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The 50 Greatest Sports Figures:
New York

20th Century Top 50: New York
Rank Profile
1 Jim Brown , Manhasset
Lettered 13 times at Manhasset High; All-America at Syracuse in football and lacrosse in 1956; ran for 12,312 yards in nine years with Browns.
2 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar , New York
Led Power Memorial Academy to 71 straight wins; three straight national titles at UCLA; six-time NBA MVP scored record 38,387 points.
3 Sugar Ray Robinson , New York
Middleweight was first boxer to win a world title five times; career record of 175-19-6.
4 Lou Gehrig , New York
Batted .340 with 493 home runs and 1,995 RBIs in 17 years with Yankees; played in then-record 2,130 straight games.
5 Julius Erving , Hempstead
ABA sensation wound up leading 76ers to 1982-83 NBA title; league MVP in '80-81.
6 Sandy Koufax , Brooklyn
From 1963 through '66 went 97-27 with 1.86 ERA and 1,228 strikeouts for Dodgers -- then retired, at 30; four no-hitters.
7 Vince Lombardi , Brooklyn
Coached Packers to six conference championships, five NFL crowns and two Super Bowl titles from 1959 to '67.
8 John McEnroe , Douglaston
Finished season as No. 1 tennis player in the world three times; won four U.S. Opens (1979-81, '84) and three Wimbledons ('81, '83-84); played on five Davis Cup champions.
9 Pop Warner , Springville
Coached Pitt to two national championships and a 59-12-4 mark from 1915 to '23.
10 Althea Gibson , New York
Back-to-back Wimbledon and U.S. singles titles in 1957-58.
11 Red Auerbach , Brooklyn
Eastern District High hoops star coached Celtics to eight straight NBA titles (1959-66); 1965 Coach of the Year went 1,037-548 over career.
12 Walter Hagen , Rochester
Winner of two U.S. Opens, four British Opens and five PGA Championships between 1914 and '29; had 40 PGA Tour wins.
13 Hank Greenberg , Bronx
First baseman was AL home run king four times, including career-high 58 in 1938; two-time league MVP.
14 Sid Luckman , Brooklyn
Bears quarterback passed for seven touchdowns in one game in 1943; played in five NFL title games in seven seasons.
15 Gertrude Ederle , New York
In 1926 became first woman to swim English Channel; cut nearly two hours off men's mark.
16 Joe Paterno , Brooklyn
Penn State football coach since 1966 has won more bowl games (19) than any other coach; won national championships in 1982 and '86.
17 Gene Tunney , New York
Heavyweight champion from 1926 to '28 after beating Jack Dempsey in 10-round decision.
18 John McGraw , Truxton
Hit .334 over 16 years in majors; managed Giants to 10 pennants and three World Series from 1902 to '32.
19 Bob Cousy , St. Albans
Point guard for Holy Cross's 1946-47 NCAA championship team; led NBA in assists eight straight times with Celtics.
20 Eddie Collins , Tarrytown
Won four pennants and three world championships as A's second baseman in 1910s; batted .333 in 25-year career.
21 David Stern , New York
NBA commissioner since 1984; revitalized league with TV contracts and collective bargaining agreement.
22 Gene Sarazen , Harrison
One of four golfers with career Grand Slam; famous for double eagle on 15th hole of last round of 1935 Masters that forced playoff.
23 Al Davis , Brooklyn
Played baseball at Syracuse; was AFL commissioner when it merged with NFL; owns Raiders.
24 Lenny Wilkens , Brooklyn
In Basketball Hall of Fame as player and coach; most career wins by NBA coach.
25 Marvin Miller , Brooklyn
Executive director of MLB players' union revolutionized salary system; steering players toward unrestricted free agency and arbitration.
26 Nancy Lieberman-Cline , Far Rockaway
Three-time All-America point guard at Old Dominion; youngest member of 1976 silver medal U.S. women's Olympic team.
27 Al Oerter , New Hyde Park
First Olympian to win four gold medals in the same event -- the discus -- from 1956 through '68; set world record four times.
28 Benny Leonard , New York
Knocked out Freddie Welsh for lightweight title in 1917; held belt for eight years; 85-5-1 career mark.
29 Roone Arledge , Merrick
ABC Sports president created Wide World of Sports and Monday Night Football.
30 Floyd Patterson , Brooklyn
Two-time national Golden Gloves champ won Olympic middleweight gold in 1952; became two-time heavyweight champion of the world.
31 Warren Spahn , Buffalo
Most wins by a lefty (363); won 20 or more 13 times with Braves; 1957 Cy Young winner; threw 63 shutouts; tossed two no-hitters after turning 39.
32 Carl Yastrzemski , Bridgehampton
Red Sox leftfielder finished with 3,419 hits and 1,844 RBIs; won 1967 Triple Crown (.326, 44 homers and 121 RBIs).
33 Bob Beamon , Jamaica
Won 1968 Olympic long jump with leap of 29' 2 1/2" beating world record by nearly two feet.
34 Whitey Ford , Astoria
Yankees lefthander was Cy Young winner in 1961; alltime World Series win leader, with 10.
35 Mike Tyson , Brooklyn
Youngest heavyweight champion won title at 20 in 1986; jailed for rape in '92; regained belt in '96.
36 John Davis , Brooklyn
Won heavyweight weightlifting gold medal at 1948 and '52 Olympics; set 19 world records in career.
37 Rick Carey , Mount Kisco
Won three straight NCAA 200-meter backstroke titles; 1984 Olympic gold medalist in 100 backstroke, 200 backstroke and 4x100 medley relay.
38 John Mackey , Hempstead
Revolutionized tight end play by making 331 catches for 5,238 yards over 10-year NFL career.
39 Pat Riley , Schenectady
All-America at Kentucky in 1966; drafted by NBA and NFL; played nine NBA seasons, then coached Lakers to four titles.
40 Billy Cunningham , Brooklyn
Led Erasmus Hall High to 1961 New York City basketball title; won '67 NBA title with 76ers; three times All-NBA.
41 Joe Durso , Brooklyn
One-wall handball player won 15 National Outdoor titles (nine singles and six doubles) from 1982 to '94.
42 Red Holzman , Brooklyn
Pro guard for 1945-46 and '50-51 league champion Rochester Royals; coached Knicks to two NBA titles.
43 Ralph DePalma , Brooklyn
Won Indianapolis 500 in 1915; won 2,557 of 2,889 races over 27-year career.
44 Connie Hawkins , Brooklyn
Playground basketball legend; ABA MVP 1967-'68; four-time NBA All-Star in seven seasons.
45 Dolph Schayes , Bronx
Basketball star averaged 18.5 points and 11.3 rebounds for Nationals and 76ers from 1948 to '64; played in 764 consecutive games.
46 Frankie Frisch , Bronx
Infielder helped Giants win four straight pennants and two World Series; 1931 NL MVP.
47 Chamique Holdsclaw , Astoria
Won four state basketball titles at Christ the King; four-time All-America led Tennessee to three NCAA championships.
48 Abie Grossfeld , New York
Won four NCAA titles at Illinois; world gymnastics champ twice; coached men's U.S. Olympic team in 1972, '84 and '88.
49 Frank McGuire , New York
Had 100 wins each at three colleges -- St. John's, North Carolina and South Carolina.
50 Rocky Graziano , New York
World middleweight champion (1947-48) known for three brutal brawls with Tony Zale; 67-10-6 (52 KOs) for career.


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