You are working on Staging2

3 Wins, 10 Nominations For Swimmers At 2017 ESPY Awards

The 2017 ESPY Awards took place Wednesday night, and the sport of swimming had a phenomenal showing. The awards show, produced by the American broadcast company ESPN, honors the best from the last 12 months in sports. All in all swimmers received 10 nominations, with three wins.

Michael Phelps  came out on top for both ‘Best Record-breaking Performance‘ and ‘Best Male U.S. Olympic Athlete’. For Best Record-breaking performance, Phelps was recognized for extending his own record for most Olympic gold medals and most Olympic medals overall. Phelps won five gold and one silver medal at the 2016 Games in Rio, giving him a total of 23 gold and 28 medals in his historic career. He beat out Bill Belichick (most Superbowl wins as head coach), Diana Taurasi (broke WNBA career scoring record), and Russell Westbrook (most triple doubles in a season).

For Best Male U.S. Olympic Athlete, Phelps’ six medal performance got him the honor over teammate Ryan Murphy, who was nominated after winning three gold medals and setting a world record in his Olympic debut. Ashton Eaton (decathlon) and Kyle Snyder (wrestling) were also nominated.

Becca Meyers and her dog Birdie on the red carpet.

The third win came from Paralympian Becca Meyers, who won ‘Best Female Athlete with a Disability’. Competing in the S13 category, Meyers won three gold and one silver medal at the 2016 Paralympic games, winning gold in the 400 free, 100 fly and 200 IM.

Also receiving nominations were 2016 Olympic gold medalists Katie LedeckySimone Manuel and Katinka Hosszu, as well as 2016 Paralympic gold medalist Brad Snyder.

Check out all swimmers nominated below:

You can check out the full list of winners and nominees here.

In This Story

7
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

7 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jim C
7 years ago

I have an idea about how to do this next time. First pick the best athlete, then pick someone else as the best US Olympic Athlete.

UGA Fan
7 years ago

Simone Biles couldn’t even win Dancing With The Stars, so she isn’t that likable. Laurie Hernandez won it easily and that thing is just a popularity contest.

AvidSwimFan
7 years ago

As formidable as Katie Ledecky is, and as popular as swimming is, Simone Biles is still much more popular as is female gymnastics, hence Simone winning best US Olympic athlete over Katie.

Steve Nolan
Reply to  AvidSwimFan
7 years ago

Even taking out the relative popularity of both sports, Biles is an all-time great gymnast. Not that Ledecky already isn’t a legendary swimmer in her own right, but it’s a legitimate toss-up to me.

Hannah
Reply to  Steve Nolan
7 years ago

I agree that they are both amazing athletes, but I think Ledecky should have won. Ledecky and Biles both have events where they were extremely dominant and guaranteed to win, for Ledecky, the 800, 400 and 4×200 relay, and for Biles, vault, floor, all around, and the team competition, and events where they had more competition,for Ledecky, the 200 free, and for Biles, beam. Given that Ledecky won the 200 and even anchored the silver medal winning 4×100 free relay, which I don’t think anyone saw coming, and Biles choked on beam and only got bronze, I think that Ledecky performed better overall in Rio.

AvidSwimFan
Reply to  Steve Nolan
7 years ago

Not saying Simone Biles isn’t a good gymnast, my point is that this is a popularity contest that Simone Biles has Katie Ledecky beat at. Compare their Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook, and Twitter. Also, Simone makes E! News from time to time. Now add that Simone was on dancing with the stars.

Steve Nolan
Reply to  AvidSwimFan
7 years ago

Yup, and I agree, Biles is more popular. I was addressing the two on merits outside of popularity and even there, it’s super close. They’re both really, really good.

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

Read More »