Laureus World Sports Award for Breakthrough of the Year

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The Laureus World Sports Award for Breakthrough of the Year (known as the Laureus World Sports Award for Newcomer of the Year prior to 2007) is an annual award honouring the achievements of those individuals or teams who have made a breakthrough performance in the world of sports. It was first awarded in 2000 as one of the seven constituent awards presented during the Laureus World Sports Awards. The awards are presented by the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation, a global organisation involved in more than 150 charity projects supporting 500,000 young people. The first ceremony was held on 25 May 2000 in Monte Carlo, at which Nelson Mandela gave the keynote speech. As of 2020, a shortlist of six nominees for the award comes from a panel composed of the "world's leading sports editors, writers and broadcasters". The Laureus World Sports Academy then selects the individual winner or winning team who is presented with a Laureus statuette, created by Cartier, at an annual awards ceremony held in various locations around the world. The awards are considered highly prestigious and are frequently referred to as the sporting equivalent of "Oscars".

Laureus World Sports Award for Breakthrough of the Year
Jude Bellingham holding the Laureus trophy
Jude Bellingham, 2024 winner
Awarded for"Awarded to the sportsperson or team whose performance as a newcomer suggests the greatest potential for an outstanding career or to an established sportsman or sportswoman who produces a significant step-up in class to a considerably higher level of sporting achievement."
LocationMadrid (2024)
Presented byLaureus Sport for Good Foundation
First awarded2000
Currently held byUnited Kingdom Jude Bellingham
WebsiteOfficial website

The inaugural winner of the award was the Spanish golfer Sergio García. During his debut season as a professional, the 19-year-old finished one stroke behind Tiger Woods at the 1999 PGA Championship and became the youngest player to gain selection for Team Europe for the Ryder Cup. In 2018 he also became the first and, As of 2020, only person to win the award twice, after winning his first major golf tournament (The Masters) at the age of 37. Altogether, the award has been won by five women and eighteen men, although several teams have also been nominated. British sportspeople have won more awards than any other nationality with six, followed by Spanish with five. Tennis players are the most successful overall with seven wins, followed by golfers with six.

The winner in 2017 was the German Formula One driver Nico Rosberg. Having beaten teammate Lewis Hamilton to the 2016 World Championship title by five points, Rosberg announced his retirement from the sport five days later, two months prior to collecting his Laureus statuette.

The 2024 winner of the Laureus World Sports Award for Breakthrough of the Year was an English football player Jude Bellingham.

List of winners and nominees

Laureus World Sports Award for Breakthrough of the Year winners and nominees
Year Image Winner Nationality Sport Nominees Refs
2000   Sergio García   ESP Golf Kurt Warner (  USA) – American football
Serena Williams (  USA) – tennis
2001   Marat Safin   RUS Tennis Aaron Baddeley (  AUS) – golf
Jenson Button (  GBR) – Formula One
Juan Carlos Ferrero (  ESP) – tennis
Brett Lee (  AUS) – cricket
2002   Juan Pablo Montoya   COL Formula One Kim Clijsters (  BEL) – tennis
Steven Gerrard (  ENG) – football
Justine Henin (  BEL) – tennis
Andy Roddick (  USA) – tennis
2003   Yao Ming   CHN Basketball Daniela Hantuchová (  SVK) – tennis
David Nalbandian (  ARG) – tennis
Wayne Rooney (  ENG) – football
Jochem Uytdehaage (  NED) – speed skating
2004   Michelle Wie   USA Golf Fernando Alonso (  ESP) – Formula One
Ben Curtis (  USA) – golf
LeBron James (  USA) – basketball
Robinho (  BRA) – football
Maria Sharapova (  RUS) – tennis
2005   Liu Xiang   CHN Athletics Amir Khan (  GBR) – boxing
Svetlana Kuznetsova (  RUS) – tennis
Laure Manaudou (  FRA) – swimming
Dani Pedrosa (  ESP) – MotoGP
Xing Huina (  CHN) – athletics
2006   Rafael Nadal   ESP Tennis Paula Creamer (  USA) – golf
Lionel Messi (  ARG) – football
Andy Murray (  GBR) – tennis
Danica Patrick (  USA) – auto racing
Ben Roethlisberger (  USA) – American football
2007   Amélie Mauresmo   FRA Tennis Xavier Carter (  USA) – athletics
Ghana men's national football team (  GHA) – football
Lewis Hamilton (  GBR) – Formula One
Britta Steffen (  GER) – swimming
Ma Xiaoxu (  CHN) – football
2008   Lewis Hamilton   GBR Formula One Novak Djokovic (  SRB) – tennis
Tyson Gay (  USA) – athletics
Alberto Contador (  ESP) – cycling
Oscar Pistorius (  RSA) – athletics
Casey Stoner (  AUS) – MotoGP
2009   Rebecca Adlington   GBR Swimming Novak Djokovic (  SRB) – tennis
Ana Ivanovic (  SRB) – tennis
Anthony Kim (  USA) – golf
Sebastian Vettel (  GER) – Formula One
Zou Kai (  CHN) – gymnastics
2010   Jenson Button   GBR Formula One Mark Cavendish (  GBR) – cycling
Tom Daley (  GBR) – diving
Juan Martín del Potro (  ARG) – tennis
Jiyai Shin (  KOR) – golf
VfL Wolfsburg (  GER) – football
2011   Martin Kaymer   GER Golf Christophe Lemaitre (  FRA) – athletics
Teddy Tamgho (  FRA) – athletics
Louis Oosthuizen (  RSA) – golf
Matteo Manassero (  ITA) – golf
Thomas Müller (  GER) – football
2012   Rory McIlroy   GBR Golf Li Na (  CHN) – tennis
Oscar Pistorius (  RSA) – athletics
Mo Farah (  GBR) – athletics
Petra Kvitová (  CZE) – tennis
Yohan Blake (  JAM) – athletics
2013   Andy Murray   GBR Tennis Gabby Douglas (  USA) – gymnastics
Kirani James (  GRN) – athletics
Neymar (  BRA) – football
Yannick Agnel (  FRA) – swimming
Ye Shiwen (  CHN) – swimming
2014   Marc Márquez   ESP MotoGP Afghanistan men's national cricket team (  AFG) – cricket
Raphael Holzdeppe (  GER) – athletics
Nairo Quintana (  COL) – cycling
Justin Rose (  GBR) – golf
Adam Scott (  AUS) – golf
2015   Daniel Ricciardo   AUS Formula One Marin Čilić (  CRO) – tennis
Mario Götze (  GER) – football
Switzerland Davis Cup team (   SUI) – tennis
Mikaela Shiffrin (  USA) – alpine skiing
James Rodríguez (  COL) – football
2016   Jordan Spieth   USA Golf Max Verstappen (  NED) – Formula One
Chile men's national football team (  CHI) – football
Adam Peaty (  GBR) – swimming
Tyson Fury (  GBR) – boxing
Jason Day (  AUS) – golf
2017   Nico Rosberg   GER Formula One Almaz Ayana (  ETH) – athletics
Fiji men's rugby sevens team (  FIJ) – rugby sevens
Iceland men's football team (  ISL) – football
Leicester City F.C. (  GBR) – football
Wayde van Niekerk (  RSA) – athletics
2018   Sergio García   ESP Golf Giannis Antetokounmpo (  GRE) – basketball
Caeleb Dressel (  USA) – swimming
Anthony Joshua (  GBR) – boxing
Kylian Mbappé (  FRA) – football
Jeļena Ostapenko (  LAT) – tennis
2019   Naomi Osaka   JPN Tennis Ana Carrasco (  ESP) – MotoGP
Jakob Ingebrigtsen (  NOR) – athletics
Geraint Thomas (  GBR) – cycling
Sofia Goggia (  ITA) – Alpine skiing
Briana Williams (  JAM) – athletics
2020   Egan Bernal   COL Cycling Andy Ruiz (  USA) – boxing
Bianca Andreescu (  CAN) – tennis
Coco Gauff (  USA) – tennis
Japan men's rugby team (  JPN) – rugby union
Regan Smith (  USA) – swimming
2021   Patrick Mahomes   USA American football Ansu Fati (  ESP) – football
Joan Mir (  ESP) – MotoGP
Tadej Pogačar (  SVN) – cycling
Iga Świątek (  POL) – tennis
Dominic Thiem (  AUT) – tennis
2022   Emma Raducanu   GBR Tennis Neeraj Chopra (  IND) – athletics
Daniil Medvedev (  RUS) – tennis
Pedri (  ESP) – football
Yulimar Rojas (  VEN) – athletics
Ariarne Titmus (  AUS) – swimming
2023   Carlos Alcaraz   ESP Tennis Elena Rybakina (  KAZ) – Tennis
Morocco men's national football team (  MAR) – football
Nathan Chen (  USA) – Figure skating
Scottie Scheffler (  USA) – Golf
Tobi Amusan (  NGR) – Athletics
2024   Jude Bellingham   GBR Football Linda Caicedo (  COL) – Football
Coco Gauff (  USA) - Tennis
Qin Haiyang (  CHN) – Swimming
Josh Kerr (  GBR) – Athletics
Salma Paralluelo (  ESP) – Football

Statistics

Statistics are correct as of 2024 winners.


Winners by sport
Sport Winners Nominations
Tennis 7 24
Golf 6 11
Formula One 5 5
Football 1 21
Athletics 1 19
Swimming 1 8
Cycling 1 5
MotoGP 1 4
American football 1 2
Basketball 1 2
Boxing 0 4
Alpine skiing 0 2
Cricket 0 2
Gymnastics 0 2
Auto racing 0 1
Diving 0 1
Figure skating 0 1
Rugby sevens 0 1
Speed skating 0 1

See also

References