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RTÉ Sports Person of the Year

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RTÉ Sports Person of the Year

The RTÉ Sports Person of the Year Award is the titular award of the RTÉ Sports Awards ceremony, which takes place each December. The winner is the Irish sportsperson (from the island of Ireland) judged to have achieved the most that year. The winner was originally chosen by a special panel of RTÉ journalists and editorial staff, but was selected by a public vote from a pre-determined shortlist in 2016. The first Irish sports award ceremony took place in 1985, and was closely modelled on the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award.

Three people have won the award multiple times: athlete Sonia O'Sullivan won the award five times, including a record three successive awards, and golfers Pádraig Harrington, with three wins, and Rory McIlroy, who won it twice. The oldest recipient of the award is Christy O'Connor Jnr, who won in 1989 aged 41. Rory McIlroy, who first won in 2011, aged 22, is the youngest winner. Ten sporting disciplines have been represented; golf has the highest representation, with seven recipients.

Eamonn Darcy, Ronan Rafferty and Des Smyth, who won the Alfred Dunhill Cup in 1988, are the only non-individual winners of the award. Counting them separately, there have been twenty-seven winners of the award. Five of these have been Northern Irish. The most recent award was made in 2016 to mixed martial artist Conor McGregor.

Shortlists

The winner is in bold.

  • Katie Taylor (boxing)
  • Graeme McDowell (golf)
  • Gráinne Murphy (swimming)
  • Tony McCoy (horse racing)
  • Lar Corbett (hurling)
  • Paddy Barnes (boxing)
  • Tommy Bowe (rugby union)
  • Derval O'Rourke (athletics)
  • Rory McIlroy (golf)
  • Darren Clarke (golf)
  • Michael Fennelly (hurling)
  • Sean O'Brien (rugby union)
  • Katie Taylor (boxing)
  • Rory McIlroy (golf)
  • John Joe Nevin (boxing)
  • Kevin O'Brien (cricket)
  • Alan Brogan (Gaelic football)
  • Robbie Keane (soccer)
  • Fionnuala Britton (athletics)
  • Rob Kearney (rugby union)
  • Karl Lacey (Gaelic football)
  • Rory McIlroy (golf)
  • Michael McKillop (athletics)
  • Joseph O'Brien (horse racing)
  • Mark Rohan (cycling)
  • Henry Shefflin (hurling)
  • Jason Smyth (athletics)
  • Katie Taylor (boxing)
  • Robert Heffernan (athletics)
  • Martyn Irvine (cycling)
  • Tony Kelly (hurling)
  • Michael Darragh MacAuley (Gaelic football)
  • Tony McCoy (horse racing)
  • Michael McKillop (athletics)
  • Annalise Murphy (sailing)
  • Joseph O'Brien (horse racing)
  • Jason Quigley (boxing)
  • Jonathan Sexton (rugby union)
  • Jason Smyth (athletics)
  • Niamh Briggs (Rugby)
  • Seamus Coleman (Soccer)
  • Briege Corkery (Gaelic football)
  • Mark English (Athletics)
  • Carl Frampton (Boxing)
  • Rory McIlroy (Golf)
  • Michael McKillop (Athletics)
  • James O'Donoghue (Gaelic football)
  • Jonathan Sexton (Rugby)
  • Jason Smyth (Athletics)
  • Richie Hogan (Hurling)
  • Katie Taylor (Boxing)
  • Michael Conlan (boxer)
  • Leighton Aspell (Horse Rasing)
  • Rena Buckley (Camogie)
  • Andy Lee (Boxing)
  • Shane Lowry (Golf)
  • Jack McCaffrey (Football)
  • Rory McIlroy (Golf)
  • Michael McKillop (Athletics)
  • Paul O'Connell (Rugby)
  • TJ Reid (Hurling)
  • Sophie Spence (Rugby)
  • Richie Towell (Soccer)
  • Jon Walters (Soccer)
  • Conor McGregor (MMA)
  • Seamus Callanan (Hurling)
  • Eoghan Clifford (Cycling)
  • Katie-George Dunlevy & Eve McCrystal (Cycling)
  • Denise Gaule (Camogie)
  • Brian Fenton (Football)
  • Carl Frampton (Boxing)
  • Daryl Horgan (Soccer)
  • Annalise Murphy (Sailing)
  • Conor McGregor (MMA)
  • Paul O’Donovan (Rowing)
  • Jamie Heaslip (Rugby)
  • Brid Stack (Football)
  • References

    RTÉ Sports Person of the Year Wikipedia