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Clearly a good number of us here are hopeless Lance Armstrong fangirls and boys.
Clearly a good number of us here are hopeless Lance Armstrong fangirls and boys. (Photo: Joel Saget/AFP/Getty)

The Greatest Moments in Sports History. Ever.

According to us, your highly subjective editors at 国产吃瓜黑料

Published: 
Clearly a good number of us here are hopeless Lance Armstrong fangirls and boys.
(Photo: Joel Saget/AFP/Getty)

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Recently, we decided to poll 国产吃瓜黑料 staffers on their favorite sports moments in history. We didn鈥檛 discuss our picks beforehand, but clearly a good number of us are hopeless Lance Armstrong fangirls and boys: He claims one-third of our favorite moments in this list. Below, listed in no particular order, are all the moments that made a big impact on us personally, forever altered an athlete or sport, or are just indisputably badass.

Lance Armstrong鈥檚 Off-Road Shortcut in the Tour de France

Even if you鈥檝e never watched the Tour de France, you鈥檝e likely come across from the 2009 running of the famous stage race. Denigrate Lance Armstrong all you want, but this moment鈥攊n which he rides at speed across a steep, grassy shoulder on teeny, tiny road bike tires鈥攗nequivocally proves that the man is a phenomenal athlete. And that he deserved his TdF wins. (Discuss.)

鈥擜xie Navas, executive editor

Jessie Diggins鈥 and Kikkan Randall鈥檚 Olympic Gold Medal

There鈥檚 a reason cross-country skiing is often referenced as Nordic skiing: The elite end of the sport is dominated by Nordic countries. The win by聽Jessie聽Diggins聽and Kikken Randall聽cemented the United States鈥 place among the top nations in this sport and brought the sport into the national consciousness in a way it hasn鈥檛 been for a long time鈥攎aybe ever. For the U.S. cross-country ski team, which has been historically underfunded (athletes often have to raise funds to get themselves to overseas competitions and training camps), increased awareness (hopefully) translates into increased interest and support.

鈥擜riella Gintzler, assistant editor

Honnold鈥檚 Free Solo of El Cap

I was sitting in a newsroom in Washington, D.C., last June (at another job) when a co-worker who knew little about the sport yelled out, 鈥淗oly shit!鈥 I figured someone important was bailing on Trump鈥檚 White House. But then my co-worker asked if I knew who the hell this Alex Honnold guy was.

Honnold鈥檚 accomplishment may seem a bit too obvious, but I鈥檓 a sucker for history partly because it鈥檚 so interesting to trace a truly defining moment backwards to see all the other smaller moments that built up to it. 国产吃瓜黑料 contributor Daniel Duane wrote in the New York Times shortly after Honnold鈥檚 feat that, until that day, a free solo of El Cap had been talked about in the same spirit as 鈥渟cience fiction buffs muse about faster-than-light-speed travel.鈥 But back in the 1950s, people were making the same kind of comments to guys like Warren Harding, saying that just climbing El Cap was nuts. We have these kind of circular conversations about risk and sanity a lot鈥攍ike we did recently when Honnold and Tommy Caldwell pulled off their sub-two on the Nose. I鈥檓 not saying these conversations aren鈥檛 necessary, but look at what the people who ignore them accomplish.

鈥擩. Weston Phippen, senior editor

Lance Armstrong Gives Jan Ullrich 鈥淭he Look鈥

In 2001, Lance Armstrong was going for his third Tour de France victory. Like many Americans, I was religiously watching bike race coverage live for the first time and still trying to figure out the appeal. This was the moment that hooked me. Obviously, you can鈥檛 look back at this seminal moment without acknowledging that both Armstrong and Ullrich鈥攁nd seemingly everyone else in the peloton鈥攚ere awash in EPO and blood transfusions. But caveats aside, the boldness of the move still stands. On one of the most legendary climbs in the Tour, l鈥橝lpe d鈥橦uez, Lance to size him up, then brutally drops the hammer. As usual, announcer Phil Liggett captured it best: 鈥淗e took a look straight into the eyes of Jan Ullrich and said, Well, here I go. Are you coming or not? And the answer is, Not.

鈥擟hris Keyes, editor

Margo Hayes鈥 Face聽After Sending La Rambla

When Margo Hayes sent La Rambla in February 2017, she became the first woman in the world to send a confirmed 5.15a. And not just any 5.15a, but a benchmark route that only the best of the best have climbed. Her human reaction mirrors what all of us feel when we finally do That Thing鈥攚hether it鈥檚 top out on our super-sketchy highball project or stick a move we never in a million years thought we could with a negative-three ape index (maybe that鈥檚 just me). The destination is that much sweeter when we鈥檝e had to work for it.

鈥擩enny Earnest, social media manager

Greg Lemond in the 1989 Tour de France

I didn鈥檛 watch as it happened. But a few years later, when I was seven or eight, a friend and I discovered a VHS recording in his parents鈥 basement. Once we watched it, we were hopeless Greg Lemond fans. We鈥檇 wake up, watch a stage of the race as we ate cereal, and then hop on our bikes and ride laps on his circular driveway, huffing up the hill (elevation gain: maybe 20 feet) and crouching down over the handlebars on the downhill.

鈥擩onah Ogles, articles editor

Brett Tippey, Wade Simmons, Richie Schley, and Co. Riding the Gravel Pits in Kamloops, British Columbia, in 鈥楰ranked,鈥 1998

Okay, so Darcy Hennessey Turenne actually made an entire documentary about this moment (aptly titled ), and everyone should watch it. The gravel pits in Kamloops are pivotal in Turenne鈥檚 film and for mountain biking in general, which was busy finding its freeride spirit one face plant and busted frame at a time. has everything that鈥檚 great about action sports: wild personalities; an aesthetic, improbable dream that asks the human body to do unbelievable things; a healthy dose of audacity; and, of course, a little blood and dirt in the mouth.

鈥擜bigail Barronian, assistant fitness editor

Lance Armstrong鈥檚 Crash and Comeback on Luz Ardiden

It was 2003, Lance Armstrong was going for his fifth Tour de France win, and I was just a teenager. My family had always tuned in to the Tour, but 2003 was the first time I really took an interest in the race. And what a race it was that year. Armstrong鈥檚 longtime foil Jan Ullrich had a chance to actually win, and the Texan somehow seemed human that year. Of all the stages, I鈥檒l never forget Armstrong鈥檚 handlebar clipping a fan, his fall, and : Ullrich letting up on the pace, and Armstrong catching back on and attacking. That day made a lifelong fan of the sport and Armstrong out of me.

鈥擲cott Rosenfield, digital editorial director

Lynn Hill Frees the Nose

Long before the days of Sasha, Ashima, and Margo, Lynn Hill busted through gender barriers in the climbing world. In 1993, Hill became the first person鈥攏ot the first woman!鈥 on El Cap in Yosemite National Park. She was already well-known at the time, but sending the 31-pitch route forever sealed her legacy and paved the way for women in a historically bro-centric sport. After she sent it, Hill famously said, 鈥淚t goes, boys.鈥

鈥擜bigail Wise, online managing editor

Lead Photo: Joel Saget/AFP/Getty

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