OT: The Greatest Upsets in Sports

Submitted by stephenrjking on

We just witnessed sports history.

UMBC, a 16 seed, just beat Virginia, a 1 seed. We've all seen the stats since then: this is the first 16 seed to win in 136 tries. The remarkable 135-0 streak was one of the great streaks in sports.

And it makes this one of the great upsets of all time. This is a delight for every sports fan in the country tonight. I believe this is, easily, the upset of the century, in any sport.

What are others that rank with this? I can think of two that even rate, one of which is higher. What are upsets that approach this internationally, or in unusual sports?

We've seen history. Where does it rank?

Hold This L

March 17th, 2018 at 10:12 AM ^

But nothing beats the pregame speech and eruzione running up the boards. College kids beat the greatest hockey team in the world. They weren’t even the best college players or the best of their age. And they beat a team of superstars who had played together for years. The country united around that team. As fun as the UMBC upset is, was, and will be, 1980 us team will always take the top spot. Against insurmountable odds, they brought an entire country together if just for a moment in time and made people feel proud to be an American and one nation.

Blue in St Lou

March 17th, 2018 at 10:12 AM ^

This is one nobody has mentioned.  Patriots 20, Rams 17.  That was the Rams' Greatest Show on Turf team, and they were something like 14 point favorites.  In light of the Patriots' run of success and the Rams' failures since then, it gets forgotten what a stunning upset it was.

blueblueblue

March 17th, 2018 at 11:03 AM ^

You guys have to divorce expectations from post hoc rationalizations. "Upset" is all about expectations. Ater it happens, of course you can rationalize why it happened. But when listing upsets, you have to look at the expectations before the event. 

My flimsy, thinly-informed list: 

1. Miracle on ice

2. Tyson v. Douglas

3. UMBC v. UVA

4. UM v. App State

 

Yeoman

March 18th, 2018 at 1:32 AM ^

Some of the ranking algorithms include FBS and FCS though. Massey has an online archive--of course since it was the first game of the season he didn't have anything to go on but how he each team had finished 2005, but App St. was #42 in both divisions, a few notches ahead of Alabama and better than 7 of the 11 B1G teams, and he was predicting 33-17 on a neutral field. I doubt the spread would have been more than 21.

MGlobules

March 17th, 2018 at 2:54 PM ^

says the game was anticlimactic because UMBC beat VA so decisively; I don't see it that way. Even when it became clear that UMBC had the game won they continued to play brilliantly and sink shot after shot. My delight in the situation grew and grew.