Some athletes win. Others completely rewrite the rulebook. Throughout sports history, a small, almost impossibly rare group of competitors has come along and changed not just the scoreboard but the very DNA of their sport. They made people fall in love with games they never cared about before. They inspired a generation. They are the ones historians still argue about decades later.
This list cuts through the noise. From basketball courts to tennis stadiums, from sprint tracks to football pitches, these seven names stand apart. Get ready for a gallery of greatness – and a heated debate about who truly sits at the very top.
1. Michael Jordan – The Man Who Made Basketball a Religion
There is a reason every serious conversation about the greatest athlete ever includes Michael Jordan right near the top. His individual accolades include six NBA Finals MVP awards, ten NBA scoring titles (both all-time records), five NBA MVP awards, ten All-NBA First Team designations, nine All-Defensive First Team honors, and fourteen NBA All-Star Game selections. That is not a career. That is a dynasty built by one man.
He holds the NBA records for career regular season scoring average at 30.1 points per game and career playoff scoring average at 33.4 points per game. Think about that for a second. He was even better when everything was on the line. Most players shrink in the spotlight. Jordan got bigger.
In 1988, Jordan became the first player in NBA history to be named the Defensive Player of the Year and the league MVP in the same season. Offensive and defensive greatness combined – that had simply never happened before. The official NBA website states that “by acclamation, Michael Jordan is the greatest basketball player of all time.”
His partnership with Nike revolutionized sports marketing, with the Air Jordan brand becoming a cultural phenomenon that continues to thrive decades after his retirement. Honestly, the cultural footprint alone would have been enough to cement his legacy – but Jordan gave us the championships too, finishing a perfect six for six in NBA Finals appearances.
2. Serena Williams – The Undisputed Queen of the Court
Let’s be real. Serena Williams did not just dominate women’s tennis. She transformed what it meant to be a female athlete in the modern era. Williams won 73 WTA Tour-level singles titles, including 23 major women’s singles titles – the most in the Open Era, and the second-most of all time. The sheer volume of that achievement is staggering.
She is the only player to accomplish a career Golden Slam in both singles and doubles. That is a feat so rare and complex that most fans don’t even fully grasp it. She held the world No. 1 ranking for a total of 319 weeks, including a streak of 186 consecutive weeks from 2013 to 2017, tying for the longest such streak in WTA history.
Williams is the only woman to have tallied more than 65 wins at all four majors, and she won four straight Grand Slams twice in her career (2002–03 and 2014–15). She is also the only tennis player ever to have won three of the four majors (US Open, Australian Open, and Wimbledon) six or more times. Those are records that may never be touched.
Serena Williams concluded her professional career with a record $94,816,730 in WTA Tour prize money, establishing her as the all-time leader among female players. In 2020, the Tennis Channel ranked Williams as the greatest women’s tennis player of all time. The debate, for most serious observers, is pretty much closed.
3. Lionel Messi – Football’s Greatest Gift
There is something almost unfair about Lionel Messi. Lionel Messi has won the Ballon d’Or a record eight times, followed by Cristiano Ronaldo with five. Eight times. That number alone tells a story that no highlight reel needs to narrate. He is the standard against which every footballer is now measured.
Lionel Messi scored 73 goals during the 2011–12 season while playing for FC Barcelona, breaking a 39-year-old record for single-season goals in a major European football league. Think about that like this – it is the equivalent of a sprinter running a race in a time that everyone assumed was physically impossible for a human. At Barcelona, Messi won a club-record 34 trophies, including ten La Liga titles and four UEFA Champions Leagues.
He led Argentina’s national team to win the 2021 and 2024 Copa América and the 2022 World Cup, when he again won the Golden Ball award. For much of his career, the only missing piece was an international trophy. He collected them all in spectacular fashion. He joined MLS club Inter Miami in July 2023, leading the club to win their first MLS Cup in 2025, whilst also winning back-to-back league MVP awards in 2024 and 2025.
The eight-time Ballon d’Or winner is poised on 899 goals in his senior career for Argentina, Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain, and current club Inter Miami, following his final match of 2025: Miami’s MLS Cup triumph. Approaching 900 career goals while still actively competing at the very top level. Some athletes age gracefully. Messi ages defiantly.
4. Muhammad Ali – The Greatest, Inside the Ring and Out
Muhammad Ali was not simply a boxer. He was a force of nature that happened to express itself through sport. A three-time heavyweight champion and Olympic gold medalist, Ali’s unparalleled charisma, social activism, and brave fight against Parkinson’s disease have etched him as one of humanity’s most cherished figures beyond his athletic accomplishments.
His storied career was marked with notable victories over legends like Sonny Liston and Joe Frazier, among others, as well as the legendary “Rumble in the Jungle” against George Foreman, where he introduced the world to the “rope-a-dope” strategy. That fight alone is studied in sports psychology courses around the world to this day. Pure tactical genius.
He is an Olympic gold medalist, the first fighter to capture the heavyweight title three times, and won 56 times in his 21-year professional career. With no real competition, Muhammad Ali is regarded as the greatest boxer of all time. Ali may not have been one of the hardest punchers, but his movement was unrivalled, dancing around the ring with a grace befitting a figure far smaller.
I think what separates Ali from every other athlete of his era is that he chose to be unpopular when being popular would have been far easier. His refusal to be drafted into the Vietnam War cost him years of his prime career. He paid the price willingly. That kind of conviction is almost impossible to find in modern sport.
5. Usain Bolt – The Fastest Human Being Who Ever Lived
Usain Bolt did something that track and field observers had never seen: he made sprinting entertaining for people who had never watched a sprint in their lives. Usain Bolt is looked upon as the greatest sprinter ever, with the Jamaican becoming a global star at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. He was not just fast. He was theatrical, joyful, and utterly dominant.
In a career spanning over a decade, Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt established himself as the fastest man alive, setting world records in the 100m, 200m, and 4x100m relay, and becoming an eight-time Olympic gold medalist. Every world record belonged to him simultaneously. Bolt won three golds, becoming the first sprinter in history to win the 100m and 200m races for three consecutive Olympic Games.
At 6ft 5in, Bolt is built differently to any other successful sprinter, forever stumbling through his relatively inelegant starts before using those impossibly long limbs to burn beyond any other human in history. That is the thing that made scientists scratch their heads. Biomechanists said his height should have been a disadvantage in the explosive starting phase. He laughed at that too.
His indelible showmanship and unmatched acceleration on the track left the rest of the field in the dust at three consecutive Olympics, where he completed the unprecedented “triple-triple.” Usain Bolt announced his retirement with eight Olympic gold medals and 11 World titles. He left nothing on the track. Absolutely nothing.
6. Simone Biles – Redefining What the Human Body Can Do
Simone Biles operates in a category of her own that even elite gymnastics judges had to scramble to keep up with. Since winning her first national title in 2013, Biles has gone undefeated in all-around competition in every meet she has competed in, a staggering achievement in a sport that used to age-out athletes in their teens. She is, in a very literal sense, the standard.
She has five skills that bear her name – including a vault with the highest difficulty level in women’s gymnastics. When your name is written into the official rulebook of a sport as the label for moves nobody else can legally attempt, that is not dominance. That is a different tier of existence entirely. Simone Biles has four Olympic golds and a record 25 World medals.
Simone Biles, the most decorated gymnast of all time, was ranked seventh in ESPN’s top 100 athletes of the 21st century. That ranking drew criticism from fans who felt she belonged even higher. Honestly, given what she has accomplished across two decades at the top, the debate is completely valid. Biles’s frank dialogue on mental health created a seismic shift in sports culture, making her a beacon for younger generations.
7. Pelé – The Man Who Gave the World the Beautiful Game
Every generation gets one figure who is not just the best player but the actual face of a sport’s entire global expansion. For football, that figure was Pelé. Pelé is still widely regarded as one of the greatest football players of all time and ranks highest among his professional peers. The Brazilian passed away in late 2022, but will always be remembered for his contributions to the game with a swollen goal record and an unrivalled haul of three World Cup titles.
A football maestro, Pelé won three FIFA World Cups with Brazil and scored over 1,000 career goals, becoming the sport’s most celebrated figure. Three World Cup titles remains a record that still stands. No other individual player, male or female, has matched that international achievement in football’s biggest competition. That number alone deserves a moment of silence.
Here’s the thing about Pelé that younger fans sometimes miss. He was playing without the protection of modern refereeing, on pitches that resembled plowed fields, in boots that were barely leather bags compared to today’s engineered footwear. He did it anyway. The goals kept coming. In a career which spanned 1,366 matches for club and country, Pelé’s longest goalless streak lasted just nine games. Nine. That is almost inconceivable.
So, Who Is #1?
This is the question every sports fan eventually has to face, and there is no clean, universally agreed answer. Twenty-five years ago, the ESPN SportsCentury project ranked the top 100 North American athletes of the 20th century, with Michael Jordan coming in first, followed by Babe Ruth, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, and Wayne Gretzky. More recently, Michael Phelps was ranked No. 1 on ESPN’s list of the top 100 athletes of the 21st century, while 23-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams occupied the second position. Every ranking tells a slightly different story.
Honestly, the one case that I find hardest to argue against is Michael Jordan’s. The combination of perfect Finals record, statistical dominance at both ends of the floor, and undeniable cultural transformation of an entire sport is almost impossible to surpass. His impact on the sport transcends statistics and accolades. Jordan’s competitive fire and will to win were unmatched, leading to countless iconic moments that have been etched into basketball lore.
Yet Serena Williams has a case. Messi has a case. Ali has a profound case that goes well beyond sport. The beauty of this list is that there is no wrong answer. Sport’s greatest debate is the one nobody can ever fully settle – and maybe that is exactly how it should be.
Seven athletes. Seven redefined sports. One impossible question. What do you think – who takes the top spot in your eyes? Let us know in the comments.
