Greatest Comebacks In Sports History
Biggest Comebacks In Sports History
Jayson Tatum's return to the court was just one of many examples of athletes fighting back from insane injuries.
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- Tatum's return from Achilles tear in under a year stuns the league, reviving Celtics' title hopes. The greatest comebacks in sports history like Tiger Woods' Masters win and Adrian Peterson's MVP season defy medical expectations.

Sports will always have us on an emotional rollercoaster. One minute you’re celebrating a game-winner, the next you’re watching a superstar go down and the whole vibe changes instantly. That’s especially true when the injury looks gruesome, because in those moments, fans aren’t even thinking about standings or stat lines anymore — they’re just hoping the player can make a comeback and get back to being themselves. That’s a big part of why Jayson Tatum’s return has hit so hard around the league. Tatum ruptured his right Achilles late in the fourth quarter of Boston’s Game 4 playoff loss to the Knicks on May 12, 2025, then underwent surgery the next day.

Fast forward to Friday, March 6, 2026, and Tatum was back in uniform for his season debut against Dallas after just 298 days away. That alone was enough to make folks do a double take, because Achilles injuries are still viewed as one of the nastiest setbacks a basketball player can suffer. He didn’t just pop out for a ceremonial cameo either. Tatum put up 15 points, 12 rebounds, and seven assists in Boston’s 120-100 win over the Mavericks, reminding everybody real quick that’s he still one of the toughest forwards in the game.
Then Boston turned right around and beat Cleveland 109-98 on Sunday, with Tatum scoring 20 points in his first road game back. That pushed the Celtics to 43-21, good for second in the Eastern Conference as of March 9, and it only added more juice to the conversation around what his return means for the playoff picture. Boston was already dangerous without him, but getting Tatum back this early makes the East feel a lot less settled and title race a lot more complicated for everybody else.
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And that’s why the reaction has been so loud. Tatum said he felt a real sense of gratitude just being back on the floor, while analysts around the game have described the speed of his comeback as genuinely shocking. Around the league, the feeling seems to be a mix of respect, disbelief, and a little fear, because a healthy Celtics team with Tatum back in the fold is the kind of development that can change how folks look at the East and the FInals race altogether. That kind of perseverance always lands with fans, because people love seeing an athlete fight through the worst and come back looking like themselves again.

So with Tatum making this kind of return from an Achilles tear, it got us thinking about the other athletes who came back from injuries that looked career-ending, life-changing, or flat-out impossible to overcome. Some returned to win championships. Some came back and reached an even higher level. But all of them reminded us why sports fans can never fully count out somebody with elite talent, crazy discipline, and a refusal to stay down.
THE BIGGEST INJURY COMEBACKS IN SPORTS HISTORY
Alex Smith

Alex Smith’s comeback is still one of the wildest things an athlete has ever pulled off. After suffering a devastating compound leg fracture in 2018, he went through 17 surgeries and eventually made it all the way back to an NFL field. Smith didn’t just return for a feel good snap, either — he helped Washington win the NFC East and was named the AP Comeback Player of the Year. When you consider that there were real fears he might lose his leg, his return feels almost unreal.
Monica Seles

Monica Seles wasn’t dealing with a routine sports injury — she was stabbed on court in 1993 during a match in Hamburg, a traumatic attack that took her away from tennis for more than two years. A lot of careers would’ve been emotionally shattered by something like that, but Seles fought back and eventually won the 1996 Australian Open. That title became the ultimate proof that her game, grit, and champion mindset were still there. It remains one of the most heartbreaking and inspiring comeback stories tennis has ever seen.
Bethany Hamilton

Bethany Hamilton lost her left arm in a shark attack at just 13 years old, which by itself sounds like the end of a surfing career before it really even starts. Instead, she got back in the water less than a month later and eventually returned to professional surfing. That’s what makes her story so powerful: it wasn’t just about survival, it was about adapting, competing, and still chasing greatness in a sport that seems impossible to do at a high level with one arm. Her comeback is bigger than sports at this point — it’s straight up legendary.
Tiger Woods

Tiger Woods has had multiple comeback chapters, but the 2019 Masters sits at the top of the mountain. After years of back problems and spinal fusion surgery, there were serious questions about whether he’d ever compete at the highest level again. Instead, he completed one of the coldest returns to glory ever by winning the Masters for his 15th major. Watching Tiger put the green jacket back on after everything his body had been through was the kind of sports moment that will hit way beyond golf fans.
Adrian Peterson

Adrian Peterson tore both his ACL and MCL late in the 2011 season, which for most running backs would’ve meant a long recovery and probably a step back once they returned. Peterson said forget all that. He came back for the 2012 season, rushed for 2,097 yards, and won NFL MVP after nearly breaking Eric Dickerson’s single-season rushing record. Coming back from that kind of knee injury and immediately turning into the best non-quarterback in football is flat-out absurd.
Peyton Manning

There was a real stretch where people wondered whether Peyton Manning would ever be able to throw the same way again after multiple neck surgeries cost him the entire 2011 season. Then he came back with the Broncos, made it to another Pro Bowl, and kept stacking wins until he ended his career with a Super Bowl title in Denver. Even if he wasn’t the exact same player physically, the fact that he rebuilt himself into a championship quarterback again after that kind of neck issue is major. It’s one of the best examples of a superstar adjusting and still finishing on top.
Shaun Livingston

Shaun Livingston’s knee injury in 2007 was so horrific that his whole basketball future felt gone in an instant. He damaged just about everything in the knee, and reports later revealed there had even been concern about amputation. Instead of disappearing, Livingston slowly rebuilt his career, reinvented his game, and eventually became a key piece on three Golden State championship teams. He may not have returned as the high-flying phenom people once imagined, but turning that injury into a long, winning NBA career is still one of basketball’s great survival stories.
Teddy Bridgewater

Teddy Bridgewater’s 2016 knee injury was terrifying. He suffered a dislocated knee, torn ACL, and other structural damage in a non-contact practice injury, and later reporting described a shattered kneecap with his leg barely being held together. To make it back to the NFL after that was impressive enough, but Bridgewater eventually returned as a starter and kept carving out a real career. His comeback may not get talked abut as much as some others, but the severity of that injury makes it one of the toughest returns we’ve seen in football.
Paul George

When Paul George suffered that gruesome broken leg during a Team USA scrimmage in 2014, it felt like the kind of injury that could permanently alter an explosive wing player’s career. Instead, he worked his way back, returned to All-Star form, and even made it back onto Team USA for the Rio Olympics. That’s what makes his comeback so tough — he didn’t just return to being functional he returned to being elite. For a player whose game depended so much on burst, movement, and confidence, that recovery deserves a lot more love.
Ben Hogan

Ben Hogan’s comeback is old school, but it absolutely belongs in any conversation like this. He survived a near-fatal car crash in 1949 that left doctors unsure whether he’d even walk again, then came ack 16 months later and won the 1950 U.S. Open. That’s not just a comeback — that’s sports mythology. Hogan’s “Miracle at Merion” still stands as one of the clearest examples of pain tolerance, willpower, and pure greatness beating the odds.
Tatum still has a lot more basketball left to write his own comeback chapter, so it’s way too early to place his story beside the most untouchable returns ever. But the fact that he’s already back, already helping Boston stack wins, and already making the East feel shaky again tells you everything. If nothing else, his return is the latest reminder that some athletes are just built different — and sports fans will always show love to somebody who refuses to let a brutal injury be the final word.
Biggest Comebacks In Sports History was originally published on cassiuslife.com