The OP's list is the ESPN list. Different criteria.I'm not sure where to find the link to the list. When I Google this I see Jackie Joyner-Kersee as number 1. I must be looking at the wrong link?
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/mu...1205/title-ix-top-40-athletes/content.40.html
How could any female be considered a greater athlete than JJ-K?
On the OP's list [ESPN], with the No. 1 slot still vacant, it's gotta be.....
.....Mia Hamm.
Yeah, but I'm not on the list so far, either. Where does thst leave your logic?... Hamm is not on the list so it's a safe bet she's #1.
Thought Steffi was slightly underrated. She was definitely better than Chrissy and conceivably better than Martina...unless you care about doubles, which no one does.
Annika played 2 years at Arizona.How were Annika and Martina affected by Title IX?
Certainly, the position that Martina was the GOAT is widely held and an absolutely reasonable position to hold, but I don't think it's fair to say hands down that she was the GOAT when Steffi, at 18 years old, emphatically and decisively ended her reign atop women's tennis. Martina had a dominant run as a singles player 1982-1987, including a run of six majors in a row, but there are definitely arguments you can make for Steffi. And really very few arguments you can make for Chris Evert over Steffi. In their respective primes, Steffi would have routinely beaten her. Chrissy's longetivity in the sport was impressive, but Steffi was no slouch along those lines herself, winning at least one major 10 consecutive years, winning three or more five different years, and being the only player to win all four majors four times (and she almost certainly would have won all four five times had she not missed the Australian Open due to injury on plural occasions).
I also think Serena at her best beats anyone who's ever played, but she's (fairly) dinged for inconsistency of focus and results.
Annika played 2 years at Arizona.
The broad impact of Title IX was to greatly increase the number of girls/women playing sports -- and the number of athletes, parents, friends, media reporters et al who became interested in (and supportive of) women's sports -- from youth leagues to professional teams. In long established women's sports like tennis and golf, the huge increase in cash prize money and TV coverage brought both fame and fortune
to Annika and Martina that was not even imagined before the implementation of Title IX throughout the 1970's.