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Sporting moments that made you and your country proud
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I just watched the Netflix Untold episode Race of the Century with the folks. It told the story of when Australia II became the first challenger in 132 years to win the old mug from the New York Yacht Club. I distinctly recall my mother waking my just turned 9 yo self, at something like 4:30-5am, to come to their room as we were going to win it (of course she waited until the start of the final leg). I sat in their bed with my older sister and together we watched that cannon fire and then all hell break loose on the water.

So many things about that moment in history bring on powerful emotions to this day. The song 'Land Down Under', the boxing kangaroo flag, our PM's famous warning to bosses, raising the boat from the water. Nearly 40 years later and all three of us were a little teary watching that episode.

There are (for me) perhaps two sporting moments that united us in pride. The America's Cup victory and 400m sprinter Cathy Freeman winning gold at the Sydney Olympics; hosting the event closely linked. However I feel that it was the Cup that stands above all other moments, not just because of the pure joy it brought us, but because I think it put Australia on the map globally. The celebrations that followed seemed to go on forever. Perhaps that's biased as it was also my home city where the Cup came back to.

So it got me thinking about what others feel was their country's proudest sporting moment? Does the moment that grabs you the most differ from what you think the country would vote for? For countries like the USA (with such a rich history of sporting success) I wonder whether it's easy to single out moments that people still talk fondly about years later, where you recall exactly where you were at the time?

Note I'm referring to publicly proud moments as opposed to when your child etc did something great.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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1980 US Olympic Hockey team.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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1974 World Cup !

Germany wins 2-1 against the Netherlands in Munich
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [NormM] [ In reply to ]
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NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.

There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.

Favorite Gear: Dimond | Cadex | Desoto Sport | Hoka One One
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [The GMAN] [ In reply to ]
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The GMAN wrote:
NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.

There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.

Says the guy obviously unfamiliar with Joey Chestnut.

The devil made me do it the first time, second time I done it on my own - W
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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2008 Beijing Men's 4x100m final
September 2006 - New Orleans Saints v Atlanta Falcons (this is more about resiliency and comeback somewhat nationally but more locally/regionally)
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [The GMAN] [ In reply to ]
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The GMAN wrote:
NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.


There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.

Similar to Hockey except in this case the Russians had won every year since 1952 (except in '84 when Romania won).
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [The GMAN] [ In reply to ]
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The GMAN wrote:
NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.


There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.

Second place



Oh, this should go in the "Sports Photo" thread, as well

https://deadspin.com/...-almost-n-1708269396

"What's your claim?" - Ben Gravy
"Your best work is the work you're excited about" - Rick Rubin
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [The GMAN] [ In reply to ]
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The GMAN wrote:
NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.


There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.


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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [torrey] [ In reply to ]
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torrey wrote:
The GMAN wrote:
NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.


There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.

Similar to Hockey except in this case the Russians had won every year since 1952 (except in '84 when Romania won).

Yeahhhhbut, if you want to cherish that moment and memory, probably best if you donā€™t go digging into that area of our Olympic history too deeply.

The devil made me do it the first time, second time I done it on my own - W
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [sphere] [ In reply to ]
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sphere wrote:
torrey wrote:
The GMAN wrote:
NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.


There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.


Similar to Hockey except in this case the Russians had won every year since 1952 (except in '84 when Romania won).


Yeahhhhbut, if you want to cherish that moment and memory, probably best if you donā€™t go digging into that area of our Olympic history too deeply.
Sure but at the time it made me proud. So did this in it's own way:

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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Jesse Owens 1936 Berlin , 4 Gold Medals


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Post deleted by spudone [ In reply to ]
Last edited by: spudone: Oct 4, 22 9:15
Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Ireland beating Romania on penalties at Italia '90. The country came to a standstill that afternoon.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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I wasn't born yet but for Canada its gotta be Paul Hendersonā€™s 1972 Winning Goal vs. the Soviets in the Summit Series.



Remember - It's important to be comfortable in your own skin... because it turns out society frowns on wearing other people's
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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All of the events already noted for the US are worthy. Joan Benoit winning the first ever women's Olympic marathon was pretty cool too. My friend is her sister-in-law, so the whole knee injury prior to the Trials was a big deal at the time.

clm
Nashville, TN
https://twitter.com/ironclm | http://ironclm.typepad.com
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Desi Linden's Boston Marathon win

maybe she's born with it, maybe it's chlorine
If you're injured and need some sympathy, PM me and I'm very happy to write back.
disclaimer: PhD not MD
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [The GMAN] [ In reply to ]
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The GMAN wrote:
NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.


There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.

That was the only one I could think of. I must have been 10 at the time, really the only hockey I've watched in my life.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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_________________________________________________
"The will to win means nothing without the will to prepare" - Juma Ikangaa

http://www.litespeed.com
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Sidney Crosby 2010 Vancouver in overtime.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [Constantine] [ In reply to ]
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Constantine wrote:
Jesse Owens 1936 Berlin , 4 Gold Medals

This is the correct answer. The accomplishment went beyond athletics and rebutted the Nazi racist philosophy of chosen race/white supremacy.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Not as large scale as you are asking. But I went to the first MLB game (Phillies) in my city when the league came back after the pause for 9/11. It ws packed, and went specificially to sing the National anthem with 40,000+ people.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [Constantine] [ In reply to ]
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Constantine wrote:
Jesse Owens 1936 Berlin , 4 Gold Medals

I understood the question to be "Things you remember happening, that made you and your country proud?"

I was only 7 when Tommy Smith & John Carlos made their Black Power salute, so I don't quite remember it happening in real-time

"What's your claim?" - Ben Gravy
"Your best work is the work you're excited about" - Rick Rubin
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [slink] [ In reply to ]
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slink wrote:
Sidney Crosby 2010 Vancouver in overtime.

I remember that being a big deal because I was married to a Canadian back then. I got caught up in cheering along.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [NormM] [ In reply to ]
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NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.

Took me a while to figure how that was possible given ā€˜the USA boycotted 1980ā€™ā€¦ Oh yeah
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [spudone] [ In reply to ]
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spudone wrote:


Edit: esp because France was talking so much trash.

Shades of 8 years earlier except then you guys were dishing it out.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [RandMart] [ In reply to ]
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RandMart wrote:
Constantine wrote:
Jesse Owens 1936 Berlin , 4 Gold Medals

I understood the question to be "Things you remember happening, that made you and your country proud?"

I was only 7 when Tommy Smith & John Carlos made their Black Power salute, so I don't quite remember it happening in real-time

Thereā€™s not really any ā€˜wrongā€™ answers given part of the question asked about personal pride. As suspected though itā€™s harder for those from the USA to reach the same conclusion. Much easier when youā€™re the little guy who ended the longest winning streak in sporting history ;)
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [Nutella] [ In reply to ]
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Nutella wrote:

Likewise Cadelā€™s victory was quite a big deal here, at least for those who followed the sport. Then again even fewer follow yachting or track and field but we jumped on those wagons with steely determination.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [BarryP] [ In reply to ]
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BarryP wrote:

Interesting. Where does the pride come from there; that you finally got to see all the aces in the one hand? The outcome was obviously never in doubt.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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For Canada, Simon Whitfield winning gold in Sydney 2000


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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [The GMAN] [ In reply to ]
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The GMAN wrote:
NormM wrote:
1980 US Olympic Hockey team.


There's basically no other legit answer if you're American.


I am proud and awed by many of the posts and individual American and team accomplishments. To me.... this is the ultimate story. Herb Brooks.
His ultimate knowledge and vision, dream and leadership and bucking the system, (think Patton ) to create a team of collage kids to take on a Soviet state driven machine that was unstoppable (and probably steroid enhanced ) and was undefeated for 20 years in the Olympics. It was a progression.... not a single event but a build up to accomplishment. There were trial and tribulations, no certainty... a series of unfolding events over time that went from impossible to unlikely to a miracle on ice. It's the ultimate American sports story to date.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Maybe not an athletic sporting event, but in my lifetime Fischer beating Spassky was huge. The Soviets were utterly dominant in chess and Fischer crushed Spassky, as well as Petrosian, Larsen, and Taimanov en route to the finals. As a teenage chess player, that meant a lot to me.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [Guff] [ In reply to ]
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Guff wrote:
I wasn't born yet but for Canada its gotta be Paul Hendersonā€™s 1972 Winning Goal vs. the Soviets in the Summit Series.


Amen, I was in my Jr. High gym with 100's of other screaming teenagers and faculty, will never forget it.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Since I was born in 1969:
  1. Miracle on Ice
  2. Everything else combined


The "everything else combined":

  • Women's World Cup in '99: favored to win, but serious props for the excitement it brought to the sport
  • 4 x 100 mens freestyle Bejing: might have been the most exciting 4 minutes; also serious props for the excitement it brought to the sport here in the US
  • Dream Team: seriously? only there because we sent a team without any shooters to Seoul; great culturally
  • Not mentioned: also hockey the Flyers 4, Red Army 2, January 1976 (yeah not quite a USA team, but my god we hated the Soviets then and we not only won but physically dominated them)

To the Canadian who mentioned effing Sydney Crosby in 2010: @#&$@$%%&!!!
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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For Canadians a couple not mentioned: Blue Jays world series wins 92/93, and for a few days Ben Johnson in the 88 Olympics.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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That Netflix episode was really well done. I remember the last race well. I was in law school and working part time at a law firm. The day after the final race I was in the office, and I remember complete strangers talking and laughing with each other in the lifts, and the entire CBD having an upbeat buzz all day.

The next day I was in class, and we happened to be reviewing Bond v someoneorother. (Bond was the financial backer of Australia II, a corrupt commercial fraud and a professional litigant - a kind of mini-Trump). At the mention of Bond's name the class erupted in cheers, which disappointed our prof. I remember him saying "Bond is not a good person", and giving us a summary of the lowlights of his malfeasance, while we blew raspberries in his direction. It took another 14 years to get Bond into prison, after his bankruptcy in which creditors received 0.5 cents in the dollar. At least we didn't elevate him to the highest office in the land, so there's that.

I agree that Cathy Freeman's win is up there as well. I was lucky enough to have seats at the end of the finishing straight. There were a bunch of magic moments on that day alone - they referred to it later as Magic Monday.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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I will add a series of multiple moments. The response of the NFL, MLB, college sports, and even at high school sporting events after 9/11 were collective great moment that helped pull a nation together at a time of lot of unknowns.
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Post deleted by spudone [ In reply to ]
Last edited by: spudone: Oct 4, 22 19:30
Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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When Croatia made it to the FIFA world cup final in 2018
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [slink] [ In reply to ]
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slink wrote:
Sidney Crosby 2010 Vancouver in overtime.


+1

Also Simon Whitfild and Peter Reid winning his 3rd Hawaii Ironman
Last edited by: softrun: Oct 4, 22 21:24
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [softrun] [ In reply to ]
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softrun wrote:
slink wrote:
Sidney Crosby 2010 Vancouver in overtime.


+1

Also Simon Whitfild and Peter Reid winning his 3rd Hawaii Ironman

Did Whitfield get much mainstream recognition at the time or was triathlon too niche to fire up the masses?

For example weā€™ve won gold in the past for things like skeet shooting (or equivalent) and though celebrated well at the time it probably doesnā€™t get brought up much years later, outside of close contacts or those in the sport.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Britisher here:

2012 Olympics. We did and amazing job

Nick Faldo beating Greg Norman at the Masters
Daley Thompson wining gold in LA
Andy Murray winning Wimbledon (and the Olympic gold, twice)
Steve Redgrave in rowing.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [triguy101] [ In reply to ]
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Just thought this was an apporpriate place to leave this. Jim Redmond (British sprinter Derek's Dad) passes away, and the news cycle reminded us all of this sweet moment.


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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [WannaB] [ In reply to ]
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WannaB wrote:
Just thought this was an apporpriate place to leave this. Jim Redmond (British sprinter Derek's Dad) passes away, and the news cycle reminded us all of this sweet moment.


Jesus Christ Iā€™m balling.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [ike] [ In reply to ]
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ike wrote:
Maybe not an athletic sporting event,

Hulk Hogan def The Iron Sheik in Madison Square Garden

Take it, Mean Gene!!!



"What's your claim?" - Ben Gravy
"Your best work is the work you're excited about" - Rick Rubin
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [BarryP] [ In reply to ]
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BarryP wrote:

That picture always makes me chuckle. Magic said, "You can't get too close to Michael, or its a foul"

As for myself, Ben Johnson's 1988 win is the earliest event I can remember making me proud to be a Canuck. I remember listening to the race on the radio in the car coming home from celebrating my birthday at a recreation center. Don't think I had ever even heard of steroids at the time.

Never cared much about Canada's stacked hockey teams winning medals. As if they don't have enough trophies (wives, houses, cars, money) already.

Was a Jays fan though. Joe Carter's 1993 HR was quite memorable. I remember Alomar's HR off Eckersly in 1992 being a proud moment too. Even the Jays first win in 1992 was special. What I remember most about that night was celebrating at my friends house and his mom telling us all to shut up because the baby was sleeping. She did not give a shit about baseball.

Steve Nash winning MVP and Toronto winning the NBA championship have to be up there. Had been a Warriors fan though so bitter sweet. Actually surprised someone didn't bring up Leonard's shot vs 76ers. All that "True North" bs.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [tri_kid] [ In reply to ]
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tri_kid wrote:
Was a Jays fan though. Joe Carter's 1993 HR was quite memorable.

Ouch!!!



"What's your claim?" - Ben Gravy
"Your best work is the work you're excited about" - Rick Rubin
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [triguy101] [ In reply to ]
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triguy101 wrote:
Britisher here:

2012 Olympics. We did and amazing job

Nick Faldo beating Greg Norman at the Masters
Daley Thompson wining gold in LA
Andy Murray winning Wimbledon (and the Olympic gold, twice)
Steve Redgrave in rowing.

The investment in your athletes for those games really paid off. We could not keep up with you.

Faldo broke my heart. I grew up idolising Greg and wanted that jacket for him so badly.

I remember Daley in 84. I also remember a game on I think the C64 called Daley Thomsonā€™s Decathlon.

Murray has been perhaps one of the most unfortunate of players. If he had just come along 5 years earlier.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [spudone] [ In reply to ]
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spudone wrote:
I think what made me most excited about that swim relay was Lezak. I didn't give a crap about the press obsession with the Phelps medal count. But for pure sporting effort... wow. The term "finding another gear" gets thrown around a lot but Lezak absolutely crushed that anchor leg. 46.06 lcm is ridiculous, even in a swim skin.
Yeah, there are a lot of other memorable moments for me but, having not been alive for 1980 US Hockey, this is my answer as well. I watch most of the OLY swimming events religiously so definitely caught this one live and I was out of my seat screaming when Lezak out-touched Bernard. I still watch the replay at least a few times every year, those final ten seconds give me chills every time.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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mv2005 wrote:
triguy101 wrote:
Nick Faldo beating Greg Norman at the Masters


Faldo broke my heart. I grew up idolizing Greg and wanted that jacket for him so badly.

Faldo didn't beat Norman; Norman beat Norman ... or maybe "Augusta on Sunday" beat Norman?

"What's your claim?" - Ben Gravy
"Your best work is the work you're excited about" - Rick Rubin
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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mv2005 wrote:
triguy101 wrote:
Britisher here:

2012 Olympics. We did and amazing job

Nick Faldo beating Greg Norman at the Masters
Daley Thompson wining gold in LA
Andy Murray winning Wimbledon (and the Olympic gold, twice)
Steve Redgrave in rowing.

The investment in your athletes for those games really paid off. We could not keep up with you.

Faldo broke my heart. I grew up idolising Greg and wanted that jacket for him so badly.

I remember Daley in 84. I also remember a game on I think the C64 called Daley Thomsonā€™s Decathlon.

Murray has been perhaps one of the most unfortunate of players. If he had just come along 5 years earlier.

Omg. I had that C64 game too. A lot of button smashing and joystick wiggling. Cue the ā€œthatā€™s what she saidā€ comments. :)
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [RandMart] [ In reply to ]
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RandMart wrote:
mv2005 wrote:
triguy101 wrote:
Nick Faldo beating Greg Norman at the Masters


Faldo broke my heart. I grew up idolizing Greg and wanted that jacket for him so badly.

Faldo didn't beat Norman; Norman beat Norman ... or maybe "Augusta on Sunday" beat Norman?

Fair. However, Look at Faldos score that day and he played the perfect round. 67 which was the lowest round of the day and keeping his composure.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [triguy101] [ In reply to ]
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True as well

"What's your claim?" - Ben Gravy
"Your best work is the work you're excited about" - Rick Rubin
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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mv2005 wrote:
I just watched the Netflix Untold episode Race of the Century with the folks. It told the story of when Australia II became the first challenger in 132 years to win the old mug from the New York Yacht Club. I distinctly recall my mother waking my just turned 9 yo self, at something like 4:30-5am, to come to their room as we were going to win it (of course she waited until the start of the final leg). I sat in their bed with my older sister and together we watched that cannon fire and then all hell break loose on the water.

So many things about that moment in history bring on powerful emotions to this day. The song 'Land Down Under', the boxing kangaroo flag, our PM's famous warning to bosses, raising the boat from the water. Nearly 40 years later and all three of us were a little teary watching that episode.

There are (for me) perhaps two sporting moments that united us in pride. The America's Cup victory and 400m sprinter Cathy Freeman winning gold at the Sydney Olympics; hosting the event closely linked. However I feel that it was the Cup that stands above all other moments, not just because of the pure joy it brought us, but because I think it put Australia on the map globally. The celebrations that followed seemed to go on forever. Perhaps that's biased as it was also my home city where the Cup came back to.

So it got me thinking about what others feel was their country's proudest sporting moment? Does the moment that grabs you the most differ from what you think the country would vote for? For countries like the USA (with such a rich history of sporting success) I wonder whether it's easy to single out moments that people still talk fondly about years later, where you recall exactly where you were at the time?

Note I'm referring to publicly proud moments as opposed to when your child etc did something great.

We had just moved to Australia (from the USA) when the Americas cup was going on. I was 11 and had never heard of the Americas cup.
The Australians at my new school (and everywhere) expected me to have an opinion and to support the Americans.
The Americans did seem like classic bad guys. The technical fighting over the winged keel did seem like bad sportsmanship.
That said I had never even known anyone who had been on a yacht.

I couldn't comprehend why everyone seemed to care.

I think I ventured to say in my newest Australian slang:
"Who cares about a bunch of puf.....s on a boats."
(My apologies it was the 80s and I was 11).

But the Australians thought I was talking about their team and took offense.

This was a first of a thousand times that Australians expected me to defend American stuff.
I never figured out how to navigate this situation.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [Velocibuddha] [ In reply to ]
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Velocibuddha wrote:
mv2005 wrote:
I just watched the Netflix Untold episode Race of the Century with the folks. It told the story of when Australia II became the first challenger in 132 years to win the old mug from the New York Yacht Club. I distinctly recall my mother waking my just turned 9 yo self, at something like 4:30-5am, to come to their room as we were going to win it (of course she waited until the start of the final leg). I sat in their bed with my older sister and together we watched that cannon fire and then all hell break loose on the water.

So many things about that moment in history bring on powerful emotions to this day. The song 'Land Down Under', the boxing kangaroo flag, our PM's famous warning to bosses, raising the boat from the water. Nearly 40 years later and all three of us were a little teary watching that episode.

There are (for me) perhaps two sporting moments that united us in pride. The America's Cup victory and 400m sprinter Cathy Freeman winning gold at the Sydney Olympics; hosting the event closely linked. However I feel that it was the Cup that stands above all other moments, not just because of the pure joy it brought us, but because I think it put Australia on the map globally. The celebrations that followed seemed to go on forever. Perhaps that's biased as it was also my home city where the Cup came back to.

So it got me thinking about what others feel was their country's proudest sporting moment? Does the moment that grabs you the most differ from what you think the country would vote for? For countries like the USA (with such a rich history of sporting success) I wonder whether it's easy to single out moments that people still talk fondly about years later, where you recall exactly where you were at the time?

Note I'm referring to publicly proud moments as opposed to when your child etc did something great.

We had just moved to Australia (from the USA) when the Americas cup was going on. I was 11 and had never heard of the Americas cup.
The Australians at my new school (and everywhere) expected me to have an opinion and to support the Americans.
The Americans did seem like classic bad guys. The technical fighting over the winged keel did seem like bad sportsmanship.
That said I had never even known anyone who had been on a yacht.

I couldn't comprehend why everyone seemed to care.

I think I ventured to say in my newest Australian slang:
"Who cares about a bunch of puf.....s on a boats."
(My apologies it was the 80s and I was 11).

But the Australians thought I was talking about their team and took offense.

This was a first of a thousand times that Australians expected me to defend American stuff.
I never figured out how to navigate this situation.

ā€˜Yeah take that ya seppoā€™

I knew nothing about yachts either. But damn was I able to draw racing 12m boats, especially ones with KA-6, after that.

Never realised we had two mechanicals to start the best of 7. The NYYC committee cam across as a bunch of ā€¦ā€™s.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [RandMart] [ In reply to ]
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RandMart wrote:
mv2005 wrote:
triguy101 wrote:
Nick Faldo beating Greg Norman at the Masters


Faldo broke my heart. I grew up idolizing Greg and wanted that jacket for him so badly.

Faldo didn't beat Norman; Norman beat Norman ... or maybe "Augusta on Sunday" beat Norman?

It really was his to lose. When that short approach sucked back down on the 9th(?) I got a really horrible feeling.
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Re: Sporting moments that made you and your country proud [mv2005] [ In reply to ]
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Iā€™m exceptionally proud of all the streakers, on one hand to put ā€˜sportsā€™ in its proper place as silly fun, plus any protest elements, and the how streakers run typically ends in an act of violence, especially during NFL games
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