These Sports Records Will Likely Never Be Broken

We watch sports for their inherent unpredictability. While the rules are straightforward enough, there's no telling how things will play out. The game evolves over the years, generational talents raise the bar, and new records are set — and then bested.

Some records, though, may as well be unbreakable — or, at the very least, breaking them seems borderline impossible. While you never want to say never, it's safe to say that the following records probably won't be broken anytime soon.

Tiger Woods: 683 weeks atop golf leaderboards

It's impressive enough for any golfer to be ranked atop the leaderboards for even one week, as it means they're literally the top golfer in the world at that time. Tiger Woods made a habit of topping the leaderboards.

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During the peak of his dominance, Woods sat at the very top of the golf world for an astonishing 683 consecutive weeks. Between June 1997 and May 2014 — just shy of 17 years - no one else was ranked number one.

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Pete Rose: 4,256 hits

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Pete Rose tarnished his reputation with sports betting almost immediately after retiring, and as a result, will likely never be welcomed back into the baseball establishment — let alone the Hall of Fame.

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Rose's 4,256 hits just edged out Ty Cobb's mark of 4,191 hits. The closest a player has come to equalling this mark in the past 40 years is Derek Jeter, who racked up 3,465 hits - falling short of Rose's mark by more than 700.

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Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 26 consecutive losses

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Not all records are worth bragging about, and the woeful expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the 1970s hold one of football's most embarrassing records. After playing their first game in 1976, they went almost two full seasons before getting their first win.

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The early Bucs failed to win a single game in their 1976 expansion season, and they started off 1977 on another lengthy losing streak. Somehow, they managed to eke out wins in their final two games of 1977.

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Lance Armstrong: Seven Tour de France wins*

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There's an asterisk after this one because Armstrong's doping scandal calls his achievements into question. Still, even if his performance was enhanced, Armstrong dominated the cycling world during a time when many other riders were also using performance enhancers.

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Armstrong overcame testicular cancer to win seven times on cycling's biggest stage, the Tour de France. His wins have been officially stricken from the record books, but this doesn't change the fact that, at the time, he was seen as the greatest cyclist of all time.

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Cy Young: 749 complete games

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Cy Young, the very namesake of the award for baseball's best pitcher, holds a couple of records that won't be broken — owing largely to the fact that he played in a much different era.

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Young's 511 wins and 749 complete games won't be matched. For comparison, the active player with the lead in career complete games is Clayton Kershaw, with 25. Justin Verlander, who has 258 career wins, is the active player who leads in that category.

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Wayne Gretzky: 2,857 career points

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This article could be filled with records that Wayne Gretzky holds, but let's stick to one. The Great One amassed 2,857 points in his career, setting the marks for most career goals and assists along the way.

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The player in second place for career points, Jaromir Jagr, trails Gretzky by nearly a thousand points, even though his career was more than 200 games longer. Gretzky's goal mark might be beaten someday, but no one will ever have more points.

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Wilt Chamberlain: 100 points in a game

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Like Gretzky, Wilt the Stilt owns a number of records in the all-time NBA ledger. His most iconic moment set his most unbeatable record: Scoring 100 points for the Philadelphia Warriors over the New York Knicks in 1962.

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Kobe Bryant came somewhat close in 2006 with an 81-point game, but Chamberlain's 100 points remains a holy grail. He also occupies six of the ten top spots on the all-time list of single-game points scorers.

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Tom Brady: 98 touchdowns to different receivers

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It would be easy to point to any number of Brady's accomplishments during his prolific career, but here's an interesting one: He connected on touchdown passes with 98 different players during his career.

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Brady teamed up with Rob Gronkowski the most, throwing 105 touchdowns to Gronk. But there are 28 players to whom he threw only one touchdown pass as well. Second place for this record is Drew Brees, who threw TD passes to a comparatively meager 73 different receivers.

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Boston Celtics: Eight consecutive championships

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Not even the Jordan-Pippen Bulls of the '90s could eclipse the dominance of the Boston Celtics from the late 1950s onwards. Between 1959 and 1966, the Celtics, led by Bill Russell, won eight NBA titles in a row.

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After a one-year blip in 1967, the Celtics went on to win another two in a row. They added another two in the '70s. Overall, they have 17 championships altogether — equalling their long-time rivals, the Los Angeles Lakers.

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UConn Huskies: 111-game winning streak

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Women's college basketball has been dominated by the Connecticut Huskies (and Tennessee Volunteers) for decades now. Over the dozens of games of a typical basketball season, it's unheard of for a team to go undefeated.

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However, Geno Auriemma's squads did just that, winning 111 games in a row between 2014 and 2017. That's the longest winning streak in collegiate basketball history. The men's team with the longest winning streak is the UCLA Bruins, who won 88 in a row between 1971 and 1974.

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Joe DiMaggio: 56-game hitting streak

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Baseball is a sport where failing seven out of ten times means you're an excellent hitter, which helps explain why Joe DiMaggio's incredible hitting streak is so remarkable. It's hard to get a hit every game, especially in a sport where you're playing virtually every day.

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Pete Rose came close to Joltin' Joe's 56 games when he had a 44-game streak in 1978, and other players have occasionally crossed the 30-game threshold. That said, DiMaggio's record seems safe.

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Martin Brodeur: 691 career wins

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The long-time New Jersey Devils netminder has a Hall of Fame resume, with his 691 career wins being perhaps his most impressive feat. Consider the fact that Patrick Roy, who many consider the best goalie ever, had 551 wins, and it makes Brodeur's mark all the more impressive.

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Marc-Andre Fleury sits in second place on the all-time list, but no one is catching Brodeur. A goalie would have to rack up about 14 seasons with 50 wins in each to do so.

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Floyd Mayweather: 50-0

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Having an undefeated record means a lot in the world of boxing, and while many boxers have had undefeated streaks to start their career, nobody has done what Floyd Mayweather accomplished in his career.

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Some credit needs to be given to Rocky Marciano as well since his 49-0 record is almost as good as Mayweather's 50-0. Mayweather also fought some of the greatest punchers of all time during his career, including Oscar De La Hoya and Manny Pacquaio.

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USA: 2,959 Olympic medals

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The United States and the Soviet Union had a bitter athletic rivalry throughout the Cold War, with the two superpowers constantly challenging each other for dominance on the Olympic stage. While the Soviets had some big wins, they never really got close to the U.S. medal total.

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To date, the U.S. has won nearly 3,000 Olympic medals, with 1,061 of them being gold medals. If you add the Soviet and Russian medal counts together, they would be in second place — more than a thousand behind the U.S.

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Cal Ripken Jr.: 2,632 consecutive games played

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Ripken's unbreakable record actually eclipsed an earlier record that was commonly seen as unbreakable: Yankees legend Lou Gehrig's consecutive games streak of 1,061. Ripken was a great shortstop, but he's best remembered for playing 2,632 times without taking a game off.

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When Ripken finally broke the record in 1995, it was national news. It meant so much to the Baltimore Orioles faithful that they gave him a 22-minute standing ovation as he took a victory lap around the field.

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Secretariat: 31-length victory

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Secretariat is basically the Gretzky or Jordan of horses, enjoying a career that saw him literally leave his competition in the dust. Like the other GOATs, Secretariat holds a number of records that probably won't be beaten.

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Perhaps the most impressive is his Belmont Stakes win in 1973. It not only secured the Triple Crown for Secretariat, but he won by 31 lengths in just 2:24. To this day, it's the fastest time ever recorded over this distance.

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Richard Petty: 200 career wins

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"The King" dominated NASCAR during his prime and raced for a remarkably long period of time, totaling 1,061 races from 1958 all the way to 1992. During his peak in the '60s and '70s, he was borderline unbeatable.

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Petty sits atop the all-time NASCAR leaderboard with exactly 200 wins. His closest competition, David Pearson, has 105 wins, and nobody else has even cracked 100. In the 1967 season alone, Petty had 27 wins, with ten of them coming consecutively.

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John Stockton: 15,806 career assists

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The undersized point guard formed a dynamic duo with Karl Malone, the "Mailman," on the dynamic Utah Jazz squads of the '80s and '90s. Stockton was best at dishing the ball, and to this day, he's the all-time NBA assists leader.

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Not only does Stockton have nearly 4,000 more assists than his closest competition, Jason Kidd, but he's also the league's all-time leader in steals. He's the embodiment of effectiveness at the point guard position.

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Rafael Nadal: 14 French Open wins

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Rafael Nadal dominates the French Open like nobody else. A specialist on clay surfaces, Rafa has won 14 French Opens in his career — easily outpacing second-place Max Decugis, who won his eighth and final French Open all the way back in 1914.

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Even outside of his French Open dominance, Nadal's record elsewhere is impressive. He's currently the all-time leader in Grand Slam singles titles with 22. While this record could be broken, his French Open heroics won't be matched.

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Rickey Henderson: 1,406 career stolen bases

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Rickey Henderson wasn't the first baseball player to build his reputation around base thievery, but he's undoubtedly the best. The blueprint for Rickey was simple: Get on base, often with a walk, then create havoc on the basepaths with his speed.

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Henderson's 1,406 career steals easily outpaces second-place Lou Brock's mark of 938. Henderson stole an unbelievable 130 bases in the 1982 season alone — averaging nearly one steal per game played that season.

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Antonio Cromartie: 109.9-yard TD return

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This one's likely to stay unbroken because it's quite literally mathematically impossible to have a longer return on an NFL field. The field is 100 yards long, and endzones are 10 yards deep — this means that 109.9 yards is the longest return a player could make.

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Unless NFL fields get longer, no one will be able to make a longer return. The player with the second-longest return, Cordarrelle Patterson, returned a ball for a comparatively meager 109 yards.

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Barry Bonds: 688 career intentional walks

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Bonds holds both the single-season and all-time records for home runs, but juicing allegations ensure that many people will never see these as legitimate records. Still, Bonds was a fearsome hitter during his peak, as evidenced by how often he was intentionally walked.

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Bonds was so feared that he was even intentionally walked while the bases were loaded — the defense surrendering a single run rather than giving Bonds a chance to do more damage. The player with the second-most career intentional walks, Albert Pujols, has fewer than half of Bonds' total.

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LaDainian Tomlinson: 31 touchdowns in 2006

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LaDainian Tomlinson's 2006 MVP season was one for the record books: He set single-season records for both rushing touchdowns with 28, and all-purpose touchdowns with 31. He was the most dominant player in the NFL that season, and it wasn't even close.

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Considering how much the running back position has changed, it seems unlikely that anyone will ever beat this mark. Nobody has rushed for more than 18 rushing touchdowns since Tomlinson's 31 in 2006.

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Nolan Ryan: 5,714 career strikeouts

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In modern baseball's arms race, there's no shortage of pitchers who can throw the ball a hundred miles per hour. But throughout Nolan Ryan's long career, this was far less common — in fact, Ryan was practically the only one who could do it.

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Ryan's seven career no-hitters might be an unbeatable record all on its own, but his 5,714 career strikeouts are simply unprecedented. Fellow flamethrower Randy Johnson sits in second place but has nearly 900 fewer strikeouts.

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Oscar Robertson: Triple-double average in 1961-62

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Oscar Robertson often gets forgotten among the early NBA's greatest players, but he really shouldn't be overlooked. The dynamic point guard had a 1961-62 season that has never been touched — not by Kareem, not by MJ, and not even by LeBron.

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In that season, Robertson averaged 30.8 points, 11.4 assists, and 12.5 rebounds per game. That means that he averaged a triple-double over the course of an entire season. He's the only player to have ever done this.

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UCLA Bruins: Seven consecutive NCAA championships

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This record goes hand-in-hand with an individual accomplishment that probably won't be eclipsed: UCLA men's basketball coach John Wooden had 10 NCAA national titles in a 12-year period with the Bruins.

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Because this is a team game, we'll give UCLA the nod with this mark. The Bruins rattled off seven national championships in a row between 1967 and 1973, punctuated with an undefeated 1967 campaign. No other team has won more than two consecutive titles.

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Jerry Rice: 22,895 career receiving yards

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Jerry Rice redefined the wide receiver position during his time with the San Francisco 49ers, catching pass after pass from first Joe Montana and then Steve Young. After the 49ers, he went on to further success with the Oakland Raiders and Seattle Seahawks.

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Rice is the only player in NFL history to ever rack up more than 20,000 receiving yards — and with nearly 23,000, he's well over that threshold. Larry Fitzgerald, with 17,492 career receiving yards, sits in a comparatively distant second place.

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Ichiro Suzuki: 262 hits in 2004

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In a sport where a 200-hit season is remarkable, Ichiro's 262-hit 2004 season was otherworldly. Of the top ten leaders in this category, Ichiro sits at number one and number ten - and the others on the list all played in 1930 or earlier.

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Ichiro was such an accomplished hitter that if he'd played his entire career in North America, he likely would have threatened Pete Rose's all-time record. Between MLB and Japan's NPB, Ichiro has 4,367 hits as a pro.

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Jim Brown: Eight rushing titles

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Jim Brown had a relatively brief career, playing nine seasons for the Cleveland Browns. During that stretch, he won the NFL rushing title in eight of those seasons. It's worth noting that nobody else in NFL history has more than four rushing titles.

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In the modern NFL, not many running backs have a career of eight seasons, let alone put up Brown's gaudy offensive stats for more than a couple of years. It's unlikely we'll ever see another running back dominate for such a long period of time.

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Joey Chestnut: 76 hot dogs eaten

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You may not see hot dog eating as a sport, but to the crowds and competitors that gather every Fourth of July at Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest, the act of eating hot dogs is indeed a competitive endeavor.

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The undeniable GOAT in this category is Joey Chestnut, the greatest competitive eater in history. He ate 76 hot dogs one year, and since then no one (other than Chestnut himself) has really come close. It's hard to imagine anyone else becoming such a prolific hot dog eater.

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Simone Biles: 23 gold medals in gymnastics

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Individual sports allow athletes to accumulate an impressive quantity of medals. Gymnastics is one such discipline, and no one has accomplished more in that field than American gymnast Simone Biles.

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Just to put things into perspective, Biles' 23 gold medals in world gymnastics competition is 21 higher than any currently active women's gymnast. The second-place gymnast in this category is Svetlana Khorkina, who has nine golds — fewer than half of Biles' tally.

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USA: 239 medals in one Olympic Games

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U.S. Olympic dominance is a tale as old as time. While we've already discussed the country's overall Olympic medal tally, the 1904 Olympics in St. Louis were the peak of U.S. dominance during a single round of the Olympic games.

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In 1904, the United States won a jaw-dropping 239 total medals: 78 gold, 82 silver, and 79 bronze. Second-place Germany won just 15 medals, and third-place Canada took home six in total.

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Ty Cobb: .366 career batting average

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The man regarded as the best hitter in baseball history prior to Pete Rose, Ty Cobb played in a different era of baseball, which makes it hard to compare his numbers with modern athletes.

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That said, his statistics are still part of MLB's official records, and Cobb's career batting average of .366 — helped along by multiple seasons where he reached the .400 mark — seems unbeatable. In modern baseball, most players have difficulty maintaining .300 over a single season, let alone a career.

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Henri Richard: 11 Stanley Cups

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Henri Richard is often overshadowed by his older brother, Montreal Canadiens legend Maurice "Rocket" Richard. But Henri — also known as the "Pocket Rocket" — was a legend in his own right and is rightly recognized as a hockey legend.

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Henri Richard had a long playing career, spent entirely with Montreal, and he won 11 Stanley Cups along the way. Richard's long-time teammates Jean Beliveau, Yvan Cournoyer, Claude Provost, and his brother Maurice sit next on the list.

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Scott Skiles: 30 assists in a single game

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Skiles had a decent ten-year career as a point guard with various teams, but he isn't a player who most would regard as an all-time great. But in a game in the 1990-91 season, Skiles dished dimes at an unprecedented rate.

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In that game, in which Skiles and his Orlando Magic defeated the Denver Nuggets, Skiles racked up 30 assists. This record beat the previous mark by just one, but is likely to stand the test of time. It's rare in the modern NBA to see a player get more than 15 or 20.

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Pelé: 1,284 goals

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Because of the international nature of soccer — with innumerable clubs spread across hundreds of pro leagues around the world — it's tough to come across a definitive list of all-time goals leaders.

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That said, Brazilian legend Edson Arantes do Nascimento — best known as Pelé — is likely the all-time leader. In his 20-plus year career, Pelé scored approximately 1,284 goals and averaged nearly a goal per game across his 1,375 matches.

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Sadaharu Oh: 868 home runs

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One of baseball's most cherished records is career home runs. Babe Ruth's 714 stood for decades, only to beaten by Hank Aaron's 755, which in turn was beaten by Barry Bonds' 762 (a mark that many consider tainted).

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However, shifting the scope from Major League Baseball to overall professional baseball, Japanese legend Sadaharu Oh has them all beat with 868 home runs. They were accumulated over a 22-season career, all spent with the Yomiuri Giants.

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David Carr: Sacked 76 times

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David Carr was under a lot of pressure to start his NFL career, being named starting quarterback of the brand new Houston Texans expansion team. His rookie season was unforgettable for all the wrong reasons.

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During that 2002 season, Carr was sacked an mind-boggling 76 times — that's 4.75 sacks per game, or more than one per quarter, across the entire season. In 2005, Carr was sacked 68 times — good enough for the number three spot on the all-time list.

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Novak Djokovic: 425+ weeks as world number one

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Serbian tennis pro Novak Djokovic has an incredible resume on the court, including 24 Grand Slam men's single titles (a record) and ten Australian Open titles (another record). But his most impressive mark may be how many times he's been ranked as the best men's player in the world.

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Djokovic has spent 425 weeks (and counting) atop the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) rankings, spread out across 13 different calendar years. He's certainly number one in their hearts, which means a lot to the sport at large.

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Emmitt Smith: 18,355 rushing yards

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Legendary running back Emmitt Smith racked up some gaudy numbers during the Cowboys' early-'90s heyday. Smith's long career saw him close in on — and then eclipse — the rushing yards record set by Walter Payton, which was once thought to be unbeatable.

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Smith kept going for another couple of years, breaking Peyton's old mark by more than 1,500 yards. Considering the longevity of a typical modern-day NFL running back, it seems unlikely that anyone will ever best Smith.

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Bob Gibson: 1.12 ERA

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Records from the early days of baseball are hard to compare to the modern day because the game was so different, so things are often categorized into the "live ball era" which started in about 1920, versus the days of baseball antiquity.

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During the live ball era, no one has come close to besting Bob Gibson's 1.12 earned run average, which he achieved during the "year of the pitcher" in 1968. Pitchers were so good in this season that the pitcher's mound was lowered the following season in order to give hitters a fighting chance.

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Michael Jordan: Six for six in NBA Finals

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This record could also belong to Scottie Pippen or the '90s Chicago Bulls in general, but let's give His Airness his due. During the Bulls' run of dominance in the '90s — in which they won six championships in eight years — they never finished as runners-up.

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That means that Jordan and company were perfect when they made it to the NBA Finals. Even other players with multiple rings generally have at least one or two seasons in which they made it to the big dance but couldn't win the championship.

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Buffalo Bills: Super Bowl failure

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The defining period in Buffalo Bills history would have been the early '90s, in which a high-powered offense led by Thurman Thomas and Jim Kelly dominated the league en route to making four consecutive Super Bowl appearances.

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No team, before or since, has ever made it to the big game this many years in a row. Unfortunately for the Bills, they lost every single game, making for a record of futility that's unlikely to be beaten.

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LeBron James: Most career points

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We're not listing King James' current point total because it keeps climbing, but the important thing here is that LeBron has the all-time record of more than 40,000 after beating Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's mark of 38,387.

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It's a testament to LeBron's dominant career that he's been able to rack up points at such an impressive rate. The active player with the next-most points is Kevin Durant, who trails by more than 10,000.

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Miami Dolphins: Perfect season

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The Dolphins aren't the only NFL team to ever go unbeaten over the course of the regular season, as both the 1934 and 1942 Chicago Bears and 2007 New England Patriots also ran the table during the regular season.

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But the 1972 Miami Dolphins did something that no other team has accomplished: Winning every game during the season, then every playoff game, en route to a Super Bowl victory. The '07 Pats showed us how tough it is to win that final game.

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Edwin van der Saar: 1,311 shutout minutes

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As a soccer goalkeeper, nothing is more important than a clean sheet — allowing zero goals in a game. After all, this will guarantee your team a draw even if they're held scoreless, and will give them a win if they can score just once.

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Manchester United keeper Edwin van der Saar had an incredible run where he didn't concede a goal for 1,311 minutes. Even more impressively, he accomplished this in his late 30s.

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Derrick Thomas: Seven sacks in a game

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Derrick Thomas — who died in a car crash at 33 — is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and one of the most fearsome linebackers of all time. In 1990, he recorded an incredible seven sacks in a single game.

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Incredibly, Thomas had a chance for an eighth sack, but whiffed. Considering even the best defenders generally put up 15 or 20 sacks over a full season, Thomas' mark of seven in a game seems unbeatable.

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Oleg Salenko: Five goals in one World Cup match

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Russian-Ukrainian striker Oleg Salenko had a solid career with various European clubs between 1986 and 2001. His crowning achievement, however, came in the 1994 World Cup, where he scored five goals in Russia's 6-1 win over Cameroon.

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Several players have tallied four goals in a single World Cup game, but none have done so in the past 30 years. Barring some kind of fluke, it seems unlikely that anyone will be able to eclipse Salenko's mark.

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Steffi Graf: The Golden Slam

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German tennis legend Steffi Graf found success both professionally and as an Olympian, competing for first West Germany and then Germany over the course of her career. She has the second-most women's major single titles since the start of the Open Era, and the third-most all-time.

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However, Graf's rarest accomplishment is something that no other woman (or man) has ever done: Achieve the so-called Golden Slam. This means winning all four major singles titles, along with an Olympic gold medal, in the same year.

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Brett Favre: 336 interceptions

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Not all records are positive records, and sometimes these ignoble records are held by athletes who are otherwise regarded as all-time greats. Case in point: Brett Favre, who holds the NFL's all-time record for interceptions thrown by a quarterback.

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Favre is rightly seen as a legend, but the gunslinger's pass-happy tendencies led to him throwing far more interceptions than anyone else in history. George Blanda sits in a comparatively distant second place with 277.