Longest/most impressive streaks in sports.

:smack:
Ramsey played for the Buffalo Sabres, not the Blackhawks…Glenn Hall did though.

Thanks for digging that up colour wolf.

Bjorn Borg deserves at least a mention in this thread for his five straight Wimbledon titles.

If you want to pull a real trivia question out of the hat, ask someone what was the second most lopsided college football game ever.

The answer: King College (Bristol, TN) 206, Lenoir-Rhyne 0, in 1922.

According to college lore, the final score would have topped that of GT-Cumberland, except that Lenoir-Rhyne allegedly called it quits after the third quarter.

Okay so the Portland Trail Blazers made the NBA playoffs 22 years in a row (and yes now they kinda suck but …)

I also feel that an honorable mention needs to go to Happy Scrappy Pup for the number of consecutive threads I have seen him in. I don’t really know him, but it is impresive … I don’t know that it is a sport but …

There’s a spreadsheet at the link, so you can see how they crunch the numbers. And there’s a little mistake in their arithmetic.

The columnist correctly calculates the odds of getting a hit in a game (as opposed to in an AB). But he jumps straight from there to the odds of getting a 56-game hit streak in a season, and he does it badly.

He first takes the chance of getting a hit in a game, and raises it to the 56th power. So far, so good: that’s the odds of hitting safely in 56 specific games. Then to get the odds of a 56-game hit streak in a season, he multiplies that by 99/154 (for a 154-game season) or by 107/162 (for a 162-game season). That’s obviously wrong, because having more opportunities for an event to occur can’t reduce the chance of the event.

What he should be doing is simply multiplying by 99 (or 107) for a 154 (or 162) game season, since that’s the number of possible sets of games to have a 56-game hitting streak during.

Turns out the odds of Joe D. having a 56-game hitting streak in 1941 were ‘only’ 700 to 1 against. Certainly a longshot, but hardly astronomical. Somebody’s gonna do it again eventually. After all, Sidney Stonestreet, who played for the Rhode Island Reds of the Chicken Coop League, had a 48-game hit streak…:wink:

Makes sense. So, in your mind we can rule out Joe’s hitting streak as the greatest ever. Just looking for input is all. :wink:
Do you have any others in mind that you would consider worthy?

One significant problem with the Americas Cup record is that over the course of the streak, the NYYC repeatedly stacked the rules against the challengers. The most significant rule over most of the life of the streak was that the challenger had to be built in its home country of home country materials and equipment. It then had to be sailed over on its own bottom to challenge in the US. It’s hard to build a sleek racer to compete in relatively protected waters that is also fully seaworthy for a trans-Atlantic passage.

On the topic of Johnny Vander Meer, it should be noted that he actually pitched 21-1/3 no-hit innings - taking into account the final out of the game prior to the first no-hitter, and the three innings of the game after the second one.

Another impressive baseball streakholder, one who doesn’t get as much attention as Joe Dimaggio or Cal Ripken, is Carl Hubbell. “King Carl” won 24 straight games for the New York Giants over the course of 1936 and 1937.

Johan Santana made it to, what, 18 straight wins this year? As I recall, that was a pretty noteworthy accomplishment, yet still only 75% of Hubbell’s total.

Two impressive streaks regardless of the level of play are the University of North Carolina women’s soccer team’s 14 consecutive appearances in the finals of the NCAA championship (1981-1994), winning in all but one.

And Mount Union (Ohio) College’s 104 consecutive wins in Division III regular season play.

how about wayne gretzky for:
-13 consecutive 100+ point seasons (second in that category six players tied with 6 in a row. thats a 217% gretzky lead over 2nd place.)
-or 3 consecutive 200+ points seasons (no other nhl player has ever scored 200 points in a season - mario lemieux got 199 once. that is an infinite% lead over 2nd place.)
-or eight consecutive hart trophies (for league mvp) nobody else has won that more than 3 times in a row - thats a 267% lead over 2nd place.
-or seven consecutive art ross trophies (league scoring leader) nobody else has more than 4 in a row - a 175% lead over 2nd place.

whoops, ignore the bad math above.

correct percentage leads over second place are:

54% for 100+p seasons

63% for hart trophies

43% for art ross trophies
my bad.

now i think my second try at math is also a failure. time to go to bed, methinks. and sorry for the triple post.