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Top 25 Most Dominant Teams in Sports Gaming History (Part II)

Last week, I began to unveil my picks for the top 25 greatest video game teams of all time. This week, I will reveal all but the top five greatest teams.

Disclaimer: As much as I wanted to put it on this list, the super large Pong paddle that your unskilled family members got to select does not qualify since the paddle was not technically a "team." Sorry to all of you holding out hope that the paddle would be number one on the list.

In case you missed last week's article, here are picks 25-16:

25. Minnesota Vikings (NFL 2K)
24. Philadelphia 76ers (NBA 2K2)
23. New York Mets (MLB 2K7)
22. Detroit Lions (Tecmo Super Bowl)
21. Los Angeles (Blades of Steel)
20. Cleveland Indians (Ken Griffey Baseball N64)
19. Buffy’s Gym (Sammy Sosa’s Softball Slam)
18. LA Lakers (Bulls Vs. Lakers)
17. Pittsburgh Penguins (NHLPA Hockey)
16. Chicago Bulls (Tecmo NBA Basketball)


Now without further delay, I give you picks 15-6.

#15 Utah (Bases Loaded)

Utah was the video game equivalent of the early '90s Oakland A's, minus the steroids.

Who could forget Mr. Agua at the plate, belting homers left and right. Agua was all Utah needed on the offensive end because the phenomena Utahl pitching staff consisted of Quinta, Lep and Stava. If you scored any runs against these guys, which you did not because they were unhittable, you would have to face Bella in the ninth inning. Good luck mounting a comeback against him.

Utah was unbeatable in Bases Loaded -- reason enough in my mind to award the state with an actual MLB team.

#14 Denver Broncos (NFL Gameday '99)

Not only did this game feature the eventual 1999 Super Bowl champions, the Denver Broncos, it also featured one of the greatest individual video game performers ever in Terrell Davis. Simply put, the Broncos of Gameday '99 are clearly worthy of the #14 spot in this list.

I once spent 10 straight hours with a high school buddy of mine attempting to beat the Broncos in this game. He would play a game as the Orange Crush, I would fail at beating him. The next game I would take the helm as John Elway and crew as he tried to take me down. This charade continued back and forth for an entire Saturday, and guess what? The Broncos never lost.

What cemented the Broncos place on this illustrious list was not that they won every game, which they were used to, but rather how they would win the games. Have you ever seen a team win three games on last second screen passes to their halfback? The Gameday Broncos were magical.

I think I have an arthritic thumb because of that infernal 10-hour gaming session on the original Playstation. My thumb aches whenever it snows, rains or when the Broncos are on TV.

 

#13 Detroit Red Wings (NHL 2002)

This was the kind of team that would literally cause you to hurt friends if they had the guts to choose the Red Wings in a head-to-head game. Not only were the '01-'02 Wings stacked in real life, their PS2 virtual incarnation was even more explosive.

Hull, Yzerman, Fedorov, Larionov, Shanahan, Holmstrom, Robitaille, Chelios, Datsyuk, Lidstrom -- basically if you were not scoring 10 goals per game in NHL 02, you were not doing your job. Oh, and I forgot to mention, they had Hasek in net so they rarely allowed any goals either.

I will never forget playing a complete 82-game season with the Red Wings; I went 81-1 on the hardest difficulty setting. My only loss came after I was forced to simulate a game because my girlfriend at the time showed up for a date. (In retrospect, she was not worth that one loss.) I averaged 14 goals per game and trailed only once all season.

It is a rarity that you find a team this dominant in a hockey game. The '01-'02 virtual, and real life, Red Wings were more than deserving of the moniker "Greatest Hockey Team Ever."

#12 Seattle Mariners (Ken Griffey Jr. Presents Major League Baseball)

While the Braves were also a dynamo in this Super Nintendo classic, the Mariners are the only team deserving of being on this list.

Why you ask? Because the Mariners were the only team with a real MLB player on their roster, Mr. Ken Griffey Jr. This would mean nothing if it were not for the fact that Junior hit a home run every time he walked up to the plate. If you think I am joking, I truly am not. Griffey literally hit a home run every at bat.

Here is a little known fact about the Mariners in this game: All those "no name" players that formed Griffey’s supporting cast in the game were Nintendo employees at the time the game was released.

So, you have the only pro in the game -- who just happens to hit a home run every at bat -- and he is surrounded by Nintendo employees. If that does not sound like collusion, I do not know what does.

#11 San Francisco/Boston (RBI Baseball)

Yes, it is a tie. Will Clark and Roger Clemens are really the only two names you need to know when it comes to deciding which team to choose in RBI Baseball. Clark was the best hitter in the game, and Clemens the best pitcher. Both teams were unbeatable, and if you pitted the two against each other, the game would instantly shut off because the coding did not know how to process such a clash of titans.

The mere thought of these two teams playing against one another, and the possibility of Clemens pitching to Clark, makes my brain want to explode. For my own safety, I am done even contemplating the duel.

#10 Philadelphia Eagles (Madden '94)

QB #12 was the first genuine video game superstar. Let me rephrase that, Randall Cunningham was the first genuine video game superstar.

In an era before Madden games crowned a cover athlete, a humble, young virtual Randall decided to be a superstar. Randall could pass, Randall could run, Randall and the Eagles could not be stopped in Madden '94.

The only way to stop Randall and the Eagles was to do the unthinkable: hurt Randall. I was able to beat the Eagle’s once in Madden '94, and it was only after Randall was taken off the field in that amazing pixelated ambulance -- only to be promptly dropped on the sidelines after the ambulance mysteriously disappeared into thin air.

The Philadelphia Randalls were beastly.

#9 LA Lakers (NBA Street)

In a game that only allowed three players per team to be on the court at once, all the Lakers really needed were two, Shaq and Kobe. Sure, Robert Horry, Derek Fisher and Horace Grant were in the game so the Lakers could have a third player on the court, but it was not like any of these players ever touched the ball.

When some people have problems advancing past certain points in video games, they turn to cheat codes. If you ever had trouble advancing in NBA Street, you just chose the Lakers. Honestly, this team was able to achieve a Gamebreaker within one minute of the game starting, and even the game's so-called "end bosses" were no match for the Lakers.

If a buddy of mine ever chose the Lakers in a multiplayer match, he received a swift kick to the groin and was then forced to play as the worst player and team in the game, Jahidi White and the Washington Wizards.

 

#8 Sacramento Kings (NBA 2K1)

I am going to come out and say it regardless of the backlash the community may throw my way: The 2K1 Kings are the best 3-point shooting team in any basketball video game not titled Double Dribble.

Jason "White Chocolate" Williams could stroke the three, Peja could stroke the three, Nick Anderson could stroke the three, Jon Barry could stroke the three, Bobby Jackson could stroke the three, Doug Christie could stroke the three and even Chris Webber could knock down the three in this game. The only guy on the roster who could not hit a 3-pointer was Lawrence Funderburke, but then again, Funderburke could not hit much of anything.

I forgot to mention Vlade; he was also able to hit the three in this game for some weird reason.

Out of all the 3-point threats on this team's virtual roster, no one could shoot threes with more consistency than Doug Christie. Within a week of buying this game, my future best man Matt had already perfected the optimal Christie shot release point. The result was 14 straight Christie bombs to open up a 42-point lead on me. Virtual Doug Christie was the sole reason I stopped playing the game against Matt. In fact, NBA 2K1 almost ruined our friendship.

All you really needed was 15 minutes to learn the individual release points of the 2K1 Kings' roster, and then you could easily shoot 85 percent from beyond the arc. I am pretty sure this is the team that caused 2K to move away from generic shot animations that were easy to time.

#7 Florida State (Bill Walsh College Football)

Florida State won the 1993 National Championship, so naturally the team was unbeatable in Bill Walsh College Football.

The thing is, I honestly do not have much more to say about this team, other than that they could not be stopped. I spent hours of my youth attempting to beat FSU with my Miami squad, the second best team in the game, and never came within 14 points.

Florida State has to be the earliest example of comeback A.I. and flat out CPU cheating. It did not matter what you threw at the Seminoles, they would somehow find a way to beat the crap out of you.

If only I had Joe Kane, Lattimer and Omar Epps from The Program, then maybe I would have had a shot at beating FSU.

#6 Orlando Magic (NBA Live '95)

1995 was the year of the Orlando Magic. Little Penny was all over the airwaves, Shaq had not yet made Kazaam, and the Magic were the most dominant team on the face of the planet in NBA Live.

Shaq, Penny and Nick Anderson made the Live '95 Magic a tough draw. Penny hardly missed a shot, was able to drive the lane for the awesome scoop-and-score animation, and had the attributes that only Kobe and LeBron are given in today’s games. Shaq was a force down low, was able to snag every rebound, and was a dunking machine. Finally, Nick Anderson was the 3-point specialist, hitting anything that was not contested -- especially shots from the bottom left corner that would somehow magnetically change direction and go in the net.

It was hard to fault a friend who played as the Magic in Live '95 because deep-down inside I was always jealous that I did not scroll to that squad first. Sure the team was dominant if they were your team, and cheap if they were not, but they had some awesome jerseys and the marketability to make any 14-year-old boy swoon.


Be sure to drop by next week for the top five most dominant teams. But be warned, the top five is going to get pretty ugly because the remaining teams will be battling for the number one spot. Only the strong (or cheapest) team will survive.


Member Comments
# 1 buzzguy @ 01/28/09 11:09 AM
#15....I'm pretty sure Utah isn't a city. Am I wrong, here?

Anyway, I love these features and can't wait for the next one. #8 brings back some "nice" Dreamcast memories.
 
# 2 Cuse 15 @ 01/28/09 11:48 AM
Love the post, brings back memories of fights with brother over some of those, it was Omar Epps in the program
 
# 3 Gantry @ 01/28/09 05:37 PM
While it's great to see RBI mentioned, I think the love for San Fran is a bit off. Though people play many different styles of RBI, I don't think SF is one of the two best teams in just about any format.

And it's debatable if Will Clark is the best hitter on his team (Chili Davis is slightly weaker but MUCH faster), let alone the best in the game. Most folks wouldn't have him as a top10 overall hitter, though he still swings a mean bat.
 
# 4 HechticSooner @ 01/28/09 07:46 PM
like I said in the last one in Bill Walsh football in the historical teams Bo Jackson was unstoppable. The days of Genesis football, oh the memories.
 
# 5 Attezz @ 01/28/09 09:55 PM
It's articles like this why people have no respect for sports blogs, you clearly know next to nothing about any of these videogames, and are just making things up.

Well, bravo, this is truly the Family Guy of "awful sports articles written from a high school Journalism class", try to get people to chime in not to form a discussion, but to reminisce about the fact that "I too remember NHL 2002!!!!11111 Shanahan was da bomb diggity!!!!" as opposed to actually having a decent discussion.

It's no wonder why your "activation email" ended up in my spam folder.
 
# 6 allBthere @ 01/29/09 12:01 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Attezz
It's articles like this why people have no respect for sports blogs, you clearly know next to nothing about any of these videogames, and are just making things up.

Well, bravo, this is truly the Family Guy of "awful sports articles written from a high school Journalism class", try to get people to chime in not to form a discussion, but to reminisce about the fact that "I too remember NHL 2002!!!!11111 Shanahan was da bomb diggity!!!!" as opposed to actually having a decent discussion.

It's no wonder why your "activation email" ended up in my spam folder.


anyway, my pick would be the 'tanned' dudes in super spike v-ball - remember them?
 
# 7 Rebel10 @ 01/29/09 09:32 AM
The first iteration of NCAA Football, which came after Bill Walsh '95, for the Genesis/SNES, featured some of the most horrifically frustrating comeback AI in any game I've played. I used to rent that game regularly, and try to beat the computer... I'd play as Nebraska, probbaly the best team in the game, against Akron, the worst. Akron would always win. At one point, I had a 14 point lead with the ball and 20 seconds left. I fumbled for a TD and with 5 seconds left on the clock, they kicked off to me... I had every intention of receiving the kick, draining the 5 seconds, and running out of bounds or into the endzone to end the game. Yet with 0:00 on the clock, as I am racing to get out of bounds, I am tackled, fumble, and the CPU returns it for a TD. NOT ONLY THAT, but it was the first year EA implemented the two-point conversion, and they went for two and beat me by 1.

Other than that, I agree with Attezz -- especially because some of the remarks in the article are just incorrect. Making a friend play as the Wizards in NBA Street was not punishment -- Michael Jordan was on that team and was the best player in the game. He was also on the cover of the game. The Jordan / Yeti / Shaq combo was the most unstoppable combo in the game.
 
# 8 Bumble14 @ 01/29/09 10:36 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rebel10
The first iteration of NCAA Football, which came after Bill Walsh '95, for the Genesis/SNES, featured some of the most horrifically frustrating comeback AI in any game I've played. I used to rent that game regularly, and try to beat the computer... I'd play as Nebraska, probbaly the best team in the game, against Akron, the worst. Akron would always win. At one point, I had a 14 point lead with the ball and 20 seconds left. I fumbled for a TD and with 5 seconds left on the clock, they kicked off to me... I had every intention of receiving the kick, draining the 5 seconds, and running out of bounds or into the endzone to end the game. Yet with 0:00 on the clock, as I am racing to get out of bounds, I am tackled, fumble, and the CPU returns it for a TD. NOT ONLY THAT, but it was the first year EA implemented the two-point conversion, and they went for two and beat me by 1.

Other than that, I agree with Attezz -- especially because some of the remarks in the article are just incorrect. Making a friend play as the Wizards in NBA Street was not punishment -- Michael Jordan was on that team and was the best player in the game. He was also on the cover of the game. The Jordan / Yeti / Shaq combo was the most unstoppable combo in the game.
What remarks in this article are incorrect? Please note that this article is purely opinion based, so it was based off my personal experiences with these games. There is no scientific method of proving which teams are truly the best in video game history.

P.S. Jordan was not on the Wizards in NBA Street- he was an unlockable character that you received when beating the game. He was not assigned to a specific team in the game. Here is the Wizards team list as taken directly from the game guide that I have lying around in my media room (I still play the game a lot).

Washington Wizards
Jahidi White
*Richard Hamilton-Superstar
Courtney Alexander
*Mitch Richmond
*Christian Laettner

Also, Attezz, can you please justify your comments with some supporting statements? I value your opinion, but you have said some pretty strong comments about this article and have provided no proof for your statements.

Again, it's ok that you guys don't like the article, but this is an opinion based article, and there is no right/wrong answer. You say that this article is not condusive to debate, but I'd have to disagree. This article was made so that you could talk about past memories, but also put the teams you remember as being dominant into the limelight.

Attezz- what do you mean by "it's no wonder your activation email ended up in my junk box"?
 
# 9 strassy @ 01/29/09 11:38 AM
Another glaring error in this shoddily written article. it's QB EAGLES, not QB #12. Have you played any of these games in the past 15 years or are you just making up random tripe off the top of your head?
 
# 10 strassy @ 01/29/09 11:40 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by strassy
Another glaring error in this shoddily written article. it's QB EAGLES, not QB #12. Have you played any of these games in the past 15 years or are you just making up random tripe off the top of your head?
crap...this one is my fault. who the hell played Madden 94 anyhow? I'll save myself and say that the Detroit Lions are far from the best team in Tecmo Super Bowl
 
# 11 bh446066 @ 01/29/09 11:51 AM
I haven't played all those games, but I can vouch for #'s 23, 22, 21, 16, 15, 11, and 7 (especially #16, as I had many seasons with the new Charlotte Hornets...Rex Chapman, Mugsy Bogues, Mike Gminski, Del Curry, etc.). These retrospective articles are gold. Good job, I love it.
 
# 12 Bumble14 @ 01/29/09 12:06 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by strassy
crap...this one is my fault. who the hell played Madden 94 anyhow? I'll save myself and say that the Detroit Lions are far from the best team in Tecmo Super Bowl
Every single error that people have tried to point out in these two articles has been proven to be wrong. Keep em coming though.

I played all of these games non stop growing up. I researched the heck out of this article before writing it, and I did not make any of it up.

Sorry the majority of posters this week apparently hate this article, and think it's "shoddily" written.

I hope there are some out there who find this to be an enjoyable read, and can see this article for what it is- an entertainment piece that can inspire some fun discussion about dominant sports teams thoroughout sports gaming history.

Some people take these things way to seriously.
 
# 13 Dukefan22 @ 01/29/09 01:37 PM
One I remember that probably won't make the list, but you never know, is Oklahoma St. in NCAA Basketball for the SNES. They had a 3 point shooter who would hit about 90% of his 3's.
 
# 14 Eski33 @ 01/29/09 03:27 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bumble14
Every single error that people have tried to point out in these two articles has been proven to be wrong. Keep em coming though.

I played all of these games non stop growing up. I researched the heck out of this article before writing it, and I did not make any of it up.

Sorry the majority of posters this week apparently hate this article, and think it's "shoddily" written.

I hope there are some out there who find this to be an enjoyable read, and can see this article for what it is- an entertainment piece that can inspire some fun discussion about dominant sports teams thoroughout sports gaming history.

Some people take these things way to seriously.
I enjoy any article associated with classic video games. I hope one is written about the 25 worst teams.

Today, so many kids who play games and complain about Madden, and other sports games, have no idea what it was like to play Atari football, Intellivision football, etc. and having been able to live through the advances in technology. Too many people complain about the color of a team's socks colored incorrectly or no refs visible on the field.

Articles like this one help many old school gamers reflect on games that were the spark that ignited the games of today. Although many of those games did not wield the most competitive A.I., the dorm room battles were intense.

Again, it is great to read about many of those games that I played in high school and college.

May I add that the Kentucky Wildcats in Coach K were one of the most lethal teams ever.
 
# 15 maddenislife @ 01/29/09 03:52 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Attezz
It's articles like this why people have no respect for sports blogs, you clearly know next to nothing about any of these videogames, and are just making things up.

Well, bravo, this is truly the Family Guy of "awful sports articles written from a high school Journalism class", try to get people to chime in not to form a discussion, but to reminisce about the fact that "I too remember NHL 2002!!!!11111 Shanahan was da bomb diggity!!!!" as opposed to actually having a decent discussion.

It's no wonder why your "activation email" ended up in my spam folder.
I too remember NHL 2002!!!!11111 Shanahan was da bomb diggity

but in all seriosuness....i know its not a team...but the big show in wrestlemania 2000 for n64...try beating him on the hardest difficulty with anyone...HHH, undertaker....its not happeneing
 
# 16 htfdthewhale @ 01/29/09 04:45 PM
Larry Johnson and Zo were dominant in NBA JAM. The Red Wings and Blackhawks were always popular in NHL' 94.

Attezz, this isn't a sports blog and has nothing to do with people not having respect for sports blogs. This is a Sports Gaming Community, and as such, we discuss sports gaming, past present and future. Nobody made you read it. If you don't like it, don't ****ing read it.
 
# 17 Asp86 @ 01/30/09 01:20 AM
What about the Chiefs in Tecmo Superbowl.

I think the most dangerous 3-point team was also on NBA2k1, but it wasn't the Kings. It was the Milwaukee Bucks.

Ray Allen
Glenn Robinson
Sam Cassell
Tim Thomas

The last time the Bucks were any good.
 
# 18 adam42381 @ 01/30/09 03:11 AM
Utah might have been the best all-around team in Bases Loaded but I always went with the power trio of Paste, Bay and Ford from Jersey.
 
# 19 Jonesy @ 01/30/09 05:17 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bumble14
Some people take these things way to seriously.
That pretty much sums it up.

I thought it was a good read that brought back some great memories. Thanks.
 
# 20 BenGerman @ 01/30/09 02:04 PM
Great, fun article. Sorry some people are giving you such crap, they don't realize when writing, you can't please everyone. I agreed with most of the things, I really liked the Ken Griffey Jr part, that always used to give me nightmares because of my failure to understand the concept. I have no idea if this is yet to come, but I remember in NBA Jam, you could use Shaq to bowl over people with out a foul. The ball would just fall straight out of their hands, causing him to pick it up, and dunk the ball. I could win game by plus 100 points. Thats pretty cheap to me.
 

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