Best athlete ever.

Kings vs Jets? If so I was at that game too.

And I believe in 1968 he had a broken rib. So yes, good example both of greatness and the ability to overcome adversity.

ISTM that, as sports develop, the top performers are going to be dominated by people who are freakishly well-adapted to that particular sport. Thus there are going to be fewer and fewer top performers in multiple endeavors as time goes on. Only in closely related sports requiring the same physical attributes, like sprinting and long jump, and not in sports that are highly technical. A hundred years ago Jim Thorpe could do it - nowadays the competition is too fierce.

An argument could be made that someone who was third- or fourth-best in several sports is the greatest athlete nowadays.

Regards,
Shodan

I think Thorpe is the obvious answer.
Dave Winfield is the only athlete ever drafted by four different pro sports leagues (MLB, NFL, NBA and ABA).

I dont see how its fair, to either those athletes of Ruths generation (and beyond) or to those athletes of todays generation, to take the best players of each and try to compare them side by side to determine the “best of all time”. It is apples to oranges to it core.

I mean, Babe Ruth might be the greatest batter and baseball player of all time but we only have the training, nutrition, supplementation, lifestyle, technology and healthcare affects and markers of the early 20th century to apply to Ruth. We can only speculate (pretty meaninglessly) as to how his performance and stats would be buoyed if he had played in todays more sophisticated era where all those markers and affects are much better understood and and manipulated and controlled than in Ruth’s time.

But even that isnt enough. If you transport Ruth and all this potential to a more modern time with more learned, sophisticated means of caring for and getting the most potential out of the human body, well then you’d also have to account for all of his competiton as having much more utilized potential with better outcomes and affects.

In addition to Ambivalid, you need to put the metrics into the context of the time. For example when Babe Ruth hit 60 home runs that was more than any other team. In 2019 a comparable hitter would have to hit over 307 home runs. In juxtaposition, how would the pitching stats of those days compare to modern days where pitchers are expected to pitch a lot less?

Baseball Reference
1927 innings pitched leader-Charlie Root with 309
2019 innings pitched leader-Max Scherzer with 220

Jimmy Jacobs. He was the most dominating four-wall handball player of all time, never losing a match for fourteen years. Those who watched him said he could have dominated in any sport he tried.

Cus D’Amato – one of the top boxing trainers of all time – tried to set him up to face the light-heavyweight champion so he could become the first person to become a champion in his first fight (the deal fell through).

Outside of sports, he had the largest collection of boxing films ever amassed. If you see footage of boxing that wasn’t broadcast on TV, it comes from his collection. And his comic book collection had half a million (at least) issues at his death.

He also made boxing documentaries, three of which were nominated for Academy Awards. As if all that other stuff wasn’t enough.

He may be the coolest person ever.

Kids used to play multiple sports. Now a lot them play the same sport year round ,depending on weather. For example around here kids play indoor soccer when it’s cold. It’s not the same game but they can use many of the same skills. In places that are warm year round like Florida or LA area , they can play the same sport outdoors all year .

Reginald ‘Snowy’ Baker.

He competed in 3 sports at the 1908 Olympic Games - diving, swimming and boxing, for which he earned a silver medal.

At the age of 18 he won the Australian middleweight and heavyweight boxing titles on the same night.

Although his Wikipedia entry notes:

There is obviously no objective answer, as every sport, whether team or individual, is some proportion of pure athletic ability (speed, quickness, jumping ability, reaction time, etc…) and esoteric skill (hitting a baseball/cricket ball, throwing/kicking a football, serving a tennis ball, etc.).

With all those caveats, my answer for male athletes is Lebron James. For female athletes, it’s Serena Williams.

Jim Thorpe, hands down. But if for some reason JT doesn’t take it, it’s gotta be Bo Jackson.

Sorry to bump an old topic, but Herschel Walker was a great athlete, too. He might have been as good as Bo Jackson.

Yeah, he was another guy who was just damned good in so many areas. He was a ridiculously talented running back (and receiver and kick returner), of course, but also:

  • State champion (in high school) and All-American (in college) as a sprinter in track and field
  • Competed in the 1992 Winter Olympics on the U.S. bobsled team
  • Went 2-0 as a mixed martial arts fighter, at age 48
  • Holds a fifth-degree black belt in taekwondo

Walker is also a good cook!

(Okay that’s not an athletic achievement.)

After seeing this gif, maybe it’s Cristiano Ronaldo.

From Napolean Dynamite - def the football uncle who said he could throw a football out to those mountains.

Regarding Bo Jackson:

If that doesn’t make Bo Jackson sound epic, I don’t know what to tell you.

entire interview: https://www.pbs.org/kenburns/baseball/shadowball/oneil.html

He didn’t stick the landing!

I’m going with Bo Jackson.