POLL: Who had the best season (statistically speaking) in any sport ever?

Best Season?


  • Total voters
    98
  • Poll closed .

LionsAndBears

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2021
1,735
3,017
113
Whenever I am presented with something like this the first name that comes to mind is always Ted Williams. Hitting a baseball is the hardest thing to do in sports. The man hit .406 for a season. It's the greatest single season accomplishment in all of sports IMO.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Midnighter

LB99

Well-known member
Oct 27, 2021
6,197
8,141
113
You guys are crazy. The answer is Bob Gibson 1968. His stats are unthinkable.
 

Attachments

  • FD75C5C8-EDAD-472B-8AF5-8AD06D95349F.jpeg
    FD75C5C8-EDAD-472B-8AF5-8AD06D95349F.jpeg
    547.2 KB · Views: 4
  • Like
Reactions: 91Joe95

Nohow

Well-known member
Oct 25, 2021
1,189
950
113
Whenever I am presented with something like this the first name that comes to mind is always Ted Williams. Hitting a baseball is the hardest thing to do in sports. The man hit .406 for a season. It's the greatest single season accomplishment in all of sports IMO.
That makes him 24th on the list of highest batting averages for a season.
 

LB99

Well-known member
Oct 27, 2021
6,197
8,141
113
Gibson’s 1968 stats. 34 games pitched. 22-9 record. 28 complete games. 1.12 ERA for the season. 268 strikeouts in 304 innings. At one point he only gave up 2 earned runs in a 95 inning stretch. He also struck out 17 in the first game of the WS. Won the Cy Young and MVP.

He was a workhorse his entire career. He pitched in 528 games in his career and 255 were complete games. No one will ever touch that in today’s game. 3,884 innings and a 2.91 career ERA.
 

danvillenit

Well-known member
Oct 30, 2021
989
2,099
93
I say that Pistol Pete Maravich should be on that list for his achievements at LSU. As great as they were, just imagine if the 3 point line was in play at the time
I saw somewhere that he would have averaged 54 ppg with the three point line. Someone looked at all his college shots.
 

Dailybuck778

New member
Oct 28, 2021
22
24
3
Please feel free to submit a 'write in' (and if you do, list said accomplishments)....


1. Wilt Chamberlain - 1961-1962 - 50.4 PPG, 25.7 RBG

2. Wayne Gretzky - 1985-1986 - 52 Goals, 163 Assists, 215 Points

3. Babe Ruth - 1921 - .378 BA, .846 SLG, 59 HR, 171 RBI

4. Oscar Robertson - 1961-1962 - 30.8 PPG, 12.5 RPG, 11.4 APG

5. Tom Brady - 2007-2008 - 4,806 Yards, 50 TDs, 8 INT

6. Ted Williams - 1941 - .406 BA, 37 HR, 120 RBI

7. LaDanian Tomlinson - 2006-2007 - 1,815 Rushing Yards, 508 Receiving Yards, 31 TDs

8. Steffi Graf - 1988 - 75-2 Record, 4 GS Victories, Olympic Gold Medal

9. Pele - 1961 - 55 Goals, 8 Hat Tricks, Responsible for 48% of Team Scores

10. Tiger Woods - 2000 - 9 PGA Tour Wins, 3 Major Wins

Tiger Woods won something like 6 tournaments in a row one year and also had a multiyear grand slam (or 3 grand slam tournaments in one year if you wish)
 
  • Like
Reactions: Midnighter

Nitt1300

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2021
4,997
9,455
113
George Foreman, 1988

9 fights, 9 wins- all by knockout

statistically speaking- perfection

 
  • Like
Reactions: Midnighter

fairgambit

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2021
1,694
5,622
113
Elroy Face. 1959 Pittsburgh Pirates. 18-1 as relief pitcher. He set the still-standing major league records for winning percentage (.947), and single-season wins in relief. Roy is still alive at 94.


images.jpeg
 

Woodpecker

Well-known member
Oct 7, 2021
3,389
6,493
113
Actually, the only possible response is Bobby Bonilla.
For the win! Hard to beat his year in 2000 when a team, for whom he no longer played, agreed to make him annual payments of nearly $1.2 million for 25 years starting July 1, 2011, including a negotiated 8% interest. He'll be reaping those benefits for another 13 years! (A second deferred-contract plan with the Mets and Orioles pays him $500,000 a year for 25 years. Those payments began in 2004.)
 
Get unlimited access today.

Pick the right plan for you.

Already a member? Login