just for the heck of it!
December 30th 2008 @ 3:07am
Steffy said | December 30th 2008 @ 3:07am | Report comment
Another Bloody Sunday – it was made in the early 80s and shows the fortunes (or otherwise) of the Doncaster rugby club
There’s most of it linked on this site:
http://drunkbirders.blogspot.com/2008/12/another-bloody-sunday.html
December 30th 2008 @ 8:10am
Steve Kaless said | December 30th 2008 @ 8:10am | Report comment
“Year of the Dogs” for me. Absolute belter, everything that sport is and hollywood attempts at sport aren’t.
December 31st 2008 @ 9:21am
Cpaaa said | December 31st 2008 @ 9:21am | Report comment
Maradona, just watched it again over christmas. Undisputed greatest ever player after Pele. Like any great doco, the highs
(no pun) and lows are well documented.
December 31st 2008 @ 10:51am
Frank O'Keeffe said | December 31st 2008 @ 10:51am | Report comment
I love the mamba out of ‘When We Were Kings’. I don’t care how Norman Mair romanticised everything about the event, making it seem like a story about Ali conquering his fears, I still think it’s brilliant.
December 31st 2008 @ 11:05am
Pippinu said | December 31st 2008 @ 11:05am | Report comment
The doco of Brazil winning the 1970 WC is good, with Pele taking us through each of Brazil’s games.
The doco on Italy winning the 1982 WC isn’t quite as good, but that was such a great WC that it’s still worth a look – someone like Sean Connery is doing the voice over (?)
There’s a surf movie from the late 60s, early 70s – The Endless Wave? – it mixes great footage with the search by a bunch of young all-Americans looking for the perfect wave – in a very natural, unexaggerated manner.
The Year of the Dog must just about be one of the best reality docos ever made – going a long way to capturing the essence of why our indigenous game is so important to so many Australians (it involves my team, on their knees yet again).
December 31st 2008 @ 11:57am
Adrian Musolino said | December 31st 2008 @ 11:57am | Report comment
G’Olé! – The Story of the 1982 World Cup – narrated by Sean Connery. It’s one of the best World Cup review doco’s. The latest incarnations of the reviews have been disappointing but still worth a look.