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Quiz about Getting Their Careers In Order
Quiz about Getting Their Careers In Order

Getting Their Careers In Order Quiz


Many awards, many championships, sometimes many teams. Legendary sports figures have tons of milestones to their record. This quiz challenges you to figure out the order of some of the biggest events in the careers of some of sports' biggest stars.

A multiple-choice quiz by d2407. Estimated time: 7 mins.
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Author
d2407
Time
7 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
251,745
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
5 / 10
Plays
388
Awards
Top 35% Quiz
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Bill Parcells was one of the most dominant coaches in NFL history, leading the Dallas Cowboys, New England Patriots, New York Giants, and New York Jets. From earliest to latest, in what order did he coach those teams? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Michael Jordan was of course a basketball legend, winning numerous scoring titles, MVP awards in the regular season and playoffs, and playing on one NCAA champion and six NBA champions. But he also briefly dabbled in professional baseball. At what point in his career did he play minor league baseball? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Billie Jean King won plaudits as an athlete, as a business woman, and a social pioneer. Of the tennis and athletic accomplishments listed below, which occurred latest in her career? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Ted Williams was both a baseball hero and American hero, noted for being the last hitter (of the 20th century) to have a .400 batting average for a season, his two baseball triple crowns, his two MVP awards, and military service in two wars. Which of the following is in correct chronological order, starting from the earliest accomplishment? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. The versatile Deion Sanders played for four MLB teams and five NFL teams during his professional sports career. Which of the following listings of teams he played for is in correct chronological order, based on the first game he played for a team, with the earliest team listed first? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Larry Brown, a basketball coach whose talents were exceeded only by his restlessness, coached several college and pro teams. After leaving Kansas for the NBA, he coached the San Antonio Spurs, Los Angeles Clippers, Philadelphia 76ers, Detroit Pistons, and New York Knicks. This covers almost all of the 18 years from 1988 to 2006 - but not quite. Which other NBA team, coached by Brown during those years, is missing from this list? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Brett Favre led the Green Bay Packers to their first Super Bowl title in 29 years and won three NFL MVP awards and a raftload of other distinctions. His memorable 41-7 victory over the Oakland Raiders, in a game played the day after his beloved father passed away, is just one of his noteworthy achievements. Which of the following is true about that game? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Ken Dryden was everything a hockey goalie could have been, dominating the NHL in 1970s. He won five Vezina Trophies (for being the league's best goalie) in his eight seasons. His NHL recognitions actually began before winning the 1971-72 Calder Trophy as Rookie of the Year. What honor or distinction did he win before being Rookie of the Year? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Cal Ripken became baseball's "Iron Man," playing 3,001 major league games, all with the Baltimore Orioles, and having 2,632 of those come in a streak of consecutive games, breaking Lou Gehrig's venerable record of 2,130 straight games played. Despite having almost 90% of his career be part of that streak, not all of his achievements occurred during that time. Which accomplishment listed below happened either before his streak began, or after it ended? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Tiger Woods joined Bobby Jones as the only golfer to have won 10 majors before turning 30, and has won each major at least twice. What was the first major that he won? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Bill Parcells was one of the most dominant coaches in NFL history, leading the Dallas Cowboys, New England Patriots, New York Giants, and New York Jets. From earliest to latest, in what order did he coach those teams?

Answer: Giants, Patriots, Jets, Cowboys

Bill Parcells reputation has been crafted on taking woeful football teams and turning them around, usually quickly. Coaching the Giants from 1983-1990, he took them to two Super Bowl titles. His Patriots, which he coached from 1993-1996, went to Super Bowl XXXI, where they lost to Green Bay.

The New York Jets, who he coached for three seasons, lost the 1998 AFC title game. Parcells also coached the Dallas Cowboys from 2003-06.
2. Michael Jordan was of course a basketball legend, winning numerous scoring titles, MVP awards in the regular season and playoffs, and playing on one NCAA champion and six NBA champions. But he also briefly dabbled in professional baseball. At what point in his career did he play minor league baseball?

Answer: Between his third and fourth NBA titles with the Chicago Bulls

Before his middling basketball comeback with the Washington Wizards and being fired as a team executive, Michael Jordan's baseball career may have been the biggest chink in his athletic armor. He "retired" from basketball before the 1993/94 season began, citing his decreased passion for the game, and despair over the murder of his father during the summer of 1993 after the Bulls had won their third title. Jordan had been a standout Little League baseball player, and was soon expressing interest in trying his hand at pro ball. Chicago Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf also owned the Chicago White Sox, and engineered Jordan's joining the Birmingham Barons, a AA affiliate of the Sox, for the 1994 season. Jordan batted .202 with three home runs and 114 strikeouts (not surprising, given the big strike zone associated with his tall stature).

It wasn't a horrible effort, but not up to his Jordanesque standards, and it exposed him to his first widespread criticism in the sporting press (Sports Illustrated incurred his wrath by running a cover with a photo of him swinging and missing, with the words "Bag It, Mike"). With the 1995 baseball season in limbo because of the 1994 player strike, and the Chicago Bulls keeping the door open for his return, he quit baseball in March 1995 to return to the NBA, leading the team to league titles in 1996-98, his final three seasons with them.
3. Billie Jean King won plaudits as an athlete, as a business woman, and a social pioneer. Of the tennis and athletic accomplishments listed below, which occurred latest in her career?

Answer: Won her sixth Wimbledon singles title

At the age of 31, King won her sixth and final Wimbledon singles title in 1975. It was one of the 10+ Grand Slam titles she won in each of three categories (singles, doubles, mixed doubles), but that only scratches the surface of her impact on tennis and sports.

She was instrumental in tennis being open to professionals, and then in women's prize money being made equal to that of men. Her 1973 victory over Bobby Riggs in tennis' "Battle of the Sexes" legitimized female athletes in many people's minds, and catapulted tennis to levels of international popularity it had never before seen. World Team Tennis, which she founded in 1974, gave the sport even more exposure.

As Sports Illustrated's 1972 "Sportsman of the Year," an honor she shared with UCLA basketball coach John Wooden, King became the first woman to win that distinction.
4. Ted Williams was both a baseball hero and American hero, noted for being the last hitter (of the 20th century) to have a .400 batting average for a season, his two baseball triple crowns, his two MVP awards, and military service in two wars. Which of the following is in correct chronological order, starting from the earliest accomplishment?

Answer: .400 season, first triple crown, World War II service

The magical 1941 baseball season was highlighted both by Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak and Ted Williams' .406 batting average. Williams followed this by winning the triple crown (titles for batting average, home runs, and RBI) in 1942, and would earn a second triple crown in 1947. Probably because of his contentious relationship with the press corps who voted for MVP, he failed to win the award for those seasons, although he won in 1946 and 1949.

His baseball statistics, though impressive, would have been even bigger if he'd not flown combat missions in both World War II and the Korean War, keeping him out of the Red Sox lineup for more than four full seasons in what would have been the prime of his career. Next to his .406 season, Williams is probably best known for hitting a home run in his final at-bat in 1960.
5. The versatile Deion Sanders played for four MLB teams and five NFL teams during his professional sports career. Which of the following listings of teams he played for is in correct chronological order, based on the first game he played for a team, with the earliest team listed first?

Answer: New York Yankees, Atlanta Falcons, Cincinnati Reds, Dallas Cowboys

"Prime Time" Sanders' baseball career saw him with the New York Yankees from 1989-90, the Atlanta Braves from 1991-93, the Cincinnati Reds from 1994-95 and again in 1997 and 2001, and the 1995 San Francisco Giants. His NFL career began with the Atlanta Falcons from 1989-93.

He then played for the San Francisco 49ers (1994), Dallas Cowboys (1995-99), and Washington Redskins (2000). Sanders came out of retirement in 2004 to play two seasons for the Baltimore Ravens. His football legacy is spectacular, with eight Pro Bowl selections, and his 19 touchdowns returning interceptions and punts were an NFL record at the time of his retirement.

He is also the only person to play in both a Super Bowl and World Series, and on October 11, 1992, he pulled off the amazing feat of playing in both an NFL game and a baseball playoff game.
6. Larry Brown, a basketball coach whose talents were exceeded only by his restlessness, coached several college and pro teams. After leaving Kansas for the NBA, he coached the San Antonio Spurs, Los Angeles Clippers, Philadelphia 76ers, Detroit Pistons, and New York Knicks. This covers almost all of the 18 years from 1988 to 2006 - but not quite. Which other NBA team, coached by Brown during those years, is missing from this list?

Answer: Indiana Pacers

Brown's six seasons (1997-2003) with the Philadelphia 76ers was the longest the nomadic coach spent with any one team during those years. His 1988 Kansas team won the NCAA title, and his Detroit Pistons won the NBA title in 2004, giving him the distinction of coaching teams to championships on both levels.
7. Brett Favre led the Green Bay Packers to their first Super Bowl title in 29 years and won three NFL MVP awards and a raftload of other distinctions. His memorable 41-7 victory over the Oakland Raiders, in a game played the day after his beloved father passed away, is just one of his noteworthy achievements. Which of the following is true about that game?

Answer: He'd quarterbacked the Green Bay Packers to a Super Bowl victory before this happened

The 41-7 victory over the Raiders came on December 22, 2003, a day after his father had suffered a fatal heart attack. Favre threw for 399 yards and four first-half touchdowns in a spectacular effort under the most trying of circumstances. The other events mentioned here happened in 1995 (99 yard TD pass to Robert Brooks), 1997 (Super Bowl victory for the 1996 season, then later 1997 season MVP, his third in a row), and 2002-04 (36 straight games throwing a TD pass).
8. Ken Dryden was everything a hockey goalie could have been, dominating the NHL in 1970s. He won five Vezina Trophies (for being the league's best goalie) in his eight seasons. His NHL recognitions actually began before winning the 1971-72 Calder Trophy as Rookie of the Year. What honor or distinction did he win before being Rookie of the Year?

Answer: 1970-71 playoff MVP

Dryden, a college standout whose Cornell team won the 1967 NCAA title, graduated in 1969 and played minor league hockey before being pressed into service for the Montreal Canadiens late in the 1970-71 season. In the first round of the playoffs that year, he faced the mighty Boston Bruins, the defending Stanley Cup champions who'd had a record-breaking season of team and individual performances. Dryden's Canadiens lost the first game, but took the Bruins in seven to advance.

In the finals, they beat the vaunted Chicago Blackhawks of Bobby Hull and goalie Tony Esposito to win the Cup, with Dryden being named playoff MVP. Because he'd played so few regular season games in 1970-71, he was technically a rookie the following year, and took advantage of that standing to win Rookie of the Year honors.

When Dryden retired in 1979 after just seven full seasons (he sat out the 1973-74 year), his most powerful legacy was that he'd amassed 46 career shutouts while losing just 57 games.
9. Cal Ripken became baseball's "Iron Man," playing 3,001 major league games, all with the Baltimore Orioles, and having 2,632 of those come in a streak of consecutive games, breaking Lou Gehrig's venerable record of 2,130 straight games played. Despite having almost 90% of his career be part of that streak, not all of his achievements occurred during that time. Which accomplishment listed below happened either before his streak began, or after it ended?

Answer: His 3,000th hit

Ripken's streak lasted from May 30, 1982 to September 20, 1998, a period of 2,632 straight games. Besides breaking Lou Gehrig's record in 1995 and being one of the best players in baseball during that time, he was the 1982 American League Rookie of the Year, AL MVP in 1983 and 1991, All Star MVP in 1991 and 2001 (after the streak ended), and his Orioles won the 1983 World Series. Ripken's 3,000th hit came early in the 2000 season.

When he retired after the 2001 season, he had 3,141 hits and 431 home runs, plus a legacy for integrity and hard work that made him universally respected.

He was selected for the Hall of Fame in 2007, amassing the highest percentage of votes ever attained by a position player.
10. Tiger Woods joined Bobby Jones as the only golfer to have won 10 majors before turning 30, and has won each major at least twice. What was the first major that he won?

Answer: The Masters

Less than a year after joining the PGA tour, Tiger Woods won the 1997 Masters by a record 12 strokes, with a record 18 under par performance. At 21, he was also the youngest player to have won the venerable tournament. Another noteworthy achievement for Woods came when he won the 2001 Masters: he was the defending champion in the other three majors and thus the first player in modern golf history to concurrently hold all four major titles.
Source: Author d2407

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor gtho4 before going online.
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