GOAT
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I'd need a list, but during my lifetime I think there is only one sportsperson who was consistently the best player in the world, transcended their sport in such as way as to make their league a global product, and turned it into an ongoing enterprize in such a way that he is still one of the highest paid sports players ever (nearly 20 years after quitting).
I imagine everyone can name him without clicking the links.
In the 21st century, Brady is my GOATIEST, and I'm not much of football fan (I'm a Cowboys supporter so the last twenty years have sucked).
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I'd need a list, but during my lifetime I think there is only one sportsperson who was consistently the best player in the world, transcended their sport in such as way as to make their league a global product, and turned it into an ongoing enterprize in such a way that he is still one of the highest paid sports players ever (nearly 20 years after quitting).
I imagine everyone can name him without clicking the links.
In the 21st century, Brady is my GOATIEST, and I'm not much of football fan (I'm a Cowboys supporter so the last twenty years have sucked).
I'm going to assume Jordan.
Jordan is a phenom. What he did for the NBA is unreal. A lot of guys owe their enormous wealth to him
Like Tiger in golf.
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@mariner4life said in GOAT:
I'd need a list, but during my lifetime I think there is only one sportsperson who was consistently the best player in the world, transcended their sport in such as way as to make their league a global product, and turned it into an ongoing enterprize in such a way that he is still one of the highest paid sports players ever (nearly 20 years after quitting).
I imagine everyone can name him without clicking the links.
In the 21st century, Brady is my GOATIEST, and I'm not much of football fan (I'm a Cowboys supporter so the last twenty years have sucked).
I'm going to assume Jordan.
Jordan is a phenom. What he did for the NBA is unreal. A lot of guys owe their enormous wealth to him
Like Tiger in golf.
I think I unfairly penalize him for not following through and breaking Nicklaus' record. From 1997 to 2008, he was all of those things, then the fun caught up with him. I loved his win in 2019 too, but I can't put him as the GOAT (he's in the group).
Edit: he'd be on my list for those I've watched in my lifetime.
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@mariner4life said in GOAT:
I'd need a list, but during my lifetime I think there is only one sportsperson who was consistently the best player in the world, transcended their sport in such as way as to make their league a global product, and turned it into an ongoing enterprize in such a way that he is still one of the highest paid sports players ever (nearly 20 years after quitting).
I imagine everyone can name him without clicking the links.
In the 21st century, Brady is my GOATIEST, and I'm not much of football fan (I'm a Cowboys supporter so the last twenty years have sucked).
I'm going to assume Jordan.
Jordan is a phenom. What he did for the NBA is unreal. A lot of guys owe their enormous wealth to him
Like Tiger in golf.
I think I unfairly penalize him for not following through and breaking Nicklaus' record. From 1997 to 2008, he was all of those things, then the fun caught up with him. I loved his win in 2019 too, but I can't put him as the GOAT (he's in the group).
Edit: he'd be on my list for those I've watched in my lifetime.
Sure he didn't pass Jack. But Tiger did as much or more to revolutionise golf as anyone ever. Golfers generally train harder because of Tiger. They make more money because of Tiger. Golf generally used to be very white. Not any more. Now you could argue the game could have become more cosmopolitan on its own. But I think it owes a lot to Tiger
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Surfing thread highjacked. Slater the GOAT of surfing without a doubt. From a shitty shore break of his home turf to still being one of the best at 50. Unbelievable!
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Boxing is hard to measure, so many variables ( era, who they fought, if they fought in their absolute prime etc )
And I think Lewis and Tyson are great examples of this. Lewis is actually older than Tyson but Tyson's peak was the late 80s whereas Lewis peaked 10-15 years later.
Similarly with Holyfield and Tyson - Holyfield beat Tyson twice but by that time Tyson was past his prime and Holyfield was juiced to the gills.
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@mariner4life said in GOAT:
I'd need a list, but during my lifetime I think there is only one sportsperson who was consistently the best player in the world, transcended their sport in such as way as to make their league a global product, and turned it into an ongoing enterprize in such a way that he is still one of the highest paid sports players ever (nearly 20 years after quitting).
I imagine everyone can name him without clicking the links.
In the 21st century, Brady is my GOATIEST, and I'm not much of football fan (I'm a Cowboys supporter so the last twenty years have sucked).
I'm going to assume Jordan.
Jordan is a phenom. What he did for the NBA is unreal. A lot of guys owe their enormous wealth to him
Like Tiger in golf.
I think I unfairly penalize him for not following through and breaking Nicklaus' record. From 1997 to 2008, he was all of those things, then the fun caught up with him. I loved his win in 2019 too, but I can't put him as the GOAT (he's in the group).
Edit: he'd be on my list for those I've watched in my lifetime.
Sure he didn't pass Jack. But Tiger did as much or more to revolutionise golf as anyone ever. Golfers generally train harder because of Tiger. They make more money because of Tiger. Golf generally used to be very white. Not any more. Now you could argue the game could have become more cosmopolitan on its own. But I think it owes a lot to Tiger
All good points, but that's why I said "unfairly".
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@mariner4life caught the tail end of something on Nat Geo the other day where they were.goi g over some of the things that shaped the 80s, and how Nike was pretty small fry when they pitched for Jordan, but his ability and thier marketing sent both the the stratosphere, and Jordan was the fore runner for Tiger in terms of Nike getting on board early offering a shit ton more than the market, and winning.
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@taniwharugby said in GOAT:
@mariner4life caught the tail end of something on Nat Geo the other day where they were.goi g over some of the things that shaped the 80s, and how Nike was pretty small fry when they pitched for Jordan, but his ability and thier marketing sent both the the stratosphere, and Jordan was the fore runner for Tiger in terms of Nike getting on board early offering a shit ton more than the market, and winning.
Jordan, and Nike was a perfect storm. Signing him from college was a masterstroke. I seem to recall that being part of the Sonny Vaccaro documentary. But I might be wrong. It is in Shoe Dogs by Phil Knight
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@kiwimurph said in GOAT:
Boxing is hard to measure, so many variables ( era, who they fought, if they fought in their absolute prime etc )
And I think Lewis and Tyson are great examples of this. Lewis is actually older than Tyson but Tyson's peak was the late 80s whereas Lewis peaked 10-15 years later.
Similarly with Holyfield and Tyson - Holyfield beat Tyson twice but by that time Tyson was past his prime and Holyfield was juiced to the gills.
That Holyfield doco on Netflix is great viewing.
Really sad he tarnished his legacy recently with that farce of a fight he was involved in. Not the first and certainly won’t be the last fighter to do that though.
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@victor-meldrew said in GOAT:
@nostrildamus said in GOAT:
Phil Taylor. 16 world championships, plus carried far more weight to height than most of the above mentioned, 19 stones of dart-pushing momentum on a 5 foot 8 or so frame. Heavier than 6"6' Anthony Joshua at his flabbiest peak.
Edit: I guess my cryptic point is it would be interesting and useful to have some meta-criteria so out there "sports" like darts are considered or not on an equal footing...
That's an interesting point. Someone once said Damon Hill was the greatest development driver he had ever seen in Formula One, who could tune a good car into a truly great one better than anyone, but was an average racing driver.
That's a great skill, but is it a truly sporting skill?
your point is more interesting than mine
It reminds me of that world-famous player or athlete who was famously said to be a great but not particularly good and now I am racking my brain as to who that was, whether that was in cricket or tennis or.. -
@kiwimurph said in GOAT:
Boxing is hard to measure, so many variables ( era, who they fought, if they fought in their absolute prime etc )
And I think Lewis and Tyson are great examples of this. Lewis is actually older than Tyson but Tyson's peak was the late 80s whereas Lewis peaked 10-15 years later.
Similarly with Holyfield and Tyson - Holyfield beat Tyson twice but by that time Tyson was past his prime and Holyfield was juiced to the gills.
That Holyfield doco on Netflix is great viewing.
Really sad he tarnished his legacy recently with that farce of a fight he was involved in. Not the first and certainly won’t be the last fighter to do that though.
Did he take HGH/steroids as well or was that a rumour? Not sure we can call him a great if he can't defeat Kevin Barry in the ring
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@taniwharugby said in GOAT:
@mariner4life caught the tail end of something on Nat Geo the other day where they were.goi g over some of the things that shaped the 80s, and how Nike was pretty small fry when they pitched for Jordan, but his ability and thier marketing sent both the the stratosphere, and Jordan was the fore runner for Tiger in terms of Nike getting on board early offering a shit ton more than the market, and winning.
Iirc from One Last Dance, Jordan wasn't interested in even meeting with Nike and his parents convinced him otherwise. Converse were the big brand at that time.
IMHO GOATS are way too difficult to rank across sports. There are so many different skill-sets, individual sport vs team sport, participation numbers etc. And then even within a sport how do you define the GOAT when the individual members of a team have such different functions? For instance a goalkeeper vs a striker.
Having said that, being able to perform at elite level in your 40s (and at farking 50) is absolutely astonishing. At the very least it gives (false) hope to this 43 year old!
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@nostrildamus said in GOAT:
@kiwimurph said in GOAT:
Boxing is hard to measure, so many variables ( era, who they fought, if they fought in their absolute prime etc )
And I think Lewis and Tyson are great examples of this. Lewis is actually older than Tyson but Tyson's peak was the late 80s whereas Lewis peaked 10-15 years later.
Similarly with Holyfield and Tyson - Holyfield beat Tyson twice but by that time Tyson was past his prime and Holyfield was juiced to the gills.
That Holyfield doco on Netflix is great viewing.
Really sad he tarnished his legacy recently with that farce of a fight he was involved in. Not the first and certainly won’t be the last fighter to do that though.
Did he take HGH/steroids as well or was that a rumour? Not sure we can call him a great if he can't defeat Kevin Barry in the ring
Barry was saved by an absolute freak occurrence…….but can still go into the pub and tell people he beat “The Real Deal” back in the day.
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@rancid-schnitzel said in GOAT:
Jordan wasn't interested in even meeting with Nike
yeah this program said as much too, they were small, it didnt mention Converse, said that for a period, most people referred to Nike as 'Mike'
I'll see what the doco was, it included Run DMC signing with Adidas, which was the first time a sports brand had signed a band.
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Using the Kelly Slater model in athletics,
Ed Moses
Wiki
Edwin Corley Moses (born August 31, 1955) is an American former track and field athlete who won gold medals in the 400 m hurdles at the 1976 and 1984 Olympics.
Between 1977 and 1987, Moses won 107 consecutive finals (122 consecutive races) and set the world record in the event four times.
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Would have won in 80 too if the US had gone to Moscow
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@nostrildamus said in GOAT:
Did he take HGH/steroids as well or was that a rumour?
from 2007
Late Wednesday, SI.com reported that the name "Evan Fields" appeared on law enforcement documents reviewed by the Web site in connection with the Mobile investigation. SI.com dialed a phone number associated with "Fields" that was listed on one of the documents, and Holyfield answered the call. "Fields" listed birth date in the document -- Oct. 19, 1962 -- also is the same as Holyfield's. According to SI.com, the individual who authorities believe to be Holyfield picked up prescriptions that came from Applied Pharmacy. According to records reviewed by SI.com, Holyfield picked up vials of testosterone, two vials of Glukor (a drug believed to be used during and after steroid cycles) and injection supplies. Less than a week later, according to the document, he picked up five vials of Saizen, a brand of HGH, and related supplies.
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@kiwimurph said in GOAT:
@nostrildamus said in GOAT:
Did he take HGH/steroids as well or was that a rumour?
from 2007
Late Wednesday, SI.com reported that the name "Evan Fields" appeared on law enforcement documents reviewed by the Web site in connection with the Mobile investigation. SI.com dialed a phone number associated with "Fields" that was listed on one of the documents, and Holyfield answered the call. "Fields" listed birth date in the document -- Oct. 19, 1962 -- also is the same as Holyfield's. According to SI.com, the individual who authorities believe to be Holyfield picked up prescriptions that came from Applied Pharmacy. According to records reviewed by SI.com, Holyfield picked up vials of testosterone, two vials of Glukor (a drug believed to be used during and after steroid cycles) and injection supplies. Less than a week later, according to the document, he picked up five vials of Saizen, a brand of HGH, and related supplies.
Performance enhancing drugs aren’t as much a factor for fighters as one might think. It’s fairly obvious Tyson Fury isn’t on them for example.
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@kiwimurph said in GOAT:
@nostrildamus said in GOAT:
Did he take HGH/steroids as well or was that a rumour?
from 2007
Late Wednesday, SI.com reported that the name "Evan Fields" appeared on law enforcement documents reviewed by the Web site in connection with the Mobile investigation. SI.com dialed a phone number associated with "Fields" that was listed on one of the documents, and Holyfield answered the call. "Fields" listed birth date in the document -- Oct. 19, 1962 -- also is the same as Holyfield's. According to SI.com, the individual who authorities believe to be Holyfield picked up prescriptions that came from Applied Pharmacy. According to records reviewed by SI.com, Holyfield picked up vials of testosterone, two vials of Glukor (a drug believed to be used during and after steroid cycles) and injection supplies. Less than a week later, according to the document, he picked up five vials of Saizen, a brand of HGH, and related supplies.
Performance enhancing drugs aren’t as much a factor for fighters as one might think. It’s fairly obvious Tyson Fury isn’t on them for example.
Apples and Oranges.
Holyfield was a cruiserweight (so under 200 pounds) who had to put on weight to go up to heavyweight.
Tyson Fury weighed in at 277 pounds for the 3rd Wilder fight.
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@kiwimurph said in GOAT:
@kiwimurph said in GOAT:
@nostrildamus said in GOAT:
Did he take HGH/steroids as well or was that a rumour?
from 2007
Late Wednesday, SI.com reported that the name "Evan Fields" appeared on law enforcement documents reviewed by the Web site in connection with the Mobile investigation. SI.com dialed a phone number associated with "Fields" that was listed on one of the documents, and Holyfield answered the call. "Fields" listed birth date in the document -- Oct. 19, 1962 -- also is the same as Holyfield's. According to SI.com, the individual who authorities believe to be Holyfield picked up prescriptions that came from Applied Pharmacy. According to records reviewed by SI.com, Holyfield picked up vials of testosterone, two vials of Glukor (a drug believed to be used during and after steroid cycles) and injection supplies. Less than a week later, according to the document, he picked up five vials of Saizen, a brand of HGH, and related supplies.
Performance enhancing drugs aren’t as much a factor for fighters as one might think. It’s fairly obvious Tyson Fury isn’t on them for example.
Apples and Oranges.
Holyfield was a cruiserweight (so under 200 pounds) who had to put on weight to go up to heavyweight.
Tyson Fury weighed in at 277 pounds for the 3rd Wilder fight.
Absolutely but the point I’m making is they don’t make someone a better fighter. Less of a factor than in other power based or endurance events
Holyfield was a fucken warrior though. Tough as they come