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BBC Sports Team of the Year Award

Chris Hoy wearing a bicycle helmet, visor, cycling shorts and top cycling on a racing bike in a velodrome.
Chris Hoy, a member of the British Olympic Cycling Team that won the award in 2008

The BBC Sports Team of the Year Award is an award given annually as part of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year ceremony each December. Currently, the award is given "for the team in an individual sport or sporting discipline that has achieved the most notable performance in the calendar year to date. The team should have significant UK interest or involvement". From 2012 the award's recipient is decided by an expert panel selected by the BBC. For some years before 2012 a panel of over 30 sporting journalists, each of whom voted for their top two choices and followed a defined set of voting criteria.[1] Before that, the winner of the Team of the Year Award has been chosen by public vote[2] and picked by listeners of Radio 5 Live.[3]

The Team of the Year 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 the Cooper Formula One Racing team.[4] The England national rugby union team and the Ryder Cup team have won the award the most times; both teams have won five times and have shared the award on one of those occasions.[5] Liverpool F.C. have won the award four times.[6] The award has been shared on two occasions—by the British women's 4 x 400 m relay team and the British Ryder Cup team in 1969,[7] and by the England national rugby union team and the British men's 4 x 400 m relay team in 1991.[8] Teams have varied greatly in size. The smallest winning team has been two members; the figure skating duo of Torvill and Dean in 1982 and 1983, and the Olympic men's coxless rowing pair of Steve Redgrave and Matthew Pinsent in 1992 and 1996. The largest winning team was in 2012; the British representatives at the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

Six nations have been represented by the award winning team. Teams representing Great Britain have won the award the most times, having had twenty-three recipients, three of which shared the award. Excluding the 2000 British Olympic and Paralympic teams, which fielded competitors in many Paralympic and Olympic sports, the remainder of the winning teams have represented 15 sporting disciplines. Although dominated by teams from England or representing Great Britain, the award has been won twice by Scottish teams; Celtic in 1967, after they became the first British football club to win the European Cup, and the 1990 Grand Slam winning Scotland rugby union squad.

Football has had the highest representation among the winners, with 15 recipients. The most recent award was presented in 2022 to the England women's national football team.

By year

Photograph of the front of the Cooper T51 racing car. It is fairly cylindrical in shape, coloured green, with two white racing stripes, and the number 17 on the bonnet.
A Cooper T51, similar to the one used by the Cooper Car Company in the 1960 Formula One season
Black-and-white photograph from the front of Eric Brown which shows him finishing his golf swing over his left shoulder.
Eric Brown, who captained United Kingdom's 1969 Ryder Cup that won the award that year
Photograph from the side of horse Nijinsky II, who is walking round the paddock at the 1970 Irish Derby.
Nijinsky II, whose team took the award in 1970
Photograph of an eight-and-a-half-foot bronze statue of Bob Stokoe, which imitates him running to celebrate after the final whistle of the 1973 FA Cup Final.
A statue of Bob Stokoe celebrating the FA Cup win that won Sunderland A.F.C. the 1973 award
Head-and-shoulders photograph of Alan Hanson, who is wearing a grey suit, white shirt and black tie.
Alan Hansen, who captained the Liverpool F.C. side that won the award in 1986
Photograph of nine members of the England rugby team on an open top bus victory parade. Lawrence Dallaglio is in the centre holding up the golden coloured Webb Ellis Cup, which is the trophy awarded to the winners.
The England rugby team won the award in 2003 for their victory at the Rugby World Cup.

By nation

This table lists the total number of awards won by nations that the teams have represented.

By sport

This table lists the total number of awards won by the teams sporting discipline.

Notes

  1. ^ In addition to the Team Award in 1983, an International Team Award was presented to Alan Bond and the rest of Australia II's sailing crew.[28]
  2. ^ In addition to the Team Award in 1986, a Special Team Award was presented to the Great Britain men's 4 x 400 metres relay team.[30]
  3. ^ a b The fractions refer to occasions on which the awarded was shared between more than one person. For example, the British & Irish Lions are made up of representatives from both Ireland and the United Kingdom (including when they were called the British Lions).
  4. ^ The table excludes the individual Olympic sports that members of the winning 2000 Olympic and Paralympic, and 2012 Olympic and Paralympic teams competed in.

References

General
Specific
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