Sports records: Which ones are breakable and which ones aren't?
Alex Ovechkin celebrates scoring his 895th career goal during the second period against the New York Islanders to become the NHL all-time goals leader. (Photo by)
(Sarah Stier via Getty Images)
With Alexander Ovechkin surpassing Wayne Gretzky's goals record, it gives us a chance to consider some of the most hallowed records in sports history. Cal Ripken's consecutive games streak, Tom Brady's career yardage streak, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's career scoring record — sorry, that's LeBron James' scoring record now. See? Nothing lasts forever.
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Well, almost nothing. Certain records are untouchable, thanks to the way sports have shifted in the decades — or century — since they were set. Others are potentially breakable in this era for the same reason — the way that athletes, and strategy, have improved over the decades. So we've divided these records into three categories: Absolutely unbreakable, probably unbreakable, and definitely breakable. So which of sports' most hallowed records will one day fall, and which will stand long after everyone now playing has retired?
Pete Rose passed Ty Cobb as Major League Baseball's all-time hit king in 1985. He'd go on to add another 64 hits to establish the record at 4,256 hits. (Getty Images)
(Jacqueline Duvoisin via Getty Images)
Absolutely Unbreakable
These are the records that will stand the test of time thanks to the talents of those who set them, combined with the changing eras of sports. (Note: We've left out certain records here that are obviously out of reach — think Cy Young's 511 wins, or John Wooden's 10 championships in 12 years, or Richard Petty's 200 NASCAR Cup Series victories — simply because the level of competition is so much greater.) The greatest obstacle to record-breakers isn't talent, it's longevity — the incentives, for both athletes and teams, to craft multiple-decade-long careers are diminishing.
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Baseball: Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits
Freddie Freeman is the active leader in hits, with 2,270 as of April 3. Freeman averages 181 hits a year, meaning he'll need to play at that level until his late 40s to catch Rose, who had 172 hits in his Age 41 season and played until he was 45. Not only do you have to hit, but you have to hit for a long time. Based on longevity alone, Rose is untouchable as no active player is within even 1,000 of the number of games he played.
Baseball: Cal Ripken's 2,632 consecutive games played
If Matt Olson, baseball's current active consecutive-games-played leader, played every single game from now through the 2036 season, he still wouldn't pass Ripken. No player is going to play every game, day in and day out, for more than 16 years in a row without rest, without injury, without being released or retiring. This might be the most impressive record of them all.
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Women's tennis: Margaret Court's 24 (pre-Open) and Serena Williams' 23 Grand Slam victories
Court and Williams were titans in their eras, and there's little chance any current player has for catching either. The active leader is Iga Świątek, who already has five major victories at age 23. But four of those came at the French Open, and she's had very little success at either Wimbledon or the Australian Open. Anyone who can challenge the leaders will need to be successful at all four venues — and have the longevity to post victories for years on end.
Golf: Jack Nicklaus (18) and Patty Berg (15)'s major victories
The problem that all challengers to Nicklaus and Berg face is that the talent pool across golf is simply too deep to allow any one player to establish dominance necessary to challenge them. Brooks Koepka, for instance, leads all active men — Phil Mickelson notwithstanding — with five majors, and there's no chance he'll be able to outrun the field for another 14 majors.
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NFL: Jerry Rice's 22,895 career receiving yards
Think about what Jerry Rice combined: inborn talent, durability and two of the greatest quarterbacks in NFL history. The closest active player — assuming Julio Jones is retired — is DeAndre Hopkins, who sits nearly 10,000 yards behind Rice at 12,965. Hopkins averages 1,238 yards a season, meaning he'd need to play another eight years, until he's 41, to catch Rice. All due respect to Mr. Hopkins and other seasoned receivers, but there's no way a 41-year-old is competing with 23-year-old cornerbacks in the modern NFL, ever again.
NHL: Wayne Gretzky's 2,857 career points
Sure, Ovechkin claimed Gretzky's goals-scored mark, but Gretzky's overall points record — goals + assists — is untouchable. How great was Gretzky? He would still be the all-time points leader even if he never scored a single goal in his career. The active points leaders are Sidney Crosby (1,678) and Ovechkin (1,616). Crosby averages 102 points over an 82-game season, meaning he would need to add another 12 years to his 20-year career to catch Gretzky. We're confident in saying that won't happen.
Barry Bonds hit his 756th career home run, breaking Hank Aaron's record in 2007. He'd finish his career with 762 home runs. (Robert Beck/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)
(Robert Beck via Getty Images)
Probably Unbreakable
A lot has to go right for a long time for these records to fall. We're not saying it's impossible, but — to one degree or another — it's close to that.
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Baseball: Barry Bonds' 762 career home runs
Two active players are in the conversation here: Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani. After his Age 32 season, Bonds stood at 374 home runs. Judge, who already has five dingers this season, was at 315. After his Age 29 season, Bonds had 259; Ohtani had 225. So they are in the ballpark, so to speak. The caveat, of course, is that Bonds (for some reason) got better as the years went on. He hit 40 in a season once in his 20s, then seven times in his 30s. Can Judge and/or Ohtani level up similarly? That's the question.
NFL: Tom Brady's seven Super Bowl titles
You know who's in line for this one: Patrick Mahomes, although he's already let two chances get past him. Mahomes already has three Lombardi trophies, and could/should get several more. Will he capture enough to match Brady? There's a whole lot that's out of his control, but as we've seen over the last half-decade, whatever's within Mahomes' control tends to go his way. The big question: Can Kansas City keep a team together alongside him?
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NFL: Emmitt Smith's 18,355 career rushing yards
Here's a record of pure durability that might just be broken due to a combination of stronger athlete and 17-game (18 soon enough) NFL schedule. Derrick Henry is your current active leader at 11,423 yards; he averages 1,428 yards in a 17-game season. Smith played for 15 years; Henry has played for nine, and he would get within range of Smith in five years, assuming he stays healthy and continues producing. There are always 'ifs' when you're relying on NFL players to stay upright for long periods of time, but this is a record that's within modern players' reach.
NASCAR: The seven Cup championships of Richard Petty, Dale Earnhardt and Jimmie Johnson
NASCAR's current playoff format allows for enough randomness that a driver can win the title without necessarily being the year's best driver. Joey Logano currently has three titles at age 34, which is more than Earnhardt and one fewer than Petty. If Logano wins the right handful of races at the right time, he can add a few more to that total.
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NBA: LeBron James' 42,000-plus career points
Technically, LeBron James sets a new record every time he scores. But as for anyone who could catch him — the best bet might be Luka Dončić. James' teammate trails him by nearly 30,000 points, but Dončić has — amazingly enough — posted the NBA's third-leading career scoring average, behind only Michael Jordan and Wilt Chamberlain. He would need around 15 years at a high level to catch James, but assuming he stays reasonably healthy — which is not a sure bet — Dončić could make things interesting..
Baseball: Barry Bonds' 73 home runs in a single season
The top six single-season home run marks come from the Steroid Era, via Bonds, Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa. But the current-era players are starting to put up numbers, too — 53 from Pete Alonso, 54 from Matt Olson and Shohei Ohtani, 58 and 62 from Aaron Judge. It seems possible, if not necessarily likely, that one of today's sluggers will have a season for the ages.
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Men's tennis: Novak Djokovic's 24 Grand Slams
Djokovic probably ought to have 50 Grand Slams, but he had the misfortune of playing in an era with Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer. His loss is the future's gain — specifically Carlos Alcaraz, who already has four Grand Slams at the young age of 21. The usual caveats apply, but if Alcaraz can sustain his level of play — and if Djokovic doesn't add too many more to his total — the record is within reach.
At just 27, Max Verstappen has time to catch and pass Lewis Hamilton for most wins in the history of F1 racing (Mario Renzi - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images)
(Mario Renzi - Formula 1 via Getty Images)
Definitely Breakable
These are the all-time records that will fall, sooner or later. There aren't many of them left.
Formula 1: Lewis Hamilton's 105 wins
Max Verstappen has 63 wins, 53 of which came in the last four years. F1 is a sport of runs, and while Red Bull may face headwinds in the coming years, Verstappen still appears on a trajectory that will have him passing Hamilton in the relatively near future. He may not win 15 races, as in 2022, or 19, as in 2023, but another 43 victories should be within reach … as long as Verstappen remains interested in the chase.
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NFL: Tom Brady's 89,214 career passing yards
The more the NFL fixates on offense and the passing game, the more likely that career marks like Brady's will fall. Aaron Rodgers is the active leader at 62,952 yards, but it's unlikely he'll take enough snaps over the rest of his career to catch Brady. Mahomes now stands at 32,352, and would need to play at a high level into his early 40s to catch Brady — a huge ask but not an impossible one. Add in the possibility of an 18th game soon, and the task becomes that much more attainable.

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So much free hockey
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The three series that have had more goals at this stage: 36 goals in 1918, Toronto Arenas vs. Vancouver Millionaires 36 goals in 1981, Islanders vs. North Stars 33 goals in 1980, Islanders vs. Flyers Anytime you're mentioning the Vancouver Millionaires, you know you're looking at some pretty old history! Getty Images There are games in the history of the Stanley Cup Final that are not easily forgotten. If the Edmonton Oilers go on to win two more games and end Canada's 32-year Cup drought, everyone will remember where they were on June 12, 2025. What a freaking game. A 3-0 Florida Panthers lead after the first period. A timely Edmonton goalie switch. Four consecutive goals by the Oilers. Sam Reinhart ties it with 19.5 seconds left, throwing more adversity at Edmonton. And finally, in the magical moment, it was lead-by-example Leon Draisaitl winning it 11:18 into overtime. Bonkers. GO FURTHER Oilers' Game 4 comeback could be the stuff of legend on their path to Stanley Cup Getty Images Florida Panthers center Anton Lundell picked up a loose puck off a turnover in the high slot and barrelled towards the net with a chance to make a big lead surely insurmountable. A goal here and the game, and maybe even the Stanley Cup Final, might be over. This was Edmonton Oilers goalie Calvin Pickard's big moment, maybe the most important moment of his career. Having faced just two shots after replacing teammate Stuart Skinner, who was pulled after a disastrous first period by the Oilers, Pickard was being thrown into the deep end. He was up to the task. Pickard turned aside Lundell with his blocker at 11:24 of the second period to keep his team down two goals and within striking distance. Cue the season-saving comeback. The Oilers evened the Final with a 5-4 victory in Game 4 on Thursday, courtesy of Leon Draisaitl's fourth overtime winner – an NHL record – at 11:18 of the extra frame. They wouldn't even have had a chance to do so without Pickard's heroics, starting with that massive stop on Lundell. Read more on Pickard below. GO FURTHER Calvin Pickard, saving pucks and playoff runs alike, comes to Oilers' rescue yet again Getty Images Leon Draisaitl is the first player in NHL history to score four overtime goals in a single postseason: Game 4 of first round vs. Kings Game 2 of second round vs. Golden Knights Game 1 of Stanley Cup Final Game 4 of Stanley Cup Final Was Thursday the night that repeating as Stanley Cup champions got away from the Florida Panthers? That will be the big question the Panthers will have to answer over the next week after coughing up a three-goal lead in Game 4 and seeing what could have been a 3-1 series lead in this magnificent battle with the Edmonton Oilers become a best-of-three for all the marbles. Read more on the Panthers below. GO FURTHER Can the Panthers shake it off after blowing a 3-0 lead in Game 4? Getty Images Was it a pass? Was it a shot? The world may never know. One thing is for certain: it was a goal and an Edmonton Oilers win in Game 4. Getty Images Leon Draisaitl is just the third player in NHL history to score multiple overtime goals in a single Stanley Cup Final. Here's the full list: Don "Bones" Raleigh, 1950 (Games 4 and 5 for New York Rangers) John LeClair, 1993 (Games 3 and 4 for Montreal Canadiens) Leon Draisaitl, 2025 (Games 1 and 4 for Edmonton Oilers) In Game 4, Calvin Pickard became just the sixth goaltender in NHL history to win a Stanley Cup Final game in relief. He joined Andrei Vasilevskiy (2015, Lightning), Frank Pietrangelo (1991, Penguins), Roger Crozier (1975, Sabres), Gord Henry (1953, Bruins) and Lester Patrick (1928, Rangers). After their heroics in Game 4, the Oilers became the seventh team in Stanley Cup Final history to overcome a three-goal deficit to win a game. The previous teams to achieve this incredible feat: Hurricanes in 2006 (Game 1), Penguins in 1992 (Game 1), Flyers in 1987 (Game 3), Canadiens in 1944 (Game 4), Maple Leafs in 1936 (Game 3) and Canadiens in 1919 (Game 5). Getty Images The legend of Leon Draisaitl in Edmonton is getting bigger and bigger. His Game 1 heroics were well documented and he added to his playoff lore in Game 4, slotting in the game winner in overtime, not to mention a pair of assists to help power his team's comeback. Draisaitl now has 32 points this postseason, tied with Connor McDavid for the most in the league. Getty Images Similar to Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Reinhart was critical in a strong opening period for the Panthers. He assisted on Tkachuk's second goal of Game 4 and just over two minutes later, he created Anton Lundell's goal that made it a 3-0 game. Then, with 20 seconds left to play in regulation and the Panthers trailing 4-3, Reinhart found a window of space and wristed the game-tying goal into the back of the net to force overtime. Unfortunately for Reinhart and Florida, Leon Draisaitl struck again in OT. Getty Images Remember the first period of Game 4? Feels like forever ago now. Matthew Tkachuk scored two goals in a six-minute span late in the period, both coming on the power play. He also had the primary assist on Sam Reinhart's game-tying goal with 20 seconds remaining in regulation. Getty Images Stuart Skinner's stats in the fourth game of a series going into Game 4 weren't just good; they were incredible. The Oilers goalie had a 6-0 record in such contests with a 1.26 goals-against average, a .955 save percentage and two shutouts. He's been even better in the most recent four of those appearances with a 0.83 GAA and a .970 save percentage. That run of excellence came to an end. Skinner surrendered three goals on 17 shots in the first period while the Oilers were bombarded by the Panthers. Two of those tallies came off Tkachuk's stick while the Oilers were shorthanded. The last of the three goals, by Lundell with 42 seconds in the period remaining, effectively ended Skinner's night. Calvin Pickard replaced him to start the second period and made 23 saves in relief. He was a difference-maker. Pickard's most notable save of the night was a stop on Lundell on an abbreviated breakaway at 11:24 after a turnover by Jake Walman to pave the way for the comeback. There were question marks leading into this game about which goalie should get the start. There's little doubt who's getting the call for Game 5. Getty Images Two seemingly undeniable forces are wrestling for control of this series. The Panthers entered the Stanley Cup Final with a 31-0 record in the playoffs under head coach Paul Maurice in games where they held a lead after either the first or second period. They've seen that mark drop to 33-2 after holding a lead at an intermission in all four games played against the Oilers so far. Edmonton's three-goal comeback in Game 4 followed an overtime win in Game 1 where it overcame a 3-1 deficit during the second period. That was the same frame where the Oilers found life on Thursday to set up Draisaitl's heroics. It was the eighth comeback victory for the Oilers during this playoff run, matching the franchise records set in 1987 and 1991. Their resiliency has become a point of pride inside the dressing room – whether in-game or after a tough loss like the 6-1 waxing they took in Game 3. 'It's all experience, right?' said Draisaitl. 'Like you go through this run last year where we were under pressure for a lot of games, even in the Vancouver series, you go back to that, right? You just get comfortable in those situations knowing that you play one good game, you find a way to get a win on the road, and you go home and the series is tied. That's really all it is. 'We know it's going to be hard. They've got the same plan over there. But I think with experience, you just learn that in these moments, all you need is one game right now.' Getty Images Matthew Tkachuk, who was hurt in the 4 Nations Face-Off and missed the rest of the regular season, got off to a terrific start in his playoff debut with two goals and an assist in Game 1 in Tampa Bay. Production-wise, at least, he hadn't been as prolific since. But in Game 4, Tkachuk notched his fifth career two-goal game in the playoffs with Florida's first two goals in a three-goal first. Tkachuk missed a chance for a hat trick late in the second when Pickard was well out of his net, but Mattias Ekholm and Nugent-Hopkins saved what would have been a go-ahead goal by combining for the blocked shot. Tkachuk later had an assist on Reinhart's game-tying goal to force overtime. Getty Images Penalties were an issue for the Oilers in the first period of Game 3. That was the case again in Game 4. The Oilers gifted the Panthers three power plays in the opening frame, a game after giving them four in the first 20 minutes. The Panthers made them pay for their indiscretions. Evander Kane took his third first-period penalty in the last two games, this time for high-sticking A.J. Greer. Nurse followed that up by tripping Aleksander Barkov. Tkachuk scored on the two-man advantage. (Kane's penalty led to him getting benched for most of the rest of the period and then starting the second on the fourth line.) Later, Mattias Ekholm was sent off for high-sticking Brad Marchand, and Tkachuk scored again. The Oilers' penalty kill has been an issue for most of these playoffs and has now allowed seven goals against on 21 Panthers power plays in the series. They just can't keep taking penalties because they can't kill enough of them off. Getty Images The Edmonton Oilers won Game 4 of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final 5-4 thanks to an overtime goal by Leon Draisaitl, tying the series at two games apiece. The Panthers jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first period, but a goalie change and some timely power plays helped the Oilers mount a stunning second-period rally to tie the game. Jake Walman gave Edmonton its first lead of the game with 6:24 remaining in the third, but Sam Reinhart forced overtime with 20 seconds left after Florida had pulled Sergei Bobrovsky. That set the stage for Draisaitl's heroics with a miracle one-handed shot that took a major deflection off Niko Mikkola to skip past Bobrovsky. Draisaitl, who also scored the overtime winner in Game 1, becomes just the third player in NHL history with multiple OT goals in a single Stanley Cup Final. The Athletic We here at The Athletic are committed to providing elite, award-winning coverage across all sports but with the Stanley Cup Final underway, this is the perfect time to highlight our excellent NHL coverage. In addition to our live coverage, our team of hockey reporters are on the ground providing color, in-depth analysis and revealing stories throughout the series. Whether it be analytical breakdowns, postgame takeaways or features on your favorite players, our NHL staff constantly produces compelling work that you do not want to miss. Throughout the Stanley Cup Final, reporters Daniel Nugent-Bowman, Michael Russo, Chris Johnston and Pierre LeBrun are on the ground in Sunrise and Edmonton. Given all that, there's never been a better time to sign up! You can subscribe to The Athletic on an exclusive offer here. Page 2
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Marchand, Bennett too hot for Oilers to handle in Game 5 of Stanley Cup final
EDMONTON - Driving the Florida Panthers attack in the playoffs is a player in his NHL prime and another acting like he is. Sam Bennett, 28, and Brad Marchand, 37, continued to be a lot for the Oilers to handle in the Stanley Cup final in Florida's 5-2 win over Edmonton on Saturday to take a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven series. Marchand scored twice Saturday — Florida's first and third goals — to reach half a dozen goals in the Cup final. Florida's second goal of the game was Bennett's fifth of the Cup final and his NHL-leading 15th of the post-season. The Panthers can close out the series at home Tuesday and become the first back-to-back Stanley Cup champions since the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2020 and 2021. A new ingredient for the Panthers this post-season, however, is the five-foot-nine, 180-pound Marchand, who Florida acquired at the trade deadline after his almost 16 years with the Boston Bruins. Marchand's six goals was the most by any player in the championship series since Esa Tikkanen in 1988. Marchand, from Halifax, seeks the second Stanley Cup of his career after lifting the trophy with the Boston Bruins in 2011 at the age of 23. He reached another two Cup finals with Boston before he was dealt to Florida this winter. When asked what the 2011 edition of Brad Marchand would say to his 2025 version, he replied 'man, that guy's good looking.' 'Sometimes you get bounces, sometimes you don't but definitely you'd be grateful to be in this opportunity and have another opportunity to be in the finals and be part of a really good team for sure,' Marchand continued. Bennett, from Holland Landing, Ont., pushed his road goal streak to six straight games when he wired a rebound past Edmonton's Calvin Pickard to give the Oilers a 2-0 lead in the first period. A front-runner for this year's Conn Smythe Trophy that goes to the NHL's playoff MVP, Bennett ranks second in post-season in hits (103) to Edmonton's Zach Hyman (111). 'We've talked about it so much,' said Bennett's teammate Sam Reinhart. 'It's just his game translates so well to this time of year. He creates so much room for himself.' Marchand and Bennett each with five, or more, goals apiece in the Cup final are the first teammates to do so since Montreal's Frank Mahovlich and Yvan Cournoyer in 1973. 'They're just certainly capable of processing the context of the game,' Panthers head coach Paul Maurice said. 'They don't get too high, they don't go too low. Their energy level is high, and they're very focused on the game. 'There's a mental toughness there, a mental capacity to stay within the game and not try to break it open. Just wait. Patience.' The ageless Marchand scored both his goals off draws that Edmonton won, but he got to the puck first and beat Oilers to the net to score twice. 'What he can do under duress in a small area is world class,' Maurice said. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 14, 2025.