Year |
Winner |
Nationality |
Sport |
Achievement
|
1954 |
Roger Bannister |
Great Britain |
Track and field |
First sub-four-minute mile
|
1955 |
Johnny Podres |
United States |
Baseball |
World Series MVP
|
1956 |
Bobby Morrow |
United States |
Track and field |
Triple Olympic gold medalist
|
1957 |
Stan Musial |
United States |
Baseball |
National League batting champion
|
1958 |
Rafer Johnson |
United States |
Track and field |
Decathlon world record
|
1959 |
Ingemar Johansson |
Sweden |
Boxing |
World Heavyweight Champion
|
1960 |
Arnold Palmer |
United States |
Golf |
PGA Player of the Year
|
1961 |
Jerry Lucas |
United States |
College basketball |
Final Four MVP
|
1962 |
Terry Baker |
United States |
College football |
Heisman Trophy winner
|
1963 |
Pete Rozelle |
United States |
Professional football |
NFL Commissioner; credited for expansion and the suspension of athletes for gambling
|
1964 |
Ken Venturi |
United States |
Golf |
U.S. Open champion
|
1965 |
Sandy Koufax |
United States |
Baseball |
World Series Champion, Cy Young Award, Triple Crown winner, World Series MVP
|
1966 |
Jim Ryun |
United States |
Track and field |
Mile world record
|
1967 |
Carl Yastrzemski |
United States |
Baseball |
Triple Crown winner, AL MVP
|
1968 |
Bill Russell |
United States |
Professional basketball |
NBA champion player-coach
|
1969 |
Tom Seaver |
United States |
Baseball |
Cy Young Award, World Series champion
|
1970 |
Bobby Orr |
Canada |
Hockey |
NHL MVP, Art Ross, Conn Smythe, Norris
|
1971 |
Lee Trevino |
United States |
Golf |
PGA Player of the Year
|
1972 |
Billie Jean King |
United States |
Tennis |
Three major titles
|
John Wooden |
United States |
College basketball |
NCAA champion coach
|
1973 |
Jackie Stewart |
Great Britain |
Auto racing |
Formula One World Champion
|
1974 |
Muhammad Ali |
United States |
Boxing |
World heavyweight champion
|
1975 |
Pete Rose |
United States |
Baseball |
World Series MVP
|
1976 |
Chris Evert |
United States |
Tennis |
Two major titles
|
1977 |
Steve Cauthen |
United States |
Horse racing |
Eclipse Award for Outstanding Jockey
|
1978 |
Jack Nicklaus |
United States |
Golf |
British Open champion
|
1979 |
Terry Bradshaw |
United States |
Professional football |
Super Bowl MVP
|
Willie Stargell |
United States |
Baseball |
NL MVP, NLCS MVP, World Series MVP
|
1980 |
U.S. Olympic hockey team |
United States |
Hockey |
Olympic gold medalists
|
1981 |
Sugar Ray Leonard |
United States |
Boxing |
World welterweight champion
|
1982 |
Wayne Gretzky |
Canada |
Hockey |
NHL MVP, Art Ross
|
1983 |
Mary Decker |
United States |
Track and field |
Double world champion
|
1984 |
Edwin Moses |
United States |
Track and field |
Olympic gold medalist
|
Mary Lou Retton |
United States |
Gymnastics |
Olympic gold medalist
|
1985 |
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar |
United States |
Professional basketball |
Playoff MVP
|
1986 |
Joe Paterno |
United States |
College football |
NCAA champion coach
|
1987 |
Bob Bourne |
Canada |
Hockey |
Helped handicapped children's school
|
Judi Brown King |
United States |
Track and field |
Helped abused children
|
Kipchoge Keino |
Kenya |
Track and field |
Cared for orphaned children
|
Dale Murphy |
United States |
Baseball |
Charity spokesman
|
Chip Rives |
United States |
College football |
Helped needy children
|
Patty Sheehan |
United States |
Golf |
Helped abused girls
|
Rory Sparrow |
United States |
Professional basketball |
Helped school children
|
Reggie Williams |
United States |
Professional football |
Helped high school students
|
1988 |
Orel Hershiser |
United States |
Baseball |
World Series Champion, Cy Young Award, NLCS MVP, World Series MVP
|
1989 |
Greg LeMond |
United States |
Road cycling |
Tour de France and World champion
|
1990 |
Joe Montana |
United States |
Professional football |
Three-time Super Bowl MVP
|
1991 |
Michael Jordan |
United States |
Professional basketball |
NBA MVP, NBA Finals MVP, NBA Champion
|
1992 |
Arthur Ashe |
United States |
Tennis |
Supported humanitarian causes
|
1993 |
Don Shula |
United States |
Professional football |
Winningest NFL coach
|
1994 |
Bonnie Blair |
United States |
Speed skating |
Double Olympic gold medalist
|
Johann Olav Koss |
Norway |
Speed skating |
Triple Olympic gold medalist
|
1995 |
Cal Ripken Jr. |
United States |
Baseball |
Consecutive games record
|
1996 |
Tiger Woods |
United States |
Golf |
U.S. Amateur, NCAA champion
|
1997 |
Dean Smith |
United States |
College basketball |
Winningest college coach at the time of publication
|
1998 |
Mark McGwire |
United States |
Baseball |
Single-season home run record holder at the time of publication
|
Sammy Sosa |
Dominican Republic |
Baseball |
National League MVP
|
1999 |
U.S. women's soccer team |
United States |
Soccer |
World Cup champions
|
2000 |
Tiger Woods (2) |
United States |
Golf |
Three major championships
|
2001 |
Curt Schilling |
United States |
Baseball |
World Series Co-MVP
|
Randy Johnson |
United States |
Baseball |
World Series Co-MVP, Cy Young Award
|
2002 |
Lance Armstrong |
United States |
Cycling |
Four-time Tour de France winner (wins later disqualified in 2012)
|
2003 |
David Robinson |
United States |
Professional basketball |
Two-time NBA champion
|
Tim Duncan |
United States |
Professional basketball |
NBA MVP, NBA Champion, NBA Finals MVP
|
2004 |
Boston Red Sox |
United States |
Baseball |
2004 World Series champions
|
2005 |
Tom Brady |
United States |
Professional football |
Two-time Super Bowl MVP, Three-time Super Bowl champion
|
2006 |
Dwyane Wade |
United States |
Professional basketball |
NBA Champion, NBA Finals MVP
|
2007 |
Brett Favre |
United States |
Professional football |
"For his perseverance and his passion"
|
2008 |
Michael Phelps |
United States |
Swimming |
Eight gold medals in 2008 Summer Olympics
|
2009 |
Derek Jeter |
United States |
Baseball |
World Series Champion
|
2010 |
Drew Brees |
United States |
Professional football |
Super Bowl MVP and charitable work toward the reconstruction of New Orleans
|
2011 |
Mike Krzyzewski |
United States |
College basketball |
Most wins as coach in NCAA men's Division I history
|
Pat Summitt |
United States |
College basketball |
All-time winningest coach in NCAA basketball
|
2012 |
LeBron James |
United States |
Professional basketball |
NBA MVP, NBA Finals MVP, NBA Champion, Olympic gold medalist
|
2013 |
Peyton Manning |
United States |
Professional football |
Five-Time NFL MVP, single-season touchdown record, AFC Champion
|
2014 |
Madison Bumgarner |
United States |
Baseball |
World Series Champion, NLCS MVP, World Series MVP
|
2015 |
Serena Williams |
United States |
Tennis |
Won three majors, oldest player to be ranked no. 1 during the Open Era
|
2016 |
LeBron James (2) |
United States |
Professional basketball |
NBA Finals MVP, led Cleveland Cavaliers to first title in franchise history
|
2017 |
Jose Altuve |
Venezuela |
Baseball |
American League MVP, World Series Champion, Helped lead the Houston Astros to their first ever title and the city's first major championship since 1995.
|
J. J. Watt |
United States |
Professional football |
Raised more than $37 million in relief aid for the city of Houston, Texas less than a month after the impact of Hurricane Harvey.
|
2018 |
Golden State Warriors |
United States |
Professional basketball |
2018 NBA champions, third title in last four years.
|
2019 |
Megan Rapinoe[7] |
United States |
Soccer |
FIFA Women's World Cup champion, won Golden Ball and Golden Boot.
|
2020 |
Laurent Duvernay-Tardif |
Canada |
Professional football |
Super Bowl LIV champion, sat out the 2020 season to serve as an orderly during the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
LeBron James (3) [3] |
United States |
Professional basketball |
NBA Finals MVP, worked to end voter suppression. First three-time winner.
|
Patrick Mahomes |
United States |
Professional football |
Super Bowl MVP, pushed the NFL to recognize the Black Lives Matter movement, pushed to encourage voter registration across the country, as well as among his teammates
|
Naomi Osaka |
Japan |
Tennis |
U.S. Open champion and advocate for social justice.
|
Breanna Stewart[3] |
United States |
Professional basketball |
WNBA Finals MVP, spoke out against racism and for women's equality.
|
2021 |
Tom Brady (2) |
United States |
Professional football |
Super Bowl LV MVP, 7-time Super Bowl champion
|
2022 |
Stephen Curry |
United States |
Professional basketball |
NBA Finals MVP, led the Golden State Warriors to their fourth title in eight years.
|
2023 |
Deion Sanders |
United States |
College football |
For revitalizing the Colorado Buffaloes Football program, despite a 4–8 record.
|
2024 |
Simone Biles |
United States |
Artistic gymnastics |
3x 2024 Olympic gold medalist, transformed gymnastics in the USA and conversations around athletes in general.
|