The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

1. Year in review:

Ten unforgetta­ble moments from the year in sports.

- By Tim Reynolds

Take a look back at 10 of the top sports moments of 2017, capped by Julian Edelman’s heartbreak­er against the Falcons in the Super Bowl.

Some were championsh­ip-defining events. Others capped upsets. One just seemed to defy the laws of physics.

Sports are moments, and there were many in 2017 that will not be forgotten.

Whether it was a human being jumping over another human being, a ridiculous kick return that will be remembered for not actually getting into the end zone, a shot that ended an epic winning streak or a diving grab that punctuated a Super Bowl comeback for all time, this year was filled with plays that are likely forever etched on those who got to see them.

Here are the sports plays of the year:

10. No sliding required

Toronto’s Chris Coghlan had three options: Go through St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina, go around him or go over him. He smartly chose the last one. Coghlan was trying to score on Kevin Pillar’s triple. St. Louis right fielder Stephen Piscotty’s throw to the plate was a few feet up the third-base line, putting Molina right in Coghlan’s path. Coghlan went airborne, flipped over Molina, somehow landed on the plate and the Blue Jays took a 3-2 lead.

9. Short-handed season-saver

Julia Duquette’s only goal of her senior season at Plattsburg­h State in upstate New York is one she’ll never forget. Duquette’s shorthande­d goal with 20.7 seconds left in regulation pulled the Cardinals into a tie with Adrian in the NCAA Division III women’s hockey final — and Plattsburg­h would go on to win it in overtime for its fourth consecutiv­e national championsh­ip.

8. A Preakness upset

Always Dreaming and Classic Empire were the favorites going into the Preakness Stakes, the middle leg of the Triple Crown, and those two dueled most of the way — until Cloud Computing decided it was time to beat them both. Cloud Computing, trained by Chad Brown and ridden by Javier Castellano, stole the race in the last half-dozen strides and paid $28.80 on $2 win bets to its backers.

7. Waiters strikes the pose

Dion Waiters was in no hurry. He knew exactly what he was going to do. After Kevin Durant’s dunk pulled Golden State into a 102-102 tie with Miami with 11.7 seconds left, Waiters took the inbounds pass, coolly brought the ball upcourt,

made a move on Klay Thompson and delivered a straightaw­ay 3-pointer that gave the Heat a win — punctuated by his striking an arms-folded pose afterward, one that quickly became part of Heat lore.

6. Cole Mericle’s miracle

Cole Mericle kicked what became the winning field goal for Lima Senior High in Ohio with 3 seconds left, but no one will remember that part of his team’s 25-24 victory over St. Francis de Sales. Mericle’s ensuing kickoff turned into a five-lateral return, one where St. Francis got the ball down to the Lima 2 — but the ball carrier stumbled a bit on the turf, Mericle ran him down in the nick of time and Lima escaped.

5. Clemson’s title hunter

Hunter Renfrow, a former walk-on, made the catch with 1 second left that gave Clemson a win over Alabama in the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game. The 2-yard scoring toss from Deshaun Watson gave the Tigers a 35-31 win over the Crimson Tide, in a championsh­ip rematch where the sequel was just as good as the original.

4. Down goes UConn

Morgan William wanted the ball, got it and made history. William’s jumper with no time remaining in overtime lifted Mississipp­i State to a 66-64 win over Connecticu­t

in the national semifinals, ending the Huskies’ 111game winning streak. Mississipp­i State led by as many as 16 points, then found itself trailing by three late before William delivered the dagger. “I live for moments like this, “she said.

3. Sloane’s U.S. Open

It’s hard to pick one play that stood out for Sloane Stephens in her ride to the U.S. Open title this summer, but this 25-stroke point might have been the gem. Stephens was serving down 4-5, 30-30 in the third set to Venus Williams in the semifinals, and needed a backhand winner down the line to help her eventually hold. Had that shot missed, she would have faced match point. Instead, Stephens went on to capture the title.

2. Spieth from the sand

Here’s how you win a playoff: Hole out from 60 feet from the sand. Jordan Spieth hit plenty of stellar shots in 2017, none of them probably more memorable than his bunker shot in a playoff to beat Daniel Berger and win the Travelers Championsh­ip. Berger had a 50-foot putt that just missed after Spieth’s dramatic moment — and tipped his cap afterward. “Jordan does Jordan things, “Berger said. “So there’s not really much you can say.”

1. Edelman’s Super catch

Down by eight points with

about two minutes left in the Super Bowl, the New England Patriots needed all the heroics they could get — and Julian Edelman delivered. His diving, juggling catch of a Tom Brady pass that almost got intercepte­d was perhaps the biggest moment in the Patriots’ stirring rally from being down 28-3 and beating Atlanta in overtime for their fifth Vince Lombardi Trophy.

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 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY / AP ?? Patriots receiver Julian Edelman makes a miraculous catch fighting off Ricardo Allen and Keanu Neal to turn what looked like an intercepti­on into a reception that helped New England rally to win the Super Bowl over the Falcons.
PATRICK SEMANSKY / AP Patriots receiver Julian Edelman makes a miraculous catch fighting off Ricardo Allen and Keanu Neal to turn what looked like an intercepti­on into a reception that helped New England rally to win the Super Bowl over the Falcons.
 ?? BRAD HORRIGAN / HARTFORD COURANT ?? Jordan Spieth celebrates with caddie Michael Greller after he holed a 60-foot bunker shot to win the Travelers Championsh­ip.
BRAD HORRIGAN / HARTFORD COURANT Jordan Spieth celebrates with caddie Michael Greller after he holed a 60-foot bunker shot to win the Travelers Championsh­ip.
 ?? JEFF ROBERSON / AP ?? The Blue Jays’ Chris Coghlan takes a flying leap over Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina to land on home plate and score for a 3-2 lead.
JEFF ROBERSON / AP The Blue Jays’ Chris Coghlan takes a flying leap over Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina to land on home plate and score for a 3-2 lead.
 ?? SETH WENIG / AP ?? Sloane Stephens fended off Venus Williams to win a point that involved 25 strokes and enabled her to win the semifinal of the U.S. Open.
SETH WENIG / AP Sloane Stephens fended off Venus Williams to win a point that involved 25 strokes and enabled her to win the semifinal of the U.S. Open.

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