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Fred
Bowen's "The Score" column,
January 12, 2001, Washington Post
They say that records are made to be broken.
And that's true. Most of the time.
No one thought Lou Gehrig's consecutive-game
streak in baseball would be broken, but Cal Ripken topped
it when he played in his 2,131st consecutive game a
few years back.
But I do think there are some sports records
that really won't be broken -- not in the year 2001
or ever.
Here are a few of the unbreakable feats:
- Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point game.
In 1962, center Wilt "The Stilt" Chamberlain
of the Philadelphia Warriors (now the 76ers) set a
National Basketball Association record by pouring
in an unbelievable 100 points against the New York
Knicks. No one has even come close to that mark. The
most Michael Jordan ever scored was 69 points. Most
teams don't even score 100 points in a game.
- Wayne Gretzky's 215-point season. Nowadays,
any hockey player who scores 100 points (that's goals
and assists) in a season is called a superstar. So,
believe me, the Great Gretzky's record of 215 points
in the 1985-86 season is safe. He was a magician at
helping his teammates score goals. That season, he
had 163 assists -- more than two per game.
- Goalie Glenn Hall's 502 consecutive-game
streak. Want a hockey record that is even tougher
to break than Gretzky's? From 1955 to 1962, goalie
Glenn Hall played for the Detroit Red Wings and then
for the Chicago Black Hawks without missing a game.
In nearly 40 years, no goalie (besides Hall) has played
every game of even a single season. Hall's record
spans more than six seasons.
- Margaret Court's 24 Grand Slam tennis
titles. The biggest tournaments in tennis are Wimbledon
and the Australian, French and U.S. Opens -- known
as Grand Slams. Martina Navratilova (18 Grand Slam
titles), Chris Evert (18) and Steffi Graf (22) have
come close to Margaret Court's record, but the competition
among female athletes, including tennis players, has
become really fierce. Venus Williams may be bigger,
faster and stronger than Court, but so are Williams's
rivals. So chances are that Williams will not reach
Court's 24 Grand Slam wins.
- Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak.
This is one of baseball's most famous records, made
by one of the New York Yankees' most famous players.
The "Yankee Clipper," as he was called,
smacked at least one hit in 56 straight games in 1941.
Even more amazing, after DiMaggio came up empty in
his 57th game, he immediately started another 17-game
streak. So, he was only one hit away from an even
more unreachable 74-game streak.
Bigger gloves, better fielders and tougher
relief pitchers are making it harder for anybody to
get a hit in any game, much less 57 in a row.
Yeah, they say records are meant to be
broken. But maybe they weren't thinking of these records.
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