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Top 10 Unbreakable Sports Records

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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 </B>​

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.
38_fitness_list.JPG

Number 9 </B>​

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 83 (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 </B>​

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 </B>​

Nolan Ryan's 7 no-hitters
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.
38b_fitness_list.JPG

Number 6 </B>​

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 -- last season's scoring leader recorded just 94 points -- multiple-point outbursts just won't happen.
Number 5 </B>​

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 </B>​

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 </B>​

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.
38c_fitness_list.JPG

Number 2 </B>​

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 </B>​

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.
sports exploits

Tennis great Pete Sampras came close to making the list, with his 14 Grand Slam titles placing him tops among male players of all time. The same goes for Ted "the Splendid Splinter" Williams of the Boston Red Sox, who finished his career with an on-base percentage of .482.
But while challengers may take aim at Sampras' and Williams' marks, and at the other records mentioned above, it will take a truly phenomenal player to eclipse any of these incredible athletic achievements.
.
 
george_foreman.jpg
Source George Foreman, Boxer
  • Born: 10 January 1949
  • Birthplace: Marshall, Texas
  • Best Known As: Heavyweight boxing champ at age 46
Foreman was young, lean and angry when he beat Joe Frazier for the world heavyweight boxing championship in 1973. The next year he lost the title to Muhammad Ali in an epic bout in Zaire called the "Rumble in the Jungle." Foreman dropped from the public eye for years and devoted himself to his religious ministry, but in the 1990s he returned to the ring transformed into a rotund, jovial fighter who somehow beat Michael Moorer in 1994 to regain the heavyweight crown at age 45. His subsequent self-mocking commercials for hamburgers and mufflers made him even more famous. Foreman retired again after a 1997 loss to Shannon Briggs, but his fame was intact: he made millions as a TV pitchman for a low-fat cooking gadget called the George Foreman Grill. In February of 2004, Foreman announced that he intended to return for one more fight, this time as a 55-year-old grandfather, in honor of the 30th anniversary of his rumble with Ali.
Foreman was the Olympic heavyweight boxing champion in 1968... It's true: Foreman has five daughters and five sons and has named all of the sons George: George Jr., George III, George IV, George V, and George VI.
 
The Ring Magazine Rankings 1960-1980 Heavyweight Division
Career records shown if available when name first appears in rankings. If record is complete then will not say (as of) after the record.
Key- Red- Means new to the rankings
Blue-Means Last time in the rankings
Green- Means only time appearing in the rankings 1960
Champ- Floyd Patterson (55-8-1) 40 ko's
1. Sonny Liston (50-4) 39 ko's
2. Ingemar Johansson (26-2) 17 ko's
3. Eddie Machen (50-11-3) 29 ko's
4. Zora Folley (79-11-5) 44 ko's
5. Henry Cooper (40-14-1) 27 ko's
6. Mike DeJohn (46-12-1) 31 ko's
7. Bob Cleroux (48-6-1) 38 ko's
8. Alex Miteff (25-13-1) 15 ko's
9. Dick Richardson (29-14-2) 23 ko's
10 Joe Erskine (44-8-1) 13 ko's
1961
Champ- Floyd Patterson
1. Sonny Liston
2. Eddie Machen
3. Zora Folley
4. Alejandro Lavorante (19-5) 15 ko's
5. Bob Cleroux
6. Ingemar Johansson
7. Cleveland Williams (78-13-1) 58 ko's
8. Henry Cooper
9. Cassius Clay (56-5) 37 ko's
10. George Logan (23-9-1) 14 ko's as of 1964

1962
Champ- Sonny Liston
1. Floyd Patterson
2. Cassius Clay
3. Doug Jones (30-10-1) 19 ko's
4. Ingemar Johansson
5. Zora Folley
6. Cleveland Williams
7. Bob Cleroux
8. Billy Daniels (23-21-4) 11 ko's
9. Archie Moore (194-26-8) 141 ko's
10. Henry Cooper

1963
Champ- Sonny Liston
1. Cassius Clay
2. Doug Jones
3. Ernie Terrell (46-9) 21 ko's
4. Cleveland Williams
5. Zora Folley
6. Eddie Machen
7. Floyd Patterson
8. Karl Mildenberger (53-6-3) 20 ko's
9. George Chuvalo (73-18-2) 64 ko's
10.Brian London (37-20-1) 26 ko's

1964
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Sonny Liston
2. Floyd Patterson
3. Ernie Terrell
4. Cleveland Williams
5. George Chuvalo
6. Zora Folley
7. Karl Mildenberger
8. Roger Rischer (26-10-2) 13 ko's as of 1966
9. Eddie Machen
10.Doug Jones

1965
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Ernie Terrell
2. Floyd Patterson
3. George Chuvalo
4. Karl Mildenberger
5. Zora Folley
6. Amos Lincoln (39-15-3) 23 ko's
7. Thad Spencer (32-13-1) 14 ko's
8. Doug Jones
9. Hubert Hilton (17-7-2) 10 ko's as of 1968
10.Brian London

1966
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Ernie Terell
2. Zora Folley
3. Thad Spencer
4. Floyd Patterson
5. Karl Mildenberger
6. Joe Frazier (32-4-1) 27 ko's
7. Oscar Bonavena (58-9-1) 44 ko's
8. George Chuvalo
9. Johnny Persol (19-4-1) 5 ko's as of 1968
10.Manuel Ramos (26-24-3) 22 ko's as of 1974

1967
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Joe Frazier
2. Thad Spencer
3. Jimmy Ellis (40-12-1) 24 ko's
4. Manuel Ramos
5. Jerry Quarry (53-9-4) 33 ko's
6. Oscar Bonavena
7. Floyd Patterson
8. Eduardo Corletti (33-15-5) 18 ko's
9. Karl Mildenberger
10.Ernie Terrell

1968
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Joe Frazier
2. Jimmy Ellis
3. Oscar Bonavena
4. George Chuvalo
5. Sonny Liston
6. Jerry Quarry
7. Leotis Martin (31-5) 19 ko's
8. Manuel Ramos
9. Al Lewis (30-6) 19 ko's
10.Floyd Patterson

1969
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Joe Frazier
2. Jimmy Ellis
3. Jerry Quarry
4. Leotis Martin
5. Mac Foster (30-6) 30 ko's
6. Sonny Liston
7. Oscar Bonavena
8. (Florida) Al Jones (33-3-2) 18 ko's
9. Henry Cooper
10.Gregorio Peralta (93-9-9) 57 ko's

1970
Champ- Joe Frazier
1. Muhammad Ali
2. George Foreman (76-5) 68 ko's
3. Oscar Bonavena
4. Jerry Quarry
5. Mac Foster
6. Henry Cooper
7. George Chuvalo
8. Sonny Liston
9. Jose Ibar Urtain (56-11-4) 44 ko's
10.Jose Luis Garcia (28-8-1) 18 ko's as of 1976





1971
Champ- Joe Frazier
1. Muhammad Ali
2. Jerry Quarry
3. George Foreman
4. Oscar Bonavena
5. Mac Foster
6. Jimmy Ellis
7. Floyd Patterson
8. Jose Luis Garcia
9. Jack Bodell (54-13) 28 ko's
10.Joe Bugner (69-13-1) 41 ko's
1972
Champ- Joe Frazier
1. Muhammad Ali
2. George Foreman
3. Jimmy Ellis
4. Ron Lyle (43-7-1) 32 ko's
5. Floyd Patterson
6. Ernie Terrell
7. Jose Roman (53-24-3) 26 ko's
8. Joe Bugner
9. Ken Norton (42-7-1) 33 ko's
10.Jose Luis Garcia

1973
Champ- George Foreman
1. Muhammad Ali
2. Joe Frazier
3. Ken Norton
4. Jerry Quarry
5. Ron Lyle
6. Earnie Shavers (73-14-1) 67 ko's
7. Oscar Bonavena
8. Joe Bugner
9. Jimmy Ellis
10.Chuck Wepner (35-14-2) 17 ko's

1974
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. George Foreman
2. Joe Frazier
3. Ron Lyle
4. Oscar Bonavena
5. Joe Bugner
6. Ken Norton
7. Jerry Quarry
8. Chuck Wepner
9. Henry Clark (32-12-4) 7 ko's
10.Larry Middleton (23-9-1) 14 ko's

1975
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Ken Norton
2. Jimmy Young (32-18-2) 10 ko's
3. Joe Frazier
4. George Foreman
5. Ron Lyle
6. Earnie Shavers
7. Duane Bobick (48-4) 42 ko's
8. Joe Bugner
9. Chuck Wepner
10.Randy Neumann (30-6) 11 ko's as of 1976

1976
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. George Foreman
2. Ken Norton
3. Jimmy Young
4. Duane Bobick
5. Ron Lyle
6. Larry Holmes (68-6) 45 ko's
7. Howard Smith (17-2) 10 ko's
8. Johnny Boudreaux (21-5-1) 7 ko's
9. Stan Ward (21-7-2) 8 ko's
10.Joe Bugner

1977
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Ken Norton
2. Jimmy Young
3. Larry Holmes
4. Ron Lyle
5. Duane Bobick
6. Earnie Shavers
7. Kallie Knoetze (21-6) 20 ko's
8. Alfredo Evangelista (62-13-4) 42 ko's
9. Leon Spinks (26-17-3) 14 ko's
10.Gerrie Coetzee (33-6-1) 21 ko's

1978
Champ- Muhammad Ali
1. Larry Holmes
2. Ken Norton
3. Leon Spinks
4. Ron Lyle
5. Jimmy Young
6. Kallie Knoetze
7. Alfredo Evangelista
8. Gerrie Coetzee
9. Ossie Ocasio (23-13-1) 12 ko's
10. Domingo D'Elia (23-2-2) 10 ko's

1979
Champ- Larry Holmes
1. John Tate (33-3) 22 ko's
2. Gerrie Coetzee
3. Mike Weaver (41-18-1) 28 ko's
4. Earnie Shavers
5. Leroy Jones (24-1-1) 12 ko's
6. Lorenzo Zanon (28-6-3) 11 ko's
7. Alfredo Evangelista
8. Gerry Cooney (28-3) 24 ko's
9. Scott Ledoux (32-13-4) 21 ko's
10. Ken Norton

1980
Champ- Larry Holmes
1. Mike Weaver
2. Gerry Cooney
3. Leon Spinks
4. Micheal Dokes (53-6-2) 33 ko's
5. Gerrie Coetzee
6. Marty Monroe (22-2-1) 14 ko's
7. Trevor Berbick (50-11-1) 32 ko's
8. Greg Page (58-16-1) 48 ko's
9. Bernardo Mercado (33-5) 27 ko's
10.Ken Norton
 
Cy Young's records will be around alot longer then the rest of them. He also pitched alittle over 900 games.
 
Last edited:
I think that Cy Young & TY Cobb's records will outlast most. Ripkens is impressive but then again not in the same way.
 
Greztky's single Season Pt total and Career Pts will never be touched
 
IainDaniel said:
Greztky's single Season Pt total and Career Pts will never be touched


Aren't they making regs that will decrease the size of the goalie pads and increase the size of the net? If so then there is a chance now, there was nil before, but now there's a puncher's chance. :)
 
Dale Mabry said:
Aren't they making regs that will decrease the size of the goalie pads and increase the size of the net? If so then there is a chance now, there was nil before, but now there's a puncher's chance. :)

Still not likely. Part of the Gretzky magic was his team that supported him. At the time, they had Gretzky, Messier, Coffey, Kurri, Lowe, Anderson.

The Oilers were simply the most incredible team in hockey history. Sure there were other teams that were great and won 5 championships in a row... but they were done at a time when there were 6 teams in the NHL. The Oilers shattered records all over the place and there has never been a team like it since.

The NHL changed a rule around that time largely because of the Oilers. When both teams got a penalty, both teams would play short handed. The Oilers would send someone out to pick a fight or do something else that would result in a matched penalty... or maybe do it twice and get 2 matched penalties. Then when they were playing 3 on 3 instead of 5 on 5, they would put Gretzky, Messier and Coffey out there and no team could come up with 3 players that could stop these 3 guys, especially with a lot of clear uncovered ice. It was so effective that the NHL changed the rule so that matched penalties were still played 5 on 5.

Yes, Gretzky had an amazing number of points... but a lot of these were assists. The guys he was playing with were great too. They could set him up and finish the job when he passed to them. This goes a long way to racking up the points.

It is no coincidence that Messier is the number 2 point leader and Coffey is 10th (not bad for a defenseman) and Jari Kurri is 17th. Think about that... one team had 4 of the top 20 all time point leaders (including #1 and #2)

Not only that, they had 3 of the top 5 all time assist leaders (Gretzky #1, Messier #3, Coffey #5)... no wonder it was such an incredible line.

Hockey is such a team game, not only would the NHL have to find a player as good as Gretzky to beat his records but that team would also have to fill his line up with a few other people that could rank in the top 20 hockey players ever in order to have a shot at the record. I don't think smaller pads and a larger net are going to be enough.
 
I banged Gococks' Mom 6 times in one day. That record will never be broken.
 
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topolo said:
I banged Gococks' Mom 6 times in one day. That record will never be broken.

Doesn't seem like a big feat until you take her mountainous size into account.
 
topolo said:
I agree, she wears you out.

Shouldn't you be out wig shopping?
 
Alan Shearer is currently tied top scorer for Newcastle United with 200 goals alongside Jackie Milburn, however, the rest of the season remains and it is almost guaranteed that Shearer will surpass Milburn's record.
 
Is that in a career or season? How many games in a season?
 
Dale Mabry said:
Is that in a career or season? How many games in a season?
that's in his Newcastle Utd career.
there are 38 games in a season but almost no-one ever plays every game.
this is also with 2 career threatening injuries- having snapped his ankle in 1998/99 and snapping a tendon in about 2000.
he's averaged about a goal every second game.
 
Ross051288 said:
that's in his Newcastle Utd career.
there are 38 games in a season but almost no-one ever plays every game.
this is also with 2 career threatening injuries- having snapped his ankle in 1998/99 and snapping a tendon in about 2000.
he's averaged about a goal every second game.

Um who whoopee :rolleyes:

Wayne Gretzky scored 92 goal in one season. Averaging more than 1 per game.

804 for his career :p
 
IainDaniel said:
Um who whoopee :rolleyes:

Wayne Gretzky scored 92 goal in one season. Averaging more than 1 per game.

804 for his career :p
LMFAO, that's in hockey.
That just proves it's easier to score in hockey than it is football.

and what do you mean who?
that's ignorance on your part for not knowing who one of the greatest players of the past 15 years is.
 
Ross051288 said:
LMFAO, that's in hockey.
That just proves it's easier to score in hockey than it is football.

and what do you mean who?
that's ignorance on your part for not knowing who one of the greatest players of the past 15 years is.

That's just regional popularity. I couldn't tell you who is the best cricket player ever because we are not exposed to it.
 
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Dale Mabry said:
That's just regional popularity. I couldn't tell you who is the best cricket player ever because we are not exposed to it.
I never said best, I said one of the greatest.
and I wasn't having a go at you, it was the guy that said 'who?'
 
I know, I was explaining the issue. Soccer has no coverage here unless you get 500 channels.
 
Dale Mabry said:
I know, I was explaining the issue. Soccer has no coverage here unless you get 500 channels.

I get 500 channels and soccer is not on. :lol:
 
Ross051288 said:
LMFAO, that's in hockey.
That just proves it's easier to score in hockey than it is football.

and what do you mean who?
that's ignorance on your part for not knowing who one of the greatest players of the past 15 years is.

No it proves your self-proclaimed soccer great is shit.Most people in the UK would recognize the name Wayne Greztky.

Hardly anyone in North America could give a shit about whoever you mentioned
 
IainDaniel said:
No it proves your self-proclaimed soccer great is shit.Most people in the UK would recognize the name Wayne Greztky.

Hardly anyone in North America could give a shit about whoever you mentioned
Showing even greater ignorance than I thought you were capable of.
He is not my self-proclaimed football great. He IS a great, it is a fact and NO-ONE can dispute that. It is common knowledge amongst the football world.
saying otherwise proves you're an idiot.
most people in the UK would not recognise the name Wayne Greztky.

that's a typical answer I was expecting though from a meathead- completely ignorant.

fair enough if you think the sport is shit but to say one of the sport's great players is shit is like saying Tiger Woods is a shit golfer.
 
IainDaniel said:
No it proves your self-proclaimed soccer great is shit.Most people in the UK would recognize the name Wayne Greztky.

Hardly anyone in North America could give a shit about whoever you mentioned

Isn't there some Dave Pecker dude who poses in GQ a lot that plays soccer in Scotland or something?
 
Ross051288 said:
S
fair enough if you think the sport is shit but to say one of the sport's great players is shit is like saying Tiger Woods is a shit golfer.

Let's keep the golf talk out of the sport section, please.
 
eric gagne's 88 consecutive saves i would put up there
 
Ross051288 said:
Showing even greater ignorance than I thought you were capable of.
He is not my self-proclaimed football great. He IS a great, it is a fact and NO-ONE can dispute that. It is common knowledge amongst the football world.
saying otherwise proves you're an idiot.
most people in the UK would not recognise the name Wayne Greztky.

that's a typical answer I was expecting though from a meathead- completely ignorant.

fair enough if you think the sport is shit but to say one of the sport's great players is shit is like saying Tiger Woods is a shit golfer.

Take things pretty Personal do we?

Both my parents are from the UK, and have been over there more then I care to count. I never said the sport was shit. You come in here with some holier-then-thou attitude expect a ribbing or two.

Oh and Tiger Woods is a shit golfer :p
 
IainDaniel said:
Take things pretty Personal do we?

Both my parents are from the UK, and have been over there more then I care to count. I never said the sport was shit. You come in here with some holier-then-thou attitude expect a ribbing or two.

Oh and Tiger Woods is a shit golfer :p
I was merely pointing out your stupidity at saying a player whom you know hardly anything about was shit.

oh and Wayne Gretzky is shit- he doesn't even play a proper sport!:laugh:
 
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