Football - I'd say the two most important people that have changed the game to what it is today are Bill Walsh and LT.Lawrence Taylor.
He changed how teams play defense and he changed how offenses had to play offense. Left tackle became a critical piece of your offense.
Babe and Tiger are the easiest two to select for their respective sports.
For BB, Wilt fundamentally changed BB moreso than any other player. And there is a new Showtime doucmentary on Wilt and supposedly it is very good. Here is a link to the trailer.
FB is a tough one but the modern day game is primarily rooted from the coaching of Paul Brown (with due respect to Bill Walsh, LaVell Edwards, Mouse Davis, Hal Mumme and Mike Leach). From a players' standpoint, that is very difficult but certainly Lawrence Taylor (as the first great non DL premium pass rusher) is at or near the top (with due respect to Jim Brown as the greatest player of all time).
Got to give Dan Gable a shout out.Cael Sanderson
I agree that Wilt was a physical unicorn but he wasn't a transcendent player solely due to his attributes. In the late 60s, he was amongst the NBA's assist leaders.This is always an interesting topic, and in a lot of ways I agree, but I view the physical outliers like Wilt as not really changing the game. It wasn't like teams were not looking for tall athletic guys, they just didn't really exist, and Wilt was a physical unicorn at the time.
I kind of view Wilt and Shaq as guys that changed rules because they were physical outliers at the time. But they didn't have a long term effect on style of play, how kids develop, how teams are constructed, etc. Their impact was solely because of physical attributes that really can't be developed or replicated. Likewise I don't think Wemby is going to change the game. He could become super-skilled and great, but ultimately he's going to be dominant in large part because physically he's 1 in a billion.
That's a good point. Now that you say that you can definitely say that was a pretty rare case where you had offense running through a center like that. So I change my mind a bit about Wilt.I agree that Wilt was a physical unicorn but he wasn't a transcendent player solely due to his attributes. In the late 60s, he was amongst the NBA's assist leaders.
If you took away all of Gretzky's goals, he would still be the all time point leader in the NHL.Agree. He changed what was thought to be possible on a golf course.
My second pick would be Wayne Gretzky. Scoring numbers were just absurd. May never be broken. 2857 points. 2nd place all time is Jagr with 1921.
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For better or worse?I think a simple barometer could be applied in some regards to anything outside the absolute core mainstream leagues (NBA, NFL, MLB) - do you remember a name of a person for a sport you otherwise would know nothing about? It doesn't work as well for the core leagues in my opinion.
To that degree, it likely means that person made a big enough impact to transcend the sport itself and/or have wide recognition for a long period of time. Now, that obviously doesn't mean they "changed" the sport, but created a wide enough awareness to the masses.
This is going to have recency bias for the above reasons...
Guys like Earnhardt, Gordon, or Jimmy Johnson are examples for racing - I know nobody but them and Lightning McQueen (the true GOAT).
Agassi, Ash, Sampras, Nadal, Federer, Williams sisters, and Djokovic for tennis.
Woods, Palmer, Mickelson for golf.
Ronaldo and Messi for soccer.
McGregor for MMA or UFC - don't know the different.
@isufbcurt for local racing.
I follow it absolutely 0 so assumed he was the king. Great context/point.For better or worse?
The only reason Conor McGregor is so well known is for doing sh*t outside the octagon that he should be in jail for, including sucker punching a 50+ year old guy who criticized his branded whiskey. I don't think getting yourself into the news for nearly blinding a fellow MMA fighter by throwing a steel dolly through a bus window or sucker punching some older dude in a pub should qualify as making an impact that transcends the sport.
But I do understand that for people who don't follow the sport of MMA (mixed marial arts, UFC is one production within the sport of MMA) that's a name that stands out. IMO it just stands out for all the wrong reasons. Dude should be in prison.
Trying to come up with one that hasn't been said yet...
Marcus Smart changed how defense in CBB is played. He flopped so much, and sadly was often rewarded for it, that it has become a normal part of the game. So much so that they added the flop rule, which they should just call the Marcus Smart rule.
I follow it absolutely 0 so assumed he was the king. Great context/point.