The GOAT
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@MiketheSnow said in The GOAT:
Phil ‘The Power’ Taylor
deserves a mention, when I regularly watched darts about 10 years ago he won fucken everything. Great entertainment.
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Dr Marion Tinsley was the most dominant checkers/draughts player in history. No doubt we will have differing views on whether competitive board games are sport, but that aside, his record was phenomenal. When the computers were first ascending to the top, Tinsley won a game because he saw further than the computer which had seen over 20 moves ahead.
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@MajorRage said in The GOAT:
I'd put more names in the Mix - and will undoubtedly come up with more as I think.
Michael Jordan - similar sort of background to Brady actually.
Cristiano Ronaldo - football very subjective especially over time and many will argue Messi over him too ...
Floyd Mayweather - all comers, all time, doesn't lose.
Serena Williams has her name in the hat as well
Tiger ... hmmmm .... not quite for me.Redgrave certainly in the conversation
If you're talking Kick ball then Pele and Maradona get in the mix. Neither Christiano Ronaldo nor Messi have won a a World Cup.
Re @MN5 Bradman a definite contender.
Pele in the mix, but Maradona? Not for me.
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Julio Cesar Chavez. An amazing record across multiple weight divisions. Had the aura about him as soon as he stepped in the ring.
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Max Woosnam. No one else come close.
Among his achievements were winning an Olympic gold and silver in tennis at the 1920 Summer Olympics, winning the doubles at Wimbledon, compiling a 147 break in Snooker, making a century at Lord's Cricket Ground, captaining the British Davis Cup team, captaining Manchester City F.C. finishing ultimately runners-up for the Football League Championship in 1920–21, and captaining the England national football team.
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@Victor-Meldrew holy crap, that is some resume.
Also, @TeWaio I agree with your list -but we have to accept that we are super biased because rugby is a minority sport internationally. Soccer has the advantage of being played anywhere, with any number of people, with any ball, in damn near every situation. The base of the pyramid is massive. Ditto the Men's 100m -- everyone sprints in a race at some point; the talent becomes clear. Rugby, snooker, rowing, all need infrastructure outside just the person, so cut down the competition.
Yes, I know this is an argument against Bradman
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in my opinion of course
with regards to team sports, there isn't another position in any sport that is under more scrutiny than the NFL quarterback. In a squad of 50-odd guys, you are the man. You get the money. The entire winning and losing of the organisation rests on you.
Brady built the greatest dynasty the NFL has ever seen. Left it at 43, and immediately won with another team. Playing the prime position still at the very elite level.
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@mariner4life said in The GOAT:
in my opinion of course
with regards to team sports, there isn't another position in any sport that is under more scrutiny than the NFL quarterback. In a squad of 50-odd guys, you are the man. You get the money. The entire winning and losing of the organisation rests on you.
Brady built the greatest dynasty the NFL has ever seen. Left it at 43, and immediately won with another team. Playing the prime position still at the very elite level.
He is the main man and should get his dues. But football isn't basketball. Brady did his part but that defence was huge. This is not MJ single-handedly dominating big games
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@mariner4life said in The GOAT:
in my opinion of course
with regards to team sports, there isn't another position in any sport that is under more scrutiny than the NFL quarterback. In a squad of 50-odd guys, you are the man. You get the money. The entire winning and losing of the organisation rests on you.
Brady built the greatest dynasty the NFL has ever seen. Left it at 43, and immediately won with another team. Playing the prime position still at the very elite level.
He is the main man and should get his dues. But football isn't basketball. Brady did his part but that defence was huge. This is not MJ single-handedly dominating big games
that's a myth too. One great guy doesn't win you a ring, even if he is 20% of the team on the court. Jordan was amazing, but needed other guys to step up (pippen, Rodman, game winning shots by Kerr). There are a lot of NBA teams with one great guy who don't win because he needs help (see the Warriors this year). Look at a season and see how many games are won when one guy gets a shitload. What did Curry score the other day in a loss?
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Usain Fucking Bolt come on down. His first Olympic 100m win is still the thing that astonished me more than everything else I've ever seen in sport
yeah, this is probably where i would lean if i gave it a proper think as well.
Unbeaten at olympic level, across 100, 200, and the relay.
In the absolute glamour event of athletics, in fact probably the whole Games. And in a sport where anyone with 2 legs can compete.
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@mariner4life said in The GOAT:
in my opinion of course
with regards to team sports, there isn't another position in any sport that is under more scrutiny than the NFL quarterback. In a squad of 50-odd guys, you are the man. You get the money. The entire winning and losing of the organisation rests on you.
Brady built the greatest dynasty the NFL has ever seen. Left it at 43, and immediately won with another team. Playing the prime position still at the very elite level.
Sheer weight of titles across two teams makes the case for Brady pretty compelling against all-comers.
But two things about arguing for an NFL quarterback to be the GOAT just irk me, and I'm a Pats and Brady fan. The first is that Brady isn't exactly a stunning athlete. He's never been a great running QB and much of what a QB does is (over-simplification coming up to a degree) shuffle around behind a defensive line designed to offer him the most protection possible, and throw the ball. It's predominantly one skill, albeit done supremely well. The second thing - and I know there are good alternative arguments) is that he's dominant in his sport, but it's a sport played to the highest level in just one country (CFL, anyone??) and with very few players contributed from other countries. As opposed to the modern game of basketball for example. So unlike basketball the NFL isn't attracting the best athletes from around the world against which one must dominate. It's not far removed from nominating the best Kabbati player as the GOAT. Sure, he'd the best player in the best competition in the world in a particular sport, but if it's not global how can it be compared to the likes of soccer, tennis, golf and athletics?
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@mariner4life said in The GOAT:
in my opinion of course
with regards to team sports, there isn't another position in any sport that is under more scrutiny than the NFL quarterback. In a squad of 50-odd guys, you are the man. You get the money. The entire winning and losing of the organisation rests on you.
Brady built the greatest dynasty the NFL has ever seen. Left it at 43, and immediately won with another team. Playing the prime position still at the very elite level.
Sheer weight of titles across two teams makes the case for Brady pretty compelling against all-comers.
But two things about arguing for an NFL quarterback to be the GOAT just irk me, and I'm a Pats and Brady fan. The first is that Brady isn't exactly a stunning athlete. He's never been a great running QB and much of what a QB does is (over-simplification coming up to a degree) shuffle around behind a defensive line designed to offer him the most protection possible, and throw the ball. It's predominantly one skill, albeit done supremely well. The second thing - and I know there are good alternative arguments) is that he's dominant in his sport, but it's a sport played to the highest level in just one country (CFL, anyone??) and with very few players contributed from other countries. As opposed to the modern game of basketball for example. So unlike basketball the NFL isn't attracting the best athletes from around the world against which one must dominate. It's not far removed from nominating the best Kabbati player as the GOAT. Sure, he'd the best player in the best competition in the world in a particular sport, but if it's not global how can it be compared to the likes of soccer, tennis, golf and athletics?
This is a good thread! I'm nodding away at quite a few posts
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@shark i don't disagree with anything you said there, this is the most subjective argument in sports, and is best done over 10 schooners.
I'm not hanging my hat on Brady at all, but it's a pretty good argument.
The only thing with the "best athletes" thing is the number of elite level athletes from other sports that have given it a go and been waaaay off the mark. Yes it's a sharp learning curve, but athletically they are not there either. Not big enough, not fast enough, not powerful enough. Jarryd Hayne when he went was an elite NRL player who embarrassed guys with his running. He got there and looked like a park football player.
Again, i am not trying to say the NFL is the best athletes from anywhere, i am just saying that they are still probably the best athletes for their particular sport.
My GOAT definition, which will differ to others is, do you dominate your particular sport? And the reason it is so subjective is, in most cases the sport itself cannot decide who its best player is.
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Deion Sanders played NFL and MLB on the same weekend at times. In the pro era. That's fucking unreal.