Some good pictures here - mostly better ones selected by us than the original list.
Below is my favourite. It’s actually a detail from a bigger picture that I can’t currently find online but the key compositional points are all intact.
For context, this was the final of the Rugby World Cup in 2003. England and Australia are tied at 17-17 in the final minute of extra time. England have engineered their way into a position where one sweetly struck drop goal through the posts will win them the tournament.
The photo is brilliant IMO as it captures so much: the open mouthed horror on George Gregan’s face as he attempts a charge down and knows he’s not going to get there to stop it, the fact that everyone is looking at Wilkinson - knowing that the game hinges on this one moment (even the guy on the floor whose head is obscured by an ankle is looking in Wilkinson’s direction), the purse-lipped concentration on Wilkinson’s face before he’s even struck it.
It’s just superb - illustrating how all the stakes can come down to one man and one moment and sometimes, even those most directly involved, just have to watch.
A favorite of mine: Mike Tyson, at age 19, whupping the tar out of Marvis Frazier. Including the count, the fight lasted 30 seconds. Tyson-Frazier. Talk about a picture taken at just the right moment…
Peter Norman, the Australian athlete in #25 has just been given a formal apology by the Commonwealth Government for being crapped on for years & forced out of the sport.
Doesn’t it seem excessive to have 2 out of 30 photos of the same exact event? Admittedly, one is a long-distance photo and the other a relatively closeup shot but two photos of the same damn thing? Was the compiler a Pittsburgh Pirates fan, or what?
It’s hard to pick which picture of Tom Watson sinking the chip at 17 to help him win the 1982 U.S. Open, so I settled on this one. The shot was declared by ESPN to be the #1 shot in the history of golf, fwiw. I wouldn’t go that far----Sarazen’s double eagle at 15 during the final round of the 1935 Masters is my choice—but it’s certainly an iconic golf shot. And a lot easier to get a picture of.
I get weary of people crapping on lists, but man, this one looks like it was cobbled together in ten minutes.
As previously stated, very few of these are actually great photographs; most are simply photos of significant sports events. Many are very ordinary (Messier smiling and holding the Stanley Cup? There are dozens of similar shots taken every June).
I would put the Ali shot at number two behind the Bobby Orr photo, which will always be my sentimental favorite.
mmm
That was in the 2002 World Series, still a painful memory for us Giants fans.
That wasn’t the bat boy, that was Darren Baker, son of Giants manager Dusty Baker. I believe after this play that MLB came out with a rule on the min age for kids allowed on the field, but I don’t have a cite.
Yes, it’s better suited to video. In the picture in this article, we see JT grabbing little Darren, with years-later-to-be-SF-Giants-catcher Bengie Molina with outstretched right hand, shooing away Darren Baker while hoping there isn’t a throw to the plate at that moment, the umpire also hoping we don’t have a play at the plate, and that looks like Rich Aurilia in the background as the on deck batter.
Again though, this may be a photo of an iconic sporting moment but is it really a great photo? I’d say no.
A better photo of a less iconic moment is this. Stirling Moss at the start of the 1952 Mille Miglia, not the more obvious 1955, but I think it captures far more about about the man and the race.
I was racking my brains for a good cricketing photo and I’m not sure I have one. And with all due respect Cicero I don’t think that one makes the grade either. I recall watching Warne bowl that very ball and I’m not sure what a photographer has to do to capture quite how astonishing that delivery was. So yes an iconic moment, but not a great photo. (personally I quite like this one, it involves Mr. Gatting as well but in a slightly more attacking mode)
I’ve also got a memory of a photo of Brian Close after facing the Windies in the 70’s. I think he was in trunks on the beach but his torso was a mass of bruises. My google-fu has deserted me though and I can’t find it. (I think it was Brian Close, it was *definitely *the Windies)