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Tubby
05-17-2006, 02:33 PM
Whenever the inevitable debate arises among sports fans concerning the record that is the least likely to ever be broken, many people are quick to cite Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hit streak.

But there are many other -- perhaps lesser-known -- achievements by athletes or teams that are likely to still be standing well into the future. Here are the Top 10 unbreakable sports records.

Number 10 - Rocky Marciano's 49-0

Boxing

Marciano began his professional career in 1947 by beating Lee Epperson, and over the next eight years, he proceeded to defeat all 49 of his opponents -- 43 by knockout. In doing so, Marciano became the first heavyweight to go undefeated throughout his entire career.
Marciano's record was challenged in 1985 by Larry Holmes, who got to 48-0 before losing to Michael Spinks. However, with today's crop of heavyweights being underwhelming, his mark seems likely to stand the test of time.

Number 9 - Michael Schumacher's 7 championships

F1 Driving

Schumacher made his Formula 1 debut in 1991, and just one year later, he managed a third-place finish in the overall drivers' standings. By 1994, Schumacher had truly arrived, winning the first of his seven F1 points titles. He performed the feat again in 1995, then moved over to the Ferrari team and won each year between 2000 and 2004. His 2003 season victory moved him ahead of Juan Fangio, who finished atop the standings five times.
Schumi also holds the F1 record for most race wins with 85 (Alain Prost is a distant second with 51) and most wins in a season with 13. All three records are unlikely to be overturned.

Number 8 - Ty Cobb's .366 career batting average

Baseball

The Georgia Peach played 24 seasons from 1905 to 1928, and outside of his rookie year, he never hit below .316. Regardless of one's opinion of Cobb as a person, his incredible statistics are indisputable: he hit over .380 nine times, batted above .400 three times, and finished with a career batting average of .366, well ahead of Rogers Hornsby, whose .358 places him second.
The closest active player is Todd Helton of the Colorado Rockies, who entered the 2005 season hitting .339, meaning that Cobb's lofty average is in no danger of being surpassed yet.


Number 7 - Nolan Ryan's 7 no-hitter

Baseball

Nolan Ryan broke into baseball in 1966 as the second-youngest player in the league. By the time he retired as Major League Baseball's oldest in 1993, he had thrown seven no-hitters, making him by far the all-time record holder (Sandy Koufax sits second, with four). Ryan's first no-no came on May 15, 1973, and he recorded his second exactly two months later.

He then proceeded to record one in each of the next two seasons, threw another in 1981 to set the record, and then added one no-hitter per season in 1990 and 1991 (made all the more incredible by his advanced age of 43 and 44 years old, respectively) to seal his position on top.

Number 6 - Wayne Gretzky's 215-point season

Hockey

While all of Gretzky’s records seem unbreakable (with 2,857 points, he's nearly 1,000 ahead of second-place Mark Messier), this mark set in 1985-'86 simply can't be surpassed. A player not only needs scoring punch but durability; during this magical season, The Great One averaged 2.69 points per game. In NHL history, only Mario Lemieux has even come close to matching that pace over a campaign, but he didn't play all 80 games, as Gretzky did.

Also, with the style of NHL play having changed so much -- 2005-06 scoring leader recorded just 55 points -- multiple-point outbursts just won't happen.

Number 5 - Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point night

Basketball

Like Gretzky's and some of the other records that follow on this list, Wilt's 100 points in a game will not be challenged simply because the sport has changed so much. In an era in which entire teams often struggle to score 100 points in a game, a repeat of what happened on March 2, 1962 isn't likely.

During the game, Chamberlain also set records for most field goals (36), free throws (28 of 32), points in a quarter (31), and points in a half (59), while breaking his own record of 78 points in a game set earlier that season. Incidentally, Wilt also holds another scoring record (20,000) that's unlikely to be broken, but we'll leave that for another article.

Number 4 - John Wooden's 88 straight wins

Basketball

Another relic of a bygone era, this record harkens back to when college players stuck around for four years and turned their programs into dynasties. Under the tutelage of the Wizard of Westwood and with Bill Walton leading the way, the UCLA Bruins won 88 straight games -- between two losses to Notre Dame on January 23, 1971 and January 19, 1974 -- a span that included three of the record seven straight NCAA championships won by UCLA from 1967 to 1973.

To get an idea of just how hard these feats are to replicate, reflect on the fact that no team has gone undefeated for even a single season since 1976, and no other school has ever won more than two straight titles.


Number 3 - Cy Young's 511 wins

Baseball

Young had the benefit of pitching from 1890 to 1911, an era in which hurlers could finish what they started. He picked up wins by throwing 749 complete games out of 815 starts on his way to setting a record that will undoubtedly never be topped. In 1903, Young got his 365th win, passing Pud Galvin for the record, and proceeded to add nearly 150 more victories for good measure.

A pitcher today would need to average 25 wins a season for 21 years to surpass Young; with an average of just 35 starts each year, that's an all-but-impossible task.

Number 2 - Jerry Rice's 22,895 receiving yards

Football

This record, and the one that follows it for top spot, earn their positions by virtue of the fact that they were set quite recently, and yet are still of mythic proportions. In other words, Rice is playing the same style of game as current players, and yet he's so far above and beyond them that his accomplishments can't be touched.

This is the most iron-clad of Rice's records set during his career that began in 1985, although he also holds the records for most catches with 1,549 and touchdowns with 197. The next-closest player is Tim Brown, who is nearly 8,000 yards behind. Even for a young star like Randy Moss to catch Rice, he'd have to average nearly 1,400 yards per year for the next 10 seasons, at which point he'll be 38. Don't count on it.

Number 1 - Cal Ripken's 2,632 consecutive games

Baseball

Likewise, Ripken set his record in the modern era, and that lends it extra credence in the pantheon of sports accomplishments. Lou Gehrig's "Iron Man" record of 2,130 games was widely regarded as "unbreakable," but Ripken not only passed it on September 6, 1995, he also added an extra 500 straight games before he finally decided to take the pressure off and end the streak. That move, on September 20, 1998, brought to a close a remarkable run that had begun over 16 years earlier on May 30, 1982, and that included a string between June 5, 1982, and September 14, 1987, in which Ripken played 8,243 straight innings.

Considering that only four players were present in all 162 of their team's games in 2004, Ripken's record looks even more impressive, and beyond challenge

Toad
05-17-2006, 04:05 PM
I think Armstrong's TdF wins deserves mention. It will not be broken in my life time.

Perhaps even Mario Cipollini's 42 stage wins in the Giro d'Italia.

Toad
05-17-2006, 04:27 PM
...and what of the great Eddie Merckx? This article is old, but Eddie Merckx will never be equaled on the bike.


Last Updated: Monday, July 26, 2004. 6:24pm AEST


Lance Armstrong and Eddie Merckx ... Tour de France legends. (Reuters)

Armstrong doesn't come close to 'The Cannibal'
By Grandstand's Glenn Mitchell

Lance Armstrong's record breaking sixth victory in the Tour de France has rightly drawn a host of accolades.

Not only has he become the first man in the event's 101-year history to win half a dozen yellow jerseys, he attained the feat in consecutive years.

Many have anointed him the greatest cyclist the sport has ever seen.

Put simply, he is not.

Just as Don Bradman stands alone when assessing batsmen in the sport of cricket, one man stands head and shoulders above all others who have thrown their leg over a bicycle.

That man is Belgium's Eddy Merckx.

Nicknamed "The Cannibal" for his insatiable appetite for victory and competition, he carved out a career that will likely never be seriously challenged.

At the age of 19 in 1964, he won the world amateur road title.

In 1967, he won the first of three world professional world titles. Armstrong has achieved the feat once, in 1993.

In 1969, Merckx contested his first Tour de France where he recorded the greatest feat in the sport's history by winning the yellow jersey, the King of the Mountains jersey, the green jersey and all three time trials.

Nowadays, no rider ever wins both the green and mountains jersey in the same Tour.

It is a record which will likely never be matched.

In other years, Merckx achieved the following:

1968 - Won Tour of Italy (also won King of Mountains jersey & green jersey)
1970 - Won Tour de France (also won King of Mountains jersey & eight stage wins)
1971 - Won Tour de France (also won green jersey) & world road championship
1972 - Won Tour de France (also won green jersey) & Tour of Italy
1973 - Didn't compete in Tour de France but won Tour of Italy (also won points jersey) & Tour of Spain
1974 - Won Tour de France, Tour of Italy & world road championship
1975 - Finished second in the Tour de France & broke the world hour record

In his career, he won the Tour de France five times (won 35 stages), the Tour of Italy five times (including 25 stage wins) and the Tour of Spain once.

No other rider can boast such an array of victories in the big three Tours.

Aside from winning the Tour de France yellow jersey five times, Merckx also won the King of the Mountains three times and the green jersey three times. Armstrong has never won either the polka dot (mountain) or green jersey (points).

In 1971, Merckx won 54 of the 120 professional races he entered. At his peak, between 1969 and 1973, he won 250 of the 650 races he contested. During his professional career, he won 445 of the 1,582 races he entered.

Nowadays, a cyclist like Armstrong rarely competes outside the Tour de France as he makes it his sole focus of the year.

Merckx used to race most of the year and often in most years, he contested both the Tours of France & Italy, as well as each of the one-day classics and many of the minor multi-stage events.

Merckx's dominance of other major races included:

Tour of Lombardy - won twice
Paris-Nice - won three times
Milan-San Remo - won seven times
Paris Roubaix - won three times
Liege-Bastogne-Liege - won five times
Amstel Gold - won twice
Tour of Flanders - won twice
Het Volk - won twice
Ghent-Wevelgem - won four times
Fleche-Wallonne - won four times
Tour of Switzerland - won once
Paris-Brussels - won once

Put simply, he was, and remains, a freak!

No cyclist has ever approached his record. It is a reasonable bet that nobody ever will.

Whilst Armstrong should be lauded for his achievement in winning a record six Tours de France, when it comes to the question of who is the greatest cyclist, Merckx wins hands down.

For mine, Merckx may well be the greatest living athlete, across any sport.

Steve
05-18-2006, 02:03 PM
I think Armstrong's TdF wins deserves mention. It will not be broken in my life time.

Perhaps even Mario Cipollini's 42 stage wins in the Giro d'Italia.

Not only do I doubt 7 TdF wins will be matched in our lifetime, what are the chances of 7 in a row? Or even 7 in a row after being on "death's doorstep" from cancer?

Steveo 90
05-18-2006, 03:13 PM
well there will always be that person who makes the coment that LA was juice-ing...........so his titles are tainted



afaiac adore: lance

Steve
05-18-2006, 04:00 PM
well there will always be that person who makes the coment that LA was juice-ing...........so his titles are tainted



afaiac adore: lance


Well with Lance being the "most drug tested" athlete in the world I highly doubt it. If the frogs could not prove it there is no way he could be doping. They would surrender their country just to prove ihe did it just once. I am sure they tried their damnedest.

To the french, all I can say is: finger: and French ----> bike: <---- Lance.

d-o-b
05-18-2006, 09:42 PM
Merckx used to race most of the year and often in most years, he contested both the Tours of France & Italy, as well as each of the one-day classics and many of the minor multi-stage events.

that's big!!! nobody does it these days, all of them concentrate only in one race.

Toad
05-18-2006, 10:12 PM
that's big!!! nobody does it these days, all of them concentrate only in one race.

That is exactly right. It takes so much out of a rider to do all three of the big tours that no one even makes an attempt anymore much less think about the one day classics.

Toad
05-19-2006, 09:39 AM
that's big!!! nobody does it these days, all of them concentrate only in one race.


BTW good to see your "smiling" face around here again d-o-b.:)

dianepmny
05-19-2006, 10:06 PM
Please. The Dolphins' Perfect Season should be on there, as well as my 7th grade 50-yard dash record.

Pfffft.

d-o-b
05-19-2006, 10:29 PM
BTW good to see your "smiling" face around here again d-o-b.:)
I know you missed me..... adore: