Becky James makes her SPOTY bid

25 02 2013

It would be nice to think this weekend has ensured a Welsh sports star will be on the BBC’s Sports Personality of the Year shortlist in 10 months’ time.

Not anyone to do with Swansea City, who won their first major (English) trophy yesterday, nor a rugby player (though with a Lions tour coming up that’s not totally out of the question).

Becky James, from Abergavenny, picked up four medals – two gold and two bronze, exactly the same record as France – in last week’s 2013 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Belarus as Great Britain continued their dominance on two wheels (if not quite as comprehensively as during the Olympics).

James won two individual rainbow jerseys, in the sprint and keirin, an individual bronze in the 500m time trial and a further bronze alongside Victoria Williamson in the team sprint. GB finished with five golds, two silvers and two bronzes.

It’s great to see a young Welsh star (she is only 21) emerge as such a force on the world stage – and if you had any doubts as to the magnitude of her achievement, you only need to see the reaction of her track rivals, including Anna Meares, Victoria Pendleton’s long-time adversary (ignore the fact she’s forgotten some past champions):

 





BBC Sports Personality of the Year: vote David Weir

16 12 2012

The importance, or otherwise, of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year, is up for debate, particularly in a year of almost unprecedented British sporting success.

But I might as well make my pick. I think Alastair Cook is unlucky to miss out on a place in the shortlist of 12, although his big achievement was after the shortlist was announced. Having said that, though, I would have to choose an Olympian or Paralympian, which rules out Rory McIlroy.

Mo Farah and Jess Ennis have rightly been lauded for their remarkable success in August, but I am more inclined to someone who hasn’t been in the media spotlight all year anyway. For that somewhat illogical reason, two of the favourites, Bradley Wiggins and Andy Murray, are also ruled out of getting my vote.

I would hate to belittle the incredible success of Sir Chris Hoy, Ellie Simmonds and Ben Ainslie, but they have already had so much success their golds this time almost feel like par for the course. Nicola Adams is a real personality, true, but I don’t reckon she deserves the nod above the rest of the competition.

So my top three would be:

  • 3rd: Katherine Grainger – a stalwart of British rowing for years, and one who had got so close before but never quite managed Olympic gold. This year she finally changed that.
  • 2nd: Sarah Storey – a five-time Paralympic swimming gold medallist, she added four more cycling golds to her two from Beijing in London. She cantered to victory in all of her races over the various distances, making all of her events look almost embarrassingly easy
  • 1st: David Weir – not just because he was the only one of the 12 I saw win over the summer, for two of his four gold medals in four events, in distances ranging from 800m to the marathon. He won the marathon despite confessing to feeling exhausted early on and visibly fading during the first lap or two. And most of all, perhaps Weir was the single athlete who allowed the British public to get as engaged with the Paralympics as much as they did with the Olympics (people were talking about him on the Tube in the same way they were Farah and Ennis).




Weekend round-up

27 05 2012
  • It can’t have been asking too much of Sky Sports to show the penalty shoot-out from the women’s FA Cup final at Ashton Gate yesterday instead of a couple of minutes’ extra coverage of the League One play-off final, surely. The channel cut to Wembley with Birmingham and Chelsea preparing to take spotkicks, which effectively undermined the whole of the rest of the broadcast. Money talks, I guess, but the women’s game is not going to gain support if even a shootout in the final is not deemed worthy of any more than red button coverage.
  • Congratulations to Team GB’s Geraint Thomas and Tom James, who produced promising performances this weekend. Cyclist Thomas finished second in the individual time-trial as the Giro d’Italia, a result he said he was “happy” with in the build-up to the Olympic Games. Meanwhile James, one of the British men’s four rowing, helped his team smash the world record in the World Cup regatta at Lucerne. The event is one of Britain’s strongest events, with Team GB picking up Olympic golds in Sydney 2000, Athens 2004 and Beijing 2008.
  • Meanwhile, Dai Greene (48.96 seconds) was narrowly beaten into second place in the 400m hurdles in Morocco by the American Felix Sanchez (48.93), one of the toughest obstacles to Greene’s hopes of adding Olympic gold to the world, European and Commonwealth equivalents he has already won