Morning Sun

. DEEP WATER (2006) The tragic story of Britain’s Donald Crowhurst, a quixotic weekend sailor who attempted a non-stop, solo race around the world in 1968. The quest quickly went awry, and the prospect of financial ruin led to his descent into deceit and

- Paul Newberry AP Sports Columnist

Sports and cinema have an uneasy alliance.

For every “Raging Bull,” there are an abundance of flicks that get it wrong when they try to recapture a memorable event or famous athlete. Seriously, how does the compelling life of Babe Ruth produce not one, but two of the greatest stinkers in the history of film-making (“The Babe Ruth Story” AND “The Babe”)?

There’s another format that serves the genre far better.

The documentar­y. No wonder three of the last four Academy Awards in this category went to sports-related films.

With that in mind, here are 10 documentar­ies that everyone should see (and 10 others that are definitely worth a look):

. STEVE MCQUEEN: THE

MAN & LE MANS (2015)

Mcqueen was at the height of his career (and an actual racer) when he decided to make the ultimate racing film centered on the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Too bad he didn’t have a script. The King of Cool was never quite the same after his hubris-fueled making of “Le Mans.”

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Pumping Iron (1977). An entertaini­ng look at profession­al bodybuildi­ng propelled Arnold Schwarzene­gger to movie stardom.

. NO NO: A DOCKUMENTA­RY (2014) Dock Ellis was a Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher who wore curlers on the field and always spoke his mind. The title refers to the 1970 no-hitter that Ellis claims to have thrown under the influence of LSD, but the story of this baseball iconoclast runs far deeper.

Hank Aaron: Chasing The Dream (1995). This chroniclin­g of the Hammer’s life as he overcomes racism on the way to breaking baseball’s most revered record was nominated for an Academy Award.

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. MURDERBALL (2005)

If there’s any doubt that Paralympic athletes approach their craft with just as much skill, determinat­ion and even pettiness as their able-bodied counterpar­ts, this film about the battering-ram sport of wheelchair rugby should put that to rest. An Oscar nominee, it lost to “March of the Penguins.”

Next Goal Wins (2014). You can’t help but cheer for the world’s

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worst soccer teams as American Samoa attempts to overcome the legacy of a 31-0loss.

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Maiden (2019). Another excellent sailing film, this one an empowering tale of the first all-female crew to compete in the Whitbread Round the World Race.

. ONE DAY IN SEPTEMBER (1999)

It’s still jarring to watch the much-chronicled bungling that led to one of sport’s darkest days — the killing of 11 Israelis at the 1972 Munich Olympics. The Germans’ naive attempts to negotiate with the Palestinia­n terrorists. The amateurish plans to pull off a rescue. The hopelessly optimistic reports that all had been saved. The first of several Academy Award winners for Best Documentar­y on our list.

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The Two Escobars (2010). Perhaps the best entry in ESPN’S acclaimed “30for 30” documentar­y series looks at drug kingpins fueling the rise of Colombian soccer leading up to the 1994World Cup.

. SENNA (2010)

Ayrton Senna was pure genius behind the wheel of a race car, but this film brilliantl­y captures the true essence of this mercurial Brazilian through archival footage, interviews ad home movies. Most touching is Senna’s softer side, as he frets over the future of a homeland as complicate­d as the man himself.

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Red Army (2014). The rise and fall of the Soviet dynasty that ruled amateur hockey for more than three decades.

. FREE SOLO (2018)

Another Oscar winner, this profile of Alex Honnold’s harrowing climb up El Capitan without ropes or safety equipment (known as a free solo) is a compelling dichotomy — edgeof-the-seat footage and a deeply personal story of a rock climber who seems truly at peace only when he’s clinging to the side of a mountain, dangling between life and death.

The Man Who Skied Down Everest (1975). Japan’s Yuichiro

Miura takes off from the near the top of the world’s tallest peak, after a tragic climb that claimed the lives of six Sherpas. An Oscar winner the

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year before “Rocky” became the first sports-related film to claim the Academy Award for best picture.

. ICARUS (2017)

You never know what you might find. Filmmaker and cycling enthusiast Bryan Fogel wanted to explore ways to get away with doping. He wound up uncovering a major internatio­nal scandal -- the Russian doping scheme at the 2014 Winter Olympics. Fogel rightfully received an Academy Award for this important film, after getting a big assist from whistleblo­wer Grigory Rodchenkov, former head of Russia’s anti-doping laboratory.

Stop at Nothing: The Lance Armstrong Story (2014). This brutally unflatteri­ng portrait of the disgraced cyclist shows how he was willing to crush anyone who got in his way, without the slightest hint of regret.

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. WHEN WE WERE KINGS (1996)

The 1974 heavyweigh­t title fight between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman — the famed “Rumble In The Jungle” — was a cultural milestone that ran far deeper than boxing. It was a chance for African-americans to take pride in their ancestral home, even while acknowledg­ing the highly questionab­le ethics of staging

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