And who can forget his orange ?A superstar
And who can forget his orange ?A superstar
You know your stuff
On the other hand, my great grandad apparently much preferred Charlie Macartney, so maybe numbers and statistical achievement aren't everything.
For those of a certain age.
Only one possible candidate
Wilson " the wonder athlete"
He won everything and wasn't swayed by lottery funding, he was a true amateur, he ran for clocks.
Great thread Swansman, like my postman you always deliver
As you say really subjective, but for me it has to be Muhammad Ali.
At the top of his sport, and even with an original circumnavigation of the system*, he refused to be drafted into the US army during the Vietnam war.
*They had originally told him his time in the Army would have been taken up with PR duties, he still could have fought professionally and he wouldn’t have to go to Vietnam.
Obviously once he made his stand the US government’s original offer was withdrawn, so they basically took his career away from him at arguably the peak of his condition for 3 years.
A peak Ali in 67/70 and both Frazier and Foreman would have probably been merely contenders and not Champions, Ali would have stayed undefeated and probably retired 72/73 and relatively healthy man with possibly Rocky Marciano’s record of 49 pro wins broken.
After boxing a fit in mind and body Ali could have done so much in the US and around the globe with Civil Rights and world peace.
For me he has to be the greatest.
There were some Aussie pundits in the first half of last century who maintained that Trumper was a better player than Bradman because he could play on dodgy pitches while Bradman just piled on the runs when he had a decent track. It could also be because Trumper was universally recognised as one of the good guys in sport, while Bradman, to put it mildly, wasn't.
He lost to Frazier however still 29 years old, and in boxing terms that is still pretty young. When Ken Norton beat him, Ali was 31, even in the return 6 months later, Ali only won on a controversial split decision. When they fought a 3rd time with Ali now 34, again it was a close decision. Remembering that Foreman completely destroyed Norton in '74.
Hypothetical of course, but Ali wouldn't have fought Foreman in those '67 - '70 years anyway as Foreman didn't turn 20 years old until '69. That he beat Foreman who was then 25 years old does stand him as the greatest heavyweight in my humble opinion, but he wasn't unbeatable.
Incidentally the Ken Burns documentary on Ali on BBC iPlayer is brilliant for anyone who hasn't watched it. I've also just finished reading 'The Fight' by Norman Mailler which while controversial is a brilliant book on the Foreman fight.
Arguably his greatest fight was '66 against Cleveland Williams. A fantastic watch:
There were some Aussie pundits in the first half of last century who maintained that Trumper was a better player than Bradman because he could play on dodgy pitches while Bradman just piled on the runs when he had a decent track. It could also be because Trumper was universally recognised as one of the good guys in sport, while Bradman, to put it mildly, wasn't.
But is this 'nice guy' thing all a bit of a myth?
How much did the 3 year inaction affect his performances in the defeats against Frazier ad Norton?
And if the Cleveland Williams fight was him at his 'peak' how much better would he have got without the Vietnam issues?
There were some Aussie pundits in the first half of last century who maintained that Trumper was a better player than Bradman because he could play on dodgy pitches while Bradman just piled on the runs when he had a decent track. It could also be because Trumper was universally recognised as one of the good guys in sport, while Bradman, to put it mildly, wasn't.
I don't think you can include anything that happened more than 50 years ago in the discussion as the world and sport was such a different place. Bradman played all of his cricket in only 2 countries, England and Australia. All of his international cricket was against England, he never faced spin bowling on cracked wickets in India and Pakistan or fast bowling in the west indies.
In my view scoring a shed loads of runs against some amateur English toffs doesn't put you in to the mix as the greatest sportsman ever!
All very selective of course - but the likes of Ayrton Senna, Babe Ruth, Tom Brady, Jerry Rice, MJ, Bo Jackson, Gretzky, Ali, Federer etc should always be in the discussion for GOAT.