词条 | Winning streak (sports) |
释义 |
}} In sports, a winning streak is a sequence of won games or competitions. It can be applied to teams in team sports, and individuals in individual sports. In sports where teams or individuals represent groups such as countries or regions, those groups can also be said to have 'winning streaks' if their representatives win consecutive games or competitions, even if the competitors are different. Streaks can also be applied to specific competitions: for example a competitor who wins an event in three consecutive Olympic Games has an Olympic winning streak, even if they have lost other competitions during the period. {{TOC limit|3}}Longest streaksThe longest recorded winning streak in any professional sports is Pakistan's Jahangir Khan's 555 consecutive wins in squash from 1981 to 1986. In 2013, the Dutch wheelchair tennis player Esther Vergeer retired with an active 10-year-long winning streak of 470 matches, including a streak of 250 consecutive sets won.[1] Air sportsAerobaticTeam3 consecutive titles at FAI World Aerobatic Championships — Russia
Aquatic SportsDivingOlympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men's10m Platform3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Klaus Dibiasi
7 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
3m Springboard11 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
Synchronized 10m Platform3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — China
Women's10m Platform7 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
3m Springboard8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
Synchronized 10m Platform4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — China
Synchronized 3m Springboard3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — China
World ChampionshipsMen's1m Springboard5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — China
3m Springboard3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
6 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
10m Platform3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Greg Louganis
Synchronized 3m Springboard5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — China
Synchronized 10m Platform3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
Women's3m Springboard5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Guo Jingjing
7 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — China
10m Platform3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — China
Synchronized 3m Springboard7 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
Synchronized 10m Platform7 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
SwimmingOverallJohnny WeissmullerWeissmuller never lost a swimming race during his entire amateur career, including three individual Olympic gold medals. He is purported to have told the other swimmers in his Olympic final that they could fight it out for second place. Tamás DarnyiDarnyi was undefeated his entire international career in both the 200m and 400m Individual medley races, lasting from 1985 to 1993, though he did not hold the world record for the entirety of the period (another person broke it in a race that Darnyi did not compete in. He later reclaimed the record). Roland MatthesMatthes was undefeated in the 100 and 200 meter backstroke races from 1968-1974, though he lost the world record in races he did not compete in during that span. He later lost both records for good at the end of his career when he earned a bronze in the 100m backstroke behind John Naber, who also set the world record in the 200m backstroke. Vladimir SalnikovSalnikov won all 61 of his 1500m freestyle races from 1977 to 1986. The streak ended when he finished fourth at the 1986 FINA World Championships. Michael PhelpsMichael Phelps was undefeated in the finals of the 200m butterfly for ten years. Before the 2012 Olympics where he was defeated by Chad le Clos. The last time Phelps had lost the race was in 2002 when he lost to Olympic champion Tom Malchow at the 2002 Pan Pacific Swimming Championships. Olympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men's100m Freestyle5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
400m Freestyle3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
1500m Freestyle4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Australia
100m Backstroke6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
200m Backstroke6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
200m Breaststroke3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Japan
100m Butterfly3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Michael Phelps
3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games
200m Butterfly3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games
200m Individual Medley3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Michael Phelps
3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games
400m Individual Medley5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States
4 × 100 m Freestyle Relay7 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
4 × 200 m Freestyle Relay7 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
Note: excluding boycotted Moscow Olympics 4 × 100 m Medley Relay14 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
Note: excluding boycotted Moscow Olympics Women's100m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — Dawn Fraser
4 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
400m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games
800m Freestyle5 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
100m Backstroke4 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
200m Backstroke3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — Krisztina Egerszegi
3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — Hungary
200m Breaststroke3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
100m Butterfly3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
4 × 100 m Freestyle Relay6 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
Note: excluding boycotted Moscow Olympics 4 × 200 m Freestyle Relay3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
4 × 100 m Medley Relay4 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
World Championships (50m)Men's50m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — César Cielo
400m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Ian Thorpe
5 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Australia
1500m Freestyle4 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Grant Hackett
5 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Australia
100m Backstroke3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Aaron Peirsol
3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States
200m Backstroke3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Aaron Peirsol
8 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States
200m Breaststroke3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Dániel Gyurta
3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Hungary
100m Butterfly3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Michael Phelps
5 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States
200m Butterfly3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Michael Phelps
Note: he also won in 2001 and 2003, but elected not to swim the race in the 2005 FINA World Championships. 3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships
200m Individual Medley3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships
400m Individual Medley3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States
4 × 100 m Freestyle Relay8 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
4 × 200 m Freestyle Relay5 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
4 × 100 m Medley Relay7 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
Women's100m Freestyle5 consecutive titles at World Championships — East Germany
200m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
800m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
200m Individual Medley3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships
400m Individual Medley3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — China
4 × 200 m Freestyle Relay3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States
World Championships (25m)Men's400m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Yuri Prilukov
3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Russia
1500m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Yuri Prilukov
4 consecutive titles at World Championships — Australia
100m Backstroke3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Cuba
200m Backstroke3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
100m Butterfly3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Lars Frölander
3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Sweden
200m Butterfly5 consecutive titles at World Championships — James Hickman
5 consecutive titles at World Championships — United Kingdom
100m Individual Medley3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Ryan Lochte
3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
200m Individual Medley4 consecutive titles at World Championships — Ryan Lochte
4 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
400m Individual Medley3 consecutive titles at World Championships
3 consecutive titles at World Championships
4 × 100 m Medley Relay3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
Women's800m Freestyle3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Chen Hua
3 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
200m Backstroke3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
100m Breaststroke3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States
100m Butterfly3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Jenny Thompson
3 consecutive titles at World Championships
100m Individual Medley3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Martina Moravcová
3 consecutive titles at World Championships
400m Individual Medley3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Yana Klochkova
3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Ukraine
4 × 100 m Freestyle Relay3 consecutive titles at World Championships
College (United States)31 consecutive NCAA Men's Division III titles — Kenyon College
44-year consecutive NJCAA National Championship wins by Indian River State College Men's Swimming and Diving (as of March in 2018) 36-year consecutive NJCAA National Championship wins by Indian River State College Women's Swimming and Diving (as of March in 2018) http://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/news/swimming-world-presents-the-naia-njcaa-d2-d3-championship-recaps/ Synchronised swimmingOlympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Duet4 consecutive gold medals at Olympics — Russia
Team4 consecutive gold medals at Olympics — Russia
FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsTeam8 consecutive gold medals at World Championships team titles — Russia
Water PoloMen's3 consecutive gold medals at Summer Olympics
ArcheryOlympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men'sTeam3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — South Korea
Women'sIndividual6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — South Korea
Team8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — South Korea
World Outdoor ChampionshipsMen'sRecurveIndividual4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Hans Deutgen
7 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Sweden
Team13 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
CompoundIndividual3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Team5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Women'sRecurveIndividual5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
Team6 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
World Indoor ChampionshipsMen'sCompoundIndividual5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships
Team5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Compound JuniorTeam4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Women'sCompoundTeam6 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Compound JuniorTeam3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
World Youth ChampionshipsMen'sCompound JuniorIndividual4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Recurve CadetIndividual3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
Compound CadetTeam3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Women'sRecurve JuniorIndividual7 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
Team3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
Compound JuniorIndividual3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Team5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Recurve CadetTeam3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
Compound CadetIndividual3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Team5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
World Para ChampionshipsMen'sRecurveTeam Open4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
Individual Wheelchair/Visual Impairment6 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
CompoundTeam Open3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
Individual Wheelchair/Visual Impairment3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships
3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships
Women'sRecurveIndividual Wheelchair/Visual Impairment3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Italy
CompoundIndividual Open3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Danielle Brown
4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United Kingdom
World Field ChampionshipsMen'sRecurve4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships
Compound3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Barebow/Instinctive3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Anders Rosenberg
5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Sweden
Team3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — France
Women'sBarebow/Instinctive3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Italy
Junior WomenCompound3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Sweden
World University ChampionshipsMen'sRecurveTeam3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Chinese Taipei
CompoundIndividual4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Team3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Women'sRecurveIndividual3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
Team3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea
CompoundIndividual3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
Team3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
MixedCompound Team4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States
AthleticsOverallMen's 400m Hurdles122 races — Edwin Moses
Note: this streak included an Olympic gold medal and two improvements of his own world records. Long-distance running75 races — Emil Zátopek[2]
Men's Long Jump65 consecutive competitions — Carl Lewis
Men's Cross Country5 consecutive World Championships
Women's high jump140 to 150 competitions[4] — Iolanda Balaş
Note: this streak included 2 Olympic gold medals and 14 improvements of the world record. Olympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men's100m5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
200m5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
400m7 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
800m4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games
5000m4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Finland
10000m4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Ethiopia
Marathon3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Ethiopia
110m Hurdles9 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
400m Hurdles6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
3000m Steeplechase9 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Kenya
4 × 100 m Relay8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
4 × 400 m Relay4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games
50km Race Walk3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Robert Korzeniowski
3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Poland
High Jump8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
Pole Vault16 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
Long Jump4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Carl Lewis
8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
Triple Jump3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Viktor Saneyev
4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Soviet Union
Shot Put6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
Discus Throw4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Al Oerter
5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
Hammer Throw3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — John Flanagan
6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
Javelin throw3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Jan Železný
3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Czechoslovakia and then Czech Republic
Decathlon6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
Women's100m4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
200m3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games
1500m3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Soviet Union
5000m3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Ethiopia
4 × 100 m Relay4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
4 × 400 m Relay6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States
Shot Put4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Soviet Union
IAAF World Championships in AthleticsMen's100m3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
200m3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Usain Bolt
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
400m4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Michael Johnson
5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
800m3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Wilson Kipketer
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
1500m4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Hicham El Guerrouj
4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Morocco
5000m4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Kenya
10000m4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Ethiopia
110m Hurdles3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Greg Foster
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
400m Hurdles3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
3000m Steeplechase3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
6 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Kenya
4 × 100 m Relay4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
4 × 400 m Relay5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
Marathon3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
20km Race Walk3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Jefferson Pérez
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
Pole Vault6 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Sergey Bubka
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
Note: Ukraine gained independence from Soviet Union in 1991 Long Jump4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Iván Pedroso
4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
Shot Put3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Werner Günthör
4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
Discus Throw4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Lars Riedel
5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — East Germany then Germany
Hammer Throw3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Ivan Tsikhan
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
Decathlon3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
Women's100m4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
200m3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Allyson Felix
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships
5000m3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Ethiopia
10000m5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Ethiopia
4 × 400 m Relay3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
Race Walking3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Olga Kaniskina
7 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Russia
Pole Vault3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Russia
Long Jump3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Brittney Reese
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States
Shot Put4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Valerie (Vili) Adams
4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — New Zealand
Heptathlon3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Carolina Klüft
3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Sweden
Auto racingFormula OneBy driver{{further information|List of Formula One driver records#Most consecutive wins}}By constructor{{further information|List of Formula One records#Most consecutive wins}}Sports car racingFIA GT1 World Championship6 consecutive FIA GT Championship and (from 2010) FIA GT1 World Championship team titles
Note: all its titles was achieved with the same car (Maserati MC12) IMSA GTP8 wins — Geoff Brabham and Nissan GTP ZX-Turbo chassis #8801 "Elvis"[5]
World Sportscar Championship18 wins — Porsche 956
24 Hours of Le MansBy driver{{further information|List of 24 hours of Le Mans records#Most Consecutive Wins 2}}By constructor{{further information|List of 24 hours of Le Mans records#Most Consecutive Wins}}By team5 consecutive wins —
By car4 consecutive wins
By same car{{further information|List of 24 hours of Le Mans records#Consecutive wins by same car}}IndyCar
NOTE: INDYCAR recognizes streaks from AAA, USAC, CART, Champ Car World Series, and INDYCAR sanctioned races. World Rally Championship9 consecutive World Championships — Sébastien Loeb[6]
NASCAR Cup Series10 wins — 1967 Richard Petty[8] Note: Because of the post-1972 schedule overhaul, NASCAR will differentiate records from pre-1972 and post-1972. The primary schedule overhaul eliminated midweek races, thus cutting the schedule from 48 to around 30 races (36 currently), and a minimum race distance (first {{convert|250|mi|km}}, later shortened to {{convert|300|km|mi|abbr=on}}). Since many pre-1972 races were under 100 miles (such as 62.5 mile races held in Islip, New York, and the current non-championship Budweiser Duel then being a championship race at 100 miles until 1967), some NASCAR records are differentiated that way, similar to the NBA differentiating "fewest points" records with pre and post-1954 records, when the 24-second shot clock was introduced.
4 wins (tie) (length of shortest race, in miles, in brackets):
Note: In seven of the eight instances, at least one of the wins was in a 500-mile race. Mark Martin's 1993 streak ended at Darlington, where the Mountain Dew Southern 500 was stopped 16 laps early because of darkness. Basketball{{see also|Basketball winning streaks}}FIBA
Olympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}64 games — 1936-1972 United States
7 Consecutive Men's titles at Olympic Games — United States
6 Consecutive Women's titles at Olympic Games — United States
NBA{{main article|List of National Basketball Association longest winning streaks}}33 games — 1971–72 Los Angeles Lakers[11]
College (United States)NCAA Women's Division IAll games111 games — Connecticut[12]
Note: The Wayland Baptist College women's basketball team achieved a winning streak of 131 games which started November 7, 1953 and ended March 20, 1958 (defeated 46–42 by Nashville Business School). However, a national organizing structure for women's intercollegiate basketball did not exist until the AIAW was established in 1971; the NCAA did not begin organizing women's sports until 1981. Wayland Baptist instead played in competitions sponsored by the Amateur Athletic Union.[13] Regular-season games onlyBy NCAA convention, the "regular season" does not include games in conference tournaments or in any national postseason tournament. 126 games — Connecticut[14]
NCAA Women's Division II73 games — Ashland University[15]
NCAA Women's Division III88 games — Washington (MO)
U Sports Women's Basketball (Canadian universities)88 games — Winnipeg (MB)
The Lady Wesmen would go on to a record 118-1 in the span from 1992-1995, including 3 CIS (now U Sports) national basketball championships and beating several NCAA Women's Division I programs in North American tournaments.[17] NCAA Men's Division IAll games88 games — UCLA[18]
Regular-season games onlyBy NCAA convention, the "regular season" does not include games in conference tournaments or in any national postseason tournament. 74 games — UCLA[18]
Home games129 games — Kentucky[18]
NCAA Men's Division II57 games — Winona State University[20]
NCAA Men's Division III60 games — SUNY Potsdam[21]
Greek LeagueGreek Women's Basketball League105 games — Athinaikos[22][23]
Greek Basket League80 games — Aris Thessaloniki[24]
Bat-and-ball gamesBaseballWorld ChampionshipsWorld Baseball Classic2 consecutive titles — Japan World Cup9 consecutive titles — Cuba
Major League Baseball{{see also|List of Major League Baseball longest winning streaks}}By a team26 games — New York Giants[25]
Note: The Giants tied the Pirates in the second game of a doubleheader 1–1 on September 18, 1916. Major League Baseball excludes all games which end in ties from their official statistics. The longest winning streak in Major League Baseball that does not include a tie is 22 games, achieved by the Cleveland Indians in 2017, which is also the longest winning streak in the American League. The National League record for consecutive wins without a tie is 21 games, by the 1935 Chicago Cubs. By a pitcher24 consecutive winning decisions — Carl Hubbell, New York Giants[25]
Note: Hubbell's streak was achieved in 27 games as he also pitched three no-decisions. In baseball, only losing decisions can end winning streaks by pitchers. Minor League Baseball29 Games — Salt Lake City Trappers of the Pioneer League
College (United States)NCAA Division I34 consecutive games
22 consecutive post season games — South Carolina
12 consecutive College World Series games — South Carolina
NCAA Division II46 games — 2000 Savannah State NCAA Division III44 games — 2008 Trinity College (Connecticut) NAIA41 games — 1990 Point Park College (Pittsburgh, PA) Softball7 consecutive World Championships — United States
NJCAA88 straight games — Butler Community College
CricketTest16 matches — Australia
Note: Australia equalled this record with another 16 wins in a row from December 2005 until January 2008. ODI21 matches — Australia
World Cup26 matches[29] — Australia
17 matches - Pakistan With 11 continuous series wins International Cricket (All Forms)20 matches (17 ODIs and 3 tests) — Australia[30]
Domestic or Club Twenty2025 matches — Sialkot Stallions (Pakistan)[31]
BoatingCanoeingMen'sC-13 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — Jon Lugbill
6 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — United States
C-1 Team7 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — United States
C-25 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — East Germany
C-2 Team3 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships
KayakingMen'sK-13 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — Richard Fox
3 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships
K-1 Team4 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — East Germany
Women'sK-13 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — Austria
K-1 Team6 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — East Germany
Rowing{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men's Coxless Pair3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Steve Redgrave
Note: gold medalist in Coxless Four at Sydney Olympics Men's Eights8 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States
Men's Coxless Pair15 consecutive major titles (World Cups and World Championships) — Eric Murray, Hamish Bond[32]
Women's Eights9 consecutive world titles (Olympic Games and World Championships) - United States
SailingAmerica's Cup25 Cups — United States
Note: With 132 years, this is the longest winning streak by years in sports history. Olympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}4 consecutive Olympic titles — Ben Ainslie
4 consecutive Olympic titles — Paul Elvstrøm
Bowling3 consecutive titles at PBA World Championship
Combat sportsBoxingProfessional87 — Julio César Chávez (light welterweight)[35]
Note 1: Included is the controversial win against Meldrick Taylor in March 1990, which could have ended the streak at 68 wins Note 2: After two more wins Chávez lost to Frankie Randall on 29 January 1994 to end an unbeaten streak of 90 matches. Longest unbeaten streaks:[36]103 — Jimmy Wilde (flyweight)[37]
Note: all fights were in the UK against boxers of the UK. The records for international fights are: 93 — Pedro Carrasco (lightweight)[38]
91 — Sugar Ray Robinson (middleweight)[39]
Olympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}3 consecutive Olympic gold medals
7 consecutive Olympic heavyweight titles — Cuba
Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles and Seoul Olympics World Championship6 consecutive heavyweight World Championships — Félix Savón
Note: winner of 3 consecutive Olympic gold medals (1992–2000) Judo6 consecutive titles at World Championships — Ryoko Tani
Mixed Martial ArtsMen's31 fights
28 fights
Women's22 fights — Megumi Fujii
37 fights (36 wins, 1 no contest) — Igor Vovchanchyn
Professional wrestlingSince matches have predetermined outcomes, winning streaks in professional wrestling are orchestrated by the wrestling organizations.[40] World Championship WrestlingSingles Matches"173 consecutive matches" — Bill Goldberg[41][42]
Note: While the tally of 173 matches was listed by World Championship Wrestling as the legitimate total, it is fictitious number. WCW inflated the win count to make Goldberg look more dominant.[43][44] World Wrestling EntertainmentSingles Matches"914 days unbeaten" — Asuka 249+ matches
Singles Matches at WrestleMania21 consecutive matches — The Undertaker, (known as The Streak)
Note: Included 1 win via disqualification (1993).[45] WrestlingOlympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men's Freestyle3 consecutive Olympics titles (tie)
187 consecutive matches including 1964 Tokyo Olympics — Osamu Watanabe Note: The only modern Olympian to go unbeaten throughout his entire career. 6 consecutive Men's heavyweight Olympic titles — USSR
Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics Men's Greco-Roman13 years including 3 consecutive Olympics titles (1988–1996) — Alexander Karelin
6 consecutive Men's heavyweight Olympic titles — USSR
Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics Women's Freestyle4 consecutive Olympics titles — Kaori Icho
World ChampionshipsMen's Freestyle6 consecutive titles at World Championships — Sergey Beloglazov[46]
19 consecutive team titles at World Championships — USSR
Men's Greco-Roman9 consecutive titles at World Championships — Alexander Karelin
Note: winner of 3 consecutive Olympic gold medals (1988–1996) 21 consecutive team titles at World Championships — USSR and Russia
Women's Freestyle6 consecutive team titles at World Championships — Japan
College (USA)159 matches — Cael Sanderson, Iowa State Note: never lost a single NCAA match in entire collegiate career (1998–2002) High school (USA)459 consecutive matches — Brandon High School, Brandon, Florida[47][48]
Sumo69 matches — Futabayama Sadaji
Cue sportsEnglish billiardsIBSF World Billiards ChampionshipTimed3 consecutive titles — Pankaj Advani
3 consecutive titles — India
Points3 consecutive titles — Bob Marshall
5 consecutive titles — India
World Billiards Championship4 consecutive titles
31 consecutive titles — England
PoolWEPF Eight-ball Pool World Championship13 consecutive titles — England
VIPA League 9 Consecutive wins - Liam Gallagher (also ended the streak of 12 by Andrew Akesson) But Andrew accumulated 34 seven balls during this momentous feat. Along with winning an incredible £180 in purse winnings for his destruction of Liam Gallagher. WPA World Nine-ball ChampionshipMen's3 consecutive titles — United States
Women's3 consecutive titles — Allison Fisher
3 consecutive titles
Snooker15 consecutive titles at World Snooker Championship — Joe Davis
15 consecutive titles at World Snooker Championship — England
Three-cushion billiardsUMB World Three-cushion Championship11 consecutive titles — Raymond Ceulemans
11 consecutive titles at — Belgium
CEB European Three-cushion Championship11 consecutive titles — Raymond Ceulemans
22 consecutive titles at — Belgium
CyclingMen'sRoad5 consecutive Tour de France — Miguel Indurain
(Note: The 7 consecutive Tour de France titles won by Lance Armstrong were stripped in 2012 following an investigation by the United States Anti-Doping Agency that found he had used and trafficked performance-enhancing drugs. The respective titles remain vacant to date.) Women'sTrack5 consecutive Women's sprint world championships — Félicia Ballanger
Note: winner of 3 Olympic gold medals in cycling 15 consecutive Women's sprint world championships — Soviet Union
Downhill10 consecutive rounds of the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup in women's downhill — Rachel Atherton
8 consecutive UCI Mountain Bike World Championships in women's downhill — Anne-Caroline Chausson
DartsMen's8 consecutive titles at PDC World Darts Championship — Phil Taylor
9 consecutive titles at PDC World Darts Championship — England
3 consecutive titles at BDO World Darts Championship — Eric Bristow
6 consecutive titles at BDO World Darts Championship — England
Women's7 consecutive titles at BDO World Darts Championship — Trina Gulliver
7 consecutive titles at BDO World Darts Championship — England
Equine sports{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Dressage7 consecutive Olympic Team titles — Germany
9 consecutive World Championships — Germany
Horse racingBy a racehorse56 races — Camarero[49]
By a jockey12 races — Gordon Richards
Show jumpingIndividual3 consecutive titles at Show Jumping World Championships — West Germany - But by whom?
Fencing{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Women's Foil3 consecutive Olympic titles — Valentina Vezzali
FootballAssociation footballInternational21 FIFA World Cup appearances — Brazil
Note: Brazil is the only national football team to have played in every World Cup.[50] 16 consecutive FIFA World Cup second round qualifications — Germany
15 competitive games (without friendlies) — Germany
15 games — Spain[52]
Spain (7 February 2007 – 24 June 2009) also shares with Brazil (16 December 1993 – 21 January 1996) the unbeaten record of 35 games. Brazil's loss at the 1996 CONCACAF Gold Cup was by the under-23 (Olympic) team, but is officially counted as a loss of the national team.[53] Otherwise the Brazil national team wouldn't lose until 30 May 1997 (2:4 vs Norway), thus extending it to 45 games. Brazil lost the 27th match of their streak on penalty kicks in the 22 July 1995 Copa América Final, but this is considered a draw in regular play. National leagues
Czechoslovak First League precursor51 games — 1920–1923 AC Sparta Prague[54][55] Jordan League32 games — 2001–2003 Al-Faisaly[56][57] Portuguese Liga29 games — 1971–1973 S.L. Benfica[55] Argentine Primera División28 games - 1918/1919 Racing Club[55] Croatian League28 games — 2007–2008 Dinamo Zagreb[55] Scottish Premier League25 games — 2003–2004 Celtic F.C.[55] Ukrainian Premier League24 games — 2012 F.C. Shakhtar Donetsk[58] Swedish League (Allsvenskan)23 games — 1949-1950 Malmö FF (part of 49 games unbeaten streak)[59] Eredivisie22 games — 1987–1988 PSV Eindhoven[55] Fußball-Bundesliga19 games — 2013–2014 Bayern Munich[60] (part of 53 games unbeaten streak with 46 wins and 7 draws, matchday 10 in 2012-13 to matchday 28 in 2013-14) Premier League18 games: Manchester City
Serie A17 games — 2006–2007 Internazionale[61] Ligue 116 games — AS Monaco[62]
La Liga16 games — 2010–2011 F.C. Barcelona[63]
16 games — 2016 Real Madrid (started 2 March 2016 and ended 18 September 2016)
Real Madrid's new streak is 40 games unbeaten Chilean Primera División16 games — 1963–1964 Club Universidad de Chile Major League Soccer15 games — Los Angeles Galaxy[64]
Note: This streak was achieved when MLS used a shootout rule to eliminate tie games. Only one of those wins was achieved through a shootout. After the 1999 season, MLS abolished the shootout in favor of the international model of letting regular-season ties stand. Campeonato Brasileiro Série A12 games — 1978–1978 Guarani[65] I-League12 games — 2015-2015 Mohun Bagan A.C.[66] A-League10 games — Western Sydney Wanderers[67]
Unbeaten streaksThe three longest undefeated streaks in domestic top level leagues are:[68]
Note: Steaua București played 16 domestic cup games during the streak, of which only the first was lost. Overall, after a cup loss to Dinamo Bucuresti on 25 June 1986 to their league loss on 9 September 1989 to Dinamo, Steaua was undefeated in 119 consecutive domestic games.[69] Australian rules footballVFA/VFL49 wins — 1914-19 North Melbourne WAFL35 wins — 1945-47 East Fremantle SANFL30 wins — 1913-15 Port Adelaide VFL/AFL23 wins — 1952-53 Geelong Gridiron footballAmerican footballNational Football League
21 games — New England Patriots
23 games — Indianapolis Colts
29 games — Green Bay Packers
25 games — Green Bay Packers
21 games — San Francisco 49ers
19 games — San Francisco 49ers
18 games — San Francisco 49ers
College footballPre-NCAA37 games — Yale Bulldogs[70]
Note: Prior to the formation of the NCAA collegiate teams played against a variety of amateur teams including local athletic clubs, YMCAs, and Indian schools as well as other colleges. Those victories are included in the win tally. NCAA Division I47 games — Oklahoma Sooners[71]
64 games (60–0–4) — Washington Huskies[72]
40 games — Grand Valley State Lakers
Note: This streak includes playoff games. NCAA Division III55 games — Mount Union Purple Raiders
Note: This streak includes playoff games. Mount Union also holds the record for most consecutive regular season victories, winning 112 games between 2005–2016. Special Note: Linfield College holds the NCAA all-divisions record of 63 consecutive winning seasons, which began in 1956 and continues to this day. Canadian footballCanadian Football League22 games — Calgary Stampeders
Note: The streak only includes the regular season. It was also achieved back when the Stampeders played in the Western Interprovincial Football Union, which later became the Canadian Football League West Division. The CFL was not formally founded until 1958, although the records of the WIFU and the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union in Eastern Canada (forerunner to the Canadian Football League East Division) were incorporated into the league. U Sports football21 games McMaster Marauders[74]
Note: The streak also includes playoff games. IFAF World ChampionshipConsecutive games won11 games — United States
Note: This streak is still active. Consecutive titles won3 Titles — United States (2007, 2011, 2015) Indoor American footballArena Football LeagueConsecutive games won (regular season and playoffs)18 wins — Arizona Rattlers
Note: Throughout the duration of the above streak, the Arizona Rattlers also achieved the most consecutive regular season games won (15 wins). AF224 wins — Quad City Steamwheelers
American Indoor Football AssociationConsecutive games won (regular season and playoffs)16 wins — Baltimore Mariners
Note: The streak ended during the 2010 off-season (team folded) Consecutive regular season games won15 wins — Baltimore Mariners
Note: The streak ended during the 2010 off-season (team folded) United Indoor Football40 games — Sioux Falls Storm
Rugby leagueRepresentative
Club
Rugby unionTest matches
24 matches — Cyprus[76]
18 matches — New Zealand[76]
18 matches — England
Home test matches47 consecutive matches — New Zealand
Gaelic gamesAll-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship21 games — Kilkenny
GolfMen's Major Championships4 consecutive wins — Tiger Woods
In 1930, Bobby Jones won the 4 major championships that he, as an amateur, was eligible to enter - the U.S. Open, the Open Championship, the British Amateur Championship and the U.S. Amateur Championship. Woods won what is often designated an official Non-Calendar Year Grand Slam, holding all major championship trophies at one time, but not in the same year. PGA Tour11 wins — 1945 Byron Nelson LPGA Tour5 wins 1978 — Nancy Lopez 2004-2005 — Annika Sörenstam Gymnastics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men8 years undefeated in All-Around competition — Kohei Uchimura
As a result of this streak, Uchimura is widely referred to as "King Kohei". 5 consecutive Men's Team all-around titles at Olympic Games — Japan
Women10 consecutive Women's Team all-around titles at Olympic Games — Soviet Union and Unified Team
Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics HandballWomen's Team3 consecutive titles at World Women's Handball Championship
HockeyIce hockeyOlympics{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men's4 consecutive gold medals
Women's4 consecutive gold medals — Canada
World Championships9 consecutive World Championships — Soviet Union
National Hockey LeagueLongest Winning Streak by a Team17 games — Pittsburgh Penguins
Note: This 6-6 tie ended the regular season. Pittsburgh won an additional three games to start the 1993 playoffs before losing for the first time in 21 games on April 25, 1993 to New Jersey, 1–4. Longest Winning Streak By a Goaltender 17 games — Gilles Gilbert, Boston Bruins[77]
35 Games — Philadelphia Flyers
Note: The 35-game stretch included 10 ties. Canadian Hockey LeagueLongest Winning Streak 25 games (tie): - Kitchener Rangers (Ontario Hockey League)[78]
Note: The 31-game stretch included 2 ties. American Hockey LeagueConsecutive Regular Season Games Won32 games — Norfolk Admirals
29 games — Norfolk Admirals[80]
NCAA Women's Ice Hockey62 games — Minnesota Golden Gophers
NCAA Men's Ice Hockey43 games — Bemidji State University
Federal Hockey League21 games — New York Aviators
Austrian Hockey League17 games — EC KAC[84]
Elite Ice Hockey League22 games — Cardiff Devils
British Columbia Hockey League42 games — Penticton Vees
Roller HockeyChampionship A5 consecutive gold medals at FIRS Roller Hockey World Cup — Spain
Portuguese Primeira Divisão10 consecutive Portuguese championships - Futebol Clube do Porto
Air Hockey9 consecutive world championships — Tim Weissman
30 consecutive world championships — United States
LacrosseWorld Lacrosse ChampionshipMen's Lacrosse38 games — United States[85]
15 game — United States[86]
Major League Lacrosse14 games — Denver Outlaws
National Lacrosse League22 games — Buffalo Bandits
College (United States)Pre-NCAA - Men 45 games — Navy
NCAA Division I - Men 42 games — Cornell
NCAA Division I - Women 43 games — Maryland
NCAA Division III - Men 69 games — Salisbury[88]
NJCAA - Men 107 games — Onondaga
33 games — Sonoma State University
High School (United States)Boys91 games — Sewanhaka High School
91 games — West Genesee High School
198 games — McDonogh School
Marbles12 consecutive titles at British and World Marbles Championship — Toucon Terribles
Mind sportsChess25 games — Wilhelm Steinitz
Memory3 consecutive titles at the World Memory Championship
Pentamind4 consecutive titles at the Mind Sports Olympiad — Demis Hassabis
Racquet sportsBadminton{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men'sSingles7 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
Doubles3 consecutive titles at World Championships
Team5 consecutive titles at the World Team Championships
Women'sSingles8 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
Doubles11 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
5 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China
Team6 consecutive titles at the World Team Championships — China
RacquetballMen's137 matches — Kane Waselenchuk[95]
Women's152 matches, 37 tournaments - Paola Longoria[96]
Squash555 matches — Jahangir Khan
Note: This is the longest winning streak in sports history (in number of wins). NB: Heather McKay (Australia) may hold a claim to having the longest winning streak as she went unbeaten for 19 years (1962–1981) College teams (USA)252 team meets — Trinity College Bantams Squash Team
Considered the longest winning streak in the history of varsity intercollegiate sports in the United States.[97] Table Tennis{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Men'sSingles4 consecutive titles at World Championships — Viktor Barna
6 consecutive titles at World Championships — Hungary
Doubles10 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
5 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China
Notes: The doubles events were replaced by team events in 2008 Beijing Olympics. Team6 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
2 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China
Women'sSingles6 consecutive titles at World Championships — Angelica Rozeanu[98]
8 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China
10 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
Doubles6 consecutive titles at World Championships — Mária Mednyánszky and Anna Sipos
13 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
4 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China
Notes: The doubles events were replaced by team events in 2008 Beijing Olympics. Team8 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
2 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China
Mixed Doubles11 consecutive titles at World Championships — China
TennisTop level amateur182 matches — Suzanne Lenglen[99]
The withdrawal in the match to Mallory in 1921 ended a 112-match winning streak. Between 1919 and 1938 Helen Wills Moody amassed a 398–35 match record, including a winning streak of at least 158 matches, during which she did not lose a set.[101] ProfessionalMenMost consecutive game wins25 games - 1993 Sergi Bruguera Overall consecutive set wins39 sets - 1980 Björn Borg Single Tournament set wins41 sets - Björn Borg, French Open
Overall Consecutive match wins46 matches — Guillermo Vilas (Open era record)[102] Vilas won his 46 consecutive matches all on clay courts.[102]
Consecutive match wins only on one surfaceClay courts81 matches — Rafael Nadal Grass courts65 matches — Roger Federer Hard courts56 matches — Roger Federer Indoor courts66 matches — Ivan Lendl Women74 matches — Martina Navratilova
Note: Chris Evert currently holds the record for the longest winning streak on clay courts (125 matches), that is also the longest winning streak on single surface (male or female). 10 consecutive US Open women's doubles titles — Margaret Osborne duPont
Wheelchair470 matches — Esther Vergeer
Note: The streak ended on February 12, 2013 when Vergeer retired from wheelchair tennis with her winning streak intact. College (USA)NCAA Men's Team137 Matches — University of Miami
(Note: Miami had won 72 consecutive matches prior to the streak and had a 59 match streak before that. Between 1949-1964 Miami won 268 of 270 matches) Home Winning Streak — Ohio State University
NCAA Women's Team89 Matches — Stanford University
Rodeo8 consecutive PRCA World All-Around Champion titles at the National Finals Rodeo — Trevor Brazile
Bull Riding
Volleyball{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Beach volleyball112 match wins, 19 tournament wins — Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh, United States
3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh
Indoor VolleyballMen's3 consecutive gold medals at FIVB Volleyball World Championship
Women's3 consecutive gold medals at FIVB Volleyball World Championship — Soviet Union
4 consecutive gold medals at FIVB Volleyball World Cup — Cuba
3 consecutive gold medals at Summer Olympics — Cuba
College Volleyball (USA)Division I109 matches — Penn State women's volleyball
Note: winner of 4 consecutive NCAA championships (2007–2010) Division II75 matches — Concordia University, Saint Paul women's volleyball
Note: winner of 6 consecutive NCAA championships (2007–2012) Beach103 matches — Sara Hughes and Kelly Claes, USC Trojans beach volleyball
Weightlifting{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Olympics3 consecutive Olympic gold medals
7 consecutive heavyweight Olympic titles — Soviet Union
Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics 6 consecutive super heavyweight Olympic titles — Soviet Union
Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics World Championships8 consecutive titles at World Championships — Vasiliy Alekseyev
Winter Sports{{Split section |List of winning streaks at the Olympics|discuss=Talk:Winning streak (sports)#Split proposed |date=August 2016}}Biathlon8 consecutive women's relay World Championships — USSR
CurlingMen's Team6 consecutive gold medals at World Curling Championships — Canada
3 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Canada
Women's Team4 consecutive gold medals at World Curling Championships — Canada
Figure skating3 consecutive Olympic gold medals
Ladies10 consecutive titles at World Figure Skating Championships — Sonja Henie
Pairs10 consecutive titles at World Figure Skating Championships — Irina Rodnina
Note: winner of three consecutive Olympic titles from 1972 to 1980 10 consecutive titles at European Figure Skating Championships — Irina Rodnina
12 consecutive Olympic titles — USSR, Unified Team and Russia
Note: this streak includes a win reduced to a draw after the 2002 Olympics. 14 consecutive titles at World Figure Skating Championships — USSR
17 consecutive titles at European Figure Skating Championships — USSR
LugeMen's Single3 consecutive men's singles World Championships — Germany
Women's Team105 consecutive women's World Cup races — Germany[109]
Women's Single11 consecutive women's singles World Championships — Germany
Doubles5 consecutive double's World Championships — East Germany
Mixed Team Relay10 consecutive mixed team relay World Championships — Germany
SkiingAlpine skiingAlpine Skiing CombinedWomen's3 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Austria
DownhillWomen's11 consecutive wins in FIS World Cup — Annemarie Moser-Pröll, Austria
Giant SlalomMen's14 consecutive wins in FIS World Cup — Ingemar Stenmark, Sweden
3 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Austria
SlalomMen's4 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Austria
Super-GMen's4 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Norway
Women's3 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Austria
Freestyle skiing16 consecutive wins in FIS World Cup moguls skiing (individual and dual moguls) — Hannah Kearney, United States
Speed skatingLong track53 consecutive 5000 m races — Hjallis Andersen[110]
15 consecutive 10000m World Championships — Netherlands[111]
9 consecutive men's all-round World Championships — Netherlands
4 consecutive men's all-round World Championships — Sven Kramer (twice)
15 consecutive women's all-round World Championships — Soviet Union
5 consecutive women's all-round World Championships — Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann
Short track5 consecutive titles at World Championships — Viktor Ahn
83 consecutive world cup, world championship, and Olympic 500 m races — Wang Meng[112]
Note: Wang Meng also has the longest Short Track Speed Skating World Cup winning streak with six wins on the 500 m between 2005 and 2010 eSportsGlobal Offensive87 Games — Ninjas in Pajamas[113]
2 Major Tournaments — Fnatic[116]
2 Major Tournaments — LG/SK[116]
Note: The roster of Luminosity Gaming changed organisations from LG to SK Gaming on July 1, 2016[121] due to contractual disputes between the players and the organisation. League of LegendsEU LCS21 Games — Fnatic[122]
NA LCS15 Games — TSM[125]
OverwatchOWL15 Matches — Boston Uprising
18 Matches — Houston Outlaws
OWC Australia[132]44 Games — Sydney Drop Bears[133]
Super Smash Bros. Wii U53 Tournaments — ZeRo
See also
References1. ^Ben Rothenberg, [https://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/sports/wheelchair-tennis-champion-esther-vergeer-retires.html Unbeaten Since 2003, Wheelchair Champ Retires], New York Times, February 12, 2013 {{DEFAULTSORT:Winning Streak (Sports)}}2. ^[https://www.arrs.run/WS_All.htm Win Streaks] at Association of Road Racing Statisticians website 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://espn.go.com/sportscentury/features/00016079.html |title=ESPN.com: King Carl had long, golden reign |publisher=Espn.go.com |date=1961-07-01 |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 4. ^The estimate ranges from 140 (Guinness Book of records before 1990) to 150 (same publication after that). She herself mentions a 142 competition streak. 5. ^{{cite web|author=Michael J. Fuller |url=http://www.mulsannescorner.com/nissangtpzx-t.html |title=Mulsanne's Corner: 1988-1990 Nissan GTP ZX-T |publisher=Mulsannescorner.com |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.wrc.com/statistics/|title=FIA World Championship for Drivers|publisher=WRC.com|accessdate=30 April 2013}} 7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sebastienloeb.com/programme/programme-2013/|title=Programme 2013|publisher=www.sebastienloeb.com|accessdate=29 September 2013}} 8. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.nascar.com/en_us/news-media/articles/hall-of-fame/nascar-hall-of-fame-richard-petty.html|title=Richard Petty|publisher=NASCAR.com|accessdate=30 April 2013}} 9. ^Argentina defeats NBA-laden Team USA - USA Today, 4 September 2002 10. ^{{cite web|url=http://library.la84.org/6oic/OfficialReports/1936/1936v2sum.pdf |title=The XIth Olympic Games Berlin, 1936 Official Report Volume II |format=PDF |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 11. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.nba.com/history/72lakers.html|title= TOP 10 TEAMS IN NBA HISTORY 1971-72 Los Angeles Lakers|publisher=NBA.com|accessdate=30 April 2013}} 12. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.espn.com/womens-college-basketball/story/_/page/uconnwinstreak/connecticut-huskies-ncaa-record-win-streak|title=UConn Huskies' NCAA-record win streak snapped at 111 games|publisher=espn.com|date=April 1, 2017|accessdate=March 4, 2019}} 13. ^{{cite news| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/19/sports/ncaabasketball/19wayland.html?_r=1&sq=wayland&st=cse&scp=1&pagewanted=all | work=The New York Times | first=Jeré | last=Longman | title=Before UConn, Before U.C.L.A., There Was Wayland Baptist | date=December 18, 2010}} 14. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.espn.com/ncw/recap?gameId=401090567|title=No. 8 Baylor takes down UConn for first win over No. 1|work=ESPN|date=January 3, 2019|accessdate=March 4, 2019}} 15. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.cleveland.com/sports/college/index.ssf/2018/03/ncaa_d2_final_four_ashland_wom.html|title=Ashland loses in NCAA D2 Women's Championship Game; winning streak ends at 73|work=Cleveland.com|date=March 23, 2018|accessdate=March 4, 2019|first= Dennis|last= Manoloff}} 16. ^http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/w_basketball_RB/2014/DIII.pdf 17. ^http://www.halloffame.mb.ca/honouredmembers/inductee.php?id=461&criteria_sort=name 18. ^1 2 {{cite web|url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_basketball_RB/2013/2013%2001%20Div.%20I%2010-16.pdf|title=2013 Men's Basketball Records|publisher=NCAA.org|accessdate=30 April 2013}} 19. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.kentucky.com/2011/12/24/2005722/the-numbers-behind-kentuckys-home.html |title=Kentucky Herald-Leader |publisher=Kentucky.com |date=2011-12-24 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 20. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/news/story?id=2811040|title=Barton tops D-II defending champ for first D-II title|work=ESPN|date=March 24, 2007|accessdate=March 4, 2019}} 21. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.watertowndailytimes.com/article/20131020/SPORTS/710209740/1481|title=A HALL OF FAME SURPRISE|first=Dave|last=Shea| date=October 20, 2013|accessdate=March 4, 2019}} 22. ^{{cite web|title=Athinaikos enters the Guinness book of records|url=http://www.eurobasket.com/Greece/basketball.asp?NewsID=260491&Women=1|publisher=eurobasket.com|accessdate=24 July 2013}} 23. ^{{cite web|title=Τέλος στο ρεκόρ Γκίνες του Αθηναϊκού!|url=http://www.sentragoal.gr/article.asp?catid=10546&subid=2&pubid=129221025|publisher=sentragoal.gr|accessdate=24 July 2013}} 24. ^{{cite web|title=Club Records and Statistics|url=http://www.arisbc.gr/en/Aris-Basketball-Club-Thessaloniki-Club-Records/|publisher=arisbc.gr|accessdate=24 July 2013}} 25. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://mlb.mlb.com/sf/history/timeline.jsp|title=Giants Timeline|publisher=SFGiants.com|accessdate=30 April 2013}} 26. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/baseball_RB/2012/D1.pdf|title=2012 NCAA Baseball Records|publisher=NCAA.org|accessdate=30 April 2012}} 27. ^{{cite web|url=http://butlergrizzlies.com/sports/sball/2015-16/releases/20160303ta35o5 |title=Butler splits doubleheader at Barton to start conference play |publisher=Butler Grizzlies |date=2016-03-03 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 28. ^{{cite web|url=http://butlergrizzlies.com/sports/sball/2016-17/releases/20170507y9c9xr |title=Butler softball wins Region VI, advances to District E series |publisher=Butler Grizzlies |date=2017-05-07 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 29. ^Venkatramani, V., The Roar, "Highlights from our record WC streak", 9th March 2011, Retrieved March 27th 2011. 30. ^ESPN Cricinfo Combined Test, ODI and T20I records, team records, Most consecutive wins, Retrieved 27th March 2011. 31. ^ESPN Cricinfo Twenty20 matches, team records, most consecutive wins, Retrieved 27th March 2011. 32. ^The official World Rowing Database Longest Winning Streaks by rower, Retrieved 4th September 2013. 33. ^The United States women make really fast eights at worldrowing.com 34. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.olympic.org/rowing |title=Rowing | Videos, Photos, News, Events, Records |publisher=Olympic.org |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 35. ^Julio César Chávez's record at BoxRec.com 36. ^Historic boxing statistics at theboxinghistorian.com {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091128112334/http://www.theboxinghistorian.com/historic_boxing_stats.html |date=November 28, 2009 }} 37. ^Jimmy Wilde's record at BoxRec.com 38. ^Pedro Carrasco's record at BoxRec.com 39. ^Sugar Ray Robinson's record at BoxRec.com 40. ^{{cite web|last=Grabianowski |first=Ed |url=http://entertainment.howstuffworks.com/pro-wrestling.htm |title=How Pro Wrestling Works |publisher=Entertainment.howstuffworks.com |date=2006-01-13 |accessdate=2012-06-10}} 41. ^{{cite web|title=WWE alumni profile|url=http://www.wwe.com/superstars/wwealumni/goldberg/|publisher=WWE|accessdate=February 15, 2012}} 42. ^{{cite book|last=Conner|first=Floyd|title=Football's Most Wanted|year=2000|publisher=Potomac Books|location=Washington, D.C.|isbn=978-1-57488-309-1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2j_Fr_2FiwYC&pg=PT45&dq=%22Bill+Goldberg%22+%22winning+streak%22&hl=en&ei=OnemTr62IMGZ8QOn3vnDDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=%22Bill%20Goldberg%22%20%22winning%20streak%22&f=false|edition=1st|accessdate=October 25, 2011|chapter=Gridiron Grapplers}} 43. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.pwinsider.com/article/97455/is-wwe-dissing-undertaker-pushing-dean-goldbergs-streak-and-more.html|title=Is WWE dissing Undertaker, pushing Dean, Goldberg's streak and more|last=Scherer|first=Dave|date=October 27, 2015|website=PWInsider|access-date=October 27, 2015}} 44. ^{{cite book|title=The Death Of WCW|author=Bryan Alvarez & R. D. Reynolds|publisher=ECW Press|location=Toronto|isbn=978-1-55022-661-4|page=134|quote=As it turned out, in a lame effort to make his streak appear more meaningful, the company had started to add imaginary numbers to the total. This had the exact opposite of its intended effect... fans figured out that the streak number had become fiction.}} 45. ^{{cite web|author=Kevin Powers|url=http://www.wwe.com/classics/classic-lists/10-great-streaks-that-came-to-an-end/page-11 |title=10 great streaks that came to an end |publisher=WWE.com |date=2013-03-06 |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 46. ^ {{dead link|date=September 2018}} 47. ^{{cite web|author=Joe Smith RivalsHigh |url=http://highschool.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=758793 |title=Rivals.com - 34-year winning streak halted |publisher=Highschool.rivals.com |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 48. ^{{cite web|url=http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/highschool/news/story?id=3183805 |title=Florida high school wrestling team's streak ends after 459 straight victories |publisher=Sports.espn.go.com |date=2008-01-06 |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 49. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.thoroughbredtimes.com/weekly-feature-articles/2005/August/05/Camareros-record-of-56-consecutive-wins-turns-50.aspx |title=Thoroughbred Times |publisher=Thoroughbred Times |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 50. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/statistics/pastworldcup/association=bra/index.html |title=2018 FIFA World Cup Russia™ |publisher=FIFA.com |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 51. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.foxsportsasia.com/football/asian-football/aff-suzuki-cup/991561/vietnam-now-hold-the-longest-active-unbeaten-streak-in-international-football/ 52. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.eloratings.net/Spain.htm |title=Spain matches, ratings and points exchanged |publisher=Eloratings.net |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 53. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.fifa.com/associations/association=bra/fixturesresults/gender=m/index.html |title=Member Association - Brazil |publisher=Fifa.com |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 54. ^Sparta Prague reportedly won at least 51 consecutive games between 1920 and 1923, but the records for the games in Czechoslovakia at that time are not conclusive. 55. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{cite web|last=Fisher |first=Graham |url=http://soccerlens.com/the-longest-winning-streaks-in-football-history/6000/ |title=The Longest Winning Streaks in Football History |publisher=Soccerlens |date=2008-02-22 |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 56. ^Al-Faysali's series of 32 matches unbeaten (all wins!) in the Jordan League at Rec.Sport.Soccer 57. ^Al-Faisaly appears to have a 32 or 33 game overall winning streak from 20 August 2001 to 30 June 2002, including matches played in the Jordan League, Jordan FA Cup, Jordan Super Cup, and Jordan Shield Cup , but according to Guinness the team entered a tournament during this time where they drew or lost a game before withdrawing from it 58. ^{{cite web|url=http://shakhtar.com/ru/news/24401 |title=Металлург Д – Шахтер: рекорды поднимают планки: 11.11.12 |publisher=Shakhtar.com |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 59. ^{{Cite book| author=Smitt, Rikard | title=Ända sen gamla dagar...| publisher=Project Management AB| year=2009| isbn=978-91-633-5767-1}} pp. 273–274. (Swedish) 60. ^Bayern's records this season (so far) at uefa.com 61. ^{{cite web|author=Michael Cummings |url=http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2614946-5-of-the-longest-winning-runs-in-world-football |title=5 of the Longest Winning Runs in World Football | Bleacher Report | Latest News, Videos and Highlights |publisher=Bleacher Report |date=2016-02-08 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 62. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.ligue1.com/ligue1/article/monaco-tear-apart-marseille.htm |title=Monaco tear apart Marseille |publisher=Ligue1.com |date=2017-08-27 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 63. ^http://www.fcbarcelona.com/web/english/noticies/futbol/temporada10-11/01/29/n110129115418.html" 64. ^http://la.galaxy.mlsnet.com/news/team_news.jsp?ymd=20071017&content_id=123994&vkey=news_lag&fext=.jsp&team=t106 65. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.futebolinterior.com.br/news/121782+Guarani_tem_a_maior_sequencia_de_vitorias_do_Brasileirao |title=Guarani tem a maior sequência de vitórias na história do Brasileirão |publisher=Futebolinterior.com.br |date= |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 66. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.thehindu.com/sport/bagans-unbeaten-run-continues/article7093784.ece |title=Bagan's unbeaten run continues |publisher=The Hindu |date=2015-04-12 |accessdate=2016-01-20}} 67. ^http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/sport/football/wanderers-surpass-longest-winning-streak-as-bottom-placed-wellington-makes-leader-leader-work/story-fnddhv0x-1226594285054 68. ^Unbeaten in the Domestic League at The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation website 69. ^Steaua's series of 104 matches unbeaten in the Divizia A at the RSSSF website 70. ^{{cite web|url=http://static.psbin.com/8/s/tziza0frrck584/Year_by_Year_Results.pdf}} 71. ^{{cite web|url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2012/fbs.pdf | title=Official 2012 NCAA Division I Football Record Book | publisher=NCAA | page = 110 | format=PDF}} 72. ^{{cite web|url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2014/fbs.pdf | title=2014 NCAA Football Record Book | publisher=NCAA | page = 117 | format=PDF | accessdate=2014-10-17}} 73. ^[https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20101116192444/http://www.gohuskies.com/auto_pdf/p_hotos/s_chools/wash/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/WASH_FB_Records ] 74. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20121128044305/http://www.ottawacitizen.com/sports/football/grey-cup-2012/Rouge+their+revenge+defeat+Marauders/7603827/story.html ] 75. ^{{cite web|url=http://wc2007.info/777/game4_e.html |title=3rd IFAF World Championships2007 in KAWASAKI/JAPAN |publisher=Wc2007.info |date=2007-07-10 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 76. ^1 {{cite web| url= http://stats.espnscrum.com/scrum/rugby/records/team/most_consecutive_wins.html?id=1;type=class |title=Test matches: Most consecutive wins |work=ESPN Scrum | accessdate=2016-10-22}} 77. ^{{cite news| url=http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2000-02-29/sports/0002290194_1_800th-nhl-three-pointers-boston-garden | work=Chicago Tribune | title=1976: Boston goalie Gilles Gilbert extends his NHL-record | date=February 29, 2000}} 78. ^1 [https://web.archive.org/web/20100922231731/http://chl.ca/page/longest-winning-streak ] 79. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20100923010741/http://chl.ca/page/longest-undefeated-streak ] 80. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20081206143153/http://www.norfolkadmirals.com/pressbox.php?id=game_summary ] 81. ^{{cite web|author=By Jim Hodges |url=http://hamptonroads.com/2012/06/admirals-parent-club-switches-affiliation-syracuse |title=Admirals' parent club switches affiliation to Syracuse | Norfolk Admirals | pilotonline.com |publisher=Hamptonroads.com |date=2012-06-15 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 82. ^[https://archive.is/20130209154118/http://www.wvec.com/my-city/norfolk/Norfolk-Admirals--159931485.html ] 83. ^Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey 84. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20110727120225/http://www.erstebankliga.at/8f234634abc92fd30763c1e63b89d9bf.html?arrSave%5bArticleID%5d=6126 ] 85. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20150923142048/http://www.uslacrosse.org/portals/1/documents/pdf/team-usa/mnt-media-guide.pdf ] 86. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20150912082746/http://www.uslacrosse.org/Portals/1/documents/pdf/team-usa/wnt-media-guide.pdf ] 87. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20160304030441/http://www.fanbase.com/1535181-1976-03-20/ ] 88. ^{{cite web|author=Jim Berkman |url=http://suseagulls.com/sports/mlax/index |title=Men's Lacrosse - 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Rennrodelverband |publisher=Fil-luge.org |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 110. ^http://sports.groups.yahoo.com/group/Speed_skating/message/32235 111. ^The Netherlands also won 12 of the 15 silver medals over this period 112. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sportresult.com/federations/ISU/ShortTrack/ |title=Swiss Timing - Swiss Timing |publisher=Sportresult.com |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 113. ^{{cite web|url=https://fragbite.com/cs/article/10800/nip-the-squad-that-set-the-tone |title=NiP: The squad that set the tone |publisher=Fragbite.com |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 114. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.hltv.org/stats/matches/mapstatsid/12838/nip-vs-prime?event=965 |title=The home of competitive Counter-Strike |publisher=HLTV.org |date=2012-09-13 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 115. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.hltv.org/matches/2239909/nip-vs-virtuspro-sltv-starseries-v-finals |title=NiP vs. Virtus.pro at SLTV StarSeries V Finals |publisher=HLTV.org |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 116. ^1 {{cite web|url=https://liquipedia.net/counterstrike/Majors#List_of_CS:GO_Major_Championships |title=CS:GO Major Championships - Liquipedia Counter-Strike Wiki |publisher=Liquipedia.net |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 117. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.hltv.org/matches/2294629/fnatic-vs-nip-esl-one-katowice-2015 |title=fnatic vs. NiP at ESL One Katowice 2015 |publisher=HLTV.org |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 118. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.hltv.org/matches/2298989/envyus-vs-natus-vincere-dreamhack-open-cluj-napoca-2015 |title=EnVyUs vs. Natus Vincere at DreamHack Open Cluj-Napoca 2015 |publisher=HLTV.org |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 119. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.hltv.org/matches/2301885/natus-vincere-vs-luminosity-mlg-columbus-2016 |title=Natus Vincere vs. Luminosity at MLG Columbus 2016 |publisher=HLTV.org |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 120. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.hltv.org/matches/2307548/astralis-vs-virtuspro-eleague-major-2017 |title=Astralis vs. Virtus.pro at ELEAGUE Major 2017 |publisher=HLTV.org |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 121. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.hltv.org/news/18126/sk-and-luminosity-reach-agreement |title=SK and Luminosity reach agreement |publisher=HLTV.org |date=2016-06-24 |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 122. ^{{cite web|url=https://lol.gamepedia.com/Riot_League_Championship_Series/Europe/2015_Season/Summer_Season |title=EU LCS 2015 Summer - Leaguepedia | League of Legends Esports Wiki |publisher=Lol.gamepedia.com |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 123. ^{{cite web|url=https://lol.gamepedia.com/Riot_League_Championship_Series/Europe/2015_Season/Summer_Season#Matches |title=EU LCS 2015 Summer - Leaguepedia | League of Legends Esports Wiki |publisher=Lol.gamepedia.com |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 124. ^{{cite web|url=https://lol.gamepedia.com/Riot_League_Championship_Series/Europe/2015_Season/Summer_Playoffs/Match_Details#Finals |title=Riot League Championship Series/Europe/2015 Season/Summer Playoffs/Match Details - Leaguepedia | League of Legends Esports Wiki |publisher=Lol.gamepedia.com |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 125. ^{{cite web|url=https://lol.gamepedia.com/League_Championship_Series/North_America/2016_Season/Summer_Season |title=NA LCS 2016 Summer - Leaguepedia | League of Legends Esports Wiki |publisher=Lol.gamepedia.com |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 126. ^{{cite web|url=https://matchhistory.na.leagueoflegends.com/en/#match-details/TRLH1/1001750049?gameHash=da8e89749e0918da&tab=overview |title=Match History |publisher=Matchhistory.na.leagueoflegends.com |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 127. ^{{cite web|url=https://matchhistory.na.leagueoflegends.com/en/#match-details/TRLH1/1001790061?gameHash=8abe496d4c8b444c&tab=overview |title=Match History |publisher=Matchhistory.na.leagueoflegends.com |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 128. ^{{cite web|url=https://overwatchleague.com/en-gb/match/10314 |title=The Overwatch League |publisher=The Overwatch League |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 129. ^{{cite web|url=https://overwatchleague.com/en-gb/match/10545 |title=The Overwatch League |publisher=The Overwatch League |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 130. ^{{cite web|url=https://overwatchleague.com/en-gb/match/10237 |title=The Overwatch League |publisher=The Overwatch League |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 131. ^{{cite web|url=https://overwatchleague.com/en-gb/match/10261 |title=The Overwatch League |publisher=The Overwatch League |date= |accessdate=2018-09-16}} 132. ^https://overwatchcontenders.com/en-gb/ 133. ^https://liquipedia.net/overwatch/Sydney_Drop_Bears 134. ^https://www.gosugamers.net/overwatch/teams/28731-surge-esports-club 135. ^https://www.over.gg/7755/surge-vs-syd-overwatch-contenders-2018-season-1-australia-groups-b 136. ^https://liquipedia.net/smash/Tyrant 137. ^https://smashboards.com/rankings/events/ugc-biweekly-17.3188/ 138. ^List of Major League Gaming National Championships#2015 World Finals 3 : Sports terminology|Playoff streaks|Terminology used in multiple sports |
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