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	<title>Akorra.com &#187; Sports</title>
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		<title>Top 10 Defunct Sports Teams</title>
		<link>http://akorra.com/2010/06/03/top-10-defunct-sports-teams/</link>
		<comments>http://akorra.com/2010/06/03/top-10-defunct-sports-teams/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jun 2010 19:12:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Luther Avery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Sports]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://akorra.com/?p=807</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nostalgia and sports go hand in hand with homeruns and slam dunks. There is nothing like going back to the yesteryears when teams that do not exist anymore were the rage. We have compiled a list of sports teams you are not likely to see anymore unless you rent a DVD or watch an episode [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nostalgia and sports go hand in hand with homeruns and slam dunks. There is nothing like going back to the yesteryears when teams that do not exist anymore were the rage. We have compiled a list of sports teams you are not likely to see anymore unless you rent a DVD or watch an episode of “classic matches” on ESPN. Of course, not all of these teams are technically defunct. Let us all look back on these teams that have already had their glorious moments under the sun.</p>
<h2><strong>10. Seattle Supersonics</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/seattlesupersonics.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-809" title="seattlesupersonics" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/seattlesupersonics-216x300.jpg" alt="" width="287" height="350" /></a></strong></p>
<p>The team from the land of grunge, Boeing and Microsoft, the Supersonics frequently dominated the Western Conference. But it is not the same in Emerald City any more. Since it folded in 2008, the franchise moved to Oklahoma City, being rechristened the Oklahoma City Thunders. But hey, Seattle just has so much more character than Oklahoma City. They might have something good going with Durant and Green in Oklahoma, but they are no Kemp and Payton! For someone used to the ‘Supersonics’ single, there is no way he could listen to something else. Who else can match the voice of Kevin Calabro? And the Supersonics’ rivalry with the Trail Blazers will be missed the most. Who can forget the “I-5?” Supersonics’ fans can take heart, though. The all time rivalry record ended at 98-94 in favor of the Emerald City.</p>
<h2><strong>9. Brooklyn Dodgers</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/BrooklynDodgers.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-810" title="BrooklynDodgers" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/BrooklynDodgers-300x262.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="262" /></a></strong></p>
<p>Remember Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire?” <em>Einstein, James Dean, Brooklyn’s got a winning team&#8230;</em>You got that right! The Brooklyn Dodgers, one of the most successful MLB team, dominated the NL Pennant for much of the 40s and the 50s. It finally won the World Series in 1955, before moving to Los Angeles. The Dodgers featured in the first ever major-league baseball game to be televised on August 26, 1939. For the record, the Dodgers thrashed Cincinnati 6-1 in Ebbets Field. Any Dodgers fan would regale you with the exploits of Jackie Robinson, Roy Campanella and Joe Black. &#8220;Wait ’til next year!&#8221; was the slogan that half of Brooklyn chanted daily to cheer the Boys in Blue. Who can forget the Dodgers-Giants rivalry that had the entire nation glued to the television and radio? How can you forget the ninth-inning home run by Bobby Thompson that broke the hearts of the Dodgers fans? When both the clubs moved to the West Coast in 1957, the rivalry was re-ignited between Los Angeles and San Francisco. But in all fairness, it could not match the excitement generated by the teams in the East Coast.</p>
<h2><strong>8. Houston Oilers</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Houston-Oilers.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-811" title="Titans" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Houston-Oilers.jpg" alt="" width="378" height="251" /></a></strong></p>
<p>There is the Tennessee Titans and then there is a football club in Houston. But nothing can quite match the nostalgia and excitement aroused by the Oilers. You just can’t see the highlights of Earl Campbell and Warren Moon without wishing those uniforms were still around. The Oilers dominated the AFL Eastern Division Championships in the 60s. Lou Rymkus, Wally Lemm and Frank Ivy led the Oilers to their dominance in the Championship. Famous Oilers included Hall of Famers George Blanda, Ken Houston and Earl Campbell. The Oilers moved to Nashville in 1997 and became the Tennessee Titans in 1999. Every Oilers fan fondly remembers the heroics of their team in the 70s and 80s. None summed it better than Mike Jones in his hit single “Houston Oiler.” <em>I’m a Houston Oiler, I’m a Houston Oiler</em> became an anthem of every Texan after the move.</p>
<h2><strong>7. New York Cosmos</strong></h2>
<p><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/New-York-Cosmos.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-812" title="New York Cosmos" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/New-York-Cosmos.jpg" alt="" width="426" height="257" /></a></p>
<p>The team that had Pele in its ranks. What? You mean Pele, the legend? THE Pele? New York Cosmos was a famous soccer team based in the Big Apple from 1971-1984. And it was the strongest and the most well known soccer club in the US. The team jersey was designed by Ralph Lauren himself. The Cosmos won the Eastern Division Soccer Bowl in ’77, ’78, ‘80, ’82 and ’83. Apart from Pele, greats like Beckenbauer, Carlos Alberto and Neeskens donned the Cosmos jersey in the late 70s. The signing of Pele was a high point in the short history of the Cosmos. Well past his prime, Pele gave the club the much needed international exposure. On October 1, 1977, Pele pulled down the curtains on his decorated career in front of a capacity crowd at the Giants Stadium. In the widely televise match, Pele played each half wearing the Cosmos and the Santos colors, respectively. Partly owned by the Warner Bros, the Cosmos became the hottest ticket in the city. The regular attendees of the Cosmos’ games looked like a Who’s Who list in the entertainment business. Robert Redford, Mick Jagger, Barbara Streisand and Steven Spielberg were some of the A-listers who had the Giants Stadium in their “to visit” list every time Cosmos played. The famous Studio 54 in midtown Manhattan was frequented by the Cosmos players in the club’s heydays.</p>
<h2><strong>6. Hartford Whalers</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Hartford-Whalers.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-813" title="Hartford Whalers" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Hartford-Whalers.jpg" alt="" width="480" height="320" /></a></strong></p>
<p>Quick quiz – Name arguably the best hockey song ever? You’ve guessed it – “Brass Bonanza,” the theme song of the former Hartford Whalers, as made famous in the NHL 94 on Sega Genesis. Although the Whalers are no more, the Bonanza lives on! If you are someone looking for a new campaign to soup up your hockey team’s image, you have the Bonanza for inspiration. It has been more than a decade since Hartford has last seen a pro team. Formerly known as the New England Whalers, the Hartford Whalers played in the NHL during 1979-97. In 1997, the Whalers moved to Raleigh, where they were rechristened the Carolina Hurricanes. The Whalers were the NHL Division Champions in 1987 and made the playoffs 8 times between 1980 and 1992. Paul Coffey, Ron Francis, Gordie Howe, Bobbie Hull, and David Keon were famous Whalers inducted to the Hall of Fame. On April 13, 1997, the Whalers played their last game in Hartford, defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning, 2–1. Team Captain Kevin Dineen, who had returned to Hartford after a brief stint in Philadelphia, scored the final goal in Whaler history. The move to Raleigh did some good finally, with the Hurricanes winning their first Stanley Cup in 2006.</p>
<h2><strong>5. Wimbledon FC</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Wimbledon-FC.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-814" title="Wimbledon FC" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Wimbledon-FC.jpg" alt="" width="480" height="322" /></a></strong></p>
<p>How can a club, rich in history and tradition in the English football scene, fall from grace the way Wimbledon FC did? Your guess is as good as mine. It isn’t everyday that you see a team that defeated the mighty Liverpool in 1988 to win the FA Cup shut shop a decade and a half later. Dave Beasant, Wimbledon’s goalie sadly looks back on the glorious days, saying, “<em>We collected the trophy, ran around the pitch, all the stuff we&#8217;d seen everyone else do on TV in previous years. We were living that dream. But when we got into the dressing room, we were knackered.</em>” Beasant himself played a decisive role in Wimbledon’s triumph, having saved a penalty from John Aldridge in the final. A team that had the likes of Joe Kinnear, Egil Olsen and Dick Graham on its rolls in its heydays gave new meaning to the term “electric atmosphere” at Selhurst Park. Its exit from top flight football was hastened by a string of poor performances and entering into administration. The aftermath &#8211; Wimbledon never won another major trophy. For the record, Beasant now coaches at the Glenn Hoddle academy in Spain.</p>
<h2><strong>4. Chester City FC</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Chester-City-FC.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-816" title="Chester City FC" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Chester-City-FC.jpg" alt="" width="249" height="194" /></a></strong></p>
<p>The Chester City FC was one of the many football clubs in the UK that folded up owing to the pressures of financial mismanagement and below-par performances. For the fans, March 10, 2010 was a fateful day in the club’s checkered history. For a club that played home to some great talents like Ian Rush and Kevin Ratcliffe, it was a sad day. Chester had battled financial trouble before and nearly went out of business in the 1998/99 season, when the club was for a time locked out of the grounds and was unable to gain access to any facilities. After being promoted to the football league in the 2003/04 season, the club’s performances went from bad to worse. Chester’s proud 125 year history in English football came to an abrupt end in 2010. Many clubs have gone into oblivion and never returned, while others have fought to regain their reputation. It couldn’t have been worse for Chester. It has ceased to exist as a club and all that remains are memories of the good times provided by the Likes of Rush, Lee Dixon and Terry Owen.</p>
<h2><strong>3. Scarborough FC</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Scarborough-FC.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-817" title="Scarborough FC" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Scarborough-FC.jpg" alt="" width="396" height="321" /></a></strong></p>
<p>Scarborough FC was one of the oldest English football clubs, established in 1879, before winding up in 2007, with debts of more than £2.5 million. You might be tempted to think that top flight footballers get ten times more in yearly wages. Not, if you were a Boro supporter. You might also blame the local council having turned its back on the club’s survival plans. The result – liquidation and curtains on the club’s proud 128 year history! For a club that won the FA Trophy thrice in the 70s, the fall from grace was too much too handle for many fans. Who can forget the atmosphere in the McCain Stadium, where thousands of fans from the North of England braved the Yorkshire weather to cheer the exploits of Steve Richards, Tommy Mooney, Gareth Williams, Martin Russell, and Neil Warnock?</p>
<h2><strong>2. Kansas City Knights</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Kansas-City-Knights-basketball.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-818" title="NCAA Northern Iowa Kansas Basketball" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Kansas-City-Knights-basketball.jpg" alt="" width="202" height="256" /></a></strong></p>
<p>Kansas City Knights was an American Basketball Association minor league team based in Kansas City, Missouri. The team was established in 2000 and wound up during the 2004/05 season. In the 2001/02 season, the Knights posted the league best 35-5 record under head coach Kevin Pritchard. Soon after winning the title, problems started within the franchise’s management and the team took a year off to reorganize. It took part in the 2003/04 and the 2004/05 season before suspending operations in 2006. The team was scheduled to move to a new arena, but plans have remained in a limbo and nothing substantial had emerged since. The ABA, however, announced that the team would resurface under new management, but for the fans starved of the Knights’ exploits, the only thing they can hope for is hope itself of seeing their team come out of the wilderness.</p>
<h2><strong>1. Chicago Stags</strong></h2>
<p><strong><a href="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Chicago-Stags.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-819" title="Chicago Stags" src="http://akorra.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Chicago-Stags.jpg" alt="" width="414" height="302" /></a></strong></p>
<p>Before the Bulls, there were the Stags. The Chicago Stags were an NBA team that was founded in 1946 and folded in 1950. When the Stags folded, their star, Bob Cousy, was drafted by the Boston Celtics. Despite their short existence in top flight basketball, they made their way to the BAA finals, only to lose to the Philadelphia Warriors. While they were never a powerhouse, the Stags compiled an impressive four-year record of 145-92; that 0.612 winning percentage translates to a 50-32 record in an 82-game schedule of today. In addition, while only playing in one championship series in four years, the Stags were in the playoffs every season. After 1948, the Stags’ performance took a nosedive and, coupled with financial mismanagement, led to the end of the team as it existed. The Chicago Bulls wore replicas of the ’46 Stags uniform as a tribute to their illustrious predecessors and to celebrate the 60<sup>th</sup> anniversary of the Stags establishment.</p>
<p>﻿</p>
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		<title>Top 20 Embarrassing Defeats in Sports</title>
		<link>http://akorra.com/2010/03/03/top-20-embarrassing-defeats-in-sports/</link>
		<comments>http://akorra.com/2010/03/03/top-20-embarrassing-defeats-in-sports/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Mar 2010 23:12:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Luther Avery</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Sports]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.akorra.com/?p=173</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sports are a grand spectacle, characterized by larger than life athletes, raucous and fiercely loyal fans, and often stunning artistry and creativity, all merging to create a live drama that is arguably the greatest theatre in the world. Sports though are unscripted theatre, and this often to leads to events that shouldn’t happen, that defy [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sports are a grand spectacle, characterized by larger than life athletes, raucous and fiercely loyal fans, and often stunning artistry and creativity, all merging to create a live drama that is arguably the greatest theatre in the world.</p>
<p>Sports though are unscripted theatre, and this often to leads to events that shouldn’t happen, that defy logic, that are simply…embarrassing. From horrible blunders, to lopsided routs, to the just plain weird, sports are filled with moments like these that people remember for a lifetime.</p>
<p>These are 20 such moments, the Top 20 Most Embarrassing Defeats in Sports.</p>
<h2>20. Georgia Tech Demolishes Cumberland University 222-0</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/GT-Cumberland_Scoreboard.jpg" alt="GT-Cumberland Scoreboard" width="525" height="242" /></p>
<p>The game took place on October 6, 1916, in Atlanta. Cumberland University, which at one time fielded fairly decent football squads, didn’t even have a team in 1916, following budget cuts to various programs by the new school president. However, the school had failed to cancel their agreement for a 1916 match with Georgia Tech, and being the savvy penny pusher that he was, the prez decided against risking the ire of Georgia Tech (and the possibility of a $3,000 fine), by sending a ragtag group of people out to play them.</p>
<p>So the writing was on the wall already (or on the scoreboard at the very least, as you can see below), but further circumstances had transpired which would lead to the massive rout, one which normally would not have taken place to such a degree out of sheer sportsmanship. You see, earlier that spring, Cumberland had smacked around Georgia 22-0 in a baseball game that Georgia Tech cried foul over, claiming the Cumberland side was using professional players. They vowed to exact their revenge on the gridiron, and so they did.</p>
<p>Against a squad consisting of people who for the most part had little to no football experience, the Yellow Jackets racked up nearly a thousand yards on the ground, scoring 32 touchdowns. Cumberland was so futile on offence, turning the ball over for further touchdowns to such an extent, that they began punting the ball back to Georgia before fourth down. Not that their defence was doing any better. By halftime it was 126-0, and the only thing stopping Georgia from a 250+ point performance was a ruling to have the second half quarters reduced in length from 15 to 12 minutes.</p>
<p>This game stands as the most lopsided football score ever recorded, though it’s validity considering the circumstances is debatable.</p>
<h2>19. The Mighty Mariners Cough Up A 14-2 Lead To The Indians</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Omar.jpg" alt="Omar" width="400" height="500" /></p>
<p>2001 was a glorious year for the Mariners. They had a stunning 80-31 record as they entered the third game of a four game series with the Indians on August 5, a game nationally televised on ESPN. They had a Japanese rookie sensation in right fielder Ichiro Suzuki, who would go on to win the American League batting title and MVP awards that season. They had one of the steadiest lineups in baseball, anchored by Ichiro, DH Edgar Martinez, 1B John Olerud, 2B Bret Boone, and CF Mike Cameron. And after years of bullpen ineptitude, they finally had a great closer in Kazuhiro Sasaki, and a quality bullpen all through the ranks. They would send 8 players to the all-star game that year, and finish with a major league record 116 wins.</p>
<p>Seattle had already taken the first two game of the series, and when they jumped out to a commanding 12 to 0 lead in the Sunday tilt, it seemed like the outcome was a foregone conclusion. That was lead was still 14-2 in the bottom of the 7th when the inexplicable happened. Cleveland would score 3 times in the 7th, putting an end to starter Aaron Sele’s day. No big deal surely, as the M’s still held a commanding 14-5 lead. Yet in the 8th, relievers John Halama and Norm Charlton would get smacked around for 4 more runs, making the gap 14-9. But it was now the ninth inning, and the M’s had their superstar closer Sasaki in the wings. In fact the score was still so lopsided that Sasaki wouldn’t even need to warm up…yet.</p>
<p>But the Indians would smack around Charlton and all-world setup man Jeff Nelson for another pair of runs. With two men on, Sasaki would enter the game, only to give up two more hits, including a bases loaded triple to light hitting Omar Vizquel which tied the game. The game lasted two more innings before the Indians would mercifully conclude the massacre with a 15-14 win.</p>
<p>As it turned out, the most brilliant of baseball seasons was so befouled in this loss that even the most hated man in baseball, John Rocker, would pick up the victory, one of only three on the season. An embarrassing loss in an otherwise glorious campaign.</p>
<h2>18. The Biggest Bust Has His Worst Day</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Leaf.jpg" alt="Leaf" width="400" height="299" /></p>
<p>In hindsight, choosing Ryan Leaf with the second overall pick may not have been a wise choice. But hindsight is 20/20 they say, unlike Ryan Leaf’s eyesight, which can’t be much more than 10/20 given his horrendous NFL passer rating of 50, and his tendency to mistake opposition players as teammates as judging by his 36 career interceptions as opposed to just 14 career touchdowns.</p>
<p>After a rather promising 2-0 start to his career, the third game of Leaf’s career would prove to be the beginning of the end. Ryan made his first pass of the day, and then missed 14 consecutive receiving targets, a Chargers record, ending the day 1-15 for 4 yards total passing, while chucking 3 interceptions and fumbling the ball twice in a 23-7 Chargers loss.</p>
<p>He would be benched later that year, and finally released. He’d be picked up by several teams over the next few seasons, who all came to the conclusion that the 2nd overall pick could see and throw no better than on that 1-15 day. Leaf eventually announced his retirement from football at the tender age of 26, citing the injuries which had plagued him for much of that time.</p>
<h2>17. Calling Timeout With No Timeouts Left (And Other Stupid Things Not To Do)</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/No_Timeouts_Left_Chris.jpg" alt="No Timeouts Left Chris" width="448" height="525" /></p>
<p>When thinking of some of the dumbest things you could possibly do (like licking a frozen pole, sticking a metal object into an electricity socket, running around with scissors, etc.), calling a timeout with no timeouts remaining would be up on that list. Maybe not at the top, but certainly right up there. After all, the refs won’t decide to play nice and give you a free one, oh no, instead they’ll slap you with a technical foul, which in the case of Chris Webber’s snafu in the NCAA Championships on April 5, 1993, all but sealed his team’s defeat. Trailing 73-71, with plenty of time to get down court and tie the game, Chris nearly (and arguably) travelled to get out of his own zone before getting cornered by two North Carolina defenders in the offensive zone. Panicking, he tried to call timeout, and the rest is history. UNC would hit both of the free throws resulting from the technical foul and cruise to the win. Chris would go on to have a good NBA career, and rise above his embarrassing mistake, but he never could live it down, and it will likely follow him for the rest of his days.</p>
<h2>16. Canseco Takes One For The Team (The Other Team)</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Off_the_head_for_the_win.jpg" alt="Off the head for the win" width="273" height="357" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Jose may have had power, but no one ever said he was graceful</strong></div>
<p>Jose Canseco has become notably famous of late for his tell all tales about his own and other player’s steroid usage. Always known as a bit of a dunderhead, Canseco proved to be a hard head as well on May 26, 1993, in a game against the Cleveland Indians.</p>
<p>In the bottom of the 4th inning, Texas was enjoying a 3-1 lead when Carlos Martinez smacked a ball deep into the right-center field gap. Canseco, the right fielder, bounded after the ball, catching up to it near the warning track. However as he got to it, he completely lost sight of it, whether in a sun flare or a roid haze, no one knows. The ball gleefully bounced off Jose’s noggin and up and over the wall for a home run. Cleveland would add two more runs in the inning to take a 4-3 lead, and would eventually win the game 7-6.<br />
	As much as he will be remembered for his 462 career home runs and steroid use, Jose’s lasting legacy will probably be the homerun ball of Carlos Martinez, on which Canseco’s cranium earned an assist.</p>
<h2>15. Where Oh Where Art Thou Sportsmanship?</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/On_the_losing_end_of_a_blowout.jpg" alt="On the losing end of a blowout" width="525" height="295" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Despite the loss, the girls of Dallas Academy took it and the resulting media attention with good humour</strong></div>
<p>If there’s one thing that is stressed above all else in children’s sports, it’s fair play, having fun, and sportsmanship. So you can bet that when a high school team composed of children with learning disabilities got their butts handed to them in a 100-0 shellacking on January 13, 2009, the story was bound to make headline news.</p>
<p>Rather than playing a passive game against a team that was clearly outmatched, Covenant continued to apply full pressure until they racked up a full 100 points, celebrating voraciously throughout the game at their performance. Only after reaching the century mark did they finally let their foot off the gas pedal.</p>
<p>Rather than being an embarrassing defeat, this match was an embarrassing victory, one that should not have happened, regardless even of the special circumstances. The Covenant coach, who refused to admit he or his team had done anything wrong, was fired shortly afterwards. Good riddance to bad sportsmanship.</p>
<h2>14. The Curse Gets Crushed In Dramatic Fashion</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Chowdah_Heads_Come_Back.jpg" alt="Chowdah Heads Come Back" width="450" height="263" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Boston stunned the Yankees in the 2004 ALCS, handing them one of their most embarrassing defeats ever</strong></div>
<p>When the Red Sox sold Babe Ruth to the Yankees in 1919, little did anyone know that the Curse of the Bambino would follow them from that day forward, as the Red Sox would fail to win a championship after his sale. Until 2004 that is.</p>
<p>Standing in their way in the ALCS were those dreaded Yankees, and the Curse looked to be in fine form as the Yankees cruised to a 3-0 series lead, not to mention holding a lead late in Game 4. Then, the improbable happened. The Red Sox pulled off one of the greatest comebacks in baseball history, coming from behind to win that 4th game, and the final 3 games in dramatic fashion to take the series, perhaps transferring the curse onto the Yankees in the process, who have now failed to win a World Series since 2000, despite massive payrolls each year.</p>
<p>The Red Sox would go on to win the World Series that year, at last breaking their Curse, and would do so again a few years later. The Yankees embarrassing series loss gave momentum to their most bitter rival, who have since outdueled them in the years that have followed.</p>
<p>Boston stunned the Yankees in the 2004 ALCS, handing them one of their most embarrassing defeats ever</p>
<h2>13. When Showboating Goes Horribly Wrong</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Showboating.jpg" alt="Showboating" width="512" height="350" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Looked like smooth sailing, but a little showboating caused this ship to sink</strong></div>
<p>So you’re in the gold medal final of the Winter Olympics Snowboard Cross event. You have a three-second lead as you approach the second to last jump, and the gold medal is all but a foregone conclusion. Do you A) Keep your composure and finish the race or B) Take big air off the jump and pull a method grab?</p>
<p>If you answered A, you probably represent 99% of the population. If B, your name is probably Lindsey Jacobellis, who did just this in the 2006 Olympic Finals in Italy, the result of which was a fall, and helplessly watching as her gold medal was snatched up by the racer who should’ve taken silver.<br />
	Depending on your outlook, this could arguably be number 1 on the list, a completely embarrassing self-inflicted wound that will haunt her forever.</p>
<h2>12. Wide Right</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/River_City_TD.jpg" alt="River City Touchdown" width="500" height="384" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>One of the NFL’s most famous plays ended in extra point disaster</strong></div>
<p>New Orleans entered their December 21, 2003 game at 7-7, with a chance at making the playoffs for the first time in three years. Down 20-13 with just 7 seconds left the Saints were had one, possibly two plays left to score. The Saints used a series of laterals to bring the ball 75 yards down the field for a touchdown, at which point they only needed the extra point kick, all but a foregone conclusion, to send the game into overtime. Yet kicker John Carney promptly pushed the kick dead right, completely shanking it. New Orleans had lost 20-19, and were officially eliminated from the playoffs in one of the most embarrassing losses imaginable.</p>
<h2>11. Hockeytown’s Hockey Disaster</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Turk.jpg" alt="Turk" width="450" height="439" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Turk did a lot of puck stopping in the final 4 games against the Wings</strong></div>
<p>Led by goalie Turk Broda and unheralded Syl Apps, the Toronto Maple Leafs pulled off an improbable comeback, smacking around and humiliating the Detroit Red Wings in the final 4 games of the 1942 Stanley Cup Finals, after trailing the series 3-0. Toronto is the only team to come back from a 3-0 series deficit in a Finals Series, and the Wings, of course, are the only poor team to cough up a 3-0 lead. Despite the embarrassing defeat, the Wings would make for it by winning the Stanley Cup the next season, also jumping out to a 3-0 series lead in the Finals, and this time finishing it off in 4 games for the sweep. What doesn’t kill us only makes us stronger.</p>
<h2>10. Man vs. Machine</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Kasparov_vs._Deep_Blue.jpg" alt="Kasparov vs. Deep Blue" width="500" height="325" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>This simple chess game garnered worldwide attention, the result of which shocked the world</strong></div>
<p>This has been a common theme in movies and novels over the past hundred years. As technology has further developed, the fears that this very technology will one day surpass us, become sentient, and enslave us have been a common theme in science fiction. This concept was brought to light in 1997, as man (Garry Kasparov) faced machine (Deep Blue) for the second time.</p>
<p>Kasparov, widely hailed before, then, and since as the best chess player in history, had soundly trounced Deep Blue in a match in 1996 4 points to 2. Despite claims the new version of Deep Blue, dubbed Deeper Blue, would put up a much stiffer test, Kasparov crushed it in the first game of the 1997 series.</p>
<p>But that would be the last game Garry would win. He would lose the second game, and immediately claimed something was afoot, that the computer was making moves that a computer simply wouldn’t make. He was held to a draw in the third and fifth games as white, while managing a draw against deep blue as black in the fourth game.</p>
<p>Despite 3 straight draws, Kasparov had the feeling he would lose the last game, and his mind wasn’t in it. He played extremely poorly and got trounced, losing the series 3 ½ to 2 ½. The long standing theory that a computer could never defeat a human chess champion had been wiped out. Were computers now smarter than us? Was humanity on the brink of destruction?</p>
<p>Despite how embarrassing the loss was for Kasparov and humanity as a whole, defeating a computer that can calculate millions of moves per second is hardly something to be ashamed of. It’s hard to imagine anyone could compute math as quickly as a calculator, that doesn’t mean calculators are smarter than humans. Deep Blue is not smarter than us, nor is any computer smarter than us. It was simply programmed to play chess as well as the best player in the world.</p>
<h2>9. Bartman (Not A Simpsons Spinoff)</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Bartman.jpg" alt="Bartman" width="291" height="525" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Bartman became the most hated man in Chicago after this play</strong></div>
<p>Your favourite team, the Cubbies, are 5 outs away from the World Series as Marlins hitter Luis Castillo lofts a fly ball out to left field. The ball comes close to your seats, possibly ending up in the stands and out of play, possibly being caught by left fielder Moises Alou if left untouched. You instinctively go for the fly ball and knock it away from Alou. Castillo goes on to draw a walk and the Marlins score 8 times in the inning as the Cubs fall apart, losing their trip to the World Series the next day. You’re put under police protection as you leave the stadium and go home, fans pelting you with debris and shouting curses at you.</p>
<p>Such was life for Steve Bartman after he famously interfered with a fly ball that may have been the second out of the top of the 8th inning in Game 6 of the NLCS. While Bartman’s interference may very well have cost the team an out (though Moises Alou would later saw he probably wouldn’t have caught the ball anyway), the self-destruction of the Cubs afterward is what made this scenario stand out. If the Cubs cruise through the rest of the game and advance to the World Series, the Bartman incident is all but a moot point. Combined though, they amount to one of the most bizarre and horrific meltdowns by a team, an embarrassing loss for both the team and its fans, one fan in particular.</p>
<h2>8. The Band’s On The Field</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Lost_Band.jpg" alt="Lost Band" width="500" height="357" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>The band jumped the tuba on their post game celebration ceremonies</strong></div>
<p>Not even hundreds of Stanford band members swarming the field in the mistaken belief that the game was over could stop a magical last second touchdown by the California Golden Bears, as they pulled off an amazing last second comeback with a play simply called ‘The Play’.</p>
<p>Trailing 20-19 with just 4 seconds on the clock, California snatched up the squib kick by Stanford’s Mark Harmon and proceeded to lateral the ball around the fault (two of which in particular were borderline forward passes, and have remained heavily debated), as they slowly advanced down field. During the third lateral, when it looked like the California player had been tackled, many of Stanford’s players rushed onto the field in celebration, as did most of the Stanford band (this aspect of The Play is also controversial, as the play should’ve been flagged and called dead at this point, with California getting one last play from scrimmage). The play was not dead though, and after a few more laterals and much dodging (or crashing) of band members later led Kevin Moen into the end zone for the game winning touchdown. The play was briefly discussed by the officials, who ruled it legal, and the game over.</p>
<p>A highly spectacular and controversial end to a game, and one of the greatest and most bizarre plays in football history, but also a crushing defeat for a team that thought they had the game wrapped up.</p>
<h2>7. A Legend Defeated By Upset (Literally)</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Upset.jpg" alt="Upset" width="512" height="337" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>After a rough ride, Man O’ War would lose the only race of his career to Upset</strong></div>
<p>Though not quite as shocking at the time, in hindsight Man o’ War’s loss in the 1919 Sanford Memorial Stakes stands as possibly the most shocking in horse racing history. Man o’ War would go on to win all 20 of his other races, finishing second in the Sanford to a horse called Upset. Though Man o’ War was clearly the best horse that day, a horrendous series of events which included him being completely turned around as the race got under way led to the massive upset.</p>
<p>While it can’t be confirmed one way or the another, many people believe that upset being used as a term to describe a favourite being defeated in a sporting event came about because of this race, as Upset pulled off one of the biggest upsets in sports history.</p>
<h2>6. The Red Carded Headbutt</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Zidane_HeadButt.jpg" alt="Zidane HeadButt" width="322" height="454" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>“You got your head in my stomach!” “No, you got your stomach in my head!”</strong></div>
<p>Much like a red headed stepchild, the red carded headbutt was worthy of mockery and derision, resulting in a humiliating end to one of football’s greatest stars.</p>
<p>In the 110th minute of France’s World Cup match against Italy, Zinedine Zidane turned and rammed his head into Italian player Marco Materazzi’s chest, seemingly without provocation. Zidane received a red card and was expelled from the match, which France would end up losing 5-3 in penalty kicks.</p>
<p>While the words that were exchanged between the two players which led to the headbutt are debated, with each side telling a different story, the end result was an embarrassing final match for one of Europe’s biggest football stars.</p>
<h2>5. Why You Should Always Eat Before A Big Fight</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Tyson_s_Hungry.jpg" alt="Tysons Hungry" width="447" height="525" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>“You don’t mind do you? All I want is a nibble!”</strong></div>
<p>You could argue that Mike Tyson’s upset loss to James ‘Buster’ Douglas could also make the list as one of the most shocking upsets in boxing history, but his famous fight against Evander Holyfield was far more embarrassing and shocking, and proved to be the first sign of Tyson’s mental unravelling.</p>
<p>After their first fight, which Holyfield won by TKO, Tyson and his camp had complained bitterly about the intentional head butts Evander had delivered repeatedly throughout the fight. Their rematch was one of the most anticipated boxing matches of all time, sadly ending not with a bang, but with a bite.</p>
<p>After what Tyson claimed was more intentional head butting early in the second fight, he retaliated by biting Holyfield’s ear. The fight was stopped, and Tyson given a warning, yet upon resuming Tyson bite down on Holyfield’s ear again, this time so fiercely that a chunk of his right ear was cleanly bitten off.</p>
<p>Despite serving jail time for rape, and having altercations with interviewers and other fighters in the past, Tyson at the time was still one of the most popular figures in boxing. His embarrassing actions in the ring that day would turn him into a circus sideshow throughout the rest of his career, a sad ending for a fighter who was at one time the most feared boxer on the planet.</p>
<h2>4. A Giant Slap In Perfection’s Face</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/No_Perfection.jpg" alt="No Perfection" width="400" height="333" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Were they simply outplayed, or did they choke? The debate over the Patriots’ Superbowl loss to the Giants rages</strong></div>
<p>After the first 16-0 season in NFL history, and the most dominant offensive display ever, the Patriots were massive favourites to defeat the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII, despite the two teams playing a closely contested game to end the regular season.</p>
<p>The Patriots, who had averaged a massive 36+ points per game during the season were stymied from the start by the Giants stalwart defence. Still, New England held a 7-3 lead at the end of the third quarter. After the Giants took a brief lead the Patriots would answer right back with a touchdown of their own, taking a 14-10 lead with just under 3 minutes to play. One defensive stop likely would’ve been enough to seal the win and the perfect season, yet the Patriots couldn’t pull it out when they needed it the most, as the Giants went downfield and scoring the winning touchdown with just 35 seconds to play. The Patriots vaunted offence couldn’t muster a single yard on their final possession of the game in an effort to at least get within field goal range to tie the score.</p>
<p>The Patriots dynasty, hailed as possibly the greatest football team ever, couldn’t pull it off when it mattered the most, when they had the potential to permanently etch their names in the record books. Choke or not, it was a shocking and upsetting loss for the team and its fans.</p>
<h2>3. Mon Dieu</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Smiling_for_now.jpg" alt="Smiling for now" width="300" height="449" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Jean would not be smiling by the end of this debacle</strong></div>
<p>Forget Lemony Snicket, Jean Van de Velde’s series of unfortunate events on the last hole of the 1999 Open Championship led to one of the most horrendous defeats in sporting history. Leading by three shots on the last hole, a hole which he had previously birdied twice in the previous three rounds, Van de Velde made the decision to use driver off the tee, when all he needed was a double bogey to complete an incredible fairy tale story. Instead the fairy tale would turn into a nightmare.</p>
<p>Jean yanked his drive right into the rough. Still playing far more dangerously than he had to, he decided to go for the green with his second rather than play it back out to the fairway. His shot bounced of the stands to the right of the green and back 50 yards into more rough. Playing his third shot out of deep rough, he shanked it into the burn that guards the front of the green. He debated hitting the shot where it lay to save himself the penalty stroke, taking off his shoes and socks and getting over the ball before conceding the penalty.</p>
<p>Now playing his 5th shot from behind the burn, Jean dunked it in the bunker, and played his 6th shot from there to about 6 feet. He now needed to make the 6 footer for triple bogey just to get into a playoff, which he miraculously did, wildly pumping his fist. However he would lose to Paul Lawrie in the three man playoff that followed between himself, Lawrie, and Justin Leonard.</p>
<p>The debacle is widely viewed as one of the greatest choke jobs in modern sports, from a player who had won only once in his career and was in an unfamiliar position. Van de Velde would return from the trauma and injuries that followed to win his second title in 2006, though the nightmares of Carnoustie will forever haunt him.</p>
<h2>2. Miracles Do Happen</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Miracle_on_Ice.jpg" alt="Miracle_on_Ice.jpg" width="380" height="498" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>Despite the Miracle on Ice, Americans still despise hockey</strong></div>
<p>When a ragtag group of American amateur and collegiate players hooked up with the mighty Soviets in the 1980 Olympics, a team comprised of their best professional stars, the outcome seemed assured. The Soviets after all were considered the most dominant hockey nation in the world, routinely beating NHL teams in exhibition games, and even whooping the NHL All-Star team 6-0 in 1979.</p>
<p>Despite being generally outplayed by the Soviets, the Americans used a brilliant goaltending performance from Jim Craig, and a number of clutch goals to stun the Soviets 4-3. Not only in hockey terms, but considering the other factors involved, most notably the Cold War, this was a massive win for the Americans, and an embarrassing loss for the Soviets, who quickly swept it under the rug and refused to even mention the results of the game through the media.</p>
<p>Though many wrongly remember this game as the gold medal game, the U.S would eventually win the gold, defeating Finland in their final game, while the Soviets would settle for silver, finishing 7-1 in the tournament with their only loss coming to the miraculous Americans.</p>
<h2>1. Doing The Big Apple Shuffle</h2>
<p><img src="http://akorra.com/uploads/1/Buck_boots_it.jpg" alt="Buck boots it" width="400" height="308" /></p>
<div class="image_caption"><strong>The most memorable miscue in baseball history</strong></div>
<p>In rare cases, players make gaffes so devastating that their careers are defined by it, no matter what they did before and after that point. We’ve seen that in some of the examples above, such as Chris Webber and Jean Van de Velde, but no one has had to live through the trauma of a costly mistake more than Bill Buckner.</p>
<p>A career .289 hitter with over 2,700 career hits, Buckner won a batting title in 1980 and was arguably one of the greatest contact hitters of his day, striking out under 500 times in over 2,500 career games played.<br />
	When the 1986 World Series rolled around, Buckner was on his last legs, both figuratively and literally. A solid fielder with decent speed earlier in his career, Buckner had since suffered numerous ankle woes which had severely limited his mobility both in the field and on the basepaths. He was routinely pulled for defensive replacements late in games, as he had been in Game 1 of the World Series.</p>
<p>With Boston one out away from the World Series Championship and an end to their Curse, things went haywire. The Mets singled three straight times, scoring twice to tie the game. Up stepped Mookie Wilson, who proceeded to chop a routine grounder towards Buckner at first. Buckner awkwardly shuffled over to it and flat out missed it, as Ray Knight scored the winning run, sending the series to a 7th game, which the Mets would also win.</p>
<p>Though manager John McNamara could arguably be blamed for leaving Buckner in considering the Red Sox had a two run lead heading into the bottom of the tenth, Buckner would largely absorb the punishment for the miscue in the years that followed. Buckner made a popular return to Fenway in 2008, being greeted with a standing ovation that helped ease some of the pain he had shouldered in the years since, but the Big Apple Shuffle will live on in infamy for many years to come.</p>
<p><strong>Honorable Mentions</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Des Sowden, a career 1-10 boxer, getting knocked out in 4 seconds by Russell Rees in the final fight of his career </li>
<li>South Korea smashing Thailand 92-0 in a 1998 hockey tournament, averaging a goal every 45 seconds </li>
<li>The Soviets disputed win over the U.S in the 1972 Olympic basketball gold medal game </li>
</ul>
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