The 100 Greatest Professional Wrestlers of All-Time

Every ranking update ever (Last wrestling update: 8/12/2025 Next scheduled wrestling update: May ’26)

The making of the list.

The Rules

If you disagree with the placement of an athlete whose prime occurred before 1975, please read The ChatGPT Cautionary Tale before commenting.

RankingWrestler
1Hulk HoganWhy?
2“Stone Cold” Steve AustinWhy?
3The RockWhy?
4John Cena
5Ric Flair
6The Undertaker
7Shawn Michaels
8“Macho Man” Randy Savage
9Roman Reigns
10Bret Hart
11Andre The Giant
12Brock Lesnar
13Seth Rollins
14Lou Thesz
15Buddy Rogers
16Bruno Sammartino
17Triple H
18Mick Foley
19Cody Rhodes
20Harley Race
21Dusty Rhodes
22Sting
23Gorgeous George
24Chris Jericho
25Kurt Angle
26Randy Orton
27Ted DiBiase
28Roddy Piper
29Terry Funk
30Daniel Bryan
31Edge
32Scott Hall
33CM Punk
34Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat
35Nick Bockwinkel
36Jake “The Snake” Roberts
37Kane
38Jerry “The King” Lawler
39AJ Styles
40John Moxley
41Bob Backlund
42The Big Show
43“Superstar” Billy Graham
44Mr. Perfect
45Chris Benoit
46Big Van Vader
47Kevin Nash
48Drew McIntyre
49Dory Funk Jr.
50Jack Brisco
51Bruiser Brody
52Pedro Morales
53Rick Rude
54The Ultimate Warrior
55Vern Gagne
56The Miz
57Kevin Owens
58Stan Hansen
59Jimmy Snuka
60Dick the Bruiser
61Ray Stevens
62Jey Uso
63Booker T.
64Rey Mysterio
65DDP
66Gunther
67The Sheik
68Jeff Hardy
69Eddie Guerrero
70Kenny Omega
71Goldberg
72Lex Luger
73Bam Bam Bigelow
74Ed “the Strangler” Lewis
75Abdullah the Butcher
76Kerry Von Erich
77Bray Wyatt
78Batista
79Bobby Lashley
80Scott Steiner
81The British Bulldog
82Sgt. Slaughter
83Goldust
84MJF
85Sami Zayn
86RVD
87Owen Hart
88Will Ospreay
89Rick Martel
90Rick Steiner
91Arn Anderson
92Sabu
93Ron Simmons
94Killer Kowalski
95Road Warrior Hawk
96Dynamite Kid
97Terry Gordy
98JBL
99The Crusher
100Wahoo McDaniel

The rest of the best wrestlers of all time.

Why is Tom Brady the GOAT?

Of all the GOAT debates in sports, one of the easiest to call comes from football, because there isn’t a debate at all. Tom Brady made the conversation an open-and-shut affair. There are no competition concerns, numbers to scrutinize, or “yeah, but”s to explore. The only mystery isn’t who the GOAT is, but how it ended up being the 199th pick of an NFL draft. Let’s explore what makes a skinny 6th round quarterback in the world’s most brutal sport the unequivocal greatest of all time. 

The Leader in Everything

It’s easy to start with statistics, and there’s no reason to bury the lede, so let’s begin there. The most important position in all of sports is, arguably, quarterback. There have been dozens of phenomenal quarterbacks in NFL history. What makes Tom Brady so unique is that he has more passing yards, passing touchdowns, 4th quarter comebacks, game-winning drives, regular season wins, postseason wins, Super Bowl victories, and Super Bowl MVPs than all of them. His 12 combined Super Bowl rings and Super Bowl MVPs are five more than any other player in NFL history. His Approximate Value–a statistic created by Pro Football Reference to estimate career value–is 49 more than any other player, which is greater than the difference between 2nd place and 9th place. He not only has the greatest career in history, but his 2007 regular season is arguably the greatest season in history. 

Impact on Winning

Brady’s career statistics are enough to end the debate, but there are several other angles that bolster his legacy. For instance, Brady’s impact on winning is unrivaled in the sport. Bill Belichick is often included on the Mount Rushmore of NFL head coaches, and rightfully so. Belichick has a record six Super Bowl victories as a head coach, and appeared in a record nine Super Bowls. However, Belichick owes quite a bit to Brady for his success. Belichick’s career regular season record without Brady is 83-104 (.444). With Brady? Well things look a little sunnier at 219-64 (.774). Belichick’s career playoff record without Brady stands at just 1-2 (.333). Again, with Brady, that record balloons to 30-11 (.732). Certainly, there was some mutualism between Brady and Belichick in New England, but Belichick was unsuccessful in three NFL stints without Brady. Brady without Belichick? This is where Brady’s legacy reaches the land beyond the land of the absurd. Brady left New England to be the starting quarterback for Tampa Bay in 2020. Tampa had not made the playoffs in the previous 12 seasons, and carried a 7-9 record in 2019. In Brady’s first season without Belichick, he was the MVP of the Super Bowl! Brady would go on to lead the Bucs to the playoffs in all three of his seasons in Tampa, and did so in his mid-40s. Brady’s career regular season without Belichick is 32-18 (.640), and his playoff record is 5-2 (.714). It is rare in sports that we get to see such a definitive conclusion on the relative importance of a single player as we’ve been able to see with Brady. His massive success with and without Belichick, and with and without the Patriots and Bucs, combined with Belichick and Tampa’s poor records without Brady shows just how instrumental Brady was to his winning endeavors.

Sustained Excellence

Brady’s massive statistical ledger and his impact on winning are more than enough to close the book on this debate, but there’s more. Brady’s sustained excellence is only rivaled by LeBron James in the history of professional sports. Brady led the NFL in passing yards in his 20s, 30s, and 40s. He did the same with touchdowns. He won multiple Super Bowls in his 20s, 30s, and 40s. As a starting quarterback, Brady was 70-24 (.745) in his 20s, 113-28 (.801) in his 30s, and 68-30 (.694) in his 40s. There are only three quarterbacks in history besides Brady who won two Super Bowls with at least a .694 career winning %, and Brady accomplished that in his 20s, 30s, and 40s. 

Brady’s sustained excellence shows up even more if we move beyond the fact that he’s the all time leader in so many categories, and explore just how big his margin is over second place in those categories. His 10 Super Bowl appearances are four more than any other player. His 251 regular season wins are 65 more than any other player. The difference between Brady and 2nd place is the same as the difference between 2nd and 12th place. Brady’s regular season win total is twice as many as all but 8 quarterbacks in NFL history. Brady’s 35 playoff wins are more than double any other quarterback in history. He has twice as many passing yards as all but 18 quarterbacks, and twice as many passing touchdowns as all but 12.

The Sneaky O.G.

Perhaps most underexplored on Brady’s resume is how effective he was with his feet. Yes, the player in NFL history that you’d pick last in a 40-yard dash competition is arguably the greatest short yardage QB of all-time. Brady’s 124 conversions on third or fourth-and-1 are the most since 2000. His 90.5% conversion rate is the 2nd highest in that same timeframe. Brady’s 238 career rushing first downs are more than Peyton Manning and Drew Brees combined. He’s 18th on the postseason list for rushing touchdowns, including running backs! The most unstoppable weapon in the NFL today is the Brotherly Shove. It’s just under 90% success rate is so effective that owners considered banning the play following the 2024-25 regular season. Long before the Eagles perfected short yardage conversions, Tom Brady had the art of the quarterback sneak mastered at an even higher success rate. Brady’s 5.24 40-yard-dash didn’t win him many footraces, but nothing deflates a defense more than an “and short” conversion, and Brady did it better than anyone.  

That’s a wrap. 

If we had the ability to create an NFL player with 99s in every category, that player would be hard-pressed to duplicate Tom Brady’s career accomplishments. He isn’t just first in everything, he’s first in everything by a lot. He didn’t just win more than anyone, he left no doubt as to who was most responsible for it. He didn’t just play longer than anyone, he sustained excellence at a level that is unheard of in professional sports. Brady didn’t just kill Super Bowl dreams, he killed the GOAT debate. Thanks, Tom!

The 100 Greatest Basketball Players of All-Time

Every ranking update ever (Last basketball update: 8/17/25 Next scheduled basketball update: July ’26)

The making of the list.

The Rules

If you disagree with the placement of an athlete whose prime occurred before 1975, please read The ChatGPT Cautionary Tale before commenting.

RankPlayerPositionYears
1LeBron JamesWhy?Pick one2003-active
2Michael JordanSG1984-2003
3Kareem Abdul-JabbarC1969-1989
4Shaquille O’Neal🔵Why?C1992-2011
5Tim DuncanPF1997-2016
6Steph CurryPG2009-active
7Magic JohnsonPG1979-1996
8Kobe BryantWhy?SG1996-2016
9Kevin DurantSF2007-active
10Nikola JokicC2015-active
11Larry BirdSF1979-1992
12Karl MalonePF1985-2004
13Giannis AntetokounmpoPF2013-active
14Hakeem OlajuwonC1984-2002
15David Robinson🔵Why?C1989-2003
16Wilt ChamberlainWhy?C1959-1973
17James Harden🔵Why?SG2009-active
18Kevin GarnettPF1995-2016
19Dirk NowitzkiPF1998-2019
20Moses MaloneC1974-1995
21Kawhi LeonardSF2011-active
22Bill RussellWhy?C1956-1969
23Charles BarkleyPF1984-2000
24Jerry WestSG1960-1974
25Julius ErvingSF1971-1987
26Dwyane WadeSG2003-2019
27Chris PaulPG2005-active
28Shai Gilgeous-AlexanderPG2018-active
29Oscar RobertsonPG1960-1974
30Rick BarrySF1965-1980
31John StocktonPG1984-2003
32Anthony DavisPF2012-active
33Russell WestbrookPG2008-active
34Steve NashPG1996-2014
35George GervinSG1972-1986
36Joel EmbiidC2016-active
37Dwight HowardC2004-2022
38Patrick EwingC1985-2002
39Gary PaytonPG1990-2007
40Scottie PippenSF1987-2004
41Luka DoncicPG2018-active
42Adrian Dantley🔵Why?SF1976-1991
43Jimmy ButlerSF2011-active
44Tony Parker🔵Why?PG2001-2019
45Jason KiddPG1994-2013
46Pau Gasol🔵Why?C2001-2019
47Damian LillardPG2012-active
48Clyde DrexlerSG1983-1998
49Walt FrazierPG1967-1980
50John HavlicekSF1962-1978
51Reggie MillerSG1987-2005
52Paul PierceSF1998-2017
53Ray AllenSG1996-2014
54Allen IversonSG1996-2010
55Isiah ThomasPG1981-1994
56Tracy McGradySG1997-2012
57Jayson TatumSF2017-active
58Kyrie IrvingPG2011-active
59Dominique WilkinsSF1982-1999
60Manu Ginobili🔵SG2002-2018
61Bob McAdooC1972-1986
62Willis ReedC1964-1974
63Dave CowensC1970-1983
64Chauncey BillupsPG1997-2014
65Chris WebberPF1993-2008
66Rudy GobertC2013-active
67Dikembe MutomboC1991-2009
68Alonzo MourningC1992-2008
69Kevin McHalePF1980-1993
70James WorthySF1982-1994
71Alex EnglishSF1976-1991
72Bernard KingSF1977-1993
73Carmelo AnthonySF2003-2022
74Devin BookerSG2015-active
75Paul GeorgeSF2010-active
76Donovan MitchellSG2017-active
77Karl-Anthony TownsC2015-active
78Domantas SabonisC2016-active
79Jaylen BrownSG2016-active
80Larry Nance🔵Why?PF1981-1994
81Dennis RodmanPF1986-2000
82Elgin BaylorSF1958-1972
83Ben WallaceC1996-2012
84Elvin HayesPF1968-1984
85George MikanWhy?C1948-1956
86Bob PettitPF1954-1965
87Joe DumarsSG1985-1999
88Wes UnseldPF1968-1981
89Artis GilmoreC1971-1988
90Anthony EdwardsSG2020-active
91LaMarcus AldridgePF2006-2021
92Amar’e StoudemirePF2002-2016
93Chris BoshC2003-2016
94Bob CousyPG1950-1963
95Vince CarterSG1998-2020
96Chris MullinSF1985-2001
97Dennis JohnsonPG1976-1990
98Bradley BealSG2012-active
99Mitch RichmondSG1988-2002
100Tim HardawayPG1989-2003

The rest of the best basketball players of all time.