Phelps Ranked No. 1, Ledecky Ranked No. 15 On ESPN’s Top 100 21st Century Athletes List

Both Michael Phelps and Katie Ledecky were included in American sports media outlet ESPN’s list of top 100 professional athletes since 2000, published on Thursday morning. Phelps was ranked No. 1, while Ledecky was No. 15.

According to ESPN, the list was decided based on over 70,000 votes from contributors for the media outlet, including ones from outside the United States. In addition, only athletic accomplishments from past 2000 were considered. The list included athletes from 16 different sports, and also ranked both male and female athletes.

  • For the full list, click here.

Here was ESPN’s full methodology:

Experts in individual sports were asked to vote to rank the top athletes in their sport since Jan. 1, 2000 (no accomplishments before this date were to be considered). Those votes pared down pools in each sport to lists of 10 to 25 athletes each, which constituted the overall candidate pool for the top athletes of the 21st century so far. Each voter was presented two randomly selected names and asked to pick which one has had the better career in the 21st century. Across repeated, randomized head-to-head matchups, more than 70,000 votes were cast at this stage, and using an Elo rating system, the list was pared down from 262 to 100. That list was then evaluated by a panel of experts for any inconsistencies or oversights, resulting in the top 100 ranking seen here.

Phelps is the most decorated Olympian of all-time with 28 Olympic medals (23 of them being gold), and also won a record eight gold medalist at a single Olympic games at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. He also broken 39 different world records, which is the most of any swimmer recognized by World Aquatics. He was notably ranked No. 1 over other prominent 21st century athletes such as Tom Brady, Lebron James, and Lionel Messi.

Here’s ESPN’s written blurb for Phelps:

At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Phelps earned a historic eight gold medals, more than any athlete in a single Olympics, while breaking world records in seven of his eight races. Throughout the Games, fans and members of the media tried to crack the code on what made Phelps — who eventually won 23 Olympic gold medals and became the most decorated Olympian of all time — so unbeatable. His mother, Debbie Phelps, was in Beijing, and often fielded their questions. Was it his size-14 feet? His extra-long arms? His breakfast regimen? “No,” Debbie answered repeatedly. “It’s his hard work.” — Alyssa Roenigk

Meanwhile, Ledecky is also one of the most accomplished swimmers of all-time. Her six individual Olympic gold medals is the most for a female swimmer, and the second-most for a swimmer not named Phelps. In 2023, she passed Phelps to becoming the winningest swimmer in World Championships history with 21 gold record medals. She currently holds the 16 fastest times ever in the 800 free, as well as the 19 fastest times in the 1500 free. Here’s ESPN’s blurb for her:

“I was expecting a lot faster.” That was Ledecky’s response to winning the 1,500-meter freestyle by 20 seconds at Olympic trials in June, in the fastest time clocked this year. For more than a decade, Ledecky has owned the race known as the “swimmer’s mile,” which was added to the Olympic lineup in 2020. The 27-year-old is expected to win gold again in Paris, where she is also the favorite in the 400 free, 800 free and 4×200-meter relay. Since first breaking the world record in the 1,500 free in 2013, she has shaved 16 seconds off her time while also winning more Olympic and world championship gold than any woman in history. — Alyssa Roenigk

Even though ESPN considers its’ list a global one, it still remains very American-centric. 56 of the top 100 ranked athletes are from the United States, and 67 of them are North American. In addition, it is dominated by athletes who play in American professional sports leagues — 56 total athletes on the list play or played in the NFL, MLB, NHL, NBA, or WNBA. The sport with the largest international representation was soccer, where 14 of the 15 athletes were not American. In total, there were 80 male athletes and 20 female athletes ranked.

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U turn
4 hours ago

Sydney Mclaughlin and Mondo Duplantis have to be there both incredibly dominant.

Ryan
4 hours ago

I’m surprised people aren’t more up in arms about Ledecky at 15. I’m probably in the minority outside of the swimming community, but there is no way you can convince me Kobe>Ledecky (I’ll admit I always thought Kobe benefitted more from insane Lakers PR than actual on-court accomplishments)

Steve Nolan
Reply to  Ryan
4 hours ago

Kobe sucks lol

Boknows34
Reply to  Ryan
3 hours ago

Kobe was great but still overrated imo.

Mark C
5 hours ago

What a failed list…Djokovic behind Williams and Federer in tennis? He achieved way more than these two. More like an American-biased popularity contest.

Greeny
5 hours ago

Also 1 cricket player is unfair 2nd biggest sport in world is unfair

Boknows34
Reply to  Greeny
4 hours ago

One is unfair but cricket is only really watched in a handful of countries (with a big population) compared to basketball. Most of Europe, the Americas, China and Japan would have no idea about cricket, but they do know and watch the NBA. Germany, Spain, Italy, France all play basketball, volleyball and even handball. Cricket is as curious to them as it is in the USA,

Swammer
Reply to  Boknows34
4 hours ago

That argument is not valid when you have football players on the list.

Boknows34
Reply to  Swammer
4 hours ago

Brady, Manning, Mahomes, Rodgers all deserve to be there. Maybe have Donald and Watt much lower. That would be my cutoff. Cricket has a case also for 4-5 names and I do think basketball has too many. Kidd and Nash??

U turn
Reply to  Boknows34
4 hours ago

Most Europe and Asia, Oceania Africa have no idea about American Football and Baseball yet featured heavily. Yet your argument against cricket it’s not diverse enough geographically when it’s known in Australia Nz England India Zimbabwe Sri Lanka India South Africa Pakistan Afghanistan Nepal Ireland and the Caribbean (which is in the Americas).

Boknows34
Reply to  U turn
3 hours ago

I’m not claiming baseball and the NFL are super popular globally. I’d cut NFL players down to about 5-6 and baseball and basketball are both grossly overinflated here.

It was simply a response to someone who claimed cricket was the 2nd biggest sport in the world. I don’t think that’s true and I live in a country that plays cricket at Test Match level. Basketball has a greater global reach and yet there are far too many players here like Nash and Kidd. One point does not contradict the other.

I agree with you on Duplantis btw. I’d also have Kipchoge and Kipyegon in my Top 100 and McLaughlin too if she wins again in Paris.

Last edited 3 hours ago by Boknows34
U turn
Reply to  Boknows34
6 minutes ago

Cricket is 2nd most popular sport in the world. Numbers back it up. If you want to say it’s not geographically diverse you may have a point.

Boknows34
Reply to  U turn
3 hours ago

Having been to the Caribbean it is no wonder they are now struggling in cricket compared to their legendary teams of the 70s and 80s. The young locals I asked were far more interested in football/soccer and NBA than cricket.

Greeny
5 hours ago

Serena Williams is no way shape or form more dominate the Djokovic , I get US bias but he has more grand slams , weeks number 1 than Williams and did it against the number 6 and number 12 athlete on this list. As a tennis fan this is egregious .

Boknows34
Reply to  Greeny
5 hours ago

All three of Djokovic, Federer and Nadal should be ahead of Serena,

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  Boknows34
4 hours ago

Even the most casual tennis fan would know this.

This is a joke

Boknows34
Reply to  Thomas The Tank Engine
4 hours ago

Top three of all-time in the same era is extremely rare. For each of them to achieve what they did with the other two in their prime is extraordinary.

SC3
5 hours ago

Ray Lewis 61 was the biggest travesty

frug
6 hours ago

Would have liked to see Ashton Eaten make the list. First person to successfully defend title of “World’s Greatest Athlete” since 1984. First person to do it at a non-boycott games since 1952. Only person to ever top 9000 points twice. Two time WRs in the decathlon. Three time (and reigning) WR holder in the heptathlon.

Boknows34
Reply to  frug
5 hours ago

Eliud Kipchoge for his marathon dominance. Ryan Crouser would be the USA track and field athlete who should be given more consideration for this list. Perhaps a little too soon for Sydney McLaughlin, though a gold in Paris would give her consideration too.

Boknows34
Reply to  Boknows34
5 hours ago

I should also mention Faith Kipyegon.

Boknows34
Reply to  Boknows34
3 hours ago

And Mondo Duplantis.

The unoriginal Tim
6 hours ago

Thorpe should be on the list. He’s the best freestyle swimmer ever (better than Ledeckey in my view).

Fair for all
Reply to  The unoriginal Tim
6 hours ago

Didn’t read the article, did you?

jeff
Reply to  The unoriginal Tim
4 hours ago

It says 21st century, so Thorpe takes a big hit from that considering his 5 medals from Sydney wouldn’t count

Boknows34
Reply to  jeff
4 hours ago

ESPN said it was Jan 1 2000 so Sydney would count.

About Yanyan Li

Yanyan Li

Although Yanyan wasn't the greatest competitive swimmer, she learned more about the sport of swimming by being her high school swim team's manager for four years. She eventually ventured into the realm of writing and joined SwimSwam in January 2022, where she hopes to contribute to and learn more about …

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