BBC Sports Personality World Sport Star of the Year


The BBC World Sport Star of the Year is an award presented at the annual BBC Sports Personality of the Year award ceremony. The award is presented to a non-British sportsperson considered to have made the most substantial contribution to a sport in that year. The award was decided by a panel of over 30 sporting journalists. Each panellist voted for their top two choices; their first preference was awarded two points, and their second preference was awarded one point. The winning sportsperson had the most total points. In the case of a points tie, the sportsperson chosen as first preference by the most panellists is the winner. If this is also a tie the award is shared. In 2015 the public voted for this award.
The Overseas Personality award was first presented in 1960, six years after the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award was introduced. The first recipient of the award was Australian middle distance runner Herb Elliott. Since then, the award has been presented to 49 sportspersons. Swiss tennis player Roger Federer has won the award four times. American boxer Muhammad Ali and Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt have both won the award three times. The award has been shared on three occasions—by Ron Clarke and Gary Player in 1965, Eusébio and Garfield Sobers in 1966, and Evander Holyfield and Michael Johnson in 1996. The husband-and-wife skating duo of Oleg Protopopov and Ludmila Belousova are the only pair to have won the award, doing so in 1968. Belousova was the first woman to become Overseas Personality—she was also the oldest, aged 33. George Moore is the oldest recipient of the award, winning in 1967 aged 44. The youngest recipient of the award is Nadia Comăneci, who won in 1976 at age 15. Boris Becker, who was 18 when he won in 1985, is the youngest male to have won.
Twenty different countries have been represented by the award winners. United States sportspersons have won the award the most times, having had nineteen recipients, two of whom shared the award. Three cricketers have received the award -- Garfield Sobers of Barbados, Brian Lara of Trinidad and Tobago, and Shane Warne of Australia. Thirteen sporting disciplines have been represented; tennis has the highest representation, with fifteen recipients. The most recent recipient in 2017 was Swiss tennis player Roger Federer.
Only one winner has ever been stripped of the award – US cyclist Lance Armstrong, whose 2003 award was rescinded by the BBC following the UCI's 2012 decision to strip Armstrong of his titles and ban him for life from the sport.
In 2018, the award was renamed BBC World Sport Star of the Year. Along with the change of name, votes could be cast from outside of the UK for the first time.

Winners

By year

YearNationalityWinnerSportNote
1960AustraliaAthletics
1961Soviet UnionAthletics
1962Figure skating
1963FranceCycling
1964Athletics
1965Australia Athletics
1965 Golf
1966PortugalEusébio Football
1966Barbados Cricket
1967AustraliaHorse racing
1968Soviet Union Figure skating
1968Soviet Union Figure skating
1969AustraliaTennis
1970PeléFootball
1971United StatesGolf
1972Soviet UnionGymnastics
1973United States Boxing
1974United States Boxing
1975United StatesTennis
1976Gymnastics
1977AustriaFormula One
1978United States Boxing
1979SwedenTennis
1980United StatesGolf
1981United StatesTennis
1982United StatesTennis
1983United StatesAthletics
1984SpainGolf
1985West GermanyTennis
1986Australia Golf
1987United StatesTennis
1988West GermanyTennis
1989United StatesBoxing
1990AustraliaRugby league
1991United StatesAthletics
1992United StatesTennis
1993Australia Golf
1994Trinidad and TobagoCricket
1995New ZealandRugby union
1996United States Boxing
1996United StatesAthletics
1997SwitzerlandTennis
1998United StatesGolf
1999United StatesAthletics
2000United StatesGolf
2001CroatiaTennis
2002BrazilRonaldoFootball
2003United StatesCycling
2004Switzerland Tennis
2005AustraliaCricket
2006Switzerland Tennis
2007Switzerland Tennis
2008Jamaica Athletics
2009Jamaica Athletics
2010SpainTennis
2011SerbiaTennis
2012Jamaica Athletics
2013GermanyFormula One
2014PortugalCristiano RonaldoFootball
2015New ZealandDan CarterRugby union
2016United StatesGymnastics
2017Switzerland Tennis
2018ItalyGolf
2019KenyaAthletics

By nationality

This table lists the total number of awards won by nationality based on the principle of jus soli.
NationalityNumber of wins
United States
Australia8
Switzerland5
Soviet Union4
Germany3
Jamaica3
Brazil2
New Zealand2
Portugal2
Spain2
Austria1
Barbados1
Canada1
Croatia1
Ethiopia1
France1
Italy1
Kenya1
Romania1
Serbia1
South Africa1
Sweden1
Trinidad and Tobago1

By sport

This table lists the total number of awards won by recipient's sporting profession.
Sporting professionNumber of wins
Tennis17
Athletics12
Golf9
Boxing5
Football4
Cricket3
Figure skating3
Gymnastics3
Formula One2
Rugby union2
Cycling1 2
Horse racing1
Rugby league1

By gender

This table lists the total number of awards won by gender.
GenderNumber of wins
Male49.5
Female7.5

Note