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Our Favorite Teams

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Posted: Tuesday August 31, 1999 02:08 PM

Sports Illustrated Did we leave your favorite team off the list? Click here to let us know, and come back later to see a selection of your responses.

1 1974 Oakland A's
The only club other than the Yankees to win three consecutive world championships, the A's epitomized the team-as-family concept. Granted, they were the Gotti family: full of internecine warfare, domineered by a powerful patriarch, pitiless toward outside rivals. And brother did they have style. The A's made it O.K. to wear white shoes after Labor Day -- long after Labor Day, damn near every autumn.
2 1976 Pittsburgh Steelers
Pick a favorite of the four Steelers Super Bowl teams of the 1970s? How 'bout none of 'em? Their greatest team was the '76 squad (below), which played the best defense the NFL had ever seen -- two touchdowns allowed in the final nine games, five shutouts. Both backs, Franco Harris and Rocky Bleier, ran for more than 1,000 yards, and when they went down in the 40-14 win over the Colts in the first round of the playoffs, the Steelers' doom was sealed.
3 1950 Harlem Globetrotters
Imagine, if you will, that the Seinfeld gang had also been Stanley Cup champions. That was the Globies, who beat the NBA's best (white) team, the Minneapolis Lakers, twice. These Globies had two Hall of Famers, Marques Haynes and Pop Gates, plus Goose Tatum, the Clown Prince of Basketball, and several other terrific players, like Sweetwater Clifton. When the Knicks signed Clifton, racial justice was served, but the Globies were soon left with only the clowns, while the black princes became the kings of the NBA.
4 1934 St. Louis Cardinals
The Gashouse Gang even sounded fun -- with guys named Dizzy, Daffy, Ducky and Spud -- and their brand of baseball was even more colorful than their monikers. Third baseman Pepper Martin was the clubhouse leader, shortstop Leo Durocher was earning his reputation as the Lip, and star pitcher Dizzy Dean made brash predictions, such as guaranteeing that he and brother Daffy would win four World Series games against Detroit. They did.
5 1976-77 Portland Trail Blazers
Sure, other title teams relied on passing rather than shooting (Portland didn't have a scorer among the league's top 20), and others upset star-studded favorites (the Blazers beat the Erving-McGinnis-Collins-Dawkins 76ers in six). But Jack Ramsey's charges were the only ones led by a bearded, berry-eating, pot-smoking, left-leaning, Dead-worshipping pivotman (above) who looked as if he'd just come down from Walton's Mountain.
6 1980 U.S. Olympic Hockey
An early chink in the Iron Curtain -- the towheaded child crusaders beat the paid Soviet goons -- was also one of those rare times when a U.S. team was the underdog in a sport Americans cared about. And after these seventh-seeded innocents won the final over Finland, never did anybody look better wrapped in a flag. Who can ever forget Jim Craig searching the stands: "Where's my father? Where's my father?"
7 1963 San Diego Chargers
While the Chicago Bears were hammering out their NFL championship with defensive muscle, the Chargers were a flash of sunlight, running up a 51-10 score -- and 610 yards of offense -- on the Boston Patriots in the AFL title game. What a collection of talent: Hall of Fame offensive tackle Ron Mix; Lance Alworth, the AFL's first homegrown Hall of Famer, blazing deep; and All-AFL end Earl Faison leading a defense coached by Chuck Noll. Overseeing the whole thing was Sid Gillman, the genius of the passing game, the originator of the true West Coast offense.
8   The King and His Court
"I am the world's finest softball pitcher by at least 100 percent," says Eddie (the King) Feigner, whose four-man fast-pitch circus has played more than 10,000 games in 53 barnstorming years. "I once struck out a man on one pitch," he boasts. "He swung and missed three times at the same changeup."
9 1962 New York Mets
Facetiously named the Amazing Mets, the inaugural Mets and their bungling were chronicled by Jimmy Breslin in Can't Anybody Here Play This Game? whose title was a plaint whined by New York's stand-up comic cum manager, Casey Stengel. The players were best represented by Marvelous Marv Throneberry, who later promulgated his ineptitude in a beer commercial, opining, "If I do for Lite what I did for baseball, I'm afraid their sales will go down."
10 1967 USC Football
While not exactly shot through with blonds, the Trojans were otherwise as California as could be, trumping every hard-held Midwestern value. What rattled the heartland most? The gorgeous cheerleaders, O.J. Simpson's effortless sweeps or the drollery of coach John McKay, who gave Indiana a free scouting report for the Rose Bowl: "We will continue to operate from two plays, which I will signal to O.J. I'll tell him to run left or right." Final score: USC 14, Indiana 3.
11 1985 Chicago Bears
The last NFL team actually allowed to smile, the Madcaps of the Midway also danced and rapped. Mike Ditka was the coach, Jim McMahon the ineffable field general, but the prime-time celebrity was an industrial-sized Refrigerator -- Perry -- who went both ways: straight and comic.
12 1954 Milan (Ind.) High Basketball
In Indiana the allegory of tiny Milan High is imparted to young boys and girls before they hear about David and Goliath. The Indians -- a team of Scott Skiles look-alikes who learned their set shooting in the family barns -- cruised through the state tournament, laying waste to schools with 10 times their student body. Fictionalized in the film Hoosiers, the Milan Miracle endures, further evidence that Indiana ought to return to its single-class high school basketball tournament.
13 1972 Boston Bruins
Boston bumper stickers read JESUS SAVES... AND ESPO SCORES ON THE REBOUND. Bobby Orr glided to places where no defenseman had ever glided, did things no defenseman had ever done. Phil Esposito stood in the slot and scored goals with production-line efficiency. The roster was filled with raucous characters like Derek (the Turk) Sanderson and Johnny (Pie) McKenzie, who rolled through the Stanley Cup playoffs as if they were a back road in Ontario on a Saturday night.
14   Torvill and Dean
It only takes two to make a team. Even if we weren't sure that what Torvill and Dean were doing was sport, we were sure it was greatness. They redefined the limits of ice dancing by removing them. They could be spunky, acrobatic or romantic -- their showstopping Bolero program in the '84 Olympics was the sexiest performance in the history of skating.
15 1906 Chicago White Sox
In the third World Series the White Sox proved that anything is possible in the Fall Classic. It was amazing enough that the Hitless Wonders won the American League pennant while finishing last in batting average (.230). But how could they possibly beat the National League champion Cubs of Tinker, Evers and Chance, the team whose 116-36 record remains the best ever? Well, the Sox did, though they hit .198 in the Series. Long live the lessons of the Dead Ball era.
16 1997-98 Princeton Basketball
The backdoor pass is sleight of hand for the slight of size, and nobody has mastered it like Princeton, everybody's second-favorite college team. How did the Tigers turn some of the nation's top programs into the Washington Generals? By using the purest example of Cartesian logic in sports, the source of the most jaw-dropping box score we've ever seen: 21 baskets, 21 assists.
17 1999 U.S. Women's World Cup
They drew an SRO crowd to the Rose Bowl, kept 11.3 million Americans glued to their television sets and proved to U.S. sports fans what the rest of the world had long known: A nil-nil soccer match can be one of the most thrilling events in sports.
18 1974-75 Spirits of St. Louis
Marvin (Bad News) Barnes -- who disappeared for two weeks early in the season -- averaged 24 points a game. Fly Williams once got into a fight with a teammate during warmups. Rookie play-by-play man Bobby Costas once referred -- on the air -- to a giveaway loss as a "blow job."
19 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers
Has the symbiosis between team and town ever been this sweet? The Dodgers made Brooklyn proud the season next year -- as in "Wait'll next year!" -- finally arrived. The Boys of Summer finally slew the dragon when Johnny Podres shut out the Yankees in Game 7 of the World Series.
20 1960 U.S. Olympic Basketball
Three members of the squad that ransacked Rome -- Jerry Lucas, Oscar Robertson and Jerry West -- are among the greatest players of all time, and the coach, Cal's Pete Newell, maybe history's most underrated hoops mind.

Issue date: September 6, 1999

YOUR TAKE
Did we leave your favorite team off the list? Click here to let us know, and come back later to see a selection of your responses.

 
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