BBC Sports Personality of the Year Helen Rollason Award

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Photograph of Oscar Pistorius sprinting around a track with two carbon fibre transtibial artificial limbs.
Oscar Pistorius, who won the award in 2007

The BBC Sports Personality of the Year Helen Rollason Award is an award given annually as part of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year ceremony each December. The award is given "for outstanding achievement in the face of adversity", and the winner is selected by BBC Sport.[1] The award is named after the BBC sports presenter Helen Rollason, who died in August 1999 at the age of 43 after suffering from cancer for two years.[2][3] Helen Rollason was the first female presenter of Grandstand. After being diagnosed with cancer, she helped raise over £5 million to set up a cancer wing at the North Middlesex Hospital, where she received most of her treatment.[4]

The inaugural recipient of the award was horse trainer Jenny Pitman, in 1999. Other winners include South African Paralympic sprinter Oscar Pistorius, who won the award in 2007. Several recipients have not played a sport professionally, including: Jane Tomlinson, who won in 2002, Kirsty Howard (2004), Phil Packer (2009), Anne Williams, who received the award posthumously in 2013, and eight-year-old Bailey Matthews (2015). Michael Watson, who won the award in 2003, had a career in boxing but was paralysed and almost killed in a title bout with Chris Eubank. He won the award for completing the London Marathon, an accomplishment that took him six days.[5] Former footballer Geoff Thomas won the award in 2005; he raised money by cycling the 2,200 miles of the 2005 Tour de France course in the same number of days as the professionals completed it.[6] In 2006, the award was given posthumously to Paul Hunter, who died from dozens of malignant neuroendocrine tumours – his widow Lindsay accepted the award on his behalf.[7]

Winners

By year

Head-and-torso photograph of Geoff Thomas standing in a lecture room wearing a grey chalk-stripe suit and waistcoat, and an open collared blue shirt
Ex-footballer Geoff Thomas, who won the award in 2005
BBC Sports Personality of the Year Helen Rollason Award winners
Year Nat. Winner Sport(s) Rationale Note
1999  ENG Jenny Pitman Horse racing for "one of national hunt's greatest trainers" who retired earlier in 1999 after suffering from cancer.[8] [9]
2000  WAL Tanni Grey-Thompson Athletics for winning "gold in the 100 m, 200 m, 400 m and 800 m events" at the 2000 Summer Paralympics.[10] [11]
2001  ENG Ellen MacArthur Sailing for her courage in becoming fastest woman to circumnavigate the globe.[12] [13]
2002  ENG Jane Tomlinson [n 1] for completing "the London Marathon, a triathlon and the Great North Run" and raising money for Cancer Research, after being diagnosed with breast cancer.[14] [15]
2003  ENG Michael Watson Boxing for completing the London Marathon and "raising millions of pounds for the Brain and Spine Foundation", despite being told previously that "he would never walk again".[16] [17]
2004  ENG Kirsty Howard [n 2] for raising money for poorly children in Francis House hospice through Kirsty's Appeal, despite having an inoperable heart condition.[18] [19]
2005  ENG Geoff Thomas Football for raising "more than £150,000 for the Leukaemia Research charity" by cycling, following his own battle with the disease.[20] [21]
2006  ENG Paul Hunter Snooker awarded posthumously "in recognition of his bravery and determination to continue playing while trying to beat [cancer]."[22] [23]
2007  RSA Oscar Pistorius Athletics for his fight to be allowed to "race in both the Olympics and the Paralympics" in 2008.[24] [25]
2008  ENG Alastair Hignell Cricket, Rugby union for fundraising and raising awareness of multiple sclerosis since being diagnosed with the disease in 1999.[26] [27]
2009  ENG Major Phil Packer [n 3] for fundraising over £1.2 million for the Help for Heroes charity, despite being paraplegic since sustaining injuries in the Iraq War.[28] [28]
2010  ENG Frank Williams Formula One for founding the Williams Formula One team which has so far won nine constructors' titles and seven drivers' championships despite himself suffering an accident in 1986 in which he sustained a severe spinal cord injury. [29]
2011  ENG Bob Champion Horse racing for beating cancer then winning the 1981 Grand National on Aldaniti, then raising money for The Bob Champion Cancer Trust. [30]
2012  ENG Martine Wright Sitting volleyball for achieving selection for GB Sitting Volleyball team at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, having been "the most seriously injured person to survive" the 7/7 bombings the day after London was announced as host of those Games.
2013  ENG Anne Williams awarded posthumously for campaigning for justice for Hillsborough victims. [31]
2014 14 countries Invictus Games Competitors Disability sport awarded for central contribution to the success of inaugural multi-sport event for injured military personnel
2015  ENG Bailey Matthews Triathlon 8 year old Bailey, who has cerebral palsy, completed his first triathlon earlier in the year, throwing away his walking frame to complete the last 20 yards of the final running event on his own [32]

By nationality

This table lists the total number of awards won by recipients of each nationality based on the principle of jus soli.

Winners by nationality
Nationality Number of wins
 England 14
 South Africa 1
 Wales 1

By sport

This table lists the total number of awards won by recipients' sporting profession.

Winners by sport
Sporting profession Number of wins[n 4]
Athletics 3
Horse racing 2
Boxing 1
Disability multi-sport 1
Football 1
Formula One 1
Sailing 1
Snooker 1
Sitting volleyball 1
Cricket ½
Rugby union ½
Triathlon 1
Other 4

Notes

References

General

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Specific

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