World Cup Wins, Olympic Gold, and Simone Biles: 16 Iconic Women's Sports Moments From the 2010s

For all of us who love women's sports, the 2010s were quite the decade. Records were broken and historical victories were clinched, and not all of them on the field of play. Over the past few years, a wave of female athletes have begun pushing for equal pay, for the flexibility to have children without losing sponsorship money, and for freedom from damaging body expectations and harmful coaching practices. The world is paying close attention to women's sports and the athletes are backing up their off-the-field activism with performances that will go down in history.

We took on the challenge of narrowing down every incredible game, match, event, and competition to the 16 most iconic, based on their impact on women's sports, on sports more generally, and on their staying power in our collective imagination. Take a look, let us know which ones we missed, and get excited: in our professional opinion, the 2020s are going to be even better.

2010: Lindsey Vonn Sets a Legacy at the Vancouver Olympics
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2010: Lindsey Vonn Sets a Legacy at the Vancouver Olympics

Lindsey Vonn is widely regarded one of the best skiers in history, but it wasn't until 2010 that her status shot to Olympic proportions. She won gold in the downhill, becoming the first American woman to do so, and went on to dominate the women's skiing circuit for the rest of the decade. She retired this year with 82 World Cup victories to her name, the most of any female Alpine skier.

2011: Japan's World Cup Victory Brings Hope to Their Country
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2011: Japan's World Cup Victory Brings Hope to Their Country

In 2011, the Japanese women's soccer team became the first Asian team of any gender to win a World Cup. And their victory, over a heavily favored US team, wasn't just historical. Earlier that year, the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami wreaked havoc in northeastern Japan, causing over 15,000 deaths and a meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant. Japan's groundbreaking victory on one of sport's largest stages came at the right time, for a country that sorely needed its message of hope and perseverance over adversity.

2012: Katie Ledecky's Breakout Olympic Gold
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2012: Katie Ledecky's Breakout Olympic Gold

Back in 2012, Katie Ledecky was a 15-year-old high schooler, the baby of the US Olympic swim team, and an athlete full of untried potential. Upsetting the field in the 800-meter freestyle and obliterating a world record ensured that none of her opponents would underestimate her again. Since that breakout performance, Katie has gone on to win six Olympic medals (so far) and 15 world titles, and has cemented herself as the undeniable, practically unbeatable superstar of swimming.

2012: Missy Franklin Puts on a Show at the London Olympics
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2012: Missy Franklin Puts on a Show at the London Olympics

Before Katie Ledecky, before Simone Manuel, there was Missy Franklin, whose record-smashing performances and vibrant personality made her one of the faces of Team USA at the 2012 Olympic Games. She captured four golds and a bronze, sweeping the women's backstroke competition in the process. Her 11 world-championship medals set a record for female swimmers surpassed only by Katie Ledecky. Though chronic shoulder pain cut her career short in 2018, Missy's Olympic performance heralded a new era of dominant female swimmers for Team USA.

2012: Kerri Walsh-Jennings and Misty May-Treanor's Historic Three-Peat
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2012: Kerri Walsh-Jennings and Misty May-Treanor's Historic Three-Peat

From 2004 to 2012, the dream duo of Kerri Walsh-Jennings and Misty May-Treanor owned beach volleyball. In their first two Olympic tournaments, they took gold without ever dropping a set. In 2012, after a few years away from each other (Kerri gave birth to two children and Misty dealt with injuries), they entered their final Olympics as underdogs and fought their way to one last gold, becoming the only beach volleyball team with three straight Olympic titles and cementing their status as icons of the sport.

2014: Danica Patrick's Daytona 500 Makes History
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2014: Danica Patrick's Daytona 500 Makes History

Danica Patrick shot to fame in 2005 after her Indianapolis 500 debut; in 2009, she secured the best-ever finish by a woman in that race, placing third. Danica secured her legacy in the 2010s. She expanded into stock-car racing and, in 2014, placed eighth at the prestigious Daytona 500, another best-ever finish by a female driver on that course. She retired in 2018, leaving the sport with a slew of broken records, a burnished legacy, and a shattered glass ceiling.

2016: Simone Manuel Makes Swimming History
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2016: Simone Manuel Makes Swimming History

With a come-from-behind victory in the 100m freestyle, Simone Manuel became the first African American woman to win an individual gold in Olympic swimming. It was a groundbreaking achievement that established Simone as one of the best swimmers in the world (she's gone on to claim 11 world-championship medals), an athlete pushing for inclusivity and breaking down the expectations of who a swimmer can be.

2016: Simone Biles Takes Over the World in Rio
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2016: Simone Biles Takes Over the World in Rio

We might as well call this the Decade of Simone Biles. In the years since her showstopping performance in Rio, where she won five medals, Simone has been practically unbeatable in international gymnastics. She essentially owns her own record book at this point and already has four flips named after her.

But as for her most iconic moment? We have to go with her performance in the team and all-around finals in Rio, back in 2016. Already heralded as one of the best gymnasts of all time, Simone was competing under intense pressure and scrutiny. She still managed to blow every expectation out of the water, cementing her status as the undeniable GOAT of gymnastics.

2016: US Women's Basketball Continue an Unprecedented Streak
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2016: US Women's Basketball Continue an Unprecedented Streak

The US women's basketball team is all but unstoppable. In 2016, they bagged their sixth consecutive Olympic gold medal, an achievement never before seen in women's team sports. They haven't relinquished the Olympic title since 1996, winning gold eight times since the sport's inclusion in 1976. If Team USA wins again in 2020, they'll equal the record set by the men's basketball team from 1936 to 1968: seven gold medals in a row.

2017: Serena Williams Sets an Open Era Record
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2017: Serena Williams Sets an Open Era Record

With her 2017 victory at the Australian Open, Serena Williams surpassed Steffi Graf to claim the most Open Era Grand Slam wins with an incredible 23. (She's still one win behind Margaret Court, who owns the overall record.) Serena's impact on the game and on women's sports as a whole is hard to exaggerate: her powerful playing style has revolutionized tennis, while her matter-of-fact (and well-deserved) confidence in her ability has urged other female athletes to follow in her footsteps. According to Forbes, she's currently the highest-paid female athlete in the world.

2018: Chloe Kim Flies High in Pyeongchang
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2018: Chloe Kim Flies High in Pyeongchang

Chloe Kim had already secured a gold medal in halfpipe when she dropped in for her final Olympic run in 2018. But instead of a low-key victory lap, Chloe took aim at history. She flew into back-to-back 1080 flips, the first time that difficult combination had been landed at the Olympics. The run, scored less than two points shy of a perfect 100, was vivid proof that Chloe's progressive, rule-breaking style was already pushing the sport to the next level. Chloe's currently taking a temporary break from snowboarding to attend Princeton University, but we suspect we'll see carving up a halfpipe by the time the 2022 Olympics roll around.

2018: US Women's Ice Hockey Breaks a 20-Year Curse
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2018: US Women's Ice Hockey Breaks a 20-Year Curse

Twenty years: that's how long it had been since the US women's ice hockey team won gold when they headed for the Olympics in 2018. In the final that year, the team would meet its bitter rivals, Canada, who'd won an unprecedented four gold medals and handed the US the silver in three of those games. The final was electrifying, ending in a nail-biting shootout with the US securing the gold for the first time since 1998. It gave the players the momentum they needed to begin pushing for higher pay in their professional league.

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2018: Des Linden Wins a Stormy Boston Marathon

No American woman had won the Boston Marathon for 33 years until Des Linden crossed the finish line in 2018. It was a feat of endurance and willpower in awful conditions: sheets of freezing rain blasted the runners and the crowd, elite runners dropped out left and right, and Des broke the tape still wearing her soaked windbreaker and mittens. But the weather only made it that much more iconic, a historical finish for Des and a sign of things to come in the growing field of elite American female runners.

2018: Naomi Osaka Breaks Through in Women's Tennis
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2018: Naomi Osaka Breaks Through in Women's Tennis

Naomi Osaka's defeat of Serena Williams in the 2018 US Open initially made headlines for Serena's controversial rule violations. Over a year later, though, Naomi's first Grand Slam win is remembered as it should be: a signature victory for a fast-rising star. The US Open win marked Naomi's first Grand Slam victory and the first by a Japanese woman. Since then, she's become the second-highest-paid female athlete in the world (behind Serena). On the cusp of the Tokyo Olympics next year, Naomi seems poised to make the 2020's her decade.

2019: Katelyn Ohashi Becomes a Force of Love in NCAA Gymnastics
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2019: Katelyn Ohashi Becomes a Force of Love in NCAA Gymnastics

Katelyn Ohashi stole our hearts with a Michael Jackson-themed floor routine that went viral in 2018. When the UCLA gymnast took the floor for her senior season in 2019, it was with a whole new arsenal of jaw-dropping flips and the same jubilant enthusiasm we fell in love with. Obviously a few perfect 10s followed, but what really landed Katelyn on this list was how she harnessed her talent and influence to become a voice for body positivity and self-love in gymnastics and in women's sports as a whole.

2019: US Women's Soccer Wins the World Cup — and Starts a Global Conversation
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2019: US Women's Soccer Wins the World Cup — and Starts a Global Conversation

The US women's national team entered the 2019 World Cup already mired in a lawsuit against US Soccer, alleging gender discrimination. As the competition wore on, the team faced accusations of arrogance and criticism of their political stances. They managed to ignore the noise, win every game, and leave the tournament with a fourth World Cup trophy and a fourth star on their crest, becoming icons not only of the sport, but in the broader fight for gender equality.