Arthur Ashe Courage Award


The Arthur Ashe Courage Award is presented as part of the ESPY Awards. It is named for the American tennis player Arthur Ashe. Although it is a sport-oriented award, it is not limited to sports-related people or actions, as it is presented annually to individuals whose contributions "transcend sports". According to ESPN, the organization responsible for giving out the award, "recipients reflect the spirit of Arthur Ashe, possessing strength in the face of adversity, courage in the face of peril and the willingness to stand up for their beliefs no matter what the cost". The award has been presented as part of the ESPY Awards ceremony at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles since 2008.
The inaugural award, made at the 1993 ESPY Awards, was presented to the American college basketball player, coach, and broadcaster Jim Valvano. In 1993, ESPN partnered with Valvano to create the V Foundation which presents the annual Jimmy V Award to "a deserving member of the sporting world who has overcome great obstacles through perseverance and determination." Suffering from cancer, Valvano gave the inaugural Arthur Ashe Courage Award acceptance speech which "brought a howling, teary-eyed Madison Square Garden to its feet". Valvano died two months after receiving the award. Although the award is usually given to individuals, it has been presented to multiple recipients on seven occasions: former athletes on United Airlines Flight 93, Pat and Kevin Tillman, Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah and Jim MacLaren, Roia Ahmad and Shamila Kohestani, Trevor Ringland and David Cullen, and Tommie Smith, John Carlos, and survivors of the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal. The accolade has been presented posthumously on five occasions.
The award has not been without controversy: in June 2015, ESPN's announcement of Caitlyn Jenner as the recipient of that year's Arthur Ashe Courage Award led to significant criticism among online commenters and some members of the media, with Bob Costas calling the decision to give Jenner the award a "crass exploitation play". Many critics of the Jenner award considered Lauren Hill, who played college basketball despite suffering from a brain tumor that would claim her life only a few months later, a more worthy recipient. Others cited Noah Galloway, an Iraq War double amputee who competes in extreme sports and was also a finalist in the 20th season of Dancing with the Stars in 2015, as a worthy candidate.
The 2018 recipients of the Arthur Ashe Courage Award were the survivors of the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal.

Recipients

YearImageRecipientNotesRef
1993American college basketball player, coach, and broadcaster, died from adenocarcinoma
1994Major League Baseball umpire paralysed from the waist down after attempting to prevent a mugging
1995Journalist, creator of ABC SportsBeat, the first serious investigative sports journalist program
1996Multi-sports Special Olympics athlete
1997Boxer, an example of racial pride for African Americans and resistance to white domination during the civil rights movement.
1998College basketball coach for 36 years at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
1999Tennis player, campaigned for equal prize money in both men's and women's tennis
2000-High school sports coach killed defending students during the Columbine High School massacre
2001Track and field athlete, first Indigenous Australian person to become an Olympic Games gold medallist
2002 Todd Beamer
Mark Bingham
Tom Burnett
Jeremy Glick
Athletes onboard United Airlines Flight 93 ' who tried to reclaim control from the hijackers
2003 Pat Tillman '
Kevin Tillman
Pat was an American footballer who played for the Arizona Cardinals in the NFL, his brother Kevin a Minor League Baseball player; both enlisted, forgoing their sporting careers
2004Association footballer who became a UN Goodwill Ambassador
2005
Jim MacLaren
Yeboah brought attention to disabled people in Ghana, himself with a deformed leg, by cycling across the country. McLaren became a successful triathlete after having his leg amputated.
2006
Shamila Kohestani
Championing girls' and women's sport, specifically the Afghan women's association football team
2007
David Cullen '
Members of Peace Players International which uses basketball to unite and educate children
2008
John Carlos
Olympic track athletes, medalists at the 1968 Summer Olympics, who gave the Black Power salute on the podium
2009South African President, his presentation of the 1995 Rugby World Cup to Francois Pienaar was described as "an iconic moment in sports history"
2010High school American football coach, shot and killed by a former student
2011Boxer, wrongly imprisoned for 26 years
2012College basketball coach with, as of 2018, the most wins in NCAA basketball history, retired with early-onset Alzheimer's disease
2013Broadcaster, increased awareness in bone marrow donation through public coverage of her own illness
2014American football player, first publicly gay player to be drafted in the NFL
2015Caitlyn JennerFormer Olympic track and field athlete and transgender television personality
2016Fifteen-year-old American football player who used his body to shield three girls from a drive-by shooting
2017Founder of the Special Olympics
2018Survivors of the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal
'
Over 300 girls and women, mostly gymnasts, including but not limited to Rachael Denhollander, Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman, Jordyn Wieber, Gabby Douglas, and Maggie Nichols, who survived the abuse of Larry Nassar, spoke out about and shined a light on sexual abuse in sports, and demanded change and accountability
2019First African American coach in NBA history, a role he held while also continuing to play
2020Advocacy for and openness about mental health