2018 was a banner year for sports; one that was colored as
much by longtime underdogs finally getting over the hump as by dynasties
continuing about their business. Also, as there is only one title to go around,
there were plenty of teams that, while they may have come up short, told an
exciting story along the way. Here's a look at 25 teams that made 2018 a
memorable year.
ALABAMA CRIMSON TIDE (COLLEGE FOOTBALL)
Another year, another title in Tuscaloosa. The Crimson Tide
reached their third consecutive National Championship Game and avenged a late
loss the previous year against Clemson. After trailing for much of the game,
the Tide sprung back to life when freshman quarter Tua Tagovailoa entered the
game in place of Jalen Hurts, throwing for 166 yards and three touchdowns. A
41-yard TD to DeVonta Smith sealed the 26-23 overtime victory against the
Georgia Bulldogs and Coach Nick Saban’s fifth title with the school.
BOSTON CELTICS (NBA)
It was a roller coaster year for the Celtics, who entered
the year with a renewed purpose having acquired Kyrie Irving and Gordon Hayward
over the offseason and drafting former Duke Star Jayson Tatum as well. Despite
losing Hayward in the opening moments of the season to a gruesome leg injury, the
Celtics still finished with the second-best record in the Eastern Conference.
And despite Irving missing the entirety of the playoffs with a knee
injury, the Celtics still pushed LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers to
seven games in the Eastern Conference Finals, with Tatum and Jaylen Brown
stepping up with a presence beyond their years.
BOSTON RED SOX (MLB)
The Red Sox roared through the regular season, led by
eventual AL MVP Mookie Betts, winning a third consecutive American League East
title via an MLB-best record of 108-54. Boston didn’t take its foot off the
pedal, becoming the first team to ever defeat two 100-win teams in the same
postseason, via the New York Yankees and Houston Astros. They made short work
of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series, winning it 4-1. When all was
said and done, their 119 wins were the fourth-most for a season in MLB history.
DUKE BLUE DEVILS (MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL)
The Blue Devils find themselves here for what they
accomplished off the court as well as on it thus far. Of his many amazing
recruiting classes, the class of 2018 is the most acclaimed in Mike
Krzyzewski’s 39 years at the helm in Durham. In RJ Barrett, Zion Williamson and
Cam Reddish, Coach K brought the top three high school players in the country
to his roster; the first time in history one team has boasted such a
collection. And in the early going, the hype has lived up to expectations for
one of America’s most exciting teams.
FRENCH NATIONAL TEAM (FIFA WORLD CUP)
The French National Football Team took the World Cup by
storm over the summer, claiming its second FIFA men’s title. With Antoine
Griezmann and Kylian Mbappe leading the way with four goals apiece throughout
the tournament and an outstanding performance from goalie Hugo Lloris, the French
team emerged from Group C after defeating Australia and Peru and finishing in a
draw with Denmark. They then embarked on defeating Lionel Messi and Argentina
before consecutive shutouts against Uruguay and Belgium to advance to the
Finals where the French squad defeated Croatia behind a goal and assist from
Griezmann.
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS (NBA)
The Warriors entered the 2017-18 NBA season as champions…and
left it in the same condition, picking up their third title in the last four
seasons. Steph Curry, Kevin Durant, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green each made
the NBA All-Star Team, as the Warriors went 58-24 and took down the top-ranked
Houston Rockets en route to a return engagement against the Cleveland
Cavaliers. The Warriors swept the Cavs in the Finals, with Curry setting a
Finals record with nine three-pointers in Game 2 and Kevin Durant winning
Finals MVP for a second consecutive year, after averaging 28 points, 10
rebounds and seven assists per game.
HOUSTON ASTROS (MLB)
The Astros entered the New Year as the reigning World Series
champions and mounted a more-than-respectable title defense season. Armed with
an upgrade in their starting rotation via Gerrit Cole and a full season of
Justin Verlander, the Astros boasted a pair of Cy Young contenders in a
rotation that set an MLB record for most strikeouts in a season. Ultimately,
the club won 103 games — two more than during their championship season of the
previous year— and returned to the American League Championship Series.
HOUSTON ROCKETS (NBA)
With Chris Paul joining eventual scoring leader and MVP
James Harden to form one of the NBA’s deadliest backcourts in recent memory,
the Houston Rockets took off accordingly. With a team-based perimeter attack
that averaged 15 three-pointers a game, the Rockets won an NBA-best 65 games.
After losing only two games throughout the first two rounds of the Western
Conference Playoffs, the Rockets pushed the Western Conference Finals to seven
games before missing a record 27 three-pointers and giving up an 11-point
halftime lead to be eliminated from the playoffs.
LOS ANGELES LAKERS (NBA)
It had been a while since the Lakers found themselves in the
spotlight, but with LeBron James heading out west, the shine has returned to
the Staples Center. James’ long-anticipated move to the West Coast finally
becoming a reality mean immediate upside for both the present and the future of
the Lakers. Time will tell if the presence of James will lead to another glory
era for the Lake Show, but LA has undeniably rejoined the inner circle of NBA
franchises as the year draws to a close.
LOS ANGELES RAMS (NFL)
Armed with the franchise’s most explosive offense since the
"Greatest Show on Turf" of the Super Bowl salad days in St. Louis,
the Rams have roared back to the top of the NFL over the past year. Precocious
head coach Sean McVay has rolled out an offense spearheaded by Todd Gurley, who
has averaged a touchdown per game over last two years. Meanwhile, Aaron Donald
has become an all-time-great-level pass rusher for a team that has clear
designs on returning to the Super Bowl well before its palatial new home is
done in Inglewood.
MANCHESTER CITY F.C. (PREMIER LEAGUE)
Man. City dominated the Premier League at a historic pace
during the 2017-18 season, becoming the first club in league history to reach
100 points in a season. Their 19-point margin of league victory was the largest
in history as well, as they distanced themselves from the pack early in the
year. Overall, they were 32-6 on the year and set a league record for most goals
scored as well, with 106. It was a stunningly dominant showing for any league,
let alone in one of the world’s best in the sport.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS (NFL)
2018 marked the third Super Bowl appearance in the past four
years for New England and an eighth in the combined run of Tom Brady and Bill
Belichick. Brady capped the season with a third MVP at age 40. In February, the
Pats came up just short of a sixth title in franchise history, falling to the
Philadelphia Eagles in the final moments of Super Bowl LII. Still, the Patriots
returned this fall to become the third team in NFL history to reach three
consecutive Super Bowls and extend their record for divisional titles to 10
consecutive years.
NEW YORK YANKEES (MLB)
The hype train was substantial for the Yankees entering the
New Year after adding 2017 NL MVP Giancarlo Stanton to their already potent
lineup. And the Bronx Bombers lived up to their billing once the year was
underway, setting a new MLB record for most home runs in a season with 267 — 32
more than any other club. Nine different Yankees hit at least 20 home runs in
the process, another MLB record. Under the guidance of rookie manager Aaron
Boone, the club won 100 games, becoming the third American League team to win
as many games, which was — guess what — yep, another MLB record.
NOTRE DAME FIGHTING IRISH (WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL)
It was quite a year for Fighting Irish Coach Muffet McGraw,
who began the season by being inducted into National Basketball Hall of Fame
before capping it with a national championship. Notre Dame went 35-3 on the
year and became an impressive underdog story as the NCAA Tournament advanced.
Despite a roster that was besieged by injury, the Irish defeated previously
undefeated Connecticut in an overtime game in the Final Four before Arike
Ogunbowale hit a championship-clinching three-pointer with less than a second
left in the National Championship Game.
TEAM NORWAY (WINTER OLYMPICS)
Norway put on an imposing show of overall dominance at the
2018 Winter Olympic Games, claiming a record 39 team medals during the event.
Its total was eight better than second-place Germany and 10 more than
third-place Canada. Cross-country skier Marit Bjørgen led the way with five
medals (including two golds); while 15 other Nordish competitors won multiple
medals. As a whole, Norway accounted for 14 gold, 14 silver and 11 bronze
medals during its record haul.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES (NFL)
After years of being the only one of the NFC East teams
without a Super Bowl title, the Eagles finally broke through in a dramatic
fashion. They enjoyed a six-game improvement from the year before — due much in
part to the breakout of second-year quarterback Carson Wentz — with an NFL-best
13-3 record. After Wentz was lost for the year to a torn ACL in Week 14, Nick
Foles stepped up to lead the team to the Super Bowl against the New England
Patriots. Once there, Foles threw for three scores and 371 yards and sealed a
41-33 victory for the first Super Bowl title in team history.
REAL MADRID (CHAMPIONS LEAGUE)
The dominant run of Real Madrid throughout the Champions
League continued, as they reached a championship three-peat in 2018. Behind 44
goals from Cristiano Ronaldo, Real Madrid were the victors of Super Copa de
Espana, UEFA Super Cup, FIFA Club World Cup and ultimately, the Champions
League in full. In the final, they defeated Liverpool F.C. 3-1 and became the
first club to claim three consecutive Champions League titles since Bayern
Munich in 1976. Ronaldo also became the first player to earn five total Champions
League titles in the process.
SEATTLE STORM (WNBA)
After an up and down early going in the year, the Storm
galvanized to finish atop the WNBA’s Western Conference by six games, with a
26-8 record. Breanna Stewart averaged 21.8 points per game, with Sue Bird and
Jewell Loyd joining her as All-Stars. In the playoffs, they survived a
hard-fought series with the Phoenix Mercury, where each team defended its home
court in each game, before sweeping the Washington Mystics in the WNBA Finals.
Bird contributed 10 assists in clinching the game, while Stewart posted 30
points en route to Finals MVP honors.
TORONTO RAPTORS (NBA)
Maybe no team has had a more unpredictable year than the
Raptors. After finishing with the Eastern Conference’s best record in 2018, they
were unceremoniously dispatched by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the second round
of the NBA playoffs. Following this, they jettisoned both Coach of the Year
winner Dwane Casey and franchise star DeMar DeRozan in a stunning overhaul as a
part of a move to acquire disenfranchised San Antonio Spurs star Kawhi Leonard.
Throughout it all, the Raptors have emerged in even better shape this fall,
owning the NBA’s best record two months into the 2018-19 season.
POWER (BIG3)
The second season of the BIG3 league continued to build on
its unique brand of 3-on-3 basketball intensity and NBA nostalgia. With league
MVP Corey Maggette, Quentin Richardson, "Big Baby" Glen Davis,
Cuttino Mobley and Chris Anderson leading the way, Power posted a 7-1 record
throughout the regular season before defeating Baron Davis’ Three’s Company
team 51-43 in the Finals. Entering its third season, BIG3 continues to grow,
having signed a streaming deal with Facebook to broadcast its games.
UCF KNIGHTS (COLLEGE FOOTBALL)
It has been Dec. 17 of 2016 since the Golden Knights last
lost a football game, a span of 24 consecutive games. It is the nation’s
longest current undefeated streak, a run that pushed the Knights to crown
themselves as legitimate national champions after being excluded from the
College Football Playoffs despite their undefeated record at year’s end. The
success carried over into this fall, as UCF has again gone undefeated entering
bowl season — but once more find themselves on the outside looking in at the
official CFB playoffs.
VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS (NHL)
In their first season of existence, the Golden Knights not
only proved hockey was a fit for Las Vegas, but they also became the first
expansion team in North American pro sports history to begin play after the
first decade of their league and finish with a record above .500. And they did
much more than that, as their 109-point effort became far and away the most
successful overall debut season in pro sports history. Although they ultimately
fell in five games to the Washington Capitals in the Cup Finals, they more than
proved they belong, going 12-3 en route to winning the Clarence Bowl as Western
Conference champions.
VILLANOVA WILDCATS (NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL)
After going 36-4 and winning their third Big East title in
the last four years, the Villanova Wildcats embarked on one of the most
dominant title runs history, winning each NCAA Tournament game by double
digits. The Wildcats dominated the Michigan Wolverines in the National
Championship Game, winning by a final score of 79-62. Although the Villanova
roster featured National Player of the Year Jalen Brunson and a pair of
first-round picks in Mikal Bridges and Omari Spellman, it was reserve forward
Donte DiVincenzo who erupted for 31 points to seal the second national title in
three years for the Wildcats.
UNITED STATES WOMEN'S NATIONAL SOCCER TEAM (FIFA)
The USWNT reaffirmed its place atop the world in women’s
soccer, going 18-0-2 on the year. The prep season for the team's World Cup
defense run in 2019 included victories in the SheBelieves Cup, Tournament of
Nations and the CONCACAF Championships. The season included 12 shutouts, nine
of which came consecutively. And over the course of those shutouts, the United
States outscored its competition 38-0. Of those victories, eight came against
top-15 teams in the world.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS (NHL)
After years of chasing the Stanley Cup only to be thwarted
by the Pittsburgh Penguins, the Caps finally not only overcame their top
playoff nemesis, but they also finally raised the Cup. The road wasn’t always a
smooth one, as the Capitals twice had to come back from series deficits, but by
the time they broke through to the Finals, there was no denying Alex Ovechkin
and Co. They disposed of the Vegas Golden Knights in five games and brought the
first Stanley Cup in history to the franchise and first title to the Washington
D.C. area since 1991.
No comments:
Post a Comment