From World Cups in rugby union, women's football, cricket and netball to rarely-seen feats in darts, formula 1 and MMA, the past year has contained thrills and spills to keep any sports fan entertained, regardless of what they are interested in.
GOATs have been crowned, sporting perfection has been achieved and a plethora of prestigious honours and trophies have been hoisted aloft.
Here, Sports Mole takes on the sizeable task of narrowing the last 365 days down to the 100 greatest sporting moments from across the spectrum, based on a ranking system which takes into account prestige, drama, history, newsworthiness, quality and importance.
So sit back and raise a glass to another historic year of sport with the conclusive list of the 100 greatest moments, continuing with numbers 50 to 41.
Top sporting moments of 2023: 100-91
Top sporting moments of 2023: 90-81
Top sporting moments of 2023: 80-71
Top sporting moments of 2023: 70-61
Top sporting moments of 2023: 60-51
50. Texas Rangers win first-ever World Series (November 1)
Few would have predicted a World Series involving the Texas Rangers and the Arizona Diamondbacks this year, but for only the third time in Major League Baseball history, two wildcard teams made it all the way to the end-of-season showpiece.
Both therefore had realistic aspirations of an unlikely title triumph heading into the series, but in the end it was the Texas Rangers who picked up the trophy for the very first time in their 62-year history.
It was fairly straightforward for them too, with a 5-0 win in game five seeing them clinch the best-of-seven series 4-1 and removing them from the list of now five active MLB teams without a World Series crown.
For manager Bruce Bochy it was a fourth World Series title - just the sixth person to achieve that - while shortstop Corey Seager earned the MVP award for a second time in his career.
49. Liverpool beat Man United 7-0 (March 5)
There were no trophies on the line, nor was it quite make-or-break in the top-four race when Liverpool welcomed their greatest rivals Manchester United to Anfield on March 5, but pride is often enough to serve up a classic in English football's most famous fixture.
As it was, one team saw their pride shattered while the other produced a performance for the ages, and one that will be spoken about for years to come.
The Red Devils entered the game as favourites in the eyes of many, with Erik ten Hag's side unbeaten in 11 games across all competitions, including victory in the EFL Cup final over Newcastle United at Wembley and a two-legged triumph over La Liga leaders Barcelona.
However, despite picking up their first trophy for six years only seven days earlier, Man United were blown away by Liverpool, who broke the deadlock in the 43rd minute after an even first half and never looked back from there.
Six further unanswered goals followed without reply in the second half as a ruthless Liverpool, who had endured a largely forgettable campaign up to that point and trailed Man United in the table by 10 points, ran riot in front of a delirious Anfield crowd.
Cody Gakpo, Darwin Nunez and Mohamed Salah all helped themselves to braces, with the latter surpassing Robbie Fowler as Liverpool's all-time leading Premier League goalscorer in the process, netting his 128th and 129th for the club.
Roberto Firmino then capped off the scoring in the week it was confirmed that he would leave the club in the summer, sealing Liverpool's biggest-ever win over their bitter rivals, surpassing a 7-1 triumph which had held that title for 128 years.
It was also Man United's joint-heaviest defeat of all time and the first time they had been beaten 7-0 since 1931, leaving them to lick their wounds following a brutal reality check in an otherwise encouraging campaign.
48. West Ham win Europa Conference League (June 7)
The Europa Conference League has often been derided since it was introduced, but you would have been given short shrift if you tried telling West Ham United and Fiorentina fans that it does not matter as they descended on Prague for the 2022-23 final.
Both teams were looking to end long trophy droughts - Fiorentina had not won anything since 2001, while their solitary European triumph came in 1961; West Ham were trophyless since 1980 and their only major European trophy dated back to 1965.
The Hammers fans travelled in huge numbers for the match - although things turned ugly during the game when Fiorentina captain Cristiano Biraghi was struck by an object thrown from the crowd, leaving blood pouring out of a cut on the back of his head.
That was a sour note on an otherwise glorious night for the East Londoners, though, and they lifted a first trophy for 43 years in the best possible way - with a last-minute winner.
A Said Benrahma penalty had given David Moyes's men the lead, only for Giacomo Bonaventura to quickly respond with an equaliser.
Then, in the 89th minute, Jarrod Bowen was played through on goal and kept his composure to send the West Ham fans into delirium and Moyes sprinting down the touchline.
There was no way back for the Serie A outfit after that as Declan Rice, in his final game for the club, emulated legendary Hammers Bobby Moore and Billy Bonds by lifting a major trophy as captain.
47. Marketa Vondrousova makes history to win Wimbledon title (July 15)
Twelve months on from visiting London to watch her friend in Wimbledon qualifying while she herself was sidelined with a cast on her wrist, Marketa Vondrousova found herself in the final at SW19.
The Czech player had already defied all expectations to make it to the Centre Court showpiece, having only won four grass court matches in her career before winning six on the bounce to reach the final.
There was one more upset to come too as she stunned a below-par Ons Jabeur to become the first unseeded player to ever win the women's singles title at Wimbledon, as well as the lowest-ranked player to do so having come into the tournament 42nd in the world.
There were breaks of serve galore between the two, but in the end it was an easier afternoon than Vondrousova would have expected as she ran out a straight-sets winner, 6-4 6-4.
For Jabeur, it was a second successive defeat in the Wimbledon final and a third Grand Slam final loss out of three, and the Tunisian was in tears after the match before defiantly promising to come back and win the title in the future.
46. Ben Stokes heroics in vain as Australia win second Ashes Test (July 2)
After a thrilling first Ashes Test at Edgbaston, the second Test at Lord's looked on course to be a more straightforward affair, with England chasing a record target of 371 to win and being reduced to 45-4 on the evening of day four.
Ben Stokes and Ben Duckett led a recovery of sorts to send England into the final day needing 257 to win - the odds still overwhelmingly in Australia's favour.
The hosts needed another miracle from captain Stokes, akin to his legendary match-winning innings in the World Cup final and at Headingley in 2019, and he very nearly provided it too.
After his stand of 132 with Duckett came to an end, Jonny Bairstow came in and made 10 before a hugely controversial stumping that saw him leave his crease believing the ball was dead, only for Australian wicket-keeper Alex Carey to throw the ball at the stumps and dismiss his opposite number.
The TV umpire ruled that it was out by the laws of the game, but England fumed at the perceived flouting of the spirit of the game, and they were vociferously backed up by a furious Lord's crowd - so much so that players from the Australia team had to be held back from members of the esteemed Long Room on their way in for lunch following a confrontation between players and spectators.
By that point, the beast within Stokes had been awoken and he blasted 38 runs from the next 16 balls he faced following the controversy of Bairstow's dismissal, including three successive sixes to go past his century.
With Stuart Broad equalling fired up - but more than happy to play the role of supporting act as Australia's bowlers pelted him with short balls - Stokes continued his barrage after lunch, helped by an uncharacteristic dropped catch from Steve Smith.
The pair put on 108 for the seventh wicket to bring a scarcely-believable victory within sight, and they were even made favourites with 70 runs left to get and Stokes still at the crease.
However, a miscue off Josh Hazlewood allowed Carey to catch Stokes out and bring an end to another innings for the ages from the England skipper, who departed on 155 and having clubbed an Ashes-record nine sixes during his one-man demolition job.
With Stokes's departure also effectively went England's hopes of completing their biggest-ever Ashes and Lord's run chase, and Australia eventually mopped up the tail to win by 43 runs and take a 2-0 lead in the series.
However, the game will be remembered most for the Bairstow dismissal and Stokes's innings, both of which will go down in Ashes folklore for years to come.
45. Barcelona produce memorable comeback to win Women's Champions League (June 3)
For Barcelona Women to find themselves in the Women's Champions League final again was no surprise, given that they had appeared in three of the previous four prior to 2022-23.
However, they had only won one of those, and they looked well on course for yet more heartbreak on the biggest stage against a Wolfsburg side who themselves were regular finalists too - this being their sixth in the past decade.
The German outfit made a perfect start through Ewa Pajor's third-minute goal, and looked set to lift the trophy for the first time since 2013-14 when they then doubled their advantage through Alexandra Popp eight minutes before half time.
It looked as though Barcelona's status as firm pre-match favourites in Eindhoven was severely misplaced, but whatever was said in the Spanish dressing room during the interval certainly worked wonders.