South African athlete Ernst van Dyk was named Laureus World Sportsperson of the Year with a Disability in Barcelona, Spain, on Monday. Swiss tennis superstar Roger Federer was named World Sportsman of the Year for the second straight year, with the women’s honour going to Croatian skier Janica Kostelic.
The awards, sometimes referred to as the Oscars of sport, bring together many of the leading sportsmen and -women from across the globe.
In 2005, Van Dyk won the Boston Marathon wheelchair race for a fifth straight time, as well as wheelchair marathons in New York, Paris, Seoul and Oita, and he showed his ability over shorter distances with wins at 400m and 800m in Atlanta’s Meet in the Heat.
In addition to Van Dyk’s successes in wheelchair racing last year, in handcycling he also won the South African Championship, the Argus Cycle Tour, the EHC Circuit Race at Spijkernisse and the Saddlers Ultra Challenge in Alaska. He was also awarded silver medals in the European Championship road race and time trial.
The 24-year-old Federer won the vote of Laureus Academy members ahead of other nominees such as another two-time winner, United States golfer Tiger Woods; Spanish Formula One world champion Fernando Alonso; Brazilian footballer Ronaldinho; and seven-times Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong.
The 23-year-old Kostelic edged out Britain’s world marathon champion Paula Radcliffe, Russian pole-vault queen Yelena Isinbayeva, Swedish heptathlete Carolina Kluft and Belgian tennis player Kim Clijsters.
There were awards also for Martina Hingis, who took the Laureus Comeback of the Year recompense; Spanish tennis star Rafael Nadal, who was named Newcomer of the Year; and French Formula One constructors’ champions Renault, who won Team of the Year.
Federer was present in Barcelona to accept his reward, flying in from Paris where he is preparing for next week’s French Open.
The world number one has won the past three grand-slam titles at Wimbledon, the US Open last year and this year’s Australian Open.
A win in the final at Roland Garros on June 11 will make him the first man since Australian legend Rod Laver in the 1960s to hold all four grand-slam titles at the same time.
He also won nine other tournaments in 2005 and continued in similar fashion this year by winning back-to-back Masters titles at Indian Wells and Miami before losing a five-set marathon to Nadal in Rome earlier this month.
Paying tribute to Federer, John McEnroe said he is the outstanding tennis player of this generation. ”In fact, he is probably the outstanding individual sportsman of this generation across all sports. Maybe only Tiger Woods of the sportsmen who are competing today week-in, week-out is on a par with him.
”He has already won seven grand slams at the age of 24. Other tennis players will come along to challenge him, but I think if he keeps healthy and keeps his appetite for the game he could break Pete Sampras’s record of 14 grand slams.”
Kostelic became the first woman to win four Alpine skiing gold medals after her victory in the women’s combined event at February’s Winter Olympics in Turin.
Once again she had to overcome injury and illness to triumph, having been forced to pull out of the Olympic downhill because she was unwell. Four years ago she won three gold medals at the Salt Lake City Olympics after fighting back from three knee operations in 12 months.
Renault won the team award ahead of such as Champions League titleholders and Spanish football champions Barcelona, the winning Croatian Davis Cup team and last year’s European football champions, Liverpool.
Top driver Fernando Alonso at 24 became the youngest world champion to date as the French-based team ended the long winning run of Ferrari and Michael Schumacher.
Hingis ended a three-year ”retirement” in January and promptly showed that she still had what it takes to compete at the highest level, culminating with victory in Rome on Sunday, while Nadal won the French Open at the age of 19 and emerged as the greatest threat to Federer’s crown.