Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Who Are the Greatest Athletes of All Time (Initial List)

Initial Thought

The following are the contenders that come to mind without me doing any research. Not in any order.
  • Simone Biles
  • Jim Thorpe
  • LeBron James
  • Michael Jordan
  • Lionel Messi
  • Shohei Ohtani
  • Floyd Mayweather
  • Carl Lewis
  • Usain Bolt
  • Michael Phelps
  • Tom Brady
  • Wayne Gretzky
  • Jesse Owens
  • Deion Sanders
  • Bo Jackson
  • Bruce Lee 
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger
  • The Rock (Dwayne Johnson)
First thought is there is a huge America bias in my list. The male bias makes sense for a few reasons: 1) women have been excluded; 2) men are more likely to be hypercompetitive; among a couple other factors.

Other Lists


I had GPT format and organize the following information into a table. There is decent overlap with my initial brainstorming above. There are a few athletes I have never heard of before. 

AthleteSport / sportsClaim to fame
Michael JordanBasketballSix-time NBA champion and five-time MVP, widely considered the defining basketball player of the modern era.
Babe RuthBaseballTransformed baseball with unprecedented power hitting after also starring as an elite pitcher early in his career.
Muhammad AliBoxingThree-time world heavyweight champion whose boxing greatness, charisma, and political significance made him a global sports icon.
Jim BrownAmerican football, lacrosseDominant NFL running back and elite lacrosse player, often cited as one of the greatest all-around American athletes.
Wayne GretzkyIce hockeyNHL’s all-time scoring leader with statistical separation from his peers unmatched in major North American team sports.
Jesse OwensTrack and fieldWon four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics in sprints and long jump, combining athletic dominance with major historical significance.
Jim ThorpeTrack and field, American football, baseball, basketballOlympic decathlon and pentathlon champion who also played multiple professional sports.
Willie MaysBaseballOne of baseball’s greatest five-tool players, combining elite hitting, power, speed, defense, and longevity.
Jack NicklausGolfWon a record 18 men’s major championships and remains the central historical comparison for golf greatness.
Babe Didrikson ZahariasTrack and field, golf, basketballOlympic track champion and dominant golfer, one of the strongest multi-sport athlete candidates ever.
Joe LouisBoxingLong-reigning heavyweight champion whose dominance and cultural importance made him one of boxing’s defining figures.
Carl LewisTrack and fieldWon Olympic golds across sprinting and long jump, giving him one of the broadest track-and-field greatness cases.
Wilt ChamberlainBasketball, track and field, volleyballStatistically overwhelming basketball player with rare size, strength, endurance, and broader athletic ability.
Hank AaronBaseballBroke Babe Ruth’s career home run record and combined elite power, consistency, and longevity.
Jackie RobinsonBaseball, football, basketball, track and fieldIntegrated modern MLB and was also a multi-sport college athlete at UCLA.
PeléSoccer / footballThree-time World Cup winner and one of the foundational figures in global soccer greatness debates.
Cristiano RonaldoSoccer / footballElite goal scorer with extraordinary longevity, Champions League dominance, global fame, and massive playing income.
Serena WilliamsTennisDominant tennis champion whose power, longevity, and major-title résumé make her one of the strongest individual-sport candidates.
Novak DjokovicTennisMen’s tennis great with the strongest modern résumé by major titles, longevity, and all-surface success.
Jackie Joyner-KerseeTrack and fieldOlympic heptathlon and long jump great, combining broad athleticism with elite multi-event dominance.
Bo JacksonBaseball, American footballRare modern athlete selected as an All-Star in both MLB and the NFL, though injuries limited longevity.
Deion SandersAmerican football, baseballHall of Fame NFL cornerback who also had a substantial MLB career, making him one of the best modern two-sport professionals.
Don BradmanCricketCricket’s greatest statistical outlier, famous for a career Test batting average of 99.94.
Eric HeidenSpeed skating, cyclingSwept all five men’s speed-skating events at the 1980 Winter Olympics, an unmatched single-Games range achievement.
Aleksandr KarelinGreco-Roman wrestlingThree-time Olympic gold medalist and one of the most dominant wrestlers in modern history.
Tiger WoodsGolfTransformed modern golf with dominant peak performance, major championships, global fame, and enormous earnings.

What's Next

Next I'm going to cut athletes from the list and or justify their contention for the greatest of all time.