I'm one of 3 who marked "idk" because, quite simply, the space race is not over. Yeah, for 40 years we have been the only contenders in this competition, but asking "Who won the space race," is pretty much just like asking "Who won basketball?" There's a LOT of space out there. We, as a species, have gone to the moon a few times. As great an achievement as that was, it was only... well... one giant leap for mankind. If we're to survive the long run, we've got to
colonize the
galaxy. One giant leap, check, we've still got a galaxy to cross. And if you think the rest of the world looks up to the night sky and thinks "Damn. America got that one," you're delusional.
Rocket envy | Bad Astronomy | Discover Magazine
So yeah, we landed on the moon first. We walked around, took a joy ride, hit a few golf balls. That doesn't sound like a space race win to me.
*edit:
The Saturn V (pronounced "Saturn Five") was an American man-rated expendable rocket used by NASA's Apollo and Skylab programs from 1967 until 1973. A multistage liquid-fueled booster, NASA launched 13 Saturn Vs from the Kennedy Space Center, Florida with no loss of crew or payload. It remains the largest and most powerful launch vehicle ever brought to operational status from a height, weight and payload standpoint.
Wikipedia: Saturn V