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BBC Sports Personality of the Year Coach Award

BBC Sports Personality of the Year Coach Award
CountryUnited Kingdom
Presented byBBC Sports Personality of the Year
First award1999; 26 years ago (1999)
Currently held byJenny Meadows and Trevor Painter (2024)

The BBC Sports Personality of the Year Coach Award is an award given annually as part of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year ceremony each December. The award is given to the coach who was considered to have made the most substantive contribution to British sport in that year.

History

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Warren Gatland, the winner in 2013

The first recipient of the award was Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson in 1999. The award has been presented to a football manager on ten occasions. It has been awarded to nine Britons, and eleven of the other fourteen winners were European. Daniel Anderson, the only winner from the Southern Hemisphere, was in his native Australia at the time of the awards, so the then St. Helens captain, Paul Sculthorpe, collected it on his behalf.[1] In 2007, Enzo Calzaghe was the first recipient of the award who had coached an individual and not a team. The most recent award was presented in 2024 to athlete Keely Hodgkinson's coaches Jenny Meadows and Trevor Painter.[2][3]

Nomination procedure

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The award is decided by a panel of over 30 sporting journalists. Each panellist votes for their top two choices; their first preference is awarded two points, and their second preference is awarded one point. The winning coach is the one with the largest points total. In the case of a points tie, the person chosen as first preference by the most panellists is the winner. If this is also a tie the award is shared.[4]

Winners

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By year

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Alex Ferguson, the inaugural winner in 1999.
A head-and-shoulders photograph of a gentleman in his 50s. He is wearing a red polo shirt underneath a blue coat, he has grey hair, and his eyes are slightly closed.
Arsène Wenger, two times winner in 2002 and 2004.
José Mourinho, winner in 2005.
A head-shot of a brown-haired man in his sixties. He has blue eyes and is wearing glasses.
Fabio Capello, the winner in 2009
BBC Sports Personality of the Year Coach Award winners
Year Nat. Winner Sport Coach of Rationale Ref.
1999 SCO Alex Ferguson Football England Manchester United for guiding Manchester United to be "the first side to complete a unique treble" of the Premier League, FA Cup, and Champions League.[5] [6]
2000 GER Jürgen Gröbler Rowing United Kingdom Olympic team for guiding "Redgrave, Matthew Pinsent, Tim Foster & James Cracknell to their coxless fours gold" at the Olympics.[7] [8]
2001 SWE Sven-Göran Eriksson Football England England for guiding England through qualification for the World Cup, defeating Germany 5–1 in the process.[9] [10]
2002 FRA Arsène Wenger (1/2) Football England Arsenal for guiding Arsenal to the Double of the Premiership and FA Cup.[11] [12]
2003 ENG Clive Woodward Rugby Union England England for guiding "his team to a famous World Cup victory in Australia."[13] [14]
2004 FRA Arsène Wenger (2/2) Football England Arsenal for guiding Arsenal to a "third Premiership-winning campaign (...) as his side went through the entire season unbeaten."[15] [16]
2005 POR José Mourinho Football England Chelsea for guiding "Chelsea to their first title for 50 years in his first season in charge."[17] [18]
2006 AUS Daniel Anderson Rugby league England St Helens R.F.C. "for guiding the team to Challenge Cup, minor Premiership and Grand Final triumph."[19] [20]
2007 ITA Enzo Calzaghe Boxing Wales Joe Calzaghe for training Joe Calzaghe to 44 undefeated fights and 10 years as world champion.[21] [22]
2008 WAL David Brailsford (1/2) Cycling United Kingdom Olympic team for guiding the British Olympic cycling team to "14 medals in total in Beijing, including eight golds."[23] [24]
2009 ITA Fabio Capello Football England England for guiding "England to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa winning an impressive nine out of the 10 qualifiers played".[25]
2010 SCO Colin Montgomerie Golf Europe European Ryder Cup team for guiding Europe to victory in the 2010 Ryder Cup. [26]
2011 ZIM Andy Flower Cricket England England cricket team for guiding England to victory in The Ashes and to the top of the ICC Test Ranking [27]
2012 WAL David Brailsford (2/2) Cycling United Kingdom Olympic team/Team Sky for guiding the British Olympic cycling team to "12 medals in total in London, including eight golds, and for guiding Bradley Wiggins towards winning the Tour de France" [28]
2013 NZL Warren Gatland Rugby Union United Kingdom/Republic of Ireland British & Irish Lions for guiding the British & Irish Lions to a 2–1 series victory over Australia, the first series win since 1997. [29]
2014 IRL Paul McGinley Golf Europe European Ryder Cup team for guiding Europe to victory in the Ryder Cup. [30]
2015 NIR Michael O'Neill Football Northern Ireland Northern Ireland national football team for guiding Northern Ireland to qualification for Euro 2016, the country's first major finals in 30 years [31]
2016 ITA Claudio Ranieri Football England Leicester City F.C. for leading Leicester City to their first Premier League title; the 2015–16 Premier League, despite pre-season odds of 5000–1. [32]
2017 SWE/ NIR/ WAL Benke Blomkvist, Stephen Maguire & Christian Malcolm Athletics United Kingdom UK Athletics sprint relay teams for coaching the UK Athletics relay teams. At the 2017 World Athletics championships the UK men's 4x100m relay won Gold and all four relay teams won medals[33] [34]
2018 ENG Gareth Southgate (1/2) Football England England for leading England Men to the 2018 World Cup semi-finals for the first time in 28 years. [35]
2019 ENG John Blackie Athletics England Dina Asher-Smith for guiding Dina Asher-Smith to 200m gold at the 2019 World Athletics Championships. [36]
2020 GER Jürgen Klopp Football England Liverpool F.C. for leading Liverpool to their first top-flight title in 30 years by winning the 2019–20 Premier League. [37]
2021 ENG Gareth Southgate (2/2) Football England England Men for leading England to the UEFA Euro 2020 final at Wembley, ending the nation's 55-year wait for a major final since the 1966 World Cup. [38]
2022 NED Sarina Wiegman Football England England Women for guiding England to victory at UEFA Women's Euro 2022, the nation's first major women's football trophy. [39]
2023 ESP Pep Guardiola Football Manchester City F.C. for guiding Manchester City to complete the treble of the Premier League, Champions League, and FA Cup. [40]
2024 ENG Jenny Meadows and Trevor Painter Athletics Keely Hodgkinson
Georgia Bell
Lewis Davey
for guiding Keely Hodgkinson to the 800m gold medal, and Georgia Bell and Lewis Davey to 1500m and 4x400m relay bronze medals at the 2024 Paris Olympics. [41]

By nationality

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

Winners by nationality
Nationality Number of wins
 England 5
 Italy 3
 Wales 3
 France 2
 Germany 2
 Northern Ireland 2
 Scotland 2
 Sweden 2
 Australia 1
Republic of Ireland 1
 Netherlands 1
 New Zealand 1
 Portugal 1
 Zimbabwe 1
 Spain 1

By sport

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

Winners by sport
Sporting profession Number of wins
Football 11
Athletics 3
Cycling 2
Golf 2
Rugby Union 2
Boxing 1
Cricket 1
Rowing 1
Rugby league 1

References

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