
The Boston Celtics celebrate Championship Banner No. 18. 
The Los Angeles Dodgers are 2024 World Series Champions.

USA women’s 4 x 400 team (from left), Alexis Holmes, Gabby Thomas, Shamier Little and Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone

The UConn Huskies celebrate their sixth men’s NCAA Championship.

Three-time All-Star and Boston Red Sox Hall of Famer Louis Tiant died this year at 83.
There are so many great highlights of the 2024 sports year that there may be some omissions. There is only so much space on the sports page to cram in all the events that transpired in the world of fun and games this past year.
Celtics
Boston Celtics fans are still in a celebratory mood following their team’s return to NBA Championship glory and the raising of title banner number 18 to the rafters of the TD Garden. Jalen Brown would capture MVP Awards in the Eastern Conference and the NBA Finals series.
Celtics teammates Jason Tatum, Jrue Holiday, Derrick White, Al Horford, Krystaps Porzingis, and Payton Pritchard all played key roles in the team’s march to NBA title number 18. Porzingis, returning from injury to play a starring role in game one of the finals with 20 huge points, and Pritchard, coming off the bench hitting multiple buzzer-beating shots to spark the C’s, were key contributors.
Jason Tatum, who had 31 points, 11 rebounds, eight assists, and two steals in 45 minutes, and Brown, who scored 21 points and had eight rebounds, six assists, and two steals in 44 minutes, were the principal stars in the Celtics 106-88 victory over the Dallas Mavericks in game five of the best of seven NBA Finals series.
One of the key ingredients to Celtics’ title number 18 was the off-season acquisitions of guard Holiday and forward Porzingis. Holiday proved to be the glue player that brought everything together. Coach Joe Mazzulla, the NBA’s youngest championship-winning coach since Bill Russell in 1969, spoke volumes when he said, “You get very few chances in life to be great, and very few chances to carry on ownership and responsibility of what these 18 Celtics Championship Banners mean.”
What is just as significant to many Celtics fans is that banner number 18 puts the franchise one ahead of Los Angeles (17) for the top spot on the all-time NBA Championship list.
College football
The year began with controversy in college football as the University of Michigan got caught in a cheating scandal that helped the Wolverines win a national college football championship. The beleaguered head coach, Jim Harbaugh, who was suspended for multiple games during the regular season for rules violations, stuck around long enough to see his team crowned as national champions before sprinting back to the National Football League to coach the Los Angeles Chargers. He left behind a certified mess that forever stained the image of Michigan football. The powers that control college football continue to investigate the blatant signal-stealing-cheating that Michigan used to win their NCAA Division One college football title.
Pro football
In pro football, the Kansas City Chiefs won their second straight Super Bowl title behind the lategame heroics of star quarterback Patrick Mahomes and a big play defense led by All-Pro Chris Jones, one of the most impactful defensive linemen in the National Football League.
Jones battled Chiefs management for a better contract, got what he wanted, and proved he was worth every dollar paid to him as the anchor of a Chiefs defense that shut down the high-powered offenses of the Buffalo Bills and Baltimore Ravens on their homefields during the team’s Super Bowl run.
Mahomes
and the Chiefs’ offense did enough to grab many of the headlines.
Still, the Chiefs defense deserved its share of glory for the teams’
back-to-back Super Bowl title runs over the last two NFL seasons, making
them the first repeat Super Bowl Champions since the 2003-04 New
England Patriots. Currently, the Chiefs are 14-1 as they attempt to
become the first team in NFL history to win three straight Super Titles.
Baseball
The
top baseball news centered on the magical season produced by the Los
Angeles Dodgers and their transcendent star, Shohei Ohtani. Ohtani
signed a record free-agent contract of 10 years/$700 plus million and
avoided a gambling scandal before producing the first 50 home run/50
stolen base season in Major League Baseball history. The Dodgers would
ride the heroics of Ohtani, World Series MVP Freddie Freeman, Mookie
Betts, and a magnificent bullpen to beat the New York Yankees in five
games to win the World Series.
The
Yanks lost more than the series when Juan Soto, the preeminent free
agent, bolted to the crosstown New York Mets for a record $765 million
deal. One rumor surrounding the 26-year-old Soto’s decision to leave the
Yankees centers on a story by New York Post’s Jon Heyman, who said that
the stadium security official disrespected his family during the
season. Soto, interviewed on the social media platform X, said, “That’s a
lie.” Only time will tell.
New
York Mets owner Steve Cohen offered the outfielder a 15-year, $765
million contract, making Juan Soto the highest paid player in Major
League Baseball history. For now, the Yankees and their fans are trying
to recover from one of the biggest losses in the history of their
storied franchise.
Basketball
The
2024 basketball season had special news in other areas. The New York
Liberty captured their first title in the 28-year history of the WNBA
franchise, beating the Minnesota Lynx 67-62 in overtime of the fifth and
deciding game of their Championship Final series. Jonquel Jones was
named the Most Valuable Player of the series.
In the women’s NCAA Championship game, The Lady
Gamecocks of South Carolina ran the table enroute to their second
straight NCAA Women’s Division I Basketball Championship. Coach Dawn
Staley’s team completed a perfect 38-0 season, beating back the
challenge of Caitlin Clark and the Lady Hawkeyes of Iowa with their
87-75 victory in the championship game. It is the third national title
for Staley at South Carolina, and they join Texas, Baylor, Tennessee and
UConn as the only women’s teams that have had undefeated seasons.
The
Connecticut Huskies men’s basketball program also achieved the
back-to-back national championship title distinction, completing their
two-year dominance of NCAA Division One men’s basketball under head
coach Dan Hurley with a 75-60 triumph over the Purdue Boilermakers in
the championship game. This win was the sixth title for the Huskies, who
have never lost in a finals contest.
Hurley
made more news when he turned down a lucrative contract offer from the
Los Angeles Lakers. He signed a multi-year extension to stay at
Connecticut for a run at a third straight national, something no team
has accomplished since the dynastic years of UCLA under legendary coach
John Wooden.
A
special note of mention for Penn State’s women’s volleyball coach Katie
Schumacher-Cawley, who is the first woman to ever lead a college team
to an NCAA Division One National Championship, as her squad beat the
University of Louisville three sets to one to capture the eighth
national title in school history. Coach Schumacher-Cawley also won a
national title as a player at Penn State. Jess Mrusik was named Most
Outstanding Player, recording 20 winning shots in five straight games.
Paris Olympics
This past summer, the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, France, grabbed international headlines during the summer weeks.
Simone
Biles returned to her lofty position as the world’s top gymnast,
bringing home four medals, three gold and one silver, while leading the
U.S. women’s team.
The
U.S. women’s and men’s basketball teams continued their championship
ways to bring gold medals home. The women dominated their competition
until they squeaked by a wily French national team 67-66, while the U.S.
men’s team had to withstand tough challenges from Serbia and France in
the final to win gold.
The
United States won the overall Olympic medal count with 126 medals (40
gold,40 silver and 42 bronze) thanks to strong performances that
produced 34 total medals in track and field.
Sydney
Mclaughlin-Levrone became the most dominant female track and field
athlete with her world record and gold medal-winning time of 50.37
seconds in the 400 hurdles. It was the sixth time that
Mclaughlin-Levrone had broken her world record.
She is also the only woman to win the event in consecutive Olympic Games.
Sprinter
Gabby Thomas won three gold medals in the 200 sprints in 21.83 seconds,
and in the 4x100 and 4x400 relay sprints, the most by any track and
field athlete in Paris.
Masai
Russell upset defending Olympic champion Jasmine Camacho-Quinn of
Puerto Rico to win her first-ever Olympic gold medal in the women’s
100-meter hurdles.
Noah
Lyles, Rai Benjamin, Ryan Crouser, and Grant Holloway grabbed headlines
for the U.S. men’s track and field team, which won seven gold medals
and 18 overall.
Crouser
became the first shot putter in Olympic history to win gold medals at
three consecutive Olympic Games. The world record holder tossed the shot
75 feet, 1 3/4 inches, to win his third.
Rai Benjamin won two golds, the 400 hurdles while anchoring the 4x400 relay team in an Olympic record time of 2:54.43.
Noah
Lyles’s dramatic photo-finish in the men’s 100 produced gold, but he
contracted COVID-19 prior to the 200 final, which Leslie Tobogo of
Botswana won.
Holloway,
the top sprint hurdler this year, backed up that claim by dominating
every phase of the competition, winning the 110-meter hurdles final in a
goldmedal winning time of 12.99 seconds.
The legends we lost
Several
sports legends of color departed this life during this year. Hall of
Fame baseball players Willie Mays, MLB’s greatest all-around baseball
player, and Rickey Henderson, the greatest leadoff hitter and base
stealer in Major League Baseball history, are gone. Still, their
memories of baseball excellence and their joy for the game will live on.
Others to leave this life were:
Al
Attles, an NBA Hall of Famer who coached the 1975 San Francisco
Warriors to a championship and spent more than 60 years with the
organization as a player, general manager and team ambassador; Dikembe
Mutombo, who played 18 seasons in the NBA, is in the Basketball Hall of Fame, was one of the best
defensive players in NBA history, and was known for his humanitarian
work outside the game; and Fernando Valenzuela, the Mexican-born phenom
for the Los Angeles Dodgers, who inspired “Fernandomania” while winning
the National League Cy Young Award and Rookie of the Year in 1981.
Valenzuela was the World Series champion the same year.
Cuban-born
baseball pitcher Louis Tiant had a stellar career in Major League
Baseball over 19 years. He played for several teams, including the
Cleveland Indians and the Boston Red Sox, where he became a fan
favorite. Tiant was known for his distinctive pitching style, which
included a variety of pitches. He was a three-time All- Star and a
Boston Red Sox Hall of Famer, playing a key role in the Red Sox’s run to
the World Series in 1975. Luis Tiant was 83.
Mercury
Morris of the Miami Dolphins was best known as a running back with the
NFL’s Miami Dolphins. Although he played for multiple teams, he was best
known for his crucial role in the Dolphins’ historic undefeated 1972
season, culminating in winning Super Bowl VII. He was also part of the
Dolphins’ Super Bowl title in 1973.
Each of these remarkable athletes left their mark on this life.
Like so many who have touched our lives, we will miss them. Blessings to all as we count down the hours to 2025.