2015 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award

2015 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award
Date 20 December 2015
Location Odyssey Arena, Belfast
Country United Kingdom
Presented by British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
Hosted by Gary Lineker
Clare Balding
Gabby Logan
Winner Andy Murray
Official website www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/sports-personality/
Television/Radio coverage
Network
Runtime 140 minutes

The 2015 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award took place on 20 December 2015 at the Odyssey Arena in Belfast. Tennis player Andy Murray was announced as the winner. It was the 62nd presentation of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award. Awarded annually by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), the main award honours an individual's British sporting achievement over the past year, with the winner selected by public vote from a twelve-person shortlist, the winner was Andy Murray.[1][2] In addition to the sports personality of the year award, there were seven other awards: Team of the Year, Coach of the Year, Overseas Sports Personality of the Year, Young Sports Personality of the Year, Helen Rollason Award, Lifetime Achievement Award and Unsung Hero.[3]

Controversy

There were calls to remove Tyson Fury from the nominees list, after comments he made were criticised as homophobic and sexist.[4][5]

Nominees

[6]

Nominee Sport 2015 Achievement BBC profile Votes (percentage)[7]
Andy Murray Tennis Led Great Britain to victory in the Davis Cup for the first time in 79 years; posted most successful single player record in one Davis Cup season (11-0) in modern era. 361,446
(35.81%)
Kevin Sinfield Rugby League Captained Leeds Rhinos to the treble, winning the Challenge Cup, League Leader's Shield and Super League Grand Final 278,353
(27.57%)
Jessica Ennis-Hill Athletics Won the heptathlon in the IAAF World Championships for the second time, nine months after comeback from birth of her first child. 79,898
(7.91%)
Tyson Fury Boxing Won three of the four major heavyweight titles (WBA (Super), IBF, and WBO) upon defeating Wladimir Klitschko 72,330
(7.17%)
Lewis Hamilton Formula 1 Won the Formula 1 World Drivers' Championship for the third time (and second time in succession) 48,379
(4.79%)
Chris Froome Cycling Won the Tour de France for the second time 39,007
(3.86%)
Mo Farah Athletics Successfully defended his 10,000m and (for the second time) 5,000m titles in the IAAF World Championships 31,311
(3.10%)
Max Whitlock Gymnastics Won the pommel horse in the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships; also became the first British male to win a global title, and the first to win three medals in one World Championship. 25,925
(2.57%)
Greg Rutherford Athletics Won the long jump in the IAAF World Championships; also became the fifth Briton to hold Olympic, World, European, and Commonwealth titles simultaneously, and the first to also hold the IAAF Diamond League title. 23,492
(2.33%)
Lizzie Armitstead Cycling Successfully defended her title in the UCI Women's Road World Cup and won the road race in the UCI Road World Championships[8] 22,356
(2.21%)
Adam Peaty Swimming Won the 50m/100m breaststroke and the 4 × 100 m mixed medley relay in the FINA World Championships. Set three world records during the season and became the first Briton to claim three world titles in a single championship 13,738
(1.36%)
Lucy Bronze Football Member of the English squad that came third in the FIFA Women's World Cup; she scored 2 goals in the tournament 13,236
(1.31%)

References

External links

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