1. Extra seconds: As the U.S. team celebrates its gold medal in basketball at the 1972 Olympics, officials clear the court and put three phantom seconds back on the clock. The USSR team floats in a Hail Mary (the same play that hadn’t worked a moment before) and scores on a layup. The Soviets win 51-50, in what is still widely perceived as a fix.
According to legend, the silver medals belonging to the U.S. team still sit in a Munich bank vault, where they will never be collected.
6. The non-triple play: In Game 3 of the 1992 World Series, the Blue Jays got so close to history they could touch it. In fact, they did.
The Braves’ David Justice clobbered a ball into centre field. It was brilliantly snagged by centre-fielder Devon White. Baserunners Terry Pendleton and Deion Sanders crossed paths in their confusion, resulting in the second out. Sanders was then caught in a rundown and tagged out by Jays third baseman Kelly Gruber.
Inexplicably, umpire Bob Davidson judged that Gruber hadn’t touched Sanders. Replays clearly showed that he had. It would’ve been only the second triple play in a World Series game and the first since 1920.
The call had no bearing on the game – the Jays won that night, and won the series. But it robbed them of a little piece of history.
Read them all here...
http://www.thestar.com/sports/baseball/ ... ts-history