Greatest athlete of all time: Top 50
القاهرة: «دريم نيوز»
49. Stephanie Gilmore, Surfing
Key achievements: 8x women’s WSL World Tour champion (all-time record), 34x WSL Championship Tour wins
Quite possibly the most unassuming person to feature in any of these lists. Gilmore landed on the pro tour at 17 declaring she was out to win 10 world titles. She then won four consecutive world titles from her rookie season, ending Layne Beachley’s domination of the sport and smiling the whole way. On the same day Queen Elizabeth II died in 2022, Gilmore, 34, claimed her record-breaking eighth title in what was considered virtually impossible circumstances – storming the WSL finals day with five straight winning heats to down fellow great Carissa Moore. – Dan Walsh
More about this GOAT: What happens when a GOAT takes a year off?
48. Erin Phillips, AFL/basketball
Key achievements: 3x AFLW premiership player, 2x league best and fairest, 2x WNBA champion, FIBA world champion
Probably a controversial pick, but her importance to AFLW and establishing the women’s game can’t be understated. After forging a successful international basketball career, Phillips joined AFLW in its first year and immediately stamped herself as one of the premier players in the competition. There were calls to name the best and fairest after her – while she was still playing. – Claire Siracusa
More about this GOAT: ‘If I missed the boat I’d be crying every time I watched:’ Phillips’ sliding doors moment
47. Greg Maddux, Baseball
Key achievements: World Series winner, 4x consecutive Cy Young (pitching) awards
A personal bias here, both for baseball and for control pitchers. Maddux epitomised control and discipline, out-thinking hitters on the mound time after time and excelling without an excess of power or movement. The best statistical measure of his mastery is the fact that on 13 occasions he pitched a complete-game shutout, more than anyone else since pitch count records started to be tracked in 1988. Never wasted a pitch. – Daniel Brettig
More about this GOAT: Greg Maddux: Master on the mound, by Bill Gutman
46. Cameron Smith, NRL
Key achievements: 3x NRL premierships, 11x State of Origin wins, 2x Rugby League World Cup wins, NRL all-time games record (425)
In a game ruled by powerful forwards and speedy backs, Smith worked himself into one of the game’s all-time greats and did so with the “body of an accountant”. Whatever he lacked in athleticism, he made up with durability, leadership and technical mastery. While the salary cap scandal of 2010 stripped two further premierships from Smith’s record, he has always maintained those teams were unfairly punished. – Roy Ward
More about this GOAT: Cameron Smith: The Storm Within, with Andrew Webster
45. Mikaela Shiffrin, Skiing
Key achievements: 2x Olympic gold medallist, 7x world championship gold medallist, 5x World Cup overall winner, 99x World Cup event winner
Shriffin’s incredible numbers do all the talking. The American alpine skier, who competes in the slalom, giant slalom, downhill and Super G races, has been a winning machine for 14 years. Among the many records she has broken, Shriffin has a record seven world championship golds, is the only skiier – male or female – with wins in all six FIS alpine ski World Cup disciplines, and with her 99th win in November, passed Ingemar Stenmark for the most World Cup wins by any alpine skier. – Iain Payten
More about this GOAT: Mikaela Shiffrin: Passion and Purpose, Apple TV
44. Andrew Johns, NRL
Key achievements: 2x NRL premierships, 5x State of Origin wins, 2x Rugby League World Cup wins
One of few half-backs who could win a game while playing behind a beaten forward pack, Johns’ 1997 grand final-winning play with a collapsed lung and his virtuoso 2005 Origin return are among rugby league’s greatest performances. As competitive as they come, Johns revolutionised general kicking during the early 2000s, could belt the game’s best back-rowers in defence and pick apart any opposition. – Dan Walsh
More about this GOAT: Andrew Johns: Flawed genius and half-back of the century
43. Nadia Comaneci, Gymnastics
Key achievements: 5x Olympic gold, first person to score a perfect 10 in gymnastics
Comaneci scored a perfect 10 at the 1976 Olympics. After doing it once, she then scored five more perfect 10s throughout her career. She deserves to be in here because, like Donald Bradman in cricket, her perfect 10 is a byword for excellence, and the reason I rate her ahead of Simone Biles. – Michael Gleeson
More about this GOAT: Nadia Comaneci: The gymnast and the dictator, Roche Productions
42. Larry Bird, Basketball
Key achievements: 3x NBA championships, 3x NBA MVP, 2x finals MVP, Olympic gold medallist, 12-time NBA All Star
This may be a controversial call, and it’s hard to argue against the likes of Michael Jordan, LeBron James, Wilt Chamberlain and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as the greatest basketballers of all time, but Bird is the man I would take as my first pick to build a team around. He engineered the point-forward role, and the Boston Celtics legend and his Los Angeles Lakers counterpart Earvin “Magic” Johnson saved a drug-marred and tape-delayed competition in the 1980s, the genesis for the Jordan and James eras. – Jon Pierik
More about this GOAT: Larry Bird: Drive – The Story of My Life, with Bob Ryan
41. Lauren Jackson, Basketball
Key achievements: 5x Olympic medallist, FIBA Women’s World Cup winner, 2x WNBA championship winner, 3x WNBA MVP, 7x WNBL championship winner
While it’s a golden age for women’s basketball with US stars such as Caitlin Clark and A’Ja Wilson in the WNBA, Jackson’s record still ranks her among the all-time best players. Her recent return to the game in her 40s – and six years and two children after her first retirement – has added to that greatness. She helped the Opals win bronze at the 2022 FIBA Women’s World Cup and Paris 2024. She spent more than a decade playing year-round in the US and Europe or Australia and her ability to deliver despite such an exhausting schedule showed her brilliance. – Roy Ward
More about this GOAT: Lauren Jackson: In her Element, Fox Sports
40. Ellyse Perry, Cricket/Soccer
Key achievements: 6x Twenty20 world champion, 2x ODI world champion, Commonwealth Games gold medallist
Perry is a superstar. Not only is she brilliant with bat and ball, she is one of the most recognisable players in Australian cricket. Oh, and by the way, she played soccer for Australia. Perry was an elite player in two sports – she appeared at the 2011 World Cup and played in the then W-League – until the end of 2015 when she was forced to choose. – Claire Siracusa
More about this GOAT: 16-year-old Ellyse Perry debuts for Australia
39. Richie McCaw, Rugby union
Key achievements: 2x Rugby World Cup winner, 3x World Rugby player of the year, 4x Super Rugby titles, 8x Bledisloe Cup titles
For explosive impact, many will look at Jonah Lomu as rugby’s GOAT. But when it comes to sheer winning, no one matches McCaw. The New Zealand flanker was a constant thorn in Australia’s side. As a leader, he helped the All Blacks overcome a long run of failure at World Cups and steered them to triumph at home in 2011, and then again over the Wallabies in 2015. The GOAT part is best measured by this stat: of his 148 Tests for New Zealand, McCaw only lost 17 Tests. That works out at a career win rate of 89 per cent. – Iain Payten
More about this GOAT: The Real McCaw, the autobiography
38. Leigh Matthews, AFL
Key achievements: 8x Hawthorn best and fairest, 4x VFL premierships (player), 4x AFL premierships (coach), AFL team of the century, AFLPA MVP award named in his honour.
Four premierships as a player, four more as a coach, eight Hawthorn best and fairests in a strong Hawks era, even a Coleman Medal, and 91 goals in another season, all as an onballer. Matthews’ physical style was of its time, and he admits he would be suspended more often now, but a man can only live in his time. He reigned in his. – Greg Baum
More about this GOAT: Why placid men do brutal things on the football field
37. Sachin Tendulkar, Cricket
Key achievements: 200 Tests, 15,921 Test runs at 53.8, 51 centuries.
Bradman gave the little master the highest praise, saying Tendulkar’s batting reminded him of himself. From his teenage years, to well into middle age, the Indian star was a commanding presence in the middle and a figure of immense, almost god-like, acclaim in his home country. His rise mirrored India’s emergence as a superpower in world cricket. – Roy Ward
More about this GOAT: Bradman and Tendulkar, ABC iView
36. Ronnie O’Sullivan, Snooker
Key achievements: 23x Triple Crown titles, 7x world championships
With rock-star rebel looks and a cool sneer, O’Sullivan kept crowds spellbound as he was part sportsperson and part magician around a snooker table. He has a record-equalling seven world championships and was the first player to make 1000 century breaks as a professional, having become one at the age of 16. His father spent time in jail for murder but O’Sullivan battled through the drama to be liked by peers and loved by fans, a sporting artist. – Peter Ryan
More about this GOAT: Running: Ronnie O’Sullivan (autobiography)
35. Kaylee McKeown, Swimming
Key achievements: Five Olympic gold medals, one silver, three bronze
Australia isn’t short on swimming greats, but for me McKeown, Australia’s double-double champion, is at the top of the list. Not only did she make history in Paris when she defended both her 100-metre and 200m backstroke gold medals, but she also became the first Australian athlete to win four individual Olympic gold medals. – Billie Eder
More about this GOAT: She’s poised to break Thorpe’s world record: Mum says she deserves more recognition
34. Jesse Owens, Athletics
Key achievements: Gold medals in 100m, 200m, long jump and 4x100m relay at the 1936 Berlin Games
Decades before Carl Lewis and Usain Bolt, there was Owens, who won the Lewis treble at the Olympics, including the long jump. He broke three world records and tied a fourth in 45 minutes at a track meeting in Ann Arbor, Michigan. His long jump record stood for 25 years, and his times were remarkable given the less advanced training and technology. Owens’ astounding victories in Berlin demolished Hitler’s Aryan supremacist propaganda. – Jake Niall
More about this GOAT: Race, Netflix
33. Eddy Merckx, Cycling
Key achievements: 5x Tour de France winner, 5x Giro d’Italia winner, Vuelta a Espana winner, winner of all five Monuments, 3x world champion
“The race is won by the rider who can suffer the most.” Belgian Merckx dominated the roads, and cobblestones, of Europe, through the late 1960s into the early 1970s. Nicknamed “the Cannibal” for the way he devoured the opposition, he said he never had a strategy, but simply attacked. Was disqualified three times during his career for testing positive to a banned substance. – Danny Russell
More about this GOAT: Half Man, Half Bike: The Life of Eddy Merckx, Cycling’s Greatest Champion, by William Fotheringham
32. Wayne Carey, AFL
Key achievements: 2x AFL premiership captain, 2x Leigh Matthews Trophy winner, 7x All-Australian
In an era dominated by forwards out of the goal square, the North Melbourne champion was a decade-long match-winner at centre half-forward, the toughest position on the field. Though his tally of 727 goals was well short of Tony Lockett, Jason Dunstall and Gary Ablett, he played higher up the ground and was the centrepiece of Denis Pagan’s successful game plan. Carey’s standing in the game, and Australian sport, is tarred by his offences against women, and the extramarital affair he had with the wife of a teammate, which ended his club’s golden era. – Andrew Wu
More about this GOAT: The Truth Hurts, by Wayne Carey with Charles Happell
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31. Tom Brady, NFL
Key achievements: 7x Super Bowl champion, 5x Super Bowl MVP
While the NFL largely remains US-centric, Brady’s statistical record, longevity and appointment-viewing reputation makes him a global phenomenon. He is the greatest NFL player of all time, having won six championships with the New England Patriots, one with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and numerous individual awards across 23 seasons. He was also centre stage in one of the sport’s greatest games – Super Bowl LI against the Atlanta Falcons, when the Patriots surged from a 28-3 deficit to win 34-28 in overtime. – Jon Pierik
More about this GOAT: The Roast of Tom Brady, Netflix
30. Bill Russell, Basketball
Key Achievements: 11x NBA championships (player), 2x NBA championships (coach), 5x NBA MVP, US Presidential Medal of Freedom, 12x NBA All-Star, Olympic gold medallist
Russell was a groundbreaking player in the NBA in the 1960s and remains the standard for leadership, success and perseverance. He led the Celtics to 11 NBA championships and became the NBA’s first African-American coach when he took over the Celtics in 1966 as player-coach, and the first to win a championship in 1968. His athleticism and strength was rarely matched while his rivalry with Wilt Chamberlain became the stuff of legend. Russell campaigned against racism and was an active part of the civil rights movement. – Roy Ward
More about this GOAT: Second Wind: Memoirs of an Opinionated Man, by Bill Russell and Taylor Branch
29. Edwin Moses, Athletics
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Key achievements: 2x Olympic gold medallist, 2x world championship gold
It takes something special to remain unbeaten for a decade on the world stage, but that’s what legendary American athlete Moses managed in the 400m hurdles between 1977 and 1987. In an incredible stretch, Moses won two gold medals in 1976 and 1984 – and was denied a certain third by the US boycott of the 1980 Moscow Games. By the time American Danny Harris finally beat Moses in 1987, Moses had won 122 consecutive races, set multiple world records, won three World Cup titles, a world championship gold and two Olympic golds. – Iain Payten
More about this GOAT: He’s hurdled into history
28. Steffi Graf, Tennis
Key achievements: 7xWimbledon titles, 6x French Open titles, 5x US Open titles, 4x Australian Open titles, Olympic gold medallist
The German superstar won each grand slam at least four times before retiring aged 30 when ranked No.3 in the world. She completed the golden slam, winning all four grand slam singles titles in a calendar year, plus Olympic gold, in 1988. So dominant was Graf that she added three more single titles in ’89, missing out only in Paris. Graf’s booming forehand, and battles with Monica Seles and Martina Navratilova, were must-watch. – Jon Pierik
More about this GOAT: How Steffi Graf became tennis’ first golden slam winner
27. Babe Ruth, Baseball
Key achievements: 7x World Series champion, 12x American league home run champion, MLB All-Time team, MBL All-Century team, inaugural MLB Hall of Fame
Whether baseball is still the great American pastime, Ruth is the single greatest figure to bestride it (with apologies to Joe DiMaggio). First with the Boston Red Sox, then the New York Yankees, he won seven World Series, hitting at .342 over a lifetime. He was a decent pitcher, too, but gave it away because he wanted to play every day. More than all this, he became the sort of figure that transcended sport and nestled into popular culture, way beyond the shores he never left to play. – Greg Baum
More about this GOAT: Babe Ruth official website
26. Marta, Soccer
Key achievements: 6x FIFA world player of the year, 3x Olympic silver medallist, FIFA World Cup runner-up
Marta is arguably the greatest women’s soccer player ever. She was the first player, man or woman, to score at five FIFA World Cups – and was the first to score at five consecutive Olympics. Her 119 international goals make her Brazil’s top scorer. Her professional career started in 2000; she’s still playing. – Claire Siracusa
More about this GOAT: Superstar, trailblazer, icon: The legacy of Brazil’s Marta
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25. Jahangir Khan, Squash
Key achievements: 6x world championship winner, 10x British Open winner
If you’re looking for an athlete who was considered unbeatable in his time, look no further than Pakistan squash great Khan in the 1980s. During a run in which he won five of his six world championships, Khan was so dominant he won 555 consecutive matches over a five-year stretch from 1981 to 1986 – and it’s in the Guinness World Records as the longest ever winning streak. Khan’s only competitor for sheer dominance is Australian Heather McKay, who is considered the best-ever female squash player. McKay only lost twice in a 20-year career, and won a record 16 British Opens. – Iain Payten
More about this GOAT: Untold story of Jahangir Khan, YouTube
24. Hulk Hogan, Wrestling
Key achievements: 12x world champion for WWE and WCW, back-to-back Royal Rumble titles (1990-91), WWF champion for 1474 days
There weren’t many athletes more famous around the world in the 1980s. With his giant frame and blond hair, Hogan was the main star as wrestling exploded into one of the biggest things in US – and global – culture. Tens of millions watched wrestling on TV, and a billion-dollar industry grew around it. “But is it sport?” I hear you ask. Hogan was on the cover of Sports Illustrated in 1985, so that clears up that question, thank you very much. – Iain Payten
More about this GOAT: Hulk Hogan: My life outside the ring
23. LeBron James, Basketball
Key achievements: 4x NBA champion, 4x finals MVP, 4x NBA MVP, 20x NBA All-Star, 3x Olympic gold medallist
James has done it all, and he’s not even finished yet. He has more than 40,500 NBA career points (and counting), is in his 22nd season in the NBA and has four NBA championship titles. Add his three Olympic gold medals to that and the fact that at 39 he’s still one of the best in the NBA, and he is easily eligible to be named one of the greatest athletes of all time. – Billie Eder
More about this GOAT: Starting 5, Netflix
22. Lewis Hamilton, F1
Key achievements: 7x world champion (105 wins, 202 podiums), knighted in 2021
A seven-time world champion whose father worked four jobs to give him a chance in karting, Hamilton has certainly made the hard work worth the while. He has the equal-most Formula 1 championships alongside the great Michael Schumacher, and with a move to Ferrari in 2025, it’s not out of the question for the 39-year-old to win at least one more title before he calls time on his career. – Billie Eder
More about this GOAT: Drive to Survive, Netflix
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21. Winx, Racing
Key achievements: 4x Australian Horse of the Year, World’s Best Racehorse (2018), 4x Cox Plate winner, 25x group 1 winner
If Bradman is defined by 99.94, then for Winx it’s four and 33, the number of Cox Plate victories and consecutive wins to finish her career. Racing may not hold the place in Australian life that it used to, but few things in sport unite the country more than a champion horse. She brought the masses back to the track, introducing a new generation to the sport of kings. They could race for another 100 years, and we’ll never see one like her again. The best thing about Winx? She never disappointed on the track, or let down fans with poor off-field behaviour. – Andrew Wu
More about this GOAT: The full story of the world’s best racehorse, by Andrew Rule
20. Eliud Kipchoge, Athletics
Key achievements: 3x Olympic gold medals, 11x World Marathon major winner
They don’t come much GOATier than Kipchoge. The slender Kenyan is considered the greatest marathon runner for a number of reasons, including back-to-back Olympic golds in 2016 and 2020 and 11 major marathon wins – not to mentioned he broke the world record twice, in 2018 and 2022. Between 2013 and 2023, he won a staggering 16 of 19 marathons he entered. But his most incredible feat was becoming the first man to run under two hours for the 42.195-kilometre event, in 2019. It wasn’t a world record because it was set up with pacers and a closed field, but still – a man ran under two hours for a marathon. Incredible. – Iain Payten
More about this GOAT: Kipchoge: The Last Milestone, Stan
19. Shohei Ohtani, Baseball
Key achievements: 4x MLB All-Star, 3x MLB league MVP, World Series winner, World Baseball Classic MVP, World Baseball Classic winner
Ohtani pitches to an exceptional level – not unusual. What is unusual is that he is also an exceptional batter. He’s a superstar in the US and his native Japan; Major League Baseball was so keen to keep him in the line-up, it changed its own rules. This past season, a serious arm injury kept him from being able to pitch. No matter – he became the first and only player in MLB history to hit 50 home runs and steal 50 bases in a single season (base stealing had never been a strength), was named MVP of the National league and won the World Series. – Claire Siracusa
More about this GOAT: Greatest game ever, YouTube
18. Carl Lewis, Athletics
Key achievements: 9x Olympic gold medals, 10x world championship medals
Lewis, with his infectious smile, flat-top hairstyle and poise, was international athletics through the 1980s and early ’90s, breaking records at will. Long before social media, the star sprinter and long jumper was a household name worldwide, his last Olympic gold coming in the long jump of the ’96 Olympics. That he was named the world athlete of the 20th century by the International Association of Athletics Federations told the tale. – Jon Pierik
More about this GOAT: Inside Track: Carl Lewis, with Jeffrey Marx.
17. Kelly Slater, Surfing
Key achievements:11x men’s World Surf League champion (record), 56x WSL Championship Tour wins, 2x X-Games gold medals
The single most recognisable figure with wax beneath their feet, Slater’s world title haul is streets ahead of the next best in men’s surfing history;so too his 56 tour event wins. Slater redefined competitive surfing when it exploded in the 1990s. He was the youngest men’s world champion in history (age 20 in 1992) and oldest (39 in 2011) and only just retired, memorably claiming the 2022 Pipeline Masters a week before his 50th birthday. – Dan Walsh
More about the GOAT: Jack Johnson’s early surf films Thicker than Water (2000) and The September Sessions (2002)
16. Jack Nicklaus, Golf
Key achievements: 18x major titles (6x US Masters, 5x PGA Championship, 4x US Open, 3x British Open), 73x PGA Tour event wins, 19x runner-up in majors
Tiger Woods (15 majors) might have eclipsed the “Golden Bear” if not for his meteoric fall, but he didn’t go the distance. Nicklaus’ 19 second-placings in majors means he finished top two in those defining events 37 times and, lest Australians forget, he stormed to victory in 1986 when Greg Norman faltered at Augusta on the back nine. – Jake Niall
More about this GOAT: Jack Nicklaus, Simply the Best, by Dan Jenkins, Martin Davis, Dave Anderson
15. Billie Jean King, Tennis
Key achievements: 39x grand slam titles (singles, doubles, mixed doubles), first female athlete to win $100,000 in a single season, Battle of the Sexes winner
It’s scary to think what tennis would be like for women without King. It’s not just the 39 grand slam titles across singles, doubles and mixed doubles that make her great – she established the first women’s professional circuit, and created the Women’s Tennis Association when men wanted to keep women out of the sport. She was also the first female athlete to earn more than $100,000 in a single season, and she defeated Bobby Riggs in the battle of the sexes. – Billie Eder
More about this GOAT: The Battle of the Sexes, Disney+
14. Diego Maradona, Soccer
Key achievements: 1986 World Cup winner, scorer of the legendary “Goal of the Century”, body to which the “Hand of God” belongs, first player to set world transfer fee record twice, Napoli icon
An alien who comes from the same planet as Lionel Messi. Maradona was simply brilliant on the pitch, his unique talents taking him to a previously unreached level of global celebrity; that might be what killed him. – Vince Rugari
More about this GOAT: Diego Maradona, Prime Video/Stan
13. Novak Djokovic, Tennis
Key achievements: Record 24 grand slam singles titles, most weeks at No.1, Olympic gold
The common call about Djokovic once he won the gold medal match over Carlos Alcaraz at the Paris Olympics was that he had “completed” tennis. The super Serb rewrote the record books during the famed “Big Three” era, and will end his career with every major title and a superior head-to-head record with rivals Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. – Marc McGowan
More about this GOAT: Serve to Win, by Novak Djokovic
12. Pele, Soccer
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Key achievements: 3x FIFA World Cup winner, 5x Ballon d’Or winner, IOC athlete of the century 1999, footballer of the century 1999, 1281 goals in 1363 games
Michel Platini once said: “To play like Pele is to play like God.” The Brazilian was one of the first true worldwide superstars, bursting onto the scene at 16 in the 1958 World Cup and scoring two goals in the final. His tearful celebration was unforgettable. Pele’s goals and dribbles were legendary, as was his love of scoring on the biggest stages. He was also the star of the 1970 Brazil team many rank as the best of all time. He took soccer to America by joining New York Cosmos in the 1970s and remained a celebrated figure in the game right up to his death in 2022. – Roy Ward
More about this GOAT: Pele: The autobiography
11. Shane Warne, Cricket
Key achievements: 145 Tests, 708 wickets
Warne makes the list for mastering one of the toughest skills in any sport – over-the-wrist slow bowling – and as the totem of arguably the greatest cricket side to play the game. It’s no overstatement to say that cricket might not be in its current state of health without Warne, who by popularising spin bowling changed cricket’s trajectory and also helped lay the ground for the current dominance of India – the spin capital of the world. – Daniel Brettig
More about this GOAT: On Warne, by Gideon Haigh
10. Michael Phelps, Swimming
Achievements: 28 Olympic medals including 23 gold
Superhuman in the pool across five Olympics in the disciplines of freestyle, butterfly and individual medleys, his battles with fellow greats Ian Thorpe and Pieter van den Hoogenband were titanic. He eclipsed Mark Spitz’s record for individual gold medals at a single Games with eight at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Phelps proved himself to be a mere mortal out of the water after those Games when photographed smoking a bong. He later admitted to struggling with depression throughout his career. – Danny Russell
More about this GOAT: There is still chlorine in Michael Phelps’ soul
9. Simone Biles, Gymnastics
Key achievements: 7x Olympic gold medals, 23x world championship medals, 5x eponymous skills
Biles is the most decorated Olympic gymnast in history, with 11 medals, seven of them gold. She has elements named after her on three different apparatuses – vault, beam and floor. The most difficult in each of those apparatuses are hers. She’s incredible to watch. But what we saw from her at Tokyo 2020, where she battled “the twisties” and mental health issues, was equally impressive. – Claire Siracusa
More about this GOAT: Simone Biles’ greatest act: choosing herself
8. Tiger Woods, Golf
Key achievements: 15 major wins, PGA player of the year 11 times, 281 consecutive weeks as world No.1 and 683 weeks at top of the rankings.
Nicklaus might have won more majors, but Tiger transformed golf. He hit the conservative, anglo-centric sport like a meteorite, challenging perceptions of who should be good at golf. The steely eyed Tiger appeared destined to pass Nicklaus’ record of 18 majors before his personal life unravelled and then injury hit. The sight of him celebrating a tournament win with one leg aloft, a putter whirling in the breeze and the other fist clenched while crowds stood with mobile phones above their heads to capture the moment showed what sport can deliver. – Peter Ryan
More about this GOAT: Tiger Woods, by Jeff Benedict, Armen Keteyian
7. Roger Federer, Tennis
Key achievements: 20x grand slam titles
The king of Wimbledon has to be on this list. Federer, a 20-time grand slam singles champion with the best one-handed backhand tennis has ever seen, was the first of the “big three” to emerge. He spent a combined 310 weeks as the world No.1 and has the most men’s singles Wimbledon titles in the open era with eight, only bettered by the nine won by Navratilova. – Billie Eder
More about this GOAT: Strokes of Genius, Disney+
6. Lionel Messi, Soccer
Key achievements: 7x Ballons d’Or, 40+ team trophies, 2022 World Cup winner, all-time top scorer for Barcelona and Argentina
The best player in the history of the world’s most popular sport. Find a map of the world, throw a dart and pick a random location – I guarantee there will be people there who idolise Messi. That, alone, is incredible. Then layer on top of that his achievements in soccer, and their impact … I can’t believe this is a debate. – Vince Rugari
More about this GOAT: The greatest final ever? YouTube
5. Muhammad Ali, Boxing
Key achievements: Olympic gold medallist, 3x world heavyweight title winner, 19x title defences. Record of 63 fights for 57 wins (37 knockouts)
Ali’s self-description as “the Greatest” was part bombast and theatre, but he nonetheless stands as boxing’s premier heavyweight practitioner. He went far beyond mere boxer, of course, as a conscientious objector to the Vietnam War, a civil rights and cultural icon who transcended the boundaries of the ring. His 1970s title fights with Joe Frazier and George Foreman have attained mythological stature, and ensured his. – Jake Niall
More about this GOAT: When We Were Kings
4. Don Bradman, Cricket
Key achievements: 6996 Test runs at 99.94, 29 centuries, highest score 334. As captain, won all four contested series against England and India, including the undefeated 1948 “Invincibles” tour
Simply, in sports of comparable scale, no one sits further above their peers than Bradman does above all other cricketers. His average is a byword, 99.94, a postcode, once even the answer to a question on a citizenship test. It’s more than 30 runs an innings better than anyone else. Woods wins – or used to – at roughly twice the rate of any other golfer. But contemplation of sporting greatness has to be in the round, and Woods has soiled his own nest in a way that Bradman did not. Others were even more indomitable, but in lower profile sports. They were Bradmanesque, but they were not Bradman. – Greg Baum
More about this GOAT: Hero of another age passes into the shadows
3. Serena Williams, Tennis
Key achievements: 23x grand slam titles, 319 weeks as world No.1
Interviewing Serena, as I did once, felt like being granted an audience with a queen. Her imperious and sometimes stormy rule over women’s tennis stretched two decades and while Margaret Court clung to that record of 24 grand slam singles titles, there’s no question that Williams ruled the court and Court, eclipsing Graf (and Venus), too. A game-changer for her sport, who – despite bouts of gracelessness – you couldn’t stop watching. – Jake Niall
More about this GOAT: The Serena Rules: She does it her way
2. Usain Bolt, Athletics
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Key achievements: World record holder in 100m (9.58s) and 200m (19.19s), 8x Olympic gold, 11x world championship gold
The fastest man ever. Bolt is the world record holder in the 100m and 200m, won eight Olympic golds, 11 world championship golds. And he did it beating drug cheats (umpteen competitors received drug bans in his time). Clean and brilliant. – Michael Gleeson
More about this GOAT: I am Bolt, Stan
1. Michael Jordan, Basketball
Key achievements: 6x NBA champion, 5x NBA MVP, 6x NBA finals MVP, 14x NBA All-Star, Olympic gold medallist
Dominant and domineering, Jordan’s supremacy in a team sport played across the globe was extraordinary and transformed not only basketball but professional sport, especially the marketing of it. The documentary on Jordan and the Bulls, The Last Dance, reveals a man whose genetic athletic endowment was more than matched by an obnoxious level of competitive drive. – Jake Niall
More about this GOAT: The Last Dance, Netflix.
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