Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Top 10 Greatest Upsets in Sports History

Who doesn’t root for the underdog, unless of course, the underdog is playing your favorite team. America loves an upset and that is why many upsets of become legendary with books being written and films being made to document the amazing feat that is an upset. And while upsets usually involve a team, we have listed some individual upsets that rocked the sporting world as well. Take a moment and relive some of these magical moments, unless you were rooting for the favorite.

10. Jack Fleck Beats Ben Hogan in 1955 U.S. Open

Jack Fleck and Ben Hogan
Jack Fleck and Ben Hogan
From humble beginnings came the man who would pull of the greatest upset in golf history. Jack Fleck was born in Iowa, the son of destitute farmers who would eventually lose their land. He was a caddy, a dentist and an assistant golf pro before joining the Navy and serving in World War II. Shortly after the war, Fleck made the decision to join the PGA Tour on a full-time basis. His first win would come in 1955, as he knocked off the legendary Ben Hogan in a three-hole playoff to win the U.S. Open. It would wind up being just one of three PGA Tour events Fleck would win during his golfing career.

9. Nuggets stun Sonics (1994 NBA Playoffs)


When the Denver Nuggets lost the first two games of their 1994 first-round NBA Playoffs series to the Seattle Supersonics, it looked as though they would be easily tossed aside, like so many #8 seeds before them. After all, they had lost the first two games by an average of 17 points. Yet Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, Dikembe Mutombo and company refused to give up. They won Game 3 by the score of 110-93, Game 4 by a 94-85 margin and Game 5, 98-94, to become the first #8 seed in NBA history to defeat a #1 seed in a playoff series. Some would argue that the Golden State Warriors seven-game upset of the top-seeded Dallas Mavericks in 2007 was the bigger upset, but as the Warriors made their impact immediately and didn’t require a comeback, in this case we think you have to go with the trailblazers.

8. Rulon Gardner beats Alexander Karelin (2000 Olympics)

Entering the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, Australia, Russian Alexander Karelin was a lock to win the gold medal in men’s super heavyweight wrestling. After all, he had won gold in 1988, 1992 and 1996. He had never lost in international competition, and in fact had not even surrendered a point in the last half-decade or so. Then along came American Rulon Gardner, a Wyoming native whose biggest claims to fame coming in had been a junior college national title and a 4th place finish in the NCAA Championship. The two met in the finals, and the impossible happened. Gardner stunned the world, earning a 1-0 victory over the man most experts proclaim the greatest Greco-Roman wrestler of all-time. As big of a surprise as Larry Owings upset of Dan Gable during the 1970 NCAA tournament was, Garner’s victory over Karelin was unquestionably bigger, considering not just the scale of the feat but also the stage on which it was accomplished.

7. Super Bowl III

The third AFL-NFL Championship Game (and the first to officially use the Super Bowl moniker) is undoubtedly best known as the game in which Joe Namath guaranteed victory for his New York Jets. Some may argue that the game and the guarantee may receive too much hype, but it is important to remember that the first two interleague championship contests had been blowouts in favor of the NFL’s Green Bay Packers. The upstart AFL was in trouble, as was the game itself. The Jets entered the game as 18-point underdogs to the Baltimore Colts, so when they made good on Namath’s promise and won the game 16-7, it was not only a tremendous upset but also a very important win for the AFL, helping to secure the eventual merger of the two leagues. Oh, and for the record, despite all the hoopla surrounding the Giants victory over the then-unbeaten Patriots in Super Bowl XLII, they were actually only 12-point underdogs entering the game.

6. N.C. State wins 1983 NCAA Championship


Like college hoops, NCAA football has given us many, many upsets throughout the years, from Centre College’s win over Harvard in 1921 to Notre Dame knocking off Oklahoma and ending the Sooners’ 47-game winning streak in 1957 and beyond. Yet, as impressive as many of these upsets are, the simple fact is that there is one that outshines them all, and that is Appalachian State’s 34-32 upset of the #5 Michigan Wolverines in 2007. By blocking Michigan’s last second field goal attempt, the Mountaineers became the first Division I-AA (FCS) team to ever beat a team ranked in the Associated Press Top 25. Adding to the magnitude of the feat is the fact that the win came at the Big House in Ann Arbor, in front of over 100,000 U of M fans, and that the victims of this historic upset just happened to be the winningest program in college football history. The only reason this amazing accomplishment doesn’t rank even higher on our list is because the Mountaineers, despite being an FCS team, were pretty damn good in their own right. They came into the Michigan game having won 1-AA titles in 2005 and 2006, and they would go on to win a third consecutive FCS national championship in 2007.

4. Buster Douglas K.O.’s Mike Tyson

Forget Cinderella Man. As impressive as James J. Braddock’s win over Max Baer in 1935 was, Braddock was merely a 10-to-1 underdog in that fight, which is nothing compared to the 42-to-1 odds that faced James “Buster” Douglas in his heavyweight title fight against Mike Tyson in 1990. Tyson had been the heavyweight champion of the world for more than two years, and appeared unstoppable. The Douglas fight was supposed to be a tune-up, merely warming “Iron Mike” up for an eventual showdown with Evander Holyfield. Douglas had other plans, however, taking the fight to Tyson early and unlike any opponent the champ had ever faced, dominating the early rounds. Tyson would fire back, knocking Douglas down (but not out) in the eighth. The two continued to battle into the tenth round, when Douglas clocked Tyson and put him down for the count, becoming the undisputed champion of the world in the process.

3.  1969 Miracle Mets

1969 Miracle Mets
1969 Miracle Mets
Since entering the National League in 1962, the New York Mets had never finished above .500 during a season. They had lost 100 games in five of their first seven seasons, and in 1969, they entered the season as 100-to-1 longshots to win the World Series. True to form, they started off 18-23. Then something amazing happened. The Mets won 11 straight games, and finished the season with a 100-62 record. They won the NL East, then swept the Atlanta Braves in the NLCS before stunning the Baltimore Orioles, four games to one, to win the 1969 World Series. It was one of the most dramatic turnarounds in sports history, and the miraculous nature of the upset not only led to the team’s popular moniker, but also prompted New York pitcher Tom Seaver to quip, “God is living in New York City, and He’s a Mets fan.” Yet as impressive as the 1969 Mets were, they aren’t the highest rated “miracle” on our list.

2.  Upset’s upset.

Upset beats Man-O-War
Upset beats Man-O-War
Throughout this list, there have been many titans of sport who have fallen victim to the underdog. But unlike all of those, only one upset is believed to have actually given us the term “upset” to describe the case of a team or athlete overcoming incredible odds to claim victory over a seemingly more gifted opponent. That upset, of course, was Man o’ War’s loss in the 1919 Sanford Memorial to a horse named, what else, Upset. It would be the only loss of Man o’ War’s career, as he would go on to win Horse of the Year honors in 1920 and would later be named the Best Racehorse of the 20th Century by Blood-Horse magazine. But on that day, it was Upset who, as a 100-to-1 underdog, won the day.

1.  The Miracle on Ice


Topping our list of the Top 10 Upsets in Sports History is, what else, the Miracle on Ice – the United States hockey team’s victory over the Soviet Union in the semifinals of the 1980 Winter Olympics. The odds were against the Americans in so many ways. They were a group of untested college and amateur players in a culture that was hardly hockey-centric, and they entered the 1980 Games as the seventh seed amongst 12 teams. The Soviets, meanwhile, were essentially full-time hockey players who had played together for years, and they were representing a country which had produced eight of the last nine gold medalists in the sport. The two countries were rivals in every sense of the word, with the political differences between them serving to further the meeting between the two teams on the ice. And to top it all off, the USSR and USA had already played each other in 1980, with the Americans suffering a 10-3 thrashing in a February exhibition match. If they played 100 times, the Soviet Union probably would have won 99 times. But they only played once, and on that day, the United States was the better team, winning 4-3 in what Sports Illustrated has called the greatest sporting moment of the 20th century. Do you believe in miracles?

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I am a student of MS(CS), and also a computer software engineer and web developer.