My best 20 sportsmen of all time

By David Lord / Expert

Saluting Muhammad Ali yesterday made me dive into my memory bank to name my top 20 sportsmen of all time in date-of-birth order. Here goes.

Jim Thorpe (1888-1953)

Thorpe was voted by American ABC Sports fans as the Greatest Athlete of the 20th Century. Winner of two gold medals at the 1912 Olympics in the decathlon and pentathlon, Thorpe went on to shine as a professional footballer, baseballer, and basketballer,

Babe Ruth (1895-1948)

He looked the least likely athlete, but he was a mighty baseballer. He struck 60 home runs in 1927, a record that stood for 34 years. The Babe was famous for nominating where his next homer would land, and he was invariably right on the money.

Paavo Nurmi (1897-1973)

The Flying Finn set 22 world records from the 1500 to 20ks and won nine gold and three silver from the 12 Olympic events he competed in across three Games – 1920, 1924, and 1928.

Jesse Owens (1913-1980)

He became famous for his four gold medals in the 100, 200, long jump, and relay at the 1936 Berlin Olympics in front of a fuming Adolf Hitler.

But for mine, his greatest feat was a 45-minute burst in Michigan in 1935 when he broke three world records and equalled one. He made new marks in the long jump of 8.13m that lasted 25 years, 220 (20.3) and 220 low hurdles with 22.6, the first to break 23 seconds, and equalled the 100m world record with 9.4.

Sir Donald Bradman (1908-2001)

The Don was without peer as a Test batsman, averaging 99.94 in his stellar career. The next best is still daylight – Graeme Pollock (63.70), George Headley (60.83), and Herbert Sutcliffe (60.73), with Jacques Kallis the best of the current batsmen with 56.48.

Rocky Marciano (1923-1969)

The only world heavyweight boxing champion to retire undefeated, his 49 victories featured 43 knockouts and on the way he beat such great fighters as Joe Louis, Jersey Joe Walcott, Roland La Starza, and Ezzard Charles. The Rock died in a light plane crash just short of his 46th birthday.

Ken Rosewall (1934)

Rosewall will never be matched for his longevity on the tennis circuit. He was in four Wimbledon finals between 1954 and 1974 (20 years apart) in five Australian Open finals 1953 to 1972 (19 years apart) in two US finals 1956 and 1984 (18 years apart) and two French finals in 1953 and 1969 (16 years apart).

Rod Laver (1938)

Laver is the only tennis player, male or female, to win two Grand Slams – the first in 1962 as an amateur, and the second in 1969 as a pro.

Herb Elliott (1938)

Elliot was never beaten over 1500 and the mile, capping his career with 1500 gold at the 1960 Rome Olympics by smashing his own world record with 3.35.6 to win by a record margin of 30 metres. He promptly retired at 23 saying he had nothing more to prove.

Pele (1940)

Pele was born Edison Arantes do Nascimento to become the world’s greatest football player with charisma that still glows worldwide. He scored 1220 goals between 1956 and 1974.

Jack Nicklaus (1940)

Nicklaus is the international golfing maestro. He captured 18 majors, and was runner up 19 times. No golfer will ever get within a binocular distance of those overall stats.

Muhammad Ali (1942)

Ali is the most charismatic boxer of all time, elevating the sport to new heights. He fought 61 times for five losses to Joe Frazier, Ken Norton, Leon Spinks, Larry Holmes, and Trevor Berbick, the last three in his last four fights as the symptoms of Parklnson’s Disease surfaced.

Wayne Gretzky (1961)

The Candian has been universally claimed as the greatest ice hockey player of all time. His records are so long, it would take a full column to do them justice.

Sir Steve Redgrave (1962)

Redgrave won five Olympic gold medals for rowing at the 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, and 2000 Games – a phenomenal feat.

Jahangir Kahn (1963)

Kahn swept all before him on the international squash courts, At one stage he won 555 matches in succession over a five year, eight month period.

Michael Jordan (1963)

Jordan is much like Wayne Gretsky. The NBA website claims “By acclamation, Michael Jordan is the greatest basketballer of all time”. His records are also too many to list here.

Roger Federer (1981)

The Swiss holds the world record by winning 17 Slam singles crowns. But reaching 18 of 19 successive finals from Wimbledon 2005 to the 2010 Australian Open is just as significant. So too is 23 successive Slam semis from Wimbledon 2004 to the 2010 Australian Open.

Michael Phelps (1985)

Phelps has won a record 22 medals with 18 gold, two silver, and two bronze in the pool from three Olympics in 2004, 2008 and 2012. The closest is gymnast Larisa Latynina with 18 medals – nine gold, five silver, and four bronze.

Usain Bolt (1986)

It’s impossible to believe any track athlete can break the Lightning Bolt’s world records of 9.58 over the 100, and 19.19 for the 200. The Jamaican is a freak of nature, and the most charismatic sportsman on the planet.

Lionel Messi (1987)

The world footballer of the year four times, and holder of the Guinness world record of 91 goals in a year. A football magician.

The Crowd Says:

2014-09-12T12:30:06+00:00

Aditya Bhat

Guest


Okay. There is no "Wizard" in this list. Come on. How can you forget Major Dhyan Chand?

2014-03-18T22:07:31+00:00

Tony Goodgame

Guest


Tendulkar, great. As a cricketer behind Richards. Warne, sobers, and Lillee.

2014-03-18T22:07:30+00:00

Tony Goodgame

Guest


Tendulkar, great. As a cricketer behind Richards. Warne, sobers, and Lillee.

2014-02-18T09:31:05+00:00

Julaise Jalal

Guest


where is SACHIN TENDULKAR??

2014-01-08T22:39:48+00:00

Tony Goodgame

Guest


My list on June 4, i forgot Sobers. And the person that picked Bernard Hopkins,silly.

2013-11-15T12:22:07+00:00

Ranjan

Guest


Are u serious???lionel messi ahead of sachin tendulkar!!doesnt make any sense

2013-09-10T22:52:17+00:00

Tony Goodgame

Guest


Bradman's great average is based on 80 test match innings of which 63 of them against England. The other 17 against South Africa, India and the West Indies. Robinson, probably the best welter-weight of them all. But overall lost far to many times (19)..five times in his prime.And always a return clause in the contract Marciarno.undefeated 49 fights 46 by KO.Fought Don Cockell in San Fransisco the only time he fought away from home.Ko'd Cockell in 8 rounds. Brit middle-weight Turpin Ko'd Cockell in 10 one year before.

2013-09-10T13:59:04+00:00

Gp

Guest


Sport, Noun. An activity involving physical exertion and skill in which an individual or team competes against another or others. - These pro surfers are fit as hell (they have to be able to paddle like mad and have the lung capacity for when they are stranded under water). They need balance and strength to handle some of these waves that would knock the avg person off there feet in a heart beat. It is a sport. - And Sir Don Bradman for me. His statistics compared to anyone else that has ever played the game of cricket before are so much higher that it is incredible.

2013-08-16T08:07:55+00:00

Mohsin

Guest


First of all, a distinction should be made in all such lists between sportsmen who competed in a Team, versus those in individual sports. If you took Jordan and placed him in the Toronto Raptors, you would've seen his stats plummet. Secondly, a methodology using stats alone doesn't work, eg. Schumacher has much better stats than Senna, but even Schumacher puts Senna ahead of himself as the best F1 driver of all time. Think about that. (source: Top Gear special on Senna) Putting the two points together basically means any top 20 list would be impossible to get right. As far as individual stats go, Jahangir Khan's record is unmatched, 555 consecutive wins? I mean seriously, who else can compete with that? But then how do you compare the skill required in squash versus driving an F1 car? How do you compare the two without bias?

2013-08-16T07:36:48+00:00

Haseeb

Guest


Tony, I offer you to know more about Jahangir Khan (Squash). His records are simply unmatchable.

2013-06-24T07:11:02+00:00

deejay

Roar Rookie


I can't agree with you that Maradona was the greatest of ALL time. My view on ranking who the best is near impossible because of the generational differences between the players who are so good. When every one who saw Pele and Maradona play in the hey-day are dead, the elderly will argue not whether its either of those 2, but between Lionel Messi and Zinedine Zidane. Before all the people watched Ferenc Puskas and Alfredo Di Stefano live died, they were the 2 everyone argued about. Its a never-ending cycle... no one will ever be able to pinpoint who the BEST player ever is.

2013-06-05T18:52:21+00:00

Mohsin

Guest


Senna was #1, how do you miss that?

2013-06-03T20:18:19+00:00

Tony Goodgame

Guest


1. ALI 2. JORDAN. 3. MESSI. 4. PIGGOTT. 5. GRETZSKY. 6. LAVER. 7. OWENS. 8. WOODS. 9. RUTH. 10.SENNA 11.FERDERER. 12.PELE. 13.PHELPS. 14.BOLT. 15.MONZON. 16.MARADONA. 17.NICKLAUS. 18.INGLISS. 19JAMES. 20.RICHARDS(V) Most over-rated BRADMAN MARCIARNO, ROBINSON.

2013-05-30T00:39:23+00:00

Madoda Mayeye- South Africa

Guest


How about Tiger Woods and Floydd Mayweather Jr, Maradona fits among, how about Roger Feder, Michael Jordan, Michael Phelps, and the Pole Vault European who broke many records, Sugar Ray Robinson, Rocky Maciano, Ronaldo from Brazil..etc

2013-05-07T13:04:29+00:00

Ayo

Guest


What of HAILE GEBRSELASSIE (Etiopia) and RONALDO de LIMA (brazil)

2013-04-26T23:07:47+00:00

Rhen

Guest


Johnno awesome knowledge mate would love to talk more sport with you but I think raisa smetannia but she didn't win 5 gold at 5 different Olympics. She actually won silver in 84 and 88 . Not to say that's not a great feet but still incorrect. Kelly slater 11 world titles in 20 years is a pretty good ratio why is Kelly not number 1?

2013-02-10T21:52:37+00:00

Damn Straight

Roar Rookie


By that logic, a lot of the great players are cheats...I have seen pretty much every great player in the modern game take a dive at some point

2013-02-08T23:28:07+00:00

linz22

Guest


Great list, but Kelly slater should certainly be on there, he has achieved more than half this list put together, and not enough people are aware of what Shaun white has achieved.

2013-02-08T14:16:46+00:00

RM

Guest


David, Major Dhyanchand (1905-1979)of Field Hockey can also be added to this list. He scored over 400 goals in his career and is widely considered to be uncomparable in his sport, just like Sir Don.

2013-02-08T12:31:27+00:00

Shahsan

Guest


Cycling tough? Get off the bike and see how tough you are

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