Stephen Curry not only broke a record but also out-did himself by 78 threes to secure his spot. The person to come closest to this record was his very own teammate Klay Thompson. The list of top five three-pointers goes as follows: Stephen Curry (402), Stephen Curry (324), Stephen Curry (286), Klay Thompson (276), and Stephen Curry (272).
While Thompson is one formidable shooter, he still is several points away from beating Curry in that regard. Also, the point guard has quite a few more years on the court.
Roger Federer, There's No Competitor
No one has come close to Roger Federer and it looks like we will be waiting for quite some time for that to change. Rafael Nadal almost reached that level of success, but clearly just couldn't make it all the way. The tennis legend spent 237 consecutive weeks as the top player in the association of Tennis Professionals.
Not many reach that number one status and no one holds onto it for that long. The tennis world will lose a phenomenal player once he retires.
Georgia Tech Team Were Ferocious In This Historic Beatdown
Legend has it that Georgia Tech had been meaning to destroy Cumberland University ever since the two went head to head for the first time in 1916. Georgia Tech coach, John Heisman, ruthlessly trained his team until they scored 220 points and Cumberland scored zero.
It sounds impossible, but it totally happened and we don't know-how. It's safe to say that revenge was served that day. Never mess with Georgia tech again.
The Hitter
Pete Rose is probably the most iconic baseball player to have ever played in Major League Baseball. During his 24 year career, Rose broke multiple records, one of which are remained untouched for years.
His 4,256 career hits blew the world's mind. Ty Cobb came second with a measly 4,19. To this day, no one in the MLB came close to beating that record-breaking. Rose could rest easy when he retired knowing that he would forever be unmatched.
UCLA Top Dogs
The list of records is neverending. Just to name a few, they have 11 NCAA titles, 7 consecutive NCAA titles, 25 Final Four wins, and have been 34 weeks ta the No. 1 in AP Top 25 Poll.
Also, it seems inconceivable that a coach could get one generation of stars to not drop out. Does it seem like John Calipari is trying to recreate the Wooden magic by bringing in seven different classes of five-star freshmen year after year? Possible.