SteamRoller67 Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 Bo was hurt the previous week, not in Buffalo. He does however, get my vote for best pro athlete. Deion was a horrific tackler and an average, at best, baseball player. Bo excelled in both sports. Bo gets my vote as well. I still haven't seen that combo of power and speed 20 years later.
Tcali Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 I would have to say Deion Sanders. I mean the guy did it all. He Played 10 seasons in MLB and 11 years in the NFL ( I may be aff by a year or two in both categories) He is the only player to not only play in a World Series and a Super Bowl, but to also hit a home run in MLB and score an NFL touchdown in the same week. In college, Sanders played football, baseball and track. On one occasion, on a day with a double header baseball game he played the first game, then went and competed in the schools 4x100 relay and then returned to play the second baseball game! I don't think there is another athlete that comes close. He also "allegedly" ran a 4.16 40 yard dash. Also, remember the Pizza Hut commercial where he responds to Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones questions ("Football or baseball?" and "Offense or defense?") with "both!!" I am interested in everyones take on this. OJ was great at most sports...as was Jim Brown.
Tcali Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 In there perspective sports you could go with folks like Micheal Jordon, Tiger Woods, Babe Ruth, Wayne Gretzky, Muhammed Ali, Jim Brown, or Jerry Rice, I mean are we talking best all around athletic ability or versatility? Can we say Dion Sanders or Bo Jackson is a better all around athlete then Michael Jordon? Tiger Woods?? I nominate Rick Musialowski.-Who I think was a superior athlete.At least a bowling ball weighs 16 LBs.
Bill from NYC Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 Mickey Mantle deserves some mention. The man hit a dead ball 564 feet with no steroids, and he was the fastest man in MLB from home to first. He was offered a scholarship to play football at Oklahome U, and did play some basketball in HS. Realistically, he was probably a step below Chamberlain and perhaps Bo, but Mantle was still superb.
R. Rich Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 Hmm. Some very interesting responses in here. I was glad to see Wilt Chamberlain get mentioned. He was known for his basketball prowess, but he also was a very fast and incredibly strong athlete. Meadowlark Lemmon once said of how Chamberlain, when he was playing w/ the Harlem Globetrotters, could throw him up in the air and catch him. Lemon was 'bout 210 @ the time. Wow. Here's my short list (haha, yeah right): Olympians Jim Thorpe Rafer Johnson Jesse Owens Carl Lewis Babe Didrickson Zaharias Jackie Joyner Kersee Wilma Rudolph Football Jim Brown Tony Gonzalez Deion Sanders Bo Jackson Baseball Willie Mays Roberto Clemente James Bell Basketball Wilt Chamberlain Michael Jordan Kobe Bryant Hakeem Olajuwon Other Sports Tiger Woods Bjorn Borg Michael Chang Roger Federer Muhammad Ali Sugar Ray Robinson
C.Biscuit97 Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 Of current athletes, it is hard to beat Carl Crawford of the Tampa Rays. He's an all star baseball player, offered a scholarship to play point guard at UCLA, and scholarship offers to Nebraska, Oklahoma, USC, Florida, etc. to be an option Quarterback. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Crawford That's a hell of a resume.
GOBILLS78 Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 Mickey Mantle deserves some mention. The man hit a dead ball 564 feet with no steroids, and he was the fastest man in MLB from home to first. He was offered a scholarship to play football at Oklahome U, and did play some basketball in HS. Realistically, he was probably a step below Chamberlain and perhaps Bo, but Mantle was still superb. Although you're probably right, I'll just play devil's advocate: There are documented cases of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball all the way back to the 1880s, like the infamous Pud Gavin's.
The Dean Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 Hmm. Some very interesting responses in here. I was glad to see Wilt Chamberlain get mentioned. He was known for his basketball prowess, but he also was a very fast and incredibly strong athlete. Meadowlark Lemmon once said of how Chamberlain, when he was playing w/ the Harlem Globetrotters, could throw him up in the air and catch him. Lemon was 'bout 210 @ the time. Wow. Here's my short list (haha, yeah right): Olympians Jim Thorpe Rafer Johnson Jesse Owens Carl Lewis Babe Didrickson Zaharias Jackie Joyner Kersee Wilma Rudolph Football Jim Brown Tony Gonzalez Deion Sanders Bo Jackson Baseball Willie Mays Roberto Clemente James Bell Basketball Wilt Chamberlain Michael Jordan Kobe Bryant Hakeem Olajuwon Other Sports Tiger Woods Bjorn Borg Michael Chang Roger Federer Muhammad Ali Sugar Ray Robinson Nice to see Clemente make your list, Rich.
Shamrock Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 Hmm. Some very interesting responses in here. I was glad to see Wilt Chamberlain get mentioned. He was known for his basketball prowess, but he also was a very fast and incredibly strong athlete. Meadowlark Lemmon once said of how Chamberlain, when he was playing w/ the Harlem Globetrotters, could throw him up in the air and catch him. Lemon was 'bout 210 @ the time. Wow. Here's my short list (haha, yeah right): Olympians Jim Thorpe Rafer Johnson Jesse Owens Carl Lewis Babe Didrickson Zaharias Jackie Joyner Kersee Wilma Rudolph Football Jim Brown Tony Gonzalez Deion Sanders Bo Jackson Baseball Willie Mays Roberto Clemente James Bell Basketball Wilt Chamberlain Michael Jordan Kobe Bryant Hakeem Olajuwon Other Sports Tiger Woods Bjorn Borg Michael Chang Roger Federer Muhammad Ali Sugar Ray Robinson Kelly Slater... introduced surfing "outside" of the typical wave zone... Olympic Lifting- Dave Rigert formally the USSR
Tcali Posted June 15, 2009 Posted June 15, 2009 Hmm. Some very interesting responses in here. I was glad to see Wilt Chamberlain get mentioned. He was known for his basketball prowess, but he also was a very fast and incredibly strong athlete. Meadowlark Lemmon once said of how Chamberlain, when he was playing w/ the Harlem Globetrotters, could throw him up in the air and catch him. Lemon was 'bout 210 @ the time. Wow. Here's my short list (haha, yeah right): Olympians Jim Thorpe Rafer Johnson Jesse Owens Carl Lewis Babe Didrickson Zaharias Jackie Joyner Kersee Wilma Rudolph Football Jim Brown Tony Gonzalez Deion Sanders Bo Jackson Baseball Willie Mays Roberto Clemente James Bell Basketball Wilt Chamberlain Michael Jordan Kobe Bryant Hakeem Olajuwon Other Sports Tiger Woods Bjorn Borg Michael Chang Roger Federer Muhammad Ali Sugar Ray Robinson Michael Chang? Tiger Woods??-Michael Jordan never lost a one on one basketball game to a fat guy with man boobs.
R. Rich Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 Michael Chang? Yes. Watching the guy chase shots all over the court @ the French Open was awesome. Rarely have I seen that kinda hustle in a tennis match. Tiger Woods??-Michael Jordan never lost a one on one basketball game to a fat guy with man boobs. To the best of my knowledge, Jordan never won THE major golf title on a broken leg, either.
manateefan Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 Dave Winfield drafted in three sports. Randy Smith who excelled in basketball, soccer and track. John Elway was drafted in two sports (football and baseball) Since I have to choose I will chose Jim Thorpe. He excelled in so much and he got screwed.
Tcali Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 Yes. Watching the guy chase shots all over the court @ the French Open was awesome. Rarely have I seen that kinda hustle in a tennis match. To the best of my knowledge, Jordan never won THE major golf title on a broken leg, either. the fact that he won a golf title with a broken leg proves that golf isnt a sport. And NO Duffy Waldorf never beat Michael Jordan one on one.
billsfan89 Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 Hmm. Some very interesting responses in here. I was glad to see Wilt Chamberlain get mentioned. He was known for his basketball prowess, but he also was a very fast and incredibly strong athlete. Meadowlark Lemmon once said of how Chamberlain, when he was playing w/ the Harlem Globetrotters, could throw him up in the air and catch him. Lemon was 'bout 210 @ the time. Wow. Here's my short list (haha, yeah right): Olympians Jim Thorpe Rafer Johnson Jesse Owens Carl Lewis Babe Didrickson Zaharias Jackie Joyner Kersee Wilma Rudolph Football Jim Brown Tony Gonzalez Deion Sanders Bo Jackson Baseball Willie Mays Roberto Clemente James Bell Basketball Wilt Chamberlain Michael Jordan Kobe Bryant Hakeem Olajuwon Other Sports Tiger Woods Bjorn Borg Michael Chang Roger Federer Muhammad Ali Sugar Ray Robinson Golf is not a sport. Hitting a stationary ball with no one at all even in the form of noise interfering isn't a sport. OH BUT ITS ON ESPN yeah well so is Poker and Dominoes. OH BUT YOU CAN'T DO WHAT THEY DO I WANT YOU SEE YOU DO IT well I can't juggle does that make juggling a sport? Comparing Tiger Woods to Michael Jordan, Wayne Gretzky, Martian Brodeur, Hank Arron, or any great NFL player is insulting them.
Tcali Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 Golf is not a sport. Hitting a stationary ball with no one at all even in the form of noise interfering isn't a sport. OH BUT ITS ON ESPN yeah well so is Poker and Dominoes. OH BUT YOU CAN'T DO WHAT THEY DO I WANT YOU SEE YOU DO IT well I can't juggle does that make juggling a sport? Comparing Tiger Woods to Michael Jordan, Wayne Gretzky, Martian Brodeur, Hank Arron, or any great NFL player is insulting them. hear hear....-a great skill..like bowling(altho requiring less exertion) or darts or skeet shooting or shuffleboard
PushthePile Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 Golf is not a sport. Hitting a stationary ball with no one at all even in the form of noise interfering isn't a sport. OH BUT ITS ON ESPN yeah well so is Poker and Dominoes. OH BUT YOU CAN'T DO WHAT THEY DO I WANT YOU SEE YOU DO IT well I can't juggle does that make juggling a sport? Comparing Tiger Woods to Michael Jordan, Wayne Gretzky, Martian Brodeur, Hank Arron, or any great NFL player is insulting them. LMAO, how about we compare Tiger Woods to David Wells, Langston Walker, and Shawn Bradley. Golf is a sport. You don't have to be a great athlete to play or even in great condition, but it certainly helps. Much like baseball, the game revolves around having great eye hand coordination and concentration. I understand your argument but I think it's just a different kind of sport.
SageAgainstTheMachine Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 Golf is not a sport. Hitting a stationary ball with no one at all even in the form of noise interfering isn't a sport. OH BUT ITS ON ESPN yeah well so is Poker and Dominoes. OH BUT YOU CAN'T DO WHAT THEY DO I WANT YOU SEE YOU DO IT well I can't juggle does that make juggling a sport? Comparing Tiger Woods to Michael Jordan, Wayne Gretzky, Martian Brodeur, Hank Arron, or any great NFL player is insulting them. You go around calling it "not a sport", and then you don't even bother to state your definition of "sport". My definition is any physical activity governed by a specific set of rules or customs and engaged in competitively. By my definition, golf is a sport. What's your definition?
Tcali Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 LMAO, how about we compare Tiger Woods to David Wells, Langston Walker, and Shawn Bradley. Golf is a sport. You don't have to be a great athlete to play or even in great condition, but it certainly helps. Much like baseball, the game revolves around having great eye hand coordination and concentration. I understand your argument but I think it's just a different kind of sport. then darts and shuffleboard and curling are sports...as long as we have defined our terms
SageAgainstTheMachine Posted June 16, 2009 Posted June 16, 2009 then darts and shuffleboard and curling are sports...as long as we have defined our terms Sure, why wouldn't they be?
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