Sports Personality of the Year: BBC award shortlist named
Olympic and Paralympic athletes dominate the shortlist for the 2012 BBC Sports Personality of the Year award.
Cyclists Bradley Wiggins and Sir Chris Hoy, tennis star Andy Murray, and athletes Jessica Ennis and Mo Farah are candidates in a 12-strong list.
Rower Katherine Grainger, golfer Rory McIlroy, boxer Nicola Adams and sailor Ben Ainslie are other hopefuls.
Paralympians Sarah Storey, Ellie Simmonds and David Weir also make the list for the award on 16 December.
Sports Personality of the Year 2012 shortlist expert panel
- Director of BBC Sport - Barbara Slater (Chair)
- BBC head of TV Sport - Philip Bernie
- Executive editor of BBC Sports Personality of the Year - Carl Doran
- From BBC Radio 5 live - Eleanor Oldroyd (presenter, 5 live Sport)
- Three newspaper sports editors (to be rotated annually) - in 2012, Mike Dunn (sports editor, the Sun), Lee Clayton (head of sport, Daily Mail), Matthew Hancock (sports editor, the Observer)
- A pan sports broadcaster/journalist - Sue Mott
- Three former SPOTY nominees (to be appointed annually) - in 2012, Sir Steve Redgrave, Baroness Grey-Thompson and Denise Lewis
- Baroness Campbell, chair of UK Sport
Three former Sports Personality nominees were on an expert panel which decided the shortlist, and the winner will be decided by a public vote on the night.
The panel was put together following criticism of an all-male list decided via a different method in 2011.
The 2000 winner Sir Steve Redgrave, Baroness Grey-Thompson and Denise Lewis were joined by Baroness Campbell, chair of UK Sport, and representatives from the BBC and the newspaper industry.
Presented by Sue Barker, Gary Lineker and Clare Balding, Sports Personality of the Year will be broadcast live on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 5 live from 19:30 GMT.
A capacity crowd of 15,000 at the ExCel in London will make it the biggest show in the event's 59-year history.
It will be a star-studded climax to 12 months of sport which saw London host the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
With an array of candidates to choose from, the panel faced some difficult choices finalising the shortlist, which was extended from 10 to 12 to reflect a brilliant year for British sport.
Contenders on Twitter
* Katherine Grainger and Bradley Wiggins do not have Twitter accounts
Bradley Wiggins became the first Briton to win the Tour de France and followed up with Olympic time trial gold. Hoy won the team sprint and men's keirin at London 2012 - his fifth and sixth gold medals overall - to beat the record for golds won by a British sportsman.
Ennis won the heptathlon and Farah triumphed in both the 5,000m and 10,00m in the Olympic Stadium.
Murray clinched gold at the Games before ending Britain's wait for a major tennis title with victory in the US Open, and McIlroy also triumphed across the Atlantic as he took the US PGA title, played in Europe's winning Ryder Cup team and won the season-ending Tour Championship.
Adams became the first female fighter to win an Olympic boxing title, Grainger claimed rowing gold at the fourth attempt and Ainslie's victory at the Games made him the most decorated Olympic sailor.
At the Paralympics, wheelchair racer Weir won four titles, teenage swimmer Simmonds triumphed twice and Storey rode to four cycling titles.
2012 Sports Personality shortlist
- Olympic gold medallists: 8
- Paralympic gold medallists: 3
- Other: 1
- Men: 7 Women: 5
- Age range: 18 to 36
Such was the strength in depth of potential contenders that those to miss out include Olympic gold medallists Charlotte Dujardin, Greg Rutherford, Victoria Pendleton, Laura Trott and Alistair Brownlee, along with Europe's Ryder Cup hero Ian Poulter.
The expert panel will also choose the first, second and third places for the Team of the Year, Overseas Personality of the Year and Coach of the Year awards.
Chair of the panel, BBC Director of Sport Barbara Slater, said: "If we ever needed reminding just how special a sporting year it has been, then the list of those sportspeople who did not make the final 12 is testament to that."
Other awards on the night will again be Young Sports Personality of the Year and Unsung Hero, which will continue to be decided by the existing specialist panel system - plus the Lifetime Achievement and Helen Rollason awards which will be decided by the board of BBC Sport.
Cavendish named 2011 Sports Personality of the Year
Comments
Jump to comments paginationAll posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
Elsewhere on the BBC
-
Winning business
Why trying to become a successful entrepreneur has never been more fashionable
-
~RS~q~RS~v=~RS~z~RS~37~RS~)

Comment number 1029.
Simon Richards27th November 2012 - 14:31
I'm 53 years old. I can't remember another year coming close to this year for sporting success. Out of the 12 twelve who have been nominated all of them would have won in probably 15 out of the last 20 years.
Link to this (Comment number 1029)
Comment number 897.
lee fett27th November 2012 - 12:34
What an amazing achievement just to be nominated this year, I don't envy the panel having to pick the 12 but they've done a great job. Yes there are notable abentees but you can't say the 12 picked don't deserve to be there. It just shows what an amazing year of sport we've all been treated to here in Britain.
Link to this (Comment number 897)
Comment number 804.
the real prophet27th November 2012 - 10:58
At least this years contenders are all deserving of their places in the line up, with another 4 or 5 that should be included.
In all honesty I couldn't choose between them. They all deserve to be winners.
Fantastic year for British sport.
Link to this (Comment number 804)
Comment number 485.
rob3_14226th November 2012 - 23:30
What an absolutely star studded line-up, with some memorable performances thrown in. The list could justifiably be double in length
Personality has no bearing on this competition, all you have to do is look at the sporting achievements and what they mean to this country.
It's unfair on anyone in that list to lose, but no doubt believe that they are all just thrilled to be a part of history
Link to this (Comment number 485)
Comment number 463.
Fraser Posford26th November 2012 - 23:10
furthermore in Brownlee's case, he ran a 10K about 1 minute slower than Mo Farah did to win gold in the individual event. That was after swimming 1.5K and cycling 43K. As a competitive open water swimmer and an occaisional runner I know how hard that is. Also Laura Trott pretty much fits the criteria for SPOTY, how you can win 2 Olympic Golds and not get on the list is absurd
Link to this (Comment number 463)
Comments 5 of 11