🀫husshhussh
  • Wiki
Reserve
🀫husshhusshOneOne Puppy
🀫 Gratitude · Top 1024 athletes

The greatest athletes ever.

Gratitude to the sportsmen and sportswomen who show us what a human being is capable of, from today's champions back to the earliest legends. Celebrated from public work, with a cited source on every card.

All championsThe Apple 1024

159 of 1024 Β· celebrated from public information, cited on every card.

77 champions

Champions of today

LM

Lionel Messi

Argentine footballer, record eight-time Ballon d'Or winner and 2022 World Cup champion.

Football, Argentina

soccerplaymakingworld-cupargentina
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for two decades of joy on the pitch and for finally lifting the World Cup for Argentina in 2022.

Wikipedia β†—
CR

Cristiano Ronaldo

Portuguese footballer, five-time Ballon d'Or winner and one of the top scorers in the sport's history.

Football, Portugal

soccergoalscoringportugallongevity
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a relentless standard of fitness and finishing that redefined how long a champion can stay at the top.

Wikipedia β†—
KM

Kylian Mbappe

French footballer and 2018 World Cup winner, one of the game's fastest and most decisive forwards.

Football, France

soccerspeedfranceworld-cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for showing a new generation that a teenager can carry a nation and still play with pure joy.

Wikipedia β†—
R

Ronaldinho

Brazilian footballer, 2002 World Cup winner and 2005 Ballon d'Or, famed for his creativity and smile.

Football, Brazil

soccerflairbraziljoy
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for reminding the world that football at its best is played with a smile.

Wikipedia β†—
ZZ

Zinedine Zidane

French footballer and 1998 World Cup winner, later a Champions League winning manager.

Football, France

soccermidfieldfranceworld-cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a grace on the ball that a whole generation of French players grew up trying to copy.

Wikipedia β†—
M

Marta

Brazilian footballer and record six-time FIFA World Player of the Year, top scorer in World Cup history.

Football, Brazil

soccergoalscoringbrazilwomens-football
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for carrying women's football on your shoulders and inspiring millions of girls in Brazil and beyond.

Wikipedia β†—
MR

Megan Rapinoe

American footballer, two-time World Cup winner and 2019 Ballon d'Or Feminin.

Football, United States

soccerworld-cupusaadvocacy
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for winning on the world stage while pushing hard for equal pay and equal respect.

Wikipedia β†—
AP

Alexia Putellas

Spanish footballer and two-time Ballon d'Or Feminin winner.

Football, Spain

soccermidfieldspainwomens-football
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for leading a golden era of Spanish women's football with skill and quiet resolve.

Wikipedia β†—
AM

Alex Morgan

American footballer, two-time World Cup winner and Olympic gold medalist.

Football, United States

soccergoalscoringusawomens-football
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a decade of big goals and for helping grow the women's game on and off the field.

Wikipedia β†—
LJ

LeBron James

American basketball player, four-time NBA champion and the league's all-time leading scorer.

Basketball, United States

basketballnbausalongevity
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for two decades of excellence and for using your platform to open schools and lift communities.

Wikipedia β†—
KB

Kobe Bryant

American basketball player, five-time NBA champion known for his Mamba Mentality work ethic.

Basketball, United States

basketballnbausamentality
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the Mamba Mentality that taught a generation what real dedication looks like.

Wikipedia β†—
SC

Stephen Curry

American basketball player, four-time NBA champion and the greatest three-point shooter in history.

Basketball, United States

basketballnbashootingusa
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for reinventing how basketball is played and showing skill can beat size.

Wikipedia β†—
KD

Kevin Durant

American basketball player, two-time NBA champion and one of the most gifted scorers of his era.

Basketball, United States

basketballnbascoringusa
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a pure scoring craft that few in history have ever matched.

Wikipedia β†—
GA

Giannis Antetokounmpo

Greek basketball player and 2021 NBA champion, a two-time league MVP.

Basketball, Greece

basketballnbagreeceunderdog
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a story that started selling goods on the streets of Athens and ended with a championship.

Wikipedia β†—
DT

Diana Taurasi

American basketball player, three-time WNBA champion and the league's all-time leading scorer.

Basketball, United States

basketballwnbausascoring
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a fearless competitiveness that set the standard for women's basketball.

Wikipedia β†—
SB

Sue Bird

American basketball player, four-time WNBA champion and five-time Olympic gold medalist.

Basketball, United States

basketballwnbausaleadership
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for two decades of steady leadership that helped grow the women's game.

Wikipedia β†—
SW

Serena Williams

American tennis player with 23 Grand Slam singles titles, most in the Open Era.

Tennis, United States

tennisgrand-slamusapower
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for redefining greatness in tennis and doing it on your own terms.

Wikipedia β†—
VW

Venus Williams

American tennis player with seven Grand Slam singles titles and a key voice for equal prize money.

Tennis, United States

tennisgrand-slamusaequality
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for winning Wimbledon and for the fight that won equal prize money for women.

Wikipedia β†—
MS

Maria Sharapova

Russian tennis player, five-time Grand Slam champion and a career Grand Slam winner.

Tennis, Russia

tennisgrand-slamrussiaresilience
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a fighting spirit that took you from a teenage Wimbledon champion to all four majors.

Wikipedia β†—
NO

Naomi Osaka

Japanese tennis player and four-time Grand Slam singles champion.

Tennis, Japan

tennisgrand-slamjapanmental-health
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for winning at the highest level and for speaking openly about mental health in sport.

Wikipedia β†—
AB

Ashleigh Barty

Australian tennis player, three-time Grand Slam champion and former world number one.

Tennis, Australia

tennisgrand-slamaustraliaall-court
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for an all-court game full of craft and for leaving on your own terms at the top.

Wikipedia β†—
JH

Justine Henin

Belgian tennis player and seven-time Grand Slam singles champion.

Tennis, Belgium

tennisgrand-slambelgiumbackhand
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for one of the most beautiful one-handed backhands the game has ever seen.

Wikipedia β†—
RF

Roger Federer

Swiss tennis player with 20 Grand Slam singles titles, celebrated for his elegant style.

Tennis, Switzerland

tennisgrand-slamswitzerlandelegance
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for making a hard sport look like art for the better part of two decades.

Wikipedia β†—
RN

Rafael Nadal

Spanish tennis player with 22 Grand Slam singles titles, including a record 14 French Opens.

Tennis, Spain

tennisgrand-slamspainclay
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a fighting spirit and humility that made every point feel like it mattered.

Wikipedia β†—
ND

Novak Djokovic

Serbian tennis player with a record 24 Grand Slam singles titles.

Tennis, Serbia

tennisgrand-slamserbiareturn
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a relentless completeness of game that pushed the sport to a new peak.

Wikipedia β†—
ST

Sachin Tendulkar

Indian cricketer, the only player with 100 international centuries and a 2011 World Cup winner.

Cricket, India

cricketbattingindiaworld-cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for carrying the hopes of a billion people with grace for twenty-four years.

Wikipedia β†—
VK

Virat Kohli

Indian cricketer, one of the greatest run-chasers and batters of the modern era.

Cricket, India

cricketbattingindiafitness
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for raising the fitness and intensity bar for a whole generation of cricketers.

Wikipedia β†—
MD

MS Dhoni

Indian cricketer and captain who led India to the 2007 T20 and 2011 ODI World Cups.

Cricket, India

cricketcaptaincyindiawicketkeeping
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a calm under pressure that made an entire nation believe in the finish.

Wikipedia β†—
MR

Mithali Raj

Indian cricketer and the highest run-scorer in women's international cricket.

Cricket, India

cricketbattingindiawomens-cricket
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for two decades of leadership that helped women's cricket grow across India.

Wikipedia β†—
EP

Ellyse Perry

Australian dual international in cricket and football and a multiple World Cup winner.

Cricket, Australia

cricketall-rounderaustraliawomens-cricket
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for showing what an all-round athlete can be across two international sports.

Wikipedia β†—
UB

Usain Bolt

Jamaican sprinter and eight-time Olympic gold medalist, world record holder at 100m and 200m.

Athletics, Jamaica

sprintingolympicsjamaicaworld-record
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for making the fastest event on earth feel like pure celebration.

Wikipedia β†—
AF

Allyson Felix

American sprinter and the most decorated athlete in World Championships track history.

Athletics, United States

sprintingolympicsusaadvocacy
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for medals across five Olympics and for fighting for maternal protections for athletes.

Wikipedia β†—
MF

Mo Farah

British distance runner and four-time Olympic gold medalist over 5000m and 10000m.

Athletics, Great Britain

distance-runningolympicsbritainendurance
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a journey from refugee to national hero told with honesty and heart.

Wikipedia β†—
SF

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce

Jamaican sprinter, three-time Olympic and multiple world champion over 100m.

Athletics, Jamaica

sprintingolympicsjamaicamotherhood
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for winning world titles as a mother and inspiring women to keep chasing their peak.

Wikipedia β†—
EK

Eliud Kipchoge

Kenyan marathon runner, two-time Olympic champion and the first to run a marathon under two hours.

Athletics, Kenya

marathonolympicskenyadiscipline
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for proving that no human is limited, one disciplined step at a time.

Wikipedia β†—
SM

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone

American hurdler and Olympic champion, world record holder in the 400m hurdles.

Athletics, United States

hurdlesolympicsusaworld-record
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for rewriting your own world record again and again with quiet grace.

Wikipedia β†—
YI

Yelena Isinbayeva

Russian pole vaulter, two-time Olympic champion and former world record holder.

Athletics, Russia

pole-vaultolympicsrussiaworld-record
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for pushing the ceiling of your event higher than anyone thought possible.

Wikipedia β†—
SB

Simone Biles

American gymnast and the most decorated gymnast in history with multiple named skills.

Gymnastics, United States

gymnasticsolympicsusamental-health
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for pushing your sport past its limits and for putting your health first when it mattered.

Wikipedia β†—
KU

Kohei Uchimura

Japanese gymnast, two-time Olympic all-around champion and six-time world all-around champion.

Gymnastics, Japan

gymnasticsolympicsjapanconsistency
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a decade of near-perfect gymnastics that set the standard for the men's all-around.

Wikipedia β†—
MP

Michael Phelps

American swimmer and the most decorated Olympian of all time with 23 gold medals.

Swimming, United States

swimmingolympicsusarecords
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a body of work in the pool that may never be matched.

Wikipedia β†—
KL

Katie Ledecky

American swimmer and multiple Olympic champion, dominant in distance freestyle.

Swimming, United States

swimmingolympicsusadistance
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a distance dominance so complete you often race only the clock.

Wikipedia β†—
IT

Ian Thorpe

Australian swimmer and five-time Olympic gold medalist known as the Thorpedo.

Swimming, Australia

swimmingolympicsaustraliafreestyle
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a teenage brilliance that made a nation fall in love with swimming.

Wikipedia β†—
CD

Caeleb Dressel

American swimmer and multiple Olympic gold medalist, a dominant sprinter in the pool.

Swimming, United States

swimmingolympicsusasprint
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for explosive sprint swimming that carries the torch for a new era.

Wikipedia β†—
FJ

Floyd Mayweather Jr.

American boxer who retired undefeated across five weight classes.

Boxing, United States

boxingdefenseusaundefeated
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a defensive mastery that made boxing a chess match at the highest level.

Wikipedia β†—
MP

Manny Pacquiao

Filipino boxer and the only fighter to win world titles in eight weight divisions.

Boxing, Philippines

boxingphilippineseight-divisionsspeed
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for giving the Philippines a hero and for fighting your way up from real poverty.

Wikipedia β†—
CM

Conor McGregor

Irish mixed martial artist and the first UFC fighter to hold two division titles at once.

MMA, Ireland

mmaufcirelandstriking
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the self-belief and showmanship that took mixed martial arts mainstream.

Wikipedia β†—
AN

Amanda Nunes

Brazilian mixed martial artist and the first woman to hold two UFC titles simultaneously.

MMA, Brazil

mmaufcbraziltwo-divisions
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a dominance that made the case for the greatest woman in MMA history.

Wikipedia β†—
RR

Ronda Rousey

American mixed martial artist and Olympic judo medalist, the first UFC women's champion.

MMA, United States

mmaufcjudopioneer
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for opening the door for women in the UFC and headlining cards no one thought possible.

Wikipedia β†—
KT

Katie Taylor

Irish boxer, Olympic gold medalist and undisputed world lightweight champion.

Boxing, Ireland

boxingolympicsirelandundisputed
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for headlining nights that proved women's boxing belongs at the top of the bill.

Wikipedia β†—
AJ

Anthony Joshua

British boxer, Olympic gold medalist and two-time unified world heavyweight champion.

Boxing, Great Britain

boxingheavyweightbritainolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for carrying yourself with humility through the wins and the setbacks alike.

Wikipedia β†—
TB

Tom Brady

American football quarterback and seven-time Super Bowl champion.

American football, United States

nflquarterbackusalongevity
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a longevity and will to win that redefined what is possible at quarterback.

Wikipedia β†—
PM

Peyton Manning

American football quarterback, five-time NFL MVP and two-time Super Bowl champion.

American football, United States

nflquarterbackusaleadership
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a football mind at the line of scrimmage that raised the whole position.

Wikipedia β†—
PM

Patrick Mahomes

American football quarterback and multiple Super Bowl champion and league MVP.

American football, United States

nflquarterbackusaimprovisation
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for an improvisational brilliance that makes every play feel alive.

Wikipedia β†—
IS

Ichiro Suzuki

Japanese baseball player and MLB hits record holder for a single season.

Baseball, Japan

baseballmlbjapanhitting
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for bridging Japanese and American baseball with a craft built on daily discipline.

Wikipedia β†—
SO

Shohei Ohtani

Japanese baseball player and the modern game's premier two-way star as pitcher and hitter.

Baseball, Japan

baseballmlbjapantwo-way
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for reviving a two-way game most thought was gone forever.

Wikipedia β†—
SC

Sidney Crosby

Canadian ice hockey player, three-time Stanley Cup champion and Olympic gold medalist.

Ice hockey, Canada

hockeynhlcanadaleadership
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for scoring the golden goal and leading with the quiet class of a true captain.

Wikipedia β†—
AO

Alexander Ovechkin

Russian ice hockey player, a Stanley Cup champion and the NHL's all-time leading goal scorer.

Ice hockey, Russia

hockeynhlrussiagoalscoring
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for chasing the greatest goal record with pure joy for the game.

Wikipedia β†—
TW

Tiger Woods

American golfer with 15 major championships and one of the great comebacks in sport.

Golf, United States

golfmajorsusacomeback
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for growing golf worldwide and for the 2019 Masters comeback that moved everyone.

Wikipedia β†—
RM

Rory McIlroy

Northern Irish golfer and multiple major champion, a former world number one.

Golf, Northern Ireland

golfmajorsnorthern-irelanddriving
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for playing the game with honesty and heart, on the good days and the hard ones.

Wikipedia β†—
AS

Annika Sorenstam

Swedish golfer with 72 LPGA Tour wins and ten major championships.

Golf, Sweden

golflpgaswedenmajors
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a dominance that lifted the profile of women's golf around the world.

Wikipedia β†—
LO

Lorena Ochoa

Mexican golfer who was the world's number one before retiring at her peak.

Golf, Mexico

golflpgamexiconumber-one
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for inspiring young players across Mexico and Latin America to pick up the game.

Wikipedia β†—
LH

Lewis Hamilton

British racing driver and seven-time Formula One World Champion.

Formula One, Great Britain

f1motorsportbritaindiversity
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for record-tying titles and for pushing motorsport to be more open to everyone.

Wikipedia β†—
MV

Max Verstappen

Dutch racing driver and multiple Formula One World Champion.

Formula One, Netherlands

f1motorsportnetherlandsracecraft
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a fearless racecraft that made you a champion at the front of the grid.

Wikipedia β†—
VR

Valentino Rossi

Italian motorcycle racer and nine-time Grand Prix World Champion.

MotoGP, Italy

motogpmotorsportitalyshowmanship
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the color and charisma that made motorcycle racing a global spectacle.

Wikipedia β†—
MV

Marianne Vos

Dutch cyclist and Olympic and multiple world champion across road and cyclo-cross.

Cycling, Netherlands

cyclingolympicsnetherlandsall-round
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a versatility on the bike that helped drive the growth of women's cycling.

Wikipedia β†—
LV

Lindsey Vonn

American alpine skier, Olympic champion and one of the most successful ski racers ever.

Alpine skiing, United States

skiingolympicsusadownhill
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a courage in the downhill that came back stronger after every serious injury.

Wikipedia β†—
MS

Mikaela Shiffrin

American alpine skier with the most World Cup race wins in the sport's history.

Alpine skiing, United States

skiingworld-cupusatechnique
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a technical precision and consistency that set a new all-time record.

Wikipedia β†—
MB

Marit Bjorgen

Norwegian cross-country skier and the most decorated Winter Olympian in history.

Cross-country skiing, Norway

skiingolympicsnorwayendurance
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for an endurance and consistency that made you the most decorated winter Olympian.

Wikipedia β†—
SW

Shaun White

American snowboarder and three-time Olympic halfpipe gold medalist.

Snowboarding, United States

snowboardingolympicsusahalfpipe
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for pushing the halfpipe higher and taking snowboarding to the world stage.

Wikipedia β†—
LD

Lin Dan

Chinese badminton player and two-time Olympic singles champion, widely rated the greatest ever.

Badminton, China

badmintonolympicschinasingles
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a completeness of game that set the benchmark for men's badminton.

Wikipedia β†—
PS

PV Sindhu

Indian badminton player, Olympic medalist and world champion.

Badminton, India

badmintonolympicsindiasingles
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for medals that inspired a wave of young players across India.

Wikipedia β†—
CM

Carolina Marin

Spanish badminton player, Olympic champion and three-time world champion.

Badminton, Spain

badmintonolympicsspainsingles
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for bringing badminton glory to Europe with fierce intensity and drive.

Wikipedia β†—
ML

Ma Long

Chinese table tennis player and multiple Olympic and world champion.

Table tennis, China

table-tennisolympicschinaconsistency
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a mastery of table tennis that many call the greatest the sport has seen.

Wikipedia β†—
DN

Ding Ning

Chinese table tennis player and Olympic and world singles champion.

Table tennis, China

table-tennisolympicschinasingles
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a resilience and craft that defined a golden era of women's table tennis.

Wikipedia β†—
MC

Magnus Carlsen

Norwegian chess grandmaster and five-time World Chess Champion.

Chess, Norway

chessworld-championnorwayendgame
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for making chess exciting and popular for a whole new online generation.

Wikipedia β†—
VA

Viswanathan Anand

Indian chess grandmaster and five-time World Chess Champion.

Chess, India

chessworld-championindiapioneer
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for sparking a chess boom in India and inspiring a generation of grandmasters.

Wikipedia β†—
HY

Hou Yifan

Chinese chess grandmaster and four-time Women's World Chess Champion.

Chess, China

chessworld-championchinayoungest
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for becoming the youngest women's world champion and lifting the bar for women in chess.

Wikipedia β†—
82 champions

Legends of all time

JO

Jesse Owens

American track and field sprinter and long jumper who won four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics.

Athletics, United States, 1930s

athleticssprintinglong jumpolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for four golds under a hostile regime's gaze, showing the world that dignity and speed answer hatred better than any speech.

Wikipedia β†—
BR

Babe Ruth

American baseball outfielder and pitcher whose home-run hitting reshaped the sport in the 1920s and 1930s.

Baseball, United States, 1914-1935

baseballhome runsyankees
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for turning baseball into joy and spectacle, and for a swing that a whole country learned to love.

Wikipedia β†—
JT

Jim Thorpe

Native American athlete who won Olympic gold in the pentathlon and decathlon and played pro football and baseball.

Multi-sport, United States, 1910s-1920s

decathlonolympicsamerican footballversatility
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for excelling across sports few could master even one of, and for carrying that gift with quiet strength against real injustice.

Wikipedia β†—
DB

Don Bradman

Australian cricket batsman with a Test batting average of 99.94, widely called the greatest batsman ever.

Cricket, Australia, 1928-1948

cricketbattingtest cricket
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a standard so far beyond anyone else that your average alone still teaches what greatness can mean.

Wikipedia β†—
FB

Fanny Blankers-Koen

Dutch sprinter and hurdler who won four gold medals at the 1948 London Olympics as a mother of two.

Athletics, Netherlands, 1940s

athleticssprintinghurdlesolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for winning four golds at thirty and proving that motherhood and greatness were never a contradiction.

Wikipedia β†—
MA

Muhammad Ali

American heavyweight boxer, three-time world champion known for his speed, showmanship, and public conscience.

Boxing, United States, 1960-1981

boxingheavyweightactivism
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the footwork and the courage both, and for standing by your convictions when it cost you your prime.

Wikipedia β†—
P

Pele

Brazilian soccer forward, three-time World Cup winner and one of the sport's most prolific scorers.

Soccer, Brazil, 1956-1977

soccerforwardworld cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for playing the beautiful game with such joy that you made the whole world fall for it.

Wikipedia β†—
DM

Diego Maradona

Argentine soccer playmaker who led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title.

Soccer, Argentina, 1976-1997

soccerplaymakerworld cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for moments of impossible skill that gave a nation and its neighborhoods something to believe in.

Wikipedia β†—
JR

Jackie Robinson

American baseball second baseman who broke Major League Baseball's color barrier in 1947.

Baseball, United States, 1947-1956

baseballbarrier-breakerdodgers
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for carrying the weight of a nation's prejudice with grace, and opening a door that could never be closed again.

Wikipedia β†—
WR

Wilma Rudolph

American sprinter who overcame childhood polio to win three gold medals at the 1960 Rome Olympics.

Athletics, United States, 1960s

athleticssprintingolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for running from a leg brace to three golds, and for showing every child that a hard start is not the ending.

Wikipedia β†—
JJ

Jack Johnson

American boxer who became the first Black world heavyweight champion in 1908.

Boxing, United States, 1900s-1910s

boxingheavyweightbarrier-breaker
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for claiming a title the world tried to deny you, and enduring the backlash so others would not have to alone.

Wikipedia β†—
JL

Joe Louis

American heavyweight boxer who held the world title for nearly twelve years, the longest in the division's history.

Boxing, United States, 1934-1951

boxingheavyweightchampion
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a reign of quiet dignity that gave millions a hero to be proud of in dark years.

Wikipedia β†—
SR

Sugar Ray Robinson

American boxer, welterweight and middleweight champion often ranked the greatest pound-for-pound fighter ever.

Boxing, United States, 1940s-1960s

boxingmiddleweightpound-for-pound
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a blend of grace and power that set the very definition of boxing artistry.

Wikipedia β†—
BR

Bill Russell

American basketball center who won eleven NBA titles with the Boston Celtics and championed civil rights.

Basketball, United States, 1956-1969

basketballdefensechampionshipsactivism
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for winning like no one else and for using that platform to stand up for justice off the court.

Wikipedia β†—
WC

Wilt Chamberlain

American basketball center who scored 100 points in a single NBA game in 1962.

Basketball, United States, 1959-1973

basketballscoringrecords
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for numbers so staggering they still feel unreal, expanding what people thought one player could do.

Wikipedia β†—
KA

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

American basketball center, six-time NBA champion and the league's all-time leading scorer for nearly four decades.

Basketball, United States, 1969-1989

basketballskyhookscoring
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the skyhook and for a thoughtful life beyond the game that widened what an athlete could be.

Wikipedia β†—
MJ

Magic Johnson

American basketball point guard, five-time NBA champion who redefined the position with the Lakers.

Basketball, United States, 1979-1996

basketballpoint guardpassing
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for playing with pure joy and for turning your HIV diagnosis into a fight against stigma for millions.

Wikipedia β†—
LB

Larry Bird

American basketball forward, three-time NBA champion and MVP with the Boston Celtics.

Basketball, United States, 1979-1992

basketballforwardshooting
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a rivalry and a craft that lifted a whole league, proving vision and work can beat raw athleticism.

Wikipedia β†—
MJ

Michael Jordan

American basketball guard, six-time NBA champion widely regarded as the greatest of all time.

Basketball, United States, 1984-1998

basketballscoringchampionships
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a standard of excellence and will that inspired a generation to chase their own best.

Wikipedia β†—
NC

Nadia Comaneci

Romanian gymnast who scored the first perfect 10 in Olympic history at the 1976 Montreal Games.

Gymnastics, Romania, 1970s

gymnasticsolympicsperfect ten
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a perfect 10 the scoreboards were not even built to show, and for redefining what flawless looks like.

Wikipedia β†—
OK

Olga Korbut

Soviet gymnast whose daring routines at the 1972 Munich Olympics sparked a global boom in the sport.

Gymnastics, Soviet Union, 1970s

gymnasticsolympicsinnovation
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the fearless smile and daring moves that made a whole generation of children want to tumble.

Wikipedia β†—
LL

Larisa Latynina

Soviet gymnast who won eighteen Olympic medals, a record that stood for nearly half a century.

Gymnastics, Soviet Union, 1950s-1960s

gymnasticsolympicsmedals
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a mountain of medals and for coaching and building a sport that lifted so many after you.

Wikipedia β†—
MS

Mark Spitz

American swimmer who won seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich Olympics, each in world-record time.

Swimming, United States, 1970s

swimmingolympicsworld records
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for seven golds and seven world records in one week, a benchmark that inspired the swimmers who followed.

Wikipedia β†—
JW

Johnny Weissmuller

American swimmer, five-time Olympic champion who later played Tarzan on film.

Swimming, United States, 1920s

swimmingolympicsfreestyle
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for never losing a race and for making swimming glamorous to a public just discovering the pool.

Wikipedia β†—
RL

Rod Laver

Australian tennis player and the only man to win the calendar Grand Slam twice, in 1962 and 1969.

Tennis, Australia, 1960s

tennisgrand slamleft-handed
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a double calendar Slam no one else has matched, and the humble craft behind it.

Wikipedia β†—
BB

Bjorn Borg

Swedish tennis player who won eleven Grand Slam singles titles, including five straight Wimbledons.

Tennis, Sweden, 1970s-1980s

tennisgrand slamwimbledon
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the icy calm and relentless baseline that made tennis a global obsession.

Wikipedia β†—
BK

Billie Jean King

American tennis player, 39-time Grand Slam champion and pioneer for equality in sport.

Tennis, United States, 1960s-1970s

tennisgrand slamequalityactivism
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for winning the Battle of the Sexes and for fighting so women's sport would finally be paid and respected.

Wikipedia β†—
MN

Martina Navratilova

Czech-American tennis player with 18 Grand Slam singles titles and a record nine Wimbledon crowns.

Tennis, Czechoslovakia and United States, 1970s-1990s

tennisgrand slamwimbledon
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the fitness and serve-and-volley that raised the whole women's game, and for living openly and bravely.

Wikipedia β†—
CE

Chris Evert

American tennis player with 18 Grand Slam singles titles and a career winning percentage near ninety percent.

Tennis, United States, 1970s-1980s

tennisgrand slambaseline
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the poise and precision, and for a rivalry with Navratilova that gave the sport its finest era.

Wikipedia β†—
SG

Steffi Graf

German tennis player who won the Golden Slam in 1988, all four majors plus Olympic gold in one year.

Tennis, Germany, 1980s-1990s

tennisgrand slamgolden slam
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a season no one else has ever matched and a forehand that defined an era.

Wikipedia β†—
AA

Arthur Ashe

American tennis player, the first Black man to win Wimbledon, the US Open, and the Australian Open.

Tennis, United States, 1960s-1970s

tennisgrand slambarrier-breakeractivism
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for breaking barriers with quiet strength and for a lifetime of service beyond the court.

Wikipedia β†—
JN

Jack Nicklaus

American golfer who won a record 18 professional major championships.

Golf, United States, 1960s-1980s

golfmajorsthe masters
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for eighteen majors and the grace to win and lose with the same class, setting golf's gold standard.

Wikipedia β†—
AP

Arnold Palmer

American golfer, seven-time major winner who helped make golf a popular televised sport.

Golf, United States, 1950s-1960s

golfmajorscharisma
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the charm and go-for-broke play that brought golf to the everyday fan and built Arnie's Army.

Wikipedia β†—
BH

Ben Hogan

American golfer, nine-time major winner celebrated for his ball-striking after a near-fatal car crash.

Golf, United States, 1940s-1950s

golfmajorsball-striking
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for coming back from a wreck that nearly killed you to win again, teaching golfers the value of pure work.

Wikipedia β†—
BJ

Bobby Jones

American amateur golfer who won the Grand Slam of 1930 and co-founded the Masters Tournament.

Golf, United States, 1920s-1930s

golfamateurgrand slam
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for winning it all as an amateur and then building Augusta, a gift to the game you loved.

Wikipedia β†—
BZ

Babe Didrikson Zaharias

American athlete who won Olympic track gold and became a founding star of women's professional golf.

Multi-sport, United States, 1930s-1950s

athleticsgolfolympicsversatility
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for excelling in track, golf, and more, and for helping found the women's tour that followed you.

Wikipedia β†—
AS

Ayrton Senna

Brazilian Formula One driver and three-time world champion known for his speed in the wet and on qualifying laps.

Formula 1, Brazil, 1984-1994

formula 1motorsportworld champion
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for driving on the edge of the possible and for a devotion to your craft and country that still moves people.

Wikipedia β†—
JF

Juan Manuel Fangio

Argentine Formula One driver who won five world championships in the 1950s.

Formula 1, Argentina, 1950s

formula 1motorsportworld champion
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for mastering the deadliest era of racing with a calm skill that set the template for every champion after.

Wikipedia β†—
JC

Jim Clark

Scottish Formula One driver, two-time world champion and 1965 Indianapolis 500 winner.

Formula 1, United Kingdom, 1960s

formula 1motorsportworld champion
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a smoothness at the wheel that rivals still study, and a humility that made you beloved.

Wikipedia β†—
NL

Niki Lauda

Austrian Formula One driver, three-time world champion who returned to racing weeks after a near-fatal fire.

Formula 1, Austria, 1970s-1980s

formula 1motorsportworld champion
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the courage to race again after the flames, a lesson in resilience far beyond sport.

Wikipedia β†—
MS

Michael Schumacher

German Formula One driver and seven-time world champion, a record he held alone for over a decade.

Formula 1, Germany, 1991-2012

formula 1motorsportworld championrecords
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a relentless standard and work ethic that lifted an entire team and defined a generation of Formula One.

Wikipedia β†—
EM

Eddy Merckx

Belgian cyclist who won the Tour de France five times and is widely regarded as the greatest ever.

Cycling, Belgium, 1960s-1970s

cyclingtour de franceclassics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a hunger to win every race you entered, earning the name The Cannibal and the sport's highest respect.

Wikipedia β†—
JK

Jean-Claude Killy

French alpine skier who swept all three men's gold medals at the 1968 Grenoble Olympics.

Alpine skiing, France, 1960s

alpine skiingolympicsdownhill
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a home-Games sweep that thrilled a nation and lifted alpine skiing onto the world stage.

Wikipedia β†—
IS

Ingemar Stenmark

Swedish alpine skier who won a record 86 World Cup races in slalom and giant slalom.

Alpine skiing, Sweden, 1970s-1980s

alpine skiingslalomworld cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a record of wins that made a quiet man from the north a hero to skiers everywhere.

Wikipedia β†—
SH

Sonja Henie

Norwegian figure skater, three-time Olympic champion who transformed the sport and later starred in film.

Figure skating, Norway, 1920s-1930s

figure skatingolympicsinnovation
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for bringing athleticism and artistry to the ice and inspiring generations of skaters to follow.

Wikipedia β†—
WG

Wayne Gretzky

Canadian ice hockey center who holds the NHL records for goals, assists, and points.

Ice hockey, Canada, 1979-1999

ice hockeyscoringrecords
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for seeing the game a step ahead of everyone and carrying it, with humility, to new places and fans.

Wikipedia β†—
GH

Gordie Howe

Canadian ice hockey forward whose pro career spanned five decades of durability and scoring.

Ice hockey, Canada, 1946-1980

ice hockeyscoringlongevity
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for decades of toughness and skill that earned you the title Mr. Hockey and a place in every fan's heart.

Wikipedia β†—
MR

Maurice Richard

Canadian ice hockey winger, the first player to score 50 goals in 50 games.

Ice hockey, Canada, 1942-1960

ice hockeyscoringcanadiens
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the fire on the ice that made you a symbol of pride for Quebec and hockey alike.

Wikipedia β†—
JB

Jim Brown

American football running back who led the NFL in rushing in eight of his nine seasons.

American football, United States, 1957-1965

american footballrunning backactivism
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a dominance at running back still unmatched, and for stepping away at your peak to serve your community.

Wikipedia β†—
JM

Joe Montana

American football quarterback who won four Super Bowls with the San Francisco 49ers.

American football, United States, 1979-1994

american footballquarterbacksuper bowl
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the calm in the final minutes that taught a sport what composure under pressure looks like.

Wikipedia β†—
JR

Jerry Rice

American football wide receiver who holds nearly every major NFL receiving record.

American football, United States, 1985-2004

american footballwide receiverrecords
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a work ethic so relentless it made talent look secondary, inspiring anyone who ever felt overlooked.

Wikipedia β†—
JU

Johnny Unitas

American football quarterback who starred in the 1958 NFL Championship, often called the greatest game ever played.

American football, United States, 1956-1973

american footballquarterbackpioneer
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the poise and passing that helped turn pro football into America's game.

Wikipedia β†—
EZ

Emil Zatopek

Czech long-distance runner who won the 5,000m, 10,000m, and marathon at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics.

Athletics, Czechoslovakia, 1950s

athleticsdistance runningolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for three golds in one Games, run with a grimace and a generosity of spirit that made you loved worldwide.

Wikipedia β†—
PN

Paavo Nurmi

Finnish distance runner who won nine Olympic gold medals in the 1920s.

Athletics, Finland, 1920s

athleticsdistance runningolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for running with a stopwatch and a scientist's discipline, showing the world what training could build.

Wikipedia β†—
CL

Carl Lewis

American track and field athlete who won nine Olympic gold medals in sprints and the long jump.

Athletics, United States, 1980s-1990s

athleticssprintinglong jumpolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a decade of dominance across four Olympics, and for the longevity that redefined a sprinter's career.

Wikipedia β†—
SC

Sebastian Coe

British middle-distance runner, double Olympic 1500m champion and multiple world record holder.

Athletics, United Kingdom, 1980s

athleticsmiddle-distanceolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the rivalries and records that made middle-distance running the drama of a generation.

Wikipedia β†—
JJ

Jackie Joyner-Kersee

American athlete widely regarded as the greatest heptathlete, with three Olympic golds.

Athletics, United States, 1980s-1990s

athleticsheptathlonlong jumpolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for mastering seven events at once and for a warmth that made you a role model far beyond the track.

Wikipedia β†—
AB

Abebe Bikila

Ethiopian marathon runner who won the 1960 Rome Olympic marathon running barefoot.

Athletics, Ethiopia, 1960s

athleticsmarathonolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for running barefoot to gold and opening the marathon world to the great runners of Africa.

Wikipedia β†—
G

Garrincha

Brazilian soccer winger and two-time World Cup winner celebrated for his dribbling despite childhood leg deformities.

Soccer, Brazil, 1950s-1960s

soccerwingerworld cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the joy of your dribble, playing for love of the game and delight of the crowd above all else.

Wikipedia β†—
FP

Ferenc Puskas

Hungarian soccer forward, star of the Mighty Magyars and a prolific scorer for Real Madrid.

Soccer, Hungary, 1940s-1960s

soccerforwardgoals
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a left foot and a scoring record that made the Hungarian side of the 1950s unforgettable.

Wikipedia β†—
FB

Franz Beckenbauer

German soccer defender who won the World Cup as captain and again as manager.

Soccer, Germany, 1960s-1970s

soccerdefenderworld cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for reinventing the role of the sweeper and lifting the World Cup as both leader on the pitch and off.

Wikipedia β†—
JC

Johan Cruyff

Dutch soccer forward and pioneer of Total Football, later an influential manager.

Soccer, Netherlands, 1960s-1970s

soccertotal footballphilosophy
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a way of playing and thinking about the game that still shapes the best teams today.

Wikipedia β†—
BC

Bobby Charlton

English soccer midfielder, 1966 World Cup winner and survivor of the Munich air disaster.

Soccer, England, 1950s-1970s

soccermidfieldworld cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the grace on the ball and the quiet dignity you carried through triumph and tragedy alike.

Wikipedia β†—
MP

Michel Platini

French soccer midfielder, three-time Ballon d'Or winner and captain of the 1984 European champions.

Soccer, France, 1970s-1980s

soccermidfieldplaymaker
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the vision and free kicks that made you the artist at the heart of a golden French side.

Wikipedia β†—
GS

Garfield Sobers

West Indian cricket all-rounder widely regarded as the greatest all-rounder the game has seen.

Cricket, West Indies, 1950s-1970s

cricketall-rounderbatting
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for doing everything on a cricket field with elegance, and for lifting West Indies cricket with pride.

Wikipedia β†—
VR

Viv Richards

West Indian cricket batsman whose fearless stroke play led a dominant era for the region.

Cricket, West Indies, 1970s-1990s

cricketbattingwest indies
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for batting with a swagger that carried the pride of a whole region onto the world stage.

Wikipedia β†—
SG

Sunil Gavaskar

Indian cricket batsman, the first to reach 10,000 Test runs, famed for facing fast bowling without a helmet.

Cricket, India, 1970s-1980s

cricketbattingtest cricket
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the technique and courage that inspired a cricket-mad nation of young batsmen to dream.

Wikipedia β†—
KD

Kapil Dev

Indian cricket all-rounder who captained India to its first World Cup title in 1983.

Cricket, India, 1970s-1990s

cricketall-rounderworld cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the 1983 triumph that changed Indian cricket forever and sparked a nation's love affair with the game.

Wikipedia β†—
WG

W. G. Grace

English cricketer of the Victorian era who did much to shape the modern techniques of batting.

Cricket, England, 1860s-1900s

cricketbattingpioneer
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for helping invent modern batting and for making cricket a national passion in its earliest days.

Wikipedia β†—
AK

Aleksandr Karelin

Russian Greco-Roman wrestler, three-time Olympic champion who went years without conceding a point.

Wrestling, Russia, 1980s-1990s

wrestlinggreco-romanolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a decade of near-untouchable dominance that set the standard for strength and technique in the sport.

Wikipedia β†—
DG

Dan Gable

American wrestler who won 1972 Olympic gold without surrendering a point and became a legendary coach.

Wrestling, United States, 1970s

wrestlingolympicscoaching
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a perfect run to gold and for coaching that shaped American wrestling for generations.

Wikipedia β†—
JK

Jahangir Khan

Pakistani squash player who won an unbeaten run of over 500 matches in the 1980s.

Squash, Pakistan, 1980s

squashworld championdominance
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for one of the longest winning streaks in all of sport, built on relentless fitness and will.

Wikipedia β†—
RB

Roger Bannister

British runner who became the first person to run a mile in under four minutes, in 1954.

Athletics, United Kingdom, 1950s

athleticsmiddle-distancemilestone
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for breaking a barrier many thought impossible and showing the world that limits are often just in the mind.

Wikipedia β†—
FJ

Florence Griffith Joyner

American sprinter who set the 100m and 200m world records in 1988 that still stand.

Athletics, United States, 1980s

athleticssprintingworld records
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for records that have stood for decades and for the style and joy you brought to the track.

Wikipedia β†—
KW

Katarina Witt

German figure skater and two-time Olympic champion in 1984 and 1988.

Figure skating, Germany, 1980s

figure skatingolympicsartistry
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the artistry and back-to-back Olympic titles that made figure skating must-watch drama.

Wikipedia β†—
DF

Dawn Fraser

Australian swimmer who won the 100m freestyle gold at three consecutive Olympics.

Swimming, Australia, 1950s-1960s

swimmingfreestyleolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a rare three-Games reign in one event and the spirit that made you an Australian icon.

Wikipedia β†—
MH

Mia Hamm

American soccer forward, two-time World Cup and Olympic champion who helped popularize the women's game.

Soccer, United States, 1987-2004

soccerforwardworld cup
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for helping build women's soccer into a movement and for inspiring millions of girls to play.

Wikipedia β†—
GW

Grete Waitz

Norwegian marathon runner who won the New York City Marathon nine times.

Athletics, Norway, 1970s-1980s

athleticsmarathondistance running
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for showing that women belonged in the marathon and for winning New York like it was your own.

Wikipedia β†—
HA

Hank Aaron

American baseball outfielder who broke Babe Ruth's career home run record in 1974.

Baseball, United States, 1954-1976

baseballhome runsrecords
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for chasing the record through hate mail and threats with quiet grace, and for making it look easy.

Wikipedia β†—
WM

Willie Mays

American baseball center fielder celebrated as one of the most complete players in the sport's history.

Baseball, United States, 1951-1973

baseballcenter fieldfive-tool
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for playing with a joy and completeness that made watching baseball feel like a gift.

Wikipedia β†—
SP

Satchel Paige

American baseball pitcher, a Negro leagues legend who became one of the oldest MLB rookies at age 42.

Baseball, United States, 1920s-1950s

baseballpitchingnegro leagues
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for a lifetime of brilliance in the shadows of segregation, and for the wit and skill history could not hide.

Wikipedia β†—
KK

Kip Keino

Kenyan middle-distance runner and Olympic champion who launched Kenya's long tradition of distance greatness.

Athletics, Kenya, 1960s-1970s

athleticsdistance runningolympics
Why we celebrate them

Thank you for the golds that opened the world's eyes to Kenyan running and for a lifetime of caring for children.

Wikipedia β†—
Know someone who belongs here?

Nominate a champion.

Toward 1024. Every champion is real, public, and cited; anyone featured can ask to be updated or removed.

Nominate a champion β†’
Honest by construction

What this is, and isn't.

A celebration of the Athletes community, assembled entirely from public information as an act of credit and gratitude. It is not a claim of endorsement, affiliation, sponsorship, or partnership by anyone featured. Every person is real and publicly documented, with a cited source of truth on their card; we never invent a person or a claim, and we prize accuracy over speed. Anyone featured can ask to be updated or removed at any time. Names and marks belong to their owners.