Winning streak (sports)

For other uses, see Streak.

In sports, a winning streak refers to a consecutive number of games won. A winning streak begins after the third consecutive victory, back-to-back wins is only considered two consecutive victories. A winning streak can be held by a team, as in baseball, football, basketball, hockey, or by an individual, as in tennis. A winning streak that extends through a single season, i.e. every game in the season is won, is known as a perfect season.

The longest recorded winning streak in any professional sports is Pakistani Jahangir Khan's 555 consecutive wins in squash from 1981 to 1986. In the same sports, the Australian Heather McKay may hold a claim to an even longer winning streak, as she went unbeaten for 19 years, from 1962 to 1981. However, an official tally of her wins may not exist. In 2013, the Dutch wheelchair tennis player Esther Vergeer retired with an active 10-year-long winning streak of 470 matches, including a streak of 250 consecutive sets won.[1]

A winning streak is not to be confused with an unbeaten streak, where teams can tie as well as win to maintain their streak. For example, if a football team wins four games in a row, plays a draw, wins three more, plays two draws in a row, and then loses, they had a 10-game unbeaten streak. Their longest winning streak in this sequence was four. If a sports league declares overtime losses different from regulation losses in that they are scored like ties (such as ice hockey leagues where there is both a 3-on-3 overtime and a shootout to break ties), an unbeaten streak (unlike a winning streak) continues if at the end of regulation, the game is tied. This is because losses in overtime and shootout are declared regulation ties, and teams accumulate one point for the draw. As such, if a team wins four consecutive games, then loses two consecutive games in overtime, then loses in a shootout, and then wins three consecutive games, that team has a ten-game unbeaten streak (seven wins and three ties at the end of regulation).

Air sports

Aerobatic

Team

3 consecutive titles at FAI World Aerobatic Championships — Russia

Aquatic Sports

Diving

Olympics

Men's
10m Platform

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic GamesKlaus Dibiasi

7 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

3m Springboard

11 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

Synchronized 10m Platform

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — China

Women's
10m Platform

7 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

3m Springboard

8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

Synchronized 10m Platform

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — China

Synchronized 3m Springboard

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — China

World Championships

Men's
1m Springboard

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — China

3m Springboard

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

6 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

10m Platform

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsGreg Louganis

Synchronized 3m Springboard

5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — China

Synchronized 10m Platform

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

Women's
3m Springboard

5 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsGuo Jingjing

7 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — China

10m Platform

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — China

Synchronized 3m Springboard

7 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

Synchronized 10m Platform

7 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

Swimming

Overall

Johnny Weissmuller

Weissmuller never lost a swimming race during his entire amateur career, including three individual Olympic gold medals. He is purported to have told the other swimmers in his Olympic final that they could fight it out for second place.

Tamás Darnyi

Darnyi was undefeated his entire international career in both the 200m and 400m Individual medley races, lasting from 1985 to 1993, though he did not hold the world record for the entirety of the period (another person broke it in a race that Darnyi did not compete in. He later reclaimed the record).

Roland Matthes

Matthes was undefeated in the 100 and 200 meter backstroke races from 1968-1974, though he lost the world record in races he did not compete in during that span. He later lost both records for good at the end of his career when he earned a bronze in the 100m backstroke behind John Naber, who also set the world record in the 200m backstroke.

Vladimir Salnikov

Salnikov won all 61 of his 1500m freestyle races from 1977 to 1986. The streak ended when he finished fourth at the 1986 FINA World Championships.

Michael Phelps

Michael Phelps was undefeated in the finals of the 200m butterfly for ten years. Before the 2012 Olympics where he was defeated by Chad le Clos. The last time Phelps had lost the race was in 2002 when he lost to Olympic champion Tom Malchow at the 2002 Pan Pacific Swimming Championships.

Olympics

Men's
100m Freestyle

5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

400m Freestyle

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

1500m Freestyle

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Australia

100m Backstroke

5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

200m Backstroke

5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

200m Breaststroke

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — Japan

100m Butterfly

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic GamesMichael Phelps

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games

200m Butterfly

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games

200m Individual Medley

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic GamesMichael Phelps

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games

400m Individual Medley

5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic Games — United States

4×100m Freestyle Relay

7 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

4×200m Freestyle Relay

7 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

Note: excluding boycotted Moscow Olympics

4×100m Medley Relay

13 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

Note: excluding boycotted Moscow Olympics

Women's
100m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at Olympic GamesDawn Fraser

4 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

400m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games

800m Freestyle

5 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

100m Backstroke

4 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

200m Backstroke

3 consecutive titles at Olympic GamesKrisztina Egerszegi

3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — Hungary

200m Breaststroke

3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

100m Butterfly

3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

4×100m Freestyle Relay

6 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

Note: excluding boycotted Moscow Olympics

4×200m Freestyle Relay

3 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

4×100m Medley Relay

4 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

World Championships (50m)

Men's
50m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsCésar Cielo

400m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsIan Thorpe

5 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Australia

1500m Freestyle

4 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsGrant Hackett

5 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Australia

100m Backstroke

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsAaron Peirsol

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States

200m Backstroke

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsAaron Peirsol

8 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States

200m Breaststroke

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsDániel Gyurta

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — Hungary

100m Butterfly

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsMichael Phelps

5 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States

200m Butterfly

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics ChampionshipsMichael Phelps

Note: he also won in 2001 and 2003, but elected not to swim the race in the 2005 FINA World Championships.

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships

200m Individual Medley

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships

400m Individual Medley

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States

4×100m Freestyle Relay

8 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

4×200m Freestyle Relay

5 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

4×100m Medley Relay

7 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

Women's
100m Freestyle

5 consecutive titles at World Championships — East Germany

200m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

800m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

200m Individual Medley

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships

400m Individual Medley

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — China

4x200m Freestyle Relay

3 consecutive titles at FINA World Aquatics Championships — United States

World Championships (25m)

Men's
400m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsYuri Prilukov

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Russia

1500m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsYuri Prilukov

4 consecutive titles at World Championships — Australia

100m Backstroke

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Cuba

200m Backstroke

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

100m Butterfly

3 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsLars Frölander

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Sweden

200m Butterfly

5 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsJames Hickman

5 consecutive titles at World Championships — United Kingdom

100m Individual Medley

3 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsRyan Lochte

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

200m Individual Medley

4 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsRyan Lochte

4 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

400m Individual Medley

3 consecutive titles at World Championships

3 consecutive titles at World Championships

4x100m Medley Relay

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

Women's
800m Freestyle

3 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsChen Hua

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

200m Backstroke

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

100m Breaststroke

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — United States

100m Butterfly

3 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsJenny Thompson

3 consecutive titles at World Championships

100m Individual Medley

3 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsMartina Moravcová

3 consecutive titles at World Championships

400m Individual Medley

3 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsYana Klochkova

3 consecutive titles at World Championships — Ukraine

4x100m Freestyle Relay

3 consecutive titles at World Championships

College (United States)

31 consecutive NCAA Men's Division III titlesKenyon College

Synchronized Swimming

Olympics

Duet

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympics — Russia

Team

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympics — Russia

FINA World Aquatics Championships

Team

8 consecutive gold medals at World Championships team titles — Russia

Water Polo

Men's

3 consecutive gold medals at Summer Olympics

Archery

Olympics

Men's

Team

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — South Korea

Women's

Individual

6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — South Korea

Team

7 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — South Korea

World Outdoor Championships

Men's

Recurve
Individual

4 consecutive titles at World Archery ChampionshipsHans Deutgen

7 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Sweden

Team

13 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Compound
Individual

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Team

5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Women's

Recurve
Individual

5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Team

6 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

World Indoor Championships

Men's

Compound
Individual

5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships

Team

5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Compound Junior
Team

4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Women's

Compound
Team

6 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Compound Junior
Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

World Youth Championships

Men's

Compound Junior
Individual

4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Recurve Cadet
Individual

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Compound Cadet
Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Women's

Recurve Junior
Individual

7 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Compound Junior
Individual

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Team

5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Recurve Cadet
Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Compound Cadet
Individual

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Team

5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

World Para Championships

Men's

Recurve
Team Open

4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Individual Wheelchair/Visual Impairment

6 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Compound
Team Open

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Individual Wheelchair/Visual Impairment

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships

Women's

Recurve
Individual Wheelchair/Visual Impairment

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Italy

Compound
Individual Open

3 consecutive titles at World Archery ChampionshipsDanielle Brown

4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United Kingdom

World Field Championships

Men's

Recurve

4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships

Compound

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Barebow/Instinctive

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Anders Rosenberg

5 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Sweden

Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — France

Women's

Barebow/Instinctive

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Italy

Junior Women

Compound

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Sweden

World University Championships

Men's

Recurve
Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — Chinese Taipei

Compound
Individual

4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Women's

Recurve
Individual

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — South Korea

Compound
Individual

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Team

3 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Mixed

Compound Team

4 consecutive titles at World Archery Championships — United States

Athletics

Overall

Men's 400m Hurdles

122 races — Edwin Moses

Note: this streak included an Olympic gold medal and two improvements of his own world records.

Long-distance running

75 races — Emil Zátopek[2]

Men's Long Jump

65 consecutive competitions — Carl Lewis

Men's Cross Country

5 consecutive World Championships

Women's high jump

140 to 150 competitions[4]Iolanda Balaş

Note: this streak included 2 Olympic gold medals and 14 improvements of the world record.

Olympics

Men's

100m

5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

200m

5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

400m

7 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

800m

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games

5000m

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Finland

10000m

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Ethiopia

Marathon

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Ethiopia

110m Hurdles

9 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

400m Hurdles

6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

3000m Steeplechase

8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Kenya

4x100m Relay

8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

4x400m Relay

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games

50km Race Walk

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic gamesRobert Korzeniowski

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Poland

High Jump

8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

Pole Vault

16 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

Long Jump

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic gamesCarl Lewis

8 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

Triple Jump

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic gamesViktor Saneyev

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Soviet Union

Shot Put

6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

Discus Throw

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic gamesAl Oerter

5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

Hammer Throw

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic gamesJohn Flanagan

6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

Javelin throw

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic gamesJan Železný

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Czechoslovakia and then Czech Republic

Decathlon

6 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

Women's

100m

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

200m

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games

1500m

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Soviet Union

5000m

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Ethiopia

4x100m Relay

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

4x400m Relay

5 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — United States

Shot Put

4 consecutive gold medals at Olympic games — Soviet Union

IAAF World Championships in Athletics

Men's

100m

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

200m

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsUsain Bolt

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

400m

4 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsMichael Johnson

5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

800m

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsWilson Kipketer

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

1500m

4 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsHicham El Guerrouj

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Morocco

5000m

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Kenya

10000m

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Ethiopia

110m Hurdles

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsGreg Foster

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

400m Hurdles

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

3000m Steeplechase

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

6 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Kenya

4x100m Relay

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

4x400m Relay

5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

Marathon

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

20km Race Walk

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsJefferson Pérez

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

Pole Vault

6 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsSergey Bubka

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

Note: Ukraine gained independence from Soviet Union in 1991

Long Jump

4 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsIván Pedroso

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

Shot Put

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsWerner Günthör

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

Discus Throw

4 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsLars Riedel

5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — East Germany then Germany

Hammer Throw

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsIvan Tsikhan

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

Decathlon

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

Women's

100m

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

200m

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsAllyson Felix

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships

5000m

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Ethiopia

10000m

5 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Ethiopia

4x400m Relay

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

Race Walking

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsOlga Kaniskina

7 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Russia

Pole Vault

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Russia

Long Jump

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsBrittney Reese

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — United States

Shot Put

4 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsValerie (Vili) Adams

4 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — New Zealand

Heptathlon

3 consecutive gold medals at World ChampionshipsCarolina Klüft

3 consecutive gold medals at World Championships — Sweden

Auto racing

Formula One

By driver

9 wins

By constructor

11 wins — McLaren MP4/4[6]

Sports car racing

FIA GT1 World Championship

6 consecutive FIA GT Championship and (from 2010) FIA GT1 World Championship team titles

Note: all its titles was achieved with the same car (Maserati MC12)

IMSA GTP

8 wins — Geoff Brabham and Nissan GTP ZX-Turbo chassis #8801 "Elvis"[7]

World Sportscar Championship

18 wins — Porsche 956

24 Hours of Le Mans

By driver

6 consecutive wins —

By constructor

7 consecutive wins —

By team

5 consecutive wins —

By car

4 consecutive wins

By car (under identical s/n)

2 consecutive wins

Of the four wins, the two Porsches were fielded by the same team (Joest Racing) unsuccessfully attempted a 3rd consecutive win.

IndyCar

4 wins — Sébastien Bourdais

NOTE: INDYCAR recognises streaks from AAA, USAC, CART, Champ Car World Series, and INDYCAR sanctioned races.

World Rally Championship

9 consecutive World ChampionshipsSébastien Loeb[8]

NASCAR Cup Series

10 wins — 1967 Richard Petty[10]

Note: Because of the post-1972 schedule overhaul, NASCAR will differentiate records from pre-1972 and post-1972. The primary schedule overhaul eliminated midweek races, thus cutting the schedule from 48 to around 30 races (36 currently), and a minimum race distance (first 250 miles (400 km), later shortened to 300 km (190 mi)). Since many pre-1972 races were under 100 miles (such as 62.5 mile races held in Islip, New York, and the current non-championship Budweiser Duel then being a championship race at 100 miles until 1967), some NASCAR records are differentiated that way, similar to the NBA differentiating "fewest points" records with pre and post-1954 records, when the 24-second shot clock was introduced.

Post–1972

4 wins (tie) (length of shortest race, in miles, in brackets):

Note: In seven of the eight instances, at least one of the wins was in a 500-mile race. Mark Martin's 1993 streak ended at Darlington, where the Mountain Dew Southern 500 was stopped 16 laps early because of darkness.

Basketball

FIBA

Olympics

64 games — 1936-1972 United States

7 Consecutive Men's titles at Olympic Games — United States

5 Consecutive Women's titles at Olympic GamesUnited States

NBA

33 games — 1971–72 Los Angeles Lakers[13]

College (United States)

NCAA Women's Division I

All games

90 games — Connecticut[14]

Note: The Wayland Baptist University women's basketball team achieved a winning streak of 131 games which started November 7, 1953 and ended March 20, 1958 (defeated by Nashville Business School 42-46). However, a national organizing structure for women's intercollegiate basketball did not exist until the AIAW was established in 1971; the NCAA did not begin organizing women's sports until 1981. Wayland Baptist instead played in competitions sponsored by the Amateur Athletic Union.[15]

Regular-season games only

By NCAA convention, the "regular season" does not include games in conference tournaments or in any national postseason tournament.

71 games — Connecticut[14]

NCAA Women's Division II

51 games — Washburn University

NCAA Women's Division III

88 games — Washington (MO)

All games

90 games — Connecticut[14]

Canadian Interuniversity Sports (CIS) Women's Basketball

88 games — Winnipeg (MB)

The Lady Westmen would go on to a record 118-1 in the span from 1992-1995, including 3 CIS national basketball championships and beating several NCAA Women's Division I programs in North American tournaments.[18]

NCAA Men's Division I

All games

88 games — UCLA[19]

Regular-season games only

By NCAA convention, the "regular season" does not include games in conference tournaments or in any national postseason tournament.

74 games — UCLA[19]

Home games

129 games — Kentucky[19]

NCAA Men's Division II

57 games — Winona State University

NCAA Men's Division III

60 games — SUNY Potsdam

Greek League

Greek Women's Basketball League

105 games — Athinaikos[23][24]

Greek Basket League

80 games — Aris Thessaloniki[25]

Bat-and-ball games

Baseball

World Championships

World Baseball Classic

2 consecutive titles — Japan

World Cup

9 consecutive titles — Cuba

Major League Baseball

By a team

26 games — New York Giants[26]

Note: The Giants tied the Pirates in the second game of a doubleheader 1–1 on September 18, 1916. Major League Baseball excludes all games which end in ties from their official statistics. The longest winning streak without ties in Major League Baseball is 21 games, achieved by the Chicago Cubs in 1935. The Oakland Athletics hold the American League record at 20 games, set in 2002.

By a pitcher

24 consecutive winning decisionsCarl Hubbell, New York Giants[26]

Note: Hubbell's streak was achieved in 27 games as he also pitched three no-decisions. In baseball, only losing decisions can end winning streaks by pitchers.

Minor League Baseball

29 Games — Salt Lake City Trappers of the Pioneer League

College (United States)

NCAA Division I

34 consecutive games

22 consecutive post season games — South Carolina

12 consecutive College World Series games — South Carolina

NCAA Division II

46 games — 2000 Savannah State

NCAA Division III

44 games — 2008 Trinity College (Connecticut)

NAIA

41 games — 1990 Point Park College (Pittsburgh, PA)

Softball

7 consecutive World Championships — United States

Cricket

Test

16 matches — Australia

Note: Australia equalled this record with another 16 wins in a row from December 2005 until January 2008.

ODI

21 matches — Australia

World Cup

26 matches[28]Australia

Twenty20 International

8 matches — England

International Cricket (All Forms)

20 matches (17 ODIs and 3 tests) — Australia[29]

Domestic or Club Twenty20

25 matches — Sialkot Stallions (Pakistan)[30]

Boating

Canoeing

Men's

C-1

3 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World ChampionshipsJon Lugbill

6 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — United States

C-1 Team

7 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — United States

C-2

5 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — East Germany

C-2 Team

3 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships

Kayaking

Men's

K-1

3 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World ChampionshipsRichard Fox

3 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships

K-1 Team

4 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — East Germany

Women's

K-1

3 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — Austria

K-1 Team

6 consecutive gold medals at ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships — East Germany

Rowing

Men's Coxless Pair

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic GamesSteve Redgrave

Note: gold medalist in Coxless Four at Sydney Olympics

Men's Eights

8 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — United States

Men's Coxless Pair

15 consecutive major titles (World Cups and World Championships) — Eric Murray, Hamish Bond[31]

Women's Eights

9 consecutive world titles (Olympic Games and World Championships) - United States

Sailing

America's Cup

25 Cups — United States

Note: With 132 years, this is the longest winning streak (in years) in sports history.

Olympics

4 consecutive Olympic titles — Ben Ainslie

4 consecutive Olympic titles — Paul Elvstrøm

Bowling

3 consecutive titles at PBA World Championship

Combat sports

Boxing

Professional

87 — Julio César Chávez (light welterweight)[34]

Note: After two more wins Chávez lost to Frankie Randall on 29 January 1994 to end an unbeaten streak of 90 matches.

Longest unbeaten streak[35]

103 — Jimmy Wilde (flyweight)[36]

Note: all fights were in the UK against boxers of the UK. The records for international fights are:

93 — Pedro Carrasco (lightweight)[37]

91 — Sugar Ray Robinson (middleweight)[38]

Olympics

3 consecutive Olympic gold medals

7 consecutive Olympic heavyweight titles — Cuba

Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles and Seoul Olympics

World Championship

6 consecutive heavyweight World ChampionshipsFélix Savón

Note: winner of 3 consecutive Olympic gold medals (1992–2000)

Judo

6 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsRyoko Tani

Mixed Martial Arts

Men's

31 fights

Women's

22 fights — Megumi Fujii

Longest unbeaten streak

37 fights (36 wins, 1 no contest) — Igor Vovchanchyn

Professional wrestling

Since matches have predetermined outcomes, winning streaks in professional wrestling are orchestrated by the wrestling organizations.[39]

World Championship Wrestling

Singles Matches

"173 consecutive matches" — Bill Goldberg[40][41]

Note: While the tally of 173 matches was listed by World Championship Wrestling as the legitimate total, it is fictitious number. WCW inflated the win count to make Goldberg look more dominant.[42][43]

World Wrestling Entertainment

Singles Matches at WrestleMania

21 consecutive matches — The Undertaker, (known as The Streak)

Note: Included 1 win via disqualification (1993).[44]

Wrestling

Olympics

Men's Freestyle

3 consecutive Olympics titles (tie)

187 consecutive matches including 1964 Tokyo OlympicsOsamu Watanabe

Note: The only modern Olympian to go unbeaten throughout his entire career.

6 consecutive Men's heavyweight Olympic titles — USSR

Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics

Men's Greco-Roman

13 years including 3 consecutive Olympics titles (1988–1996) — Alexander Karelin

6 consecutive Men's heavyweight Olympic titles — USSR

Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics

World Championships

Men's Freestyle

6 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsSergey Beloglazov

19 consecutive team titles at World Championships — USSR

Men's Greco-Roman

9 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsAlexander Karelin

Note: winner of 3 consecutive Olympic gold medals (1988–1996)

21 consecutive team titles at World Championships — USSR and Russia

Women's Freestyle

6 consecutive team titles at World Championships — Japan

College (USA)

159 matches — Cael Sanderson, Iowa State

Note: never lost a single NCAA match in entire collegiate career (1998–2002)

High school (USA)

459 consecutive matches — Brandon High School, Brandon, Florida[45][46]

Sumo

69 matches — Futabayama Sadaji

Cue sports

English billiards

IBSF World Billiards Championship

Timed

3 consecutive titles — Pankaj Advani

3 consecutive titles — India

Points

3 consecutive titles — Bob Marshall

5 consecutive titles — India

World Billiards Championship

4 consecutive titles

31 consecutive titles — England

Pool

WEPF Eight-ball Pool World Championship

13 consecutive titles — England

VIPA League 9 Consecutive wins - Liam Gallagher (also ended the streak of 12 by Andrew Akesson)

WPA World Nine-ball Championship

Men's

3 consecutive titles — United States

Women's

3 consecutive titles — Allison Fisher

3 consecutive titles

Snooker

15 consecutive titles at World Snooker ChampionshipJoe Davis

15 consecutive titles at World Snooker Championship — England

Three-cushion billiards

UMB World Three-cushion Championship

11 consecutive titles — Raymond Ceulemans

11 consecutive titles at — Belgium

CEB European Three-cushion Championship

11 consecutive titles — Raymond Ceulemans

22 consecutive titles at — Belgium

Cycling

Men's

5 consecutive Tour de FranceMiguel Indurain

(Note: The streak of 7 consecutive Tour de France earned by Lance Armstrong was stripped from him due to a positive test for doping, and the respective titles remain vacant to date)

Women's

5 consecutive Women's sprint world championshipsFélicia Ballanger

Note: winner of 3 Olympic gold medals in cycling

15 consecutive Women's sprint world championships — Soviet Union

Darts

Men's

8 consecutive titles at PDC World Darts ChampionshipPhil Taylor

9 consecutive titles at PDC World Darts Championship — England

3 consecutive titles at BDO World Darts ChampionshipEric Bristow

6 consecutive titles at BDO World Darts Championship — England

Women's

7 consecutive titles at BDO World Darts ChampionshipTrina Gulliver

7 consecutive titles at BDO World Darts Championship — England

Equine sports

Dressage

7 consecutive Olympic Team titles — Germany

9 consecutive World Championships — Germany

Horse racing

By a racehorse

56 races — Camarero[47]

By a jockey

12 races — Gordon Richards

Show jumping

Individual

3 consecutive titles at Show Jumping World Championships — West Germany

Fencing

Women's Foil

3 consecutive Olympic titles — Valentina Vezzali

Football

Association football

International

20 FIFA World Cup appearances — Brazil

Note: Brazil is the only national football team to have played in every World Cup.[48]


15 consecutive FIFA World Cup second round qualifications — Germany


15 competitive games (without friendlies) — Germany


15 games — Spain[49]

Note: Spain (7 February 2007 – 24 June 2009) also shares with Brazil (16 December 1993 – 21 January 1996) the unbeaten record of 35 games. Brazil's loss at the 1996 CONCACAF Gold Cup was by the under-23 (Olympic) team, but is officially counted as a loss of the national team.[50] Otherwise the Brazil national team wouldn't lose until 30 May 1997 (2:4 vs Norway), thus extending it to 45 games.

July 22, 1995 was the 1995 Copa América Final[51] and the 27th match of their Unbeaten streak, even though Brazil lost the Final and thus the Match on Penalties, the Official record only counts it as a Draw since in normal time it finished at 1-1.

National leagues

Czechoslovak First League precursor

51 games — 1920–1923 AC Sparta Prague[52][53]

Jordan League

32 games — 2001–2003 Al-Faisaly[54][55]

Portuguese Liga

29 games — 1971–1973 S.L. Benfica[53]

Croatian League

28 games — 2007–2008 Dinamo Zagreb[53]

Scottish Premier League

25 games — 2003–2004 Celtic F.C.[53]

Ukrainian Premier League

24 games — 2012 F.C. Shakhtar Donetsk[56]

Swedish League (Allsvenskan)

23 games — 1949-1950 Malmö FF (part of 49 games unbeaten streak)[57]

Eredivisie

22 games — 1987–1988 PSV Eindhoven[53]

Fußball-Bundesliga

19 games — 2013–2014 Bayern Munich[58]

Serie A

17 games — 2006–2007 F.C. Internazionale Milano[53]

La Liga

16 games — 2010–2011 F.C. Barcelona[59]

Chilean Primera División

16 games — 1963–1964 Club Universidad de Chile

Major League Soccer

15 games — Los Angeles Galaxy[60]

Note: This streak was achieved when MLS used a shootout rule to eliminate tie games. Only one of those wins was achieved through a shootout. After the 1999 season, MLS abolished the shootout in favor of the international model of letting regular-season ties stand.

Premier League

14 games — Arsenal F.C.[53]

Campeonato Brasileiro Série A

12 games — 1978–1978 Guarani[61]

I-League

12 games — 2015-2015 Mohun Bagan A.C.[62]

A-League

10 games — Western Sydney Wanderers[63]

Unbeaten streaks

The three longest undefeated streaks in domestic top level leagues are:[64]

Note: Steaua București played 16 domestic cup games during the streak, of which only the first was lost. Overall, after a cup loss to Dinamo Bucuresti on 25 June 1986 to their league loss on 9 September 1989 to Dinamo, Steaua was undefeated in 119 consecutive domestic games.[65]


Australian rules football

VFA/VFL

49 wins — 1914-19 North Melbourne

WAFL

35 wins — 1945-47 East Fremantle

SANFL

30 wins — 1913-15 Port Adelaide

VFL/AFL

23 wins — 1952-53 Geelong

Gridiron football

American football

National Football League
Consecutive games won (regular season and playoffs)

21 games — New England Patriots

Consecutive regular season games won

23 games — Indianapolis Colts

Consecutive home games won (regular season and playoffs)

29 games — Green Bay Packers

Consecutive regular season home games won

25 games — Green Bay Packers

Consecutive non-home games won (regular season, playoffs, and Super Bowls)

21 games — San Francisco 49ers

Consecutive road games won (regular season and playoffs)

19 games — San Francisco 49ers

Consecutive regular season road games won

18 games — San Francisco 49ers

College football

Pre-NCAA 37 games — Yale Bulldogs [66]

Note: Prior to the formation of the NCAA collegiate teams played against a variety of amateur teams including local athletic clubs, YMCAs, and Indian schools as well as other colleges. Those victories are included in the win tally.

NCAA Division I

47 games — Oklahoma Sooners [67]

Longest unbeaten streak

64 games (60–0–4) — Washington Huskies[68]

NCAA Division II

40 games — Grand Valley State Lakers

Note: This streak includes playoff games.

NCAA Division III

55 games — Mount Union Purple Raiders

Note: This streak includes playoff games. Mount Union also holds the record for most consecutive regular season victories, winning 110 games between 1994–2005.

Special Note: Linfield College holds the NCAA all-divisions record of 60 consecutive winning seasons, which began in 1956 and continues to this day.

Canadian football

Canadian Football League

22 games — Calgary Stampeders

Note: The streak only includes the regular season. It was also achieved back when the Stampeders played in the Western Interprovincial Football Union, which later became the Canadian Football League West Division. The CFL was not formally founded until 1958, although the records of the WIFU and the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union in Eastern Canada (forerunner to the Canadian Football League East Division) were incorporated into the league.

Canadian Interuniversity Sport football

21 games McMaster Marauders[70]

Note: The streak also includes playoff games.

IFAF World Championship

Consecutive Games Won

11 games — United States

Note: This streak is still active.

Consecutive Titles Won

3 Titles — United States (2007, 2011, 2015)

Indoor American football

Arena Football League

13 wins — Jacksonville Sharks[72]

AF2

24 wins — Quad City Steamwheelers

American Indoor Football Association

Consecutive Games Won (Regular Season and Playoffs)

16 wins — Baltimore Mariners

Note: The streak ended during the 2010 off-season (team folded)

Consecutive Regular Season Games Won

15 wins — Baltimore Mariners

Note: The streak ended during the 2010 off-season (team folded)

United Indoor Football

40 games — Sioux Falls Storm

Rugby league

Representative

Club

Rugby union

Test matches

All nations

24 matches — Cyprus[73]

"Tier 1" nations

17 matches[73]

Home test matches

38 consecutive matches - New Zealand

Gaelic games

All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship

21 games — Kilkenny

Golf

Men's Major Championships

4 consecutive wins — Tiger Woods

In 1930, Bobby Jones won the 4 major championships that he, as an amateur, was eligible to enter - the U.S. Open, the Open Championship, the British Amateur Championship and the U.S. Amateur Championship.

Woods won what is often designated an official Non-Calendar Year Grand Slam, holding all major championship trophies at one time, but not in the same year.

PGA Tour

11 wins — 1945 Byron Nelson

LPGA Tour

5 wins

1978 — Nancy Lopez

2004-2005 — Annika Sörenstam

Gymnastics

Men

5 consecutive Men's Team all-around titles at Olympic Games — Japan

Women

10 consecutive Women's Team all-around titles at Olympic Games — Soviet Union and Unified Team

Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics

Handball

Women's Team

3 consecutive titles at World Women's Handball Championship

Hockey

Ice hockey

Olympics

Men's

4 consecutive gold medals

Women's

4 consecutive gold medals — Canada

World Championships

9 consecutive World Championships — Soviet Union

National Hockey League

Longest Winning Streak by a Team 17 games — Pittsburgh Penguins

Note: This 6-6 tie ended the regular season. Pittsburgh won an additional three games to start the 1993 playoffs before losing for the first time in 21 games on April 25, 1993 to New Jersey, 1–4.

Longest Winning Streak By a Goaltender 17 games — Gilles Gilbert, Boston Bruins[76]

Longest Unbeaten Streak by a Team 35 Games — Philadelphia Flyers

Note: The 35-game stretch included 10 ties.

Canadian Hockey League

Longest Winning Streak 25 games (tie):

- Kitchener Rangers (Ontario Hockey League)[77]

- Sorel Éperviers (Quebec Major Junior Hockey League)[77]

Longest Undefeated Streak 31 games — London Knights (Ontario Hockey League)[78]

Note: The 31-game stretch included 2 ties.

American Hockey League

Consecutive Regular Season Games Won 32 games — Norfolk Admirals

Consecutive Games Won (Regular Season and Playoffs) 29 games — Norfolk Admirals[79]

(Note: The Norfolk Admirals franchise had their affiliation agreement with the Tampa Bay Lightning end after the 2011-12 AHL season,[80] losing its entire roster of players in the process. It began a new affiliation with the Anaheim Ducks[81] and the active 28-game streak carried over into the 2012-13 season despite the change)

NCAA Women's Ice Hockey

62 games — Minnesota Golden Gophers

NCAA Men's Ice Hockey

43 games — Bemidji State University

Federal Hockey League

21 games — New York Aviators

Austrian Hockey League

17 games — EC KAC[83]

Elite Ice Hockey League

22 games — Cardiff Devils

British Columbia Hockey League

42 games — Penticton Vees

Roller Hockey

Championship A

5 consecutive gold medals at FIRS Roller Hockey World Cup — Spain

Portuguese Primeira Divisão

10 consecutive Portuguese championships - Futebol Clube do Porto

Air Hockey

9 consecutive world championships — Tim Weissman

30 consecutive world championships — United States

Lacrosse

College (United States)

Pre-NCAA - Men

45 games — Navy

NCAA Division I - Men

42 games — Cornell

NCAA Division I - Women

43 games — Maryland

NJCAA - Men

105 games -- Onondaga

Men's Collegiate Lacrosse Association

33 games — Sonoma State University

National Lacrosse League

22 games — Buffalo Bandits

World Lacrosse Championship

Men's Lacrosse

38 games — United States [84]

Women's Lacrosse

15 game — United States [85]

Marbles

12 consecutive titles at British and World Marbles Championship — Toucon Terribles

Mind sports

Chess

25 games — Wilhelm Steinitz

Memory

3 consecutive titles at the World Memory Championship

Pentamind

4 consecutive titles at the Mind Sports Olympiad — Demis Hassabis

Racquet sports

Badminton

Men's

Singles

6 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

Doubles

3 consecutive titles at World Championships

Team

5 consecutive titles at the World Team Championships

Women's

Singles

8 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

Doubles

11 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

5 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China

Team

6 consecutive titles at the World Team Championships — China

Racquetball

Men's

137 matches — Kane Waselenchuk[86]

Women's

152 matches, 37 tournaments - Paola Longoria[87]

Squash

555 matches — Jahangir Khan

Note: This is the longest winning streak in sports history (in number of wins).

NB: Heather McKay (Australia) may hold a claim to having the longest winning streak as she went unbeaten for 19 years (1962–1981)

College teams (USA)

252 team meets — Trinity College Bantams Squash Team

Considered the longest winning streak in the history of varsity intercollegiate sports in the United States.[88]

Table Tennis

Men's

Singles

4 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsViktor Barna

6 consecutive titles at World Championships — Hungary

Doubles

10 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

5 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China

Notes: The doubles events were replaced by team events in 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Team

6 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

2 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China

Women's

Singles

6 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsAngelica Rozeanu

7 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China

10 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

Doubles

6 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsMária Mednyánszky and Anna Sipos

13 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

4 consecutive titles at Olympics Games — China

Notes: The doubles events were replaced by team events in 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Team

8 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

2 consecutive titles at Olympic Games — China

Mixed Doubles

11 consecutive titles at World Championships — China

Tennis

Top level amateur

182 matches — Suzanne Lenglen[89]

The withdrawal in the match to Mallory in 1921 ended a 112-match winning streak.

Between 1919 and 1938 Helen Wills Moody amassed a 398–35 match record, including a winning streak of at least 158 matches, during which she did not lose a set.[91]

Most consecutive game wins

25 games - 1993 Sergi Bruguera

Overall consecutive set wins

39 sets - 1980 Björn Borg

Single Tournament set wins

41 sets - Björn Borg, French Open

Overall Consecutive match wins

46 matches — Guillermo Vilas (Open era record)[92] Vilas won his 46 consecutive matches all on clay courts.[92]

Clay courts

81 matches — Rafael Nadal

Grass courts

65 matches — Roger Federer

Hard courts

56 matches — Roger Federer

Indoor courts

66 matches — Ivan Lendl

Women

74 matchesMartina Navratilova

Note: Chris Evert currently holds the record for the longest winning streak on clay courts (125 matches), that is also the longest winning streak on single surface (male or female).

10 consecutive US Open women's doubles titlesMargaret Osborne duPont

Wheelchair

470 matches — Esther Vergeer

Note: The streak ended on February 12, 2013 when Vergeer retired from wheelchair tennis with her winning streak intact.

College (USA)

NCAA Men's Team

137 Matches — University of Miami

(Note: Miami had won 72 consecutive matches prior to the streak and had a 59 match streak before that. Between 1949-1964 Miami won 268 of 270 matches)

Home Winning Streak — Ohio State University

NCAA Women's Team

89 Matches — Stanford University

Rodeo

8 consecutive PRCA World All-Around Champion titles at the National Finals RodeoTrevor Brazile

Volleyball

Beach volleyball

112 match wins, 19 tournament wins — Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh, United States

3 consecutive gold medals at Olympic GamesMisty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh

Indoor Volleyball

Men's

3 consecutive gold medals at FIVB Volleyball World Championship

Women's

3 consecutive gold medals at FIVB Volleyball World Championship — Soviet Union

4 consecutive gold medals at FIVB World Cup — Cuba

3 consecutive gold medals at Summer Olympics — Cuba

College Volleyball (USA)

Division I

109 matches — Penn State women's volleyball

Note: winner of 4 consecutive NCAA championships (2007–2010)

Division II

75 matches — Concordia University, Saint Paul women's volleyball

Note: winner of 6 consecutive NCAA championships (2007–2012)

Weightlifting

Olympics

3 consecutive Olympic gold medals

7 consecutive heavyweight Olympic titles — Soviet Union

Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics

6 consecutive super heavyweight Olympic titles — Soviet Union

Note: excluding boycotted Los Angeles Olympics

World Championships

8 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsVasiliy Alekseyev

Winter Sports

Biathlon

8 consecutive women's relay World Championships — USSR

Curling

Men's Team

6 consecutive gold medals at World Curling Championships — Canada

3 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Canada

Women's Team

4 consecutive gold medals at World Curling Championships — Canada

Figure skating

3 consecutive Olympic gold medals

Ladies

10 consecutive titles at World Figure Skating ChampionshipsSonja Henie

Pairs

10 consecutive titles at World Figure Skating ChampionshipsIrina Rodnina

Note: winner of three consecutive Olympic titles from 1972 to 1980

10 consecutive titles at European Figure Skating ChampionshipsIrina Rodnina

12 consecutive Olympic titles — USSR, Unified Team and Russia

Note: this streak includes a win reduced to a draw after the 2002 Olympics.

14 consecutive titles at World Figure Skating Championships — USSR

17 consecutive titles at European Figure Skating Championships — USSR

Luge

Men's Single

3 consecutive men's singles World Championships — Germany

Women's Team

105 consecutive women's World Cup races — Germany

Women's Single

11 consecutive women's singles World Championships — Germany

Doubles

5 consecutive double's World Championships — East Germany

Mixed Team Relay

10 consecutive mixed team relay World Championships — Germany

Skiing

Alpine skiing

Alpine Skiing Combined
Women's

3 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Austria

Downhill
Women's

11 consecutive wins in FIS World Cup — Annemarie Moser-Pröll, Austria

Giant Slalom
Men's

14 consecutive wins in FIS World Cup — Ingemar Stenmark, Sweden

3 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Austria

Slalom
Men's

4 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Austria

Super-G
Men's

4 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Norway

Women's

3 consecutive gold medals at Winter Olympics — Austria

Freestyle skiing

16 consecutive wins in FIS World Cup moguls skiing (individual and dual moguls) — Hannah Kearney, United States

Speed skating

Long track

53 consecutive 5000 m races — Hjallis Andersen

15 consecutive 10000m World Championships — Netherlands[94]

9 consecutive men's all-round World Championships — Netherlands

4 consecutive men's all-round World ChampionshipsSven Kramer

15 consecutive women's all-round World Championships — Soviet Union

5 consecutive women's all-round World ChampionshipsGunda Niemann-Stirnemann

Short track

5 consecutive titles at World ChampionshipsViktor Ahn

83 consecutive world cup, world championship, and Olympic 500 m races — Wang Meng

Note: Wang Meng also has the longest Short Track Speed Skating World Cup winning streak with six wins on the 500 m between 2005 and 2010

See also

References

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  4. The estimate ranges from 140 (Guinness Book of records before 1990) to 150 (same publication after that). She herself mentions a 142 competition streak.
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  94. The Netherlands also won 12 of the 15 silver medals over this period
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