We need to stop doing this to ourselves. A golfer would need to win the Grand Slam, and then hole the winning putt in a Ryder Cup year, to have a chance of getting on the podium of the Sports Personality of The Year awards.
This year Matt Fitzpatrick is the latest casualty, in the very loosest sense, after he wasn’t short-listed for the main prize. This came as no surprise as it continues a long-running theme of golfers missing out on an award that generally suits individual sports.
Two golfers have won the now affectionately-titled ‘SPOTY’ – Dai Rees in 1957 and Sir Nick Faldo in 1989. The latter edged out Frank Bruno who fought once that year when he lasted just under three rounds against Mike Tyson.
Darren Clarke was latterly pipped by Zara Phillips, riding Toytown, Rory McIlroy came close in 2014 after winning a pair of Majors while Seve Ballesteros has landed a pair of Lifetime Achievement awards.
Colin Montgomerie and Paul McGinley have both won the ‘coach award’, something that only started out in 1999, for their Ryder Cup leadership while any normal coach, like a Pete Cowen, has never had a look in.
The World Sports Star award has been very kind to golf with nine, all men, winning the gong. Team wise the European Ryder Cup outfit has, relatively speaking, dazzled but that’s as far as we go. You might argue that Sky Sports showing all the live golf these days has changed things but that would be pushing it.
If we go back to 2016 then we get a very clear idea of how the voting goes. Danny Willett landed The Masters and, for his troubles, gathered just over two thousand votes. Andy Murray topped the voting with nearly a quarter of a million while Alistair Brownlee had 120,000 punters picking up the phone or emailing in.
This was The Masters, where your non-golfing fans will routinely tune in on a Sunday night, so a US Open golf winner has no chance – although last year’s US Open tennis winner Emma Raducanu did go on to win the main award.
Georgia Hall, who won the Women’s British Open the same year as Danny Willett, was given fewer than 15 seconds, showing only the winning tap-in putt at Royal Lytham & St Annes, and never said a word.
Had Rory won at St Andrews then he might have slipped into the top six but that’s as far as it would probably go.
This year’s extravaganza will be beamed into our living rooms on a Wednesday evening. Long gone are the days of the warm and fuzzy pre-Christmas Sunday evening with Des Lynam at the controls, now…
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