Greatest sporting comebacks in history thread

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Tiger Woods crowned his comeback from a near two-year injury layoff on Sunday by claiming victory in the Masters at Augusta National, winning his 15th career major nearly 11 years after his last triumph, at the 2008 US Open.

Here AFP looks back at five other athletes who made successful comebacks from injury or adversity:

- Greg LeMond -

The US cycling legend came within 20 minutes of bleeding to death after a hunting accident in California in 1987.

The then-reigning Tour de France champion was hit by more than 60 pellets after being shot by his uncle during a wild turkey hunt. He was airlifted to hospital and lost an estimated 65 percent of his blood volume.

Injuries from the accident forced him to miss the next two editions of the Tour de France, but he returned in 1989 to win the racing showpiece by eight seconds after a thrilling duel with Laurent Fignon.

- Niki Lauda -

Austrian driver Lauda appeared to be cruising to a second Formula One World Championship title in 1976 when disaster struck at the German Grand Prix in Nuerburgring.

Lauda's Ferrari swerved off the course and struck an embankment, before exploding in flames. Lauda was trapped in the wreckage and suffered severe burns before being pulled to safety.

Incredibly, he returned to racing 43 days later at the Italian Grand Prix. He would go on to win two more drivers championships before retiring.

- George Foreman -

US heavyweight Foreman had faded into obscurity after his stunning defeat to Muhammad Ali in the 'Rumble in the Jungle' in 1974, fighting six more times before retiring in 1977 after a defeat to Jimmy Young.

But in 1987 he confounded the boxing world by returning to the ring at the age of 40, fighting in a series of low-key bouts at a time when Mike Tyson ruled the division.

He failed with his first attempt to regain a world title when he was beaten by Evander Holyfield on points in 1991.

However three years later Foreman was on top of the world, defeating Michael Moorer by knockout to claim the title 20 years after he had last held it. At 45 he was the oldest ever heavyweight world champion.

- Monica Seles -

Monica Seles looked poised to rule women's tennis in the early 1990s, becoming the youngest woman to reach the world number one ranking in 1991 before winning three out of four grand slam singles titles in 1992 with victories at the Australian, French and US Open.

In 1993 she again looked set to dominate, opening the year by winning the Australian Open with a defeat of German rival Steffi Graf.

In April, however, Seles was stabbed by a deranged spectator while playing at a tournament in Hamburg.

Although she soon recovered from her injuries, Seles would not play for two more years. She returned in 1995, and the following year she won her 10th and last grand slam singles title with victory at the Australian Open.

- Muhammad Ali -

After refusing to be inducted into the US army in 1966, world heavyweight champion Ali was effectively banned from boxing for three years between 1967 and 1970 as various sanctioning bodies across the United States refused to grant him a license.

The ban meant Ali missed some of the peak years of his career before he was eventually allowed to return to the ring.

He attempted to regain his title in 1971's 'Fight of the Century' against Joe Frazier but suffered the first defeat of his career after losing by unanimous decision.

In 1974, Ali was given no chance as he attempted to regain his title against George Foreman in the 'Rumble of the Jungle'.

But the then-32-year-old Ali pulled off one of the great upsets by confounding Foreman with his 'rope-a-dope' tactics before scoring an eighth round knockout.

https://www.france24.com/en/20190414-five-great-sporting-comebacks
 
And now for Liverpool in UCL!

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Liverpool completed an unbelievable comeback from 3-0 down after the first leg to beat Barcelona 4-0 and reach the Champions League final.

It was a night of incredible drama at Anfield - and it means Barcelona have now surrendered three-goal leads in the knockout stages in each of the past two seasons.

It was the latest stunning reversal in a competition that rarely disappoints.

2018-19 SF: Liverpool stun Barca in famous Anfield night

Aggregate 4-3: Barcelona 3-0 Liverpool/Liverpool 4-0 Barcelona

A late Lionel Messi masterclass at the Nou Camp left Liverpool's hopes of a second successive Champions League final dangling by a thread. The Argentine scored twice, including a sensational free-kick - his 600th Barcelona goal.

Even the most optimistic Liverpool fan could not have held out much hope after star forwards Mohamed Salah and Roberto Firmino were ruled out of the second leg through injury.

Divock Origi gave them hope in the seventh minute but they could not find a second goal before the break.

A turning point saw pantomime villain Luis Suarez injure Andy Robertson, leaving the Scot to be replaced by Georginio Wijnaldum. And his two goals in 122 seconds levelled the tie.

Origi scored a winner which will live long in the memory, turning home Trent Alexander-Arnold's corner while Barcelona switched off. Cue scenes of pandemonium at the final whistle.


2017-18 QF: Barcelona stunned in thrilling Roma fightback
Aggregate 4-4: Barcelona 4-1 Roma/Roma 3-0 Barcelona - Roma win on away goals

Sound familiar? Barcelona looked to have this quarter-final tie sewn up in the first leg at the Nou Camp after Gerard Pique and Luis Suarez added to own goals from Daniele de Rossi and Kostas Manolas.

But what looked like a consolation in the 80th minute from former Manchester City striker Edin Dzeko proved to be crucial.

The Bosnian put Roma ahead after just six minutes in the return leg before a De Rossi penalty and a Manolas header atoned for their Nou Camp mistakes and led the Italian side to an unfathomable win on away goals. Cue madness in the Stadio Olympico stands.

After the match, Dzeko said: "Nobody believed in us before the game - they gave us a 5% chance of winning. The win is difficult to describe. We will enjoy the semi-finals - I do not fear anyone."

The dream didn't last much longer for Roma, as they were beaten 5-2 at Anfield by Liverpool and 7-6 on aggregate.

2004-05 final: That night in Istanbul
AC Milan 3-3 Liverpool - Liverpool win 3-2 on penalties

While all the other entries on this list happened over two legs, the Reds squeezed their comeback into 45 second-half minutes (plus extra time and penalties) in the 2005 final.

A rollercoaster of emotion from start to finish, this was one of the gutsiest comebacks in the history of the Champions League. What was meant to be Liverpool's big moment quickly fell to pieces, with Milan captain Paolo Maldini grabbing a first-minute lead before Hernan Crespo scored twice to put Milan 3-0 up.

The game looked over at half-time but six mad second-half minutes saw captain and talisman Steven Gerrard, Vladimir Smicer and Xabi Alonso score to level the tie and take it to penalties. Liverpool won the shootout with goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek the hero and Gerrard declaring his love of the club soon after, having been heavily linked with a move to Chelsea.

"How can I think of leaving Liverpool on a night like this?" he said, before taking the trophy to bed with him.

2011-12 last 16: Would-be champions Chelsea refuse to go out
Aggregate 5-4: Napoli 3-1 Chelsea/Chelsea 4-1 Napoli AET

Two goals from Napoli's Ezequiel Lavezzi either side of an Edinson Cavani header cancelled out Juan Mata's early volley in a scintillating performance at the San Paulo Stadium that put the Italians firmly on course for the quarter-finals.

Two weeks later Roberto di Matteo had replaced Andre Villas-Boas as Chelsea's caretaker manager in a desperate attempt to galvanise the players and rescue the season.

It had the desired effect as Didier Drogba, John Terry and Frank Lampard all scored to take the tie to extra time at Stamford Bridge.

After Branislav Ivanovic's dramatic winner sent Chelsea through, Di Matteo said: "I've had some great nights but I think this will go down in the club's history."

He was right, as his Blues went on to win their first and only Champions League title - beating Bayern Munich on penalties at their own stadium.

2003-04 QF: Champions Milan crumble in Spain
Aggregate 5-4: AC Milan 4-1 Deportivo La Coruna/Deportivo 4-0 AC Milan

"Miracles often happen, things you might not rationally expect," Deportivo coach Javier Irureta said after his side were hammered 4-1 by reigning champions AC Milan in the first leg of their 2003-04 quarter-final.

His words were prophetic as a Milan side containing Maldini, Alessandro Nesta, Cafu, Clarence Seedorf, Andrea Pirlo, Kaka and Andriy Shevchenko were stunned in the second leg.

Deportivo produced a crushing display with goals from Walter Pandiani, Juan Valeron, Albert Luque and Gonzalo Fran sending the home fans into a frenzy.

A single goal from a Porto side managed by a young Jose Mourinho - who would go on to win the competition - deprived them of a place in the final.

1999-00 QF: Extra-time goals send Chelsea out in Barcelona
Aggregate 6-4: Chelsea 3-1 Barcelona/Barcelona 5-1 Chelsea

Chelsea fans were dreaming after eight glorious first-half minutes saw a trademark Gianfranco Zola free-kick and a Tore Andre Flo double give them a stunning 3-0 first-leg lead at Stamford Bridge and put a semi-final place in sight, before Luis Figo struck to give Barcelona the away goal they needed to take back to the Nou Camp.

Extra-time goals from Rivaldo and Patrick Kluivert in the second leg denied Chelsea a memorable victory. Barca would go on to lose to Valencia in the semis.

2016-17 last 16: Barcelona defy belief to shatter PSG
Aggregate 6-5: Paris St-Germain 4-0 Barcelona/Barcelona 6-1 Paris St-Germain

Sergi Roberto celebrates his winner against PSG to send Barcelona to the quarter-finals of the 2016-17 Champions League
Sergi Roberto celebrates Barcelona's sixth goal of the night to knock PSG out of the 2016-17 Champions League
The only time any side has overturned a four-goal aggregate lead.

Strikes from Angel di Maria (two), Julian Draxler and Edinson Cavani left Barcelona needing a miracle against Paris St-Germain to reach the quarter-finals.

What followed was nothing short of extraordinary.

Barcelona knew they had to go for it in the return leg and gave themselves a chance with three goals in the first 50 minutes at the Nou Camp. Cavani then struck for PSG to seemingly end the tie and leave their opponents needing three more goals to advance.

In the most incredible finale, Neymar scored in the 88th and 91st minute against his future employers before Sergi Roberto's 95th-minute winner completed a turnaround that had to be seen to be believed.

"Utter mayhem" and "deep, instinctive passion at its most authentic and unrefined" were seen by BBC Sport's Spanish football writer Andy West after the full-time whistle.

2018-19 last 16: Late VAR drama makes history in Paris
Aggregate 3-3: Man Utd 0-2 PSG/PSG 1-3 Man Utd - Man Utd win on away goals

Marcus Rashford scores an injury-time penalty to knock PSG out of this season's Champions League
Manchester United's Marcus Rashford scores a controversial penalty after VAR intervention to knock PSG out of this season's Champions League
A late penalty. VAR. A Neymar rant. This game had it all.

Manchester United were flying with 10 wins in 11 games after Ole Gunnar Solskjaer had taken over as caretaker manager following the dismissal of Jose Mourinho and welcomed PSG with renewed optimism.

But they were outclassed by the French side at Old Trafford, with second-half goals from Presnel Kimpembe and Kylian Mbappe leaving them with the task of overturning a two-goal deficit away from home - a feat never achieved before. They would also need to do it without Paul Pogba, who had been sent off for two yellow cards.

Deep into injury time in the second leg, United led 2-1 on the night, following first-half goals from Romelu Lukaku (two) and PSG's Juan Bernat, but the hosts were set for a 3-2 aggregate win and a place in the quarter-finals. Then Diogo Dalot's shot deflected behind off Presnel Kimpembe for a corner.

Or so we thought.

After looking again at the incident using VAR, Slovenian referee Damir Skomina decided it had struck Kimpembe's arm and awarded United a controversial penalty to the astonishment of the home crowd. Marcus Rashford stepped up to drill the ball home and send his team through, shattering PSG's Champions League dream once again.

Neymar, who missed the game through injury, could not contain his anger at the decision. In a social media rage, he said: "It's a disgrace. Four guys who know nothing about football watch a slow-motion replay in front of the television."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/48163330
 
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For Snooker fans Stephen Hendry once defeated Mike Hallett 9-8 in the Masters snooker final after being 8-0 down. Mike then goes home and finds out his home has been broken in to with many expensive things taken.
 
I doubt anything will ever top Ali dethroning Foreman in 74. But after this Foreman regaining his title in his 40s would have to be a close second, unprecedented that night and the irony of it all
 
Pakistan winning the CT17 and 1992 World Cup.

In both cases Pakistan were on the brink of elimination, no one gave them a chance, but in true champion style, Pakistan proved their doubters wrong and came back to win the tournaments.
 
Thomas Muster from Austria, the original King of Clay (tennis). He was involved in a major car accident and badly broke his legs. He was confined to wheelchair after that incident for a long time, after a gradual recovery he won French Open a full 6 years after the dreadful accident. Doctors said he could never play tennis again and he proved them wrong.
 
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One of the greatest comebacks I have ever seen and that too by my Eagles:

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However the greatest ever comeback I have seen is India's vs Australia 2001 test series..
 
Foreman vs Moorer in 1994, was the old past it guy against the young favored fighter, lost all the rounds, was outpointed, out hit by the younger fighter until he got one punch in in the 10th or 11th round which ended the fight immediately and he became the oldest guy to win the heavyweight title
 
Jorge Castro vs John David Jackson

What a comeback especially with the cuts as well besides being out classed, at times people bring up the quality of opposition Roy Jones fought but he beat Castro in just his 18th fight although Castro was the first to take him the distance in a 10 rounder
 
Carl Froch vs Jermain Taylor is another one [MENTION=1080]miandadrules[/MENTION], behind on the cards and literally in a last gasp effort he gets the stoppage in the final round with seconds left
 
Carl Froch vs Jermain Taylor is another one [MENTION=1080]miandadrules[/MENTION], behind on the cards and literally in a last gasp effort he gets the stoppage in the final round with seconds left

Very good candidate.

The only reason I didn’t mention it personally, was due to the fact I watched it later, knowing the result. That takes away a lot of the impact.

I was tempted to mention Chavez-Taylor but Chavez was breaking him down slowly from the start. Controversial more than a comeback.
 
For me, in individual games it’s Ali in 1974. Recently Tiger has done something similar at Masters. In some Grand Slam final, Becker came back to win in 5 sets from 0-2, 3-5, 15-40 down!!!!

In Club Soccer, I think Liverpool’s Istanbul come back was even bigger. Nothing taken from last night, but Liverpool was at home against a side not so famous for their defence. I was actually more impressed that in 90 minutes LFC stopped Barca scoring. I think, last year, Roma did knocked Barca out from 1-4, with a 3-0 2nd leg and Barca themselves recovered from 0-4 at 2nd leg against PSG. In contrast, on a neutral ground, out numbered by opponents’ fan, Liverpool came back in 2nd half from 0-3 to a top Italian side in CL final - you can’t get bigger than this.

In international soccer, Germany came from 0-2 to win 3-2 against that Hungary side and they have done something similar few more times. In 1970 Mexico, they beat ENG 3-2 from 0-2; in SF levelled twice against Italy from 1-2 & 2-3 before losing 3-4. In 1986 Final they made it 2-2 from 0-2 to loose it 2-3 eventually. But their biggest comeback was 1982 SF - trailed 1-3 against France with 15 minutes to go in extra time ... they won it in shoot out!!!! In an exhibition game (USA cup, 1994 predatory) - they came back from 0-3 to beat Brazil (3-3) in shoot out!!!!

In NFL, Eagles come back was epic - broke several records. And, couple of years back LJ lead Cavaliers to NBA title against that Warrior team from 1-3 (winning 3 elimination game, 2 at Oracle arena).
 
Very good candidate.

The only reason I didn’t mention it personally, was due to the fact I watched it later, knowing the result. That takes away a lot of the impact.

I was tempted to mention Chavez-Taylor but Chavez was breaking him down slowly from the start. Controversial more than a comeback.

Yes, watching it live was just on another level; I had stayed up for the fight, it's funny how Carl always got criticised for attracting the far right and his own views but I just loved the fighter growing up and to see him come back like that was breath-taking. I know everyone will always have Calzaghe over him if that happened but I wouldn't completely right him off.
 
For me, in individual games it’s Ali in 1974. Recently Tiger has done something similar at Masters. In some Grand Slam final, Becker came back to win in 5 sets from 0-2, 3-5, 15-40 down!!!!

In Club Soccer, I think Liverpool’s Istanbul come back was even bigger. Nothing taken from last night, but Liverpool was at home against a side not so famous for their defence. I was actually more impressed that in 90 minutes LFC stopped Barca scoring. I think, last year, Roma did knocked Barca out from 1-4, with a 3-0 2nd leg and Barca themselves recovered from 0-4 at 2nd leg against PSG. In contrast, on a neutral ground, out numbered by opponents’ fan, Liverpool came back in 2nd half from 0-3 to a top Italian side in CL final - you can’t get bigger than this.

In international soccer, Germany came from 0-2 to win 3-2 against that Hungary side and they have done something similar few more times. In 1970 Mexico, they beat ENG 3-2 from 0-2; in SF levelled twice against Italy from 1-2 & 2-3 before losing 3-4. In 1986 Final they made it 2-2 from 0-2 to loose it 2-3 eventually. But their biggest comeback was 1982 SF - trailed 1-3 against France with 15 minutes to go in extra time ... they won it in shoot out!!!! In an exhibition game (USA cup, 1994 predatory) - they came back from 0-3 to beat Brazil (3-3) in shoot out!!!!

In NFL, Eagles come back was epic - broke several records. And, couple of years back LJ lead Cavaliers to NBA title against that Warrior team from 1-3 (winning 3 elimination game, 2 at Oracle arena).

Another one over looked in this thread is the miracle on ice during the winter games in 1980, soviet union had won the gold in the last 5 out of 6 Olympics and had a team of pro's up against amateurs from the US which was also the youngest team in the US national team history but they managed to pull of an unprecedented victory with 5 seconds left in the game!
 
Cavs coming back from 1-3 series deficit to beat the warriors

Yeah, that's the best one in recent years.

73-9 team, down 1-3, and two away games at the Oracle. Even with Green suspended for a game that was a remarkable effort from Lebron and company.
 
For me one sporting team that stuck with me in terms of amazing comebacks is turkey national football team run in euro 2008

They Literally came back from almost every game they played scoring last minute goals to win games. Their best watch was against Croatia in the quarter finals. In that match Croatia scored in injury time and their was about 50 seconds left surely Croatia would advance and this was in extra time too, how ever the last play of the game restu the Turkish goalkeeper kicked the ball up the field and Turkish forward controlled it in the box and roofed it in the net. It was an estate company moment. The game went to penelty shootout and turkey won.

They were known as the comeback kings during that tourney. They played Germany in the semi final , the Turkish team was losing 2-1 and on the 87th minute turkey scored , and seemed like the comeback king were ready to roar but faith had it turkey would taste its own medicine and Germany would score in the 90th minute. Turkey were elimnated and did not make the finals

For me it's something that will stick with me for the rest of life despite not making the finals they should determination and a will to find a way to win it was truly something special
 
1984 Kasparov vs Karpov, Moscow.

First to six wins takes the match, Karpov blazed to a 4-0 start after 9 games and everyone thought the 21 year old outsider would lose tamely. Then Garry dug in, made 17 successive draws after lots of suffering, lost another game to go 0-5 down. Then started the heroic recovery and by game 48, it was 3-5 before Kremlin pushed the panic button and stopped the match citing health of the GMs as a reason. The match lasted 6 months in total (they had adjournments those days) and the world saw the emergence of a new chess czar. Next year he beat Karpov in a nerve wracking match to become 13th world chess champion, in a changed format (best of 24) after the length of 1984 match.

Those days this was national obsession in USSR, Eastern Europe and even followed widely throughout the globe being the marquee tussle of the 80s. Karpov-Kasparov confrontation was not just a board battle, it also witnessed a battle of personalities, both differing in world view, temperament, ideology....a clash between the old USSR and Gorbachev's USSR.
 
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