This pitcher, whose name is now a postseason award, has the most wins of any pitcher of all time.
Cy Young
This movie features a football coach heading to a school that is no longer segregated, where he has to win every game to keep his job.
Remember the Titans
This is the field where the Chicago Cubs play.
Wrigley
Herky and Cy reside in this midwestern state.
Iowa
This man came up with this sport while teaching physical education by hanging a peach baskets for shooting.
(James) Naismith
Playing for this team, first baseman Bill Buckner let a routine ground ball roll between his legs in the 1986 World Series, allowing the Mets to win game 6.
Boston Red Sox
The best college football player receives this famous trophy.
Heisman
This man's single-game scoring record of 100 points, though highly debated, has stood at number one since 1962.
Wilt Chamberlain
Fly together in the "V" as coach Gordon Bombei tries to take a group of misfit hockey players to the local championship.
Mighty Ducks
This is where those pin-striped baseball greats have played in New York for years.
Yankee Stadium
The Phanatic is the mascot of this major league baseball team
Phillies
Track coach Bill Bowerman famously used his wife's waffle iron in 1971 to create this revolutionary lightweight sports equipment.
Nike (waffle) Shoe (spikes)
With Game 1 tied against the Warriors, this NBA player rebounded a missed free throw and ran away from the basket, believing his team was ahead.
J.R. Smith
The world champion hockey team receives this famous trophy.
The Stanley Cup
Known as "The Great One", nobody has come close to his career numbers, and he is still considered the Goat in his sport, hockey.
Wayne Gretsky
A League of Their Own
This is the park where the big green monster resides.
Fenway Park
Otto the Orange is the mascot of this college team.
Syracuse
Amputee and athlete Van Phillips invented this flexible, J-shaped carbon-fiber running blade, named after a fast land animal, which changed Paralympic sprinting forever.
The Cheetah
The Red Sox sold this player's contract to the Yankees in 1919 becoming one of the biggest bloopers in sports history.
Babe Ruth
This college rivalry trophy is given to the winner of the annual football game between Minnesota and Wisconsin, where the winner "chops" down the opposing team's goalpost.
Paul Bunyan's Axe
At almost 2000 more hits than any active player today, this Goat's record will likely never be broken.
Pete Rose
This sports movie features Kevin Costner playing a pitcher at the end of his career who tries for a no-hitter to end on a high note.
For the Love of the Game
Demolished in 2014, this is where the Minnesota Vikings would score their home touchdowns, SKOL!!
The Metro Dome
Globie is the mascot for this entertaining group of athletes.
The Harlem Globe Trotters
Syracuse Nationals owner Danny Biasone and GM Leo Ferris invented this timing device in 1954 to eliminate stall tactics and increase scoring during basketball games.
Shot clock
Chris Webber
The Webb Ellis Cup is given out for the winner of this sport.
Rugby
This Goat coach led his college team to seven consecutive national championships in college basketball. A feat that will likely never be repeated.
John Wooden
This sports movie starring Robert Redford features a story loosely based on the 1949 shooting of Chicago Cubs first baseman Eddie Waitkus by an obsessed 19-year-old female fan, Ruth Ann Steinhagen.
The Natural
This is the country with the largest stadium (by capacity) in the world.
(Rungrada 1st of May Stadium) North Korea
Blitz is the mascot of this NFL team.
Seattle Seahawks
Broadcast pioneer and inventor Stan Honey created this digital line used in televised football, debuting it during a 1998 ESPN broadcast
The Yellow Line (First Down Marker)
Jim Marshall, a defensive end for this NFL team, recovered a fumble and ran 66 yards into the wrong end zone, scoring a safety for the 49ers.
The Minnesota Vikings
This is the heaviest rivaly trophy, weighing 545 lbs, given to the winner of the annual football game between the University of Nevada, Reno and UNLV.
The (Fremont) Canon