Best Female Action Sports Athlete ESPY Award

The Best Female Action Sports Athlete ESPY Award is an annual award honoring the achievements of a female athlete from the world of action sports. It was first awarded as part of the ESPY Awards in 2004 after the non-gender-specific Best Action Sports Athlete ESPY Award was presented the previous two years (with the American snowboarder Kelly Clark receiving the 2002 award).[2] It is given to the female, irrespective of nationality or sport contested, adjudged to be the best action sports athlete in a given calendar year. Balloting for the award is undertaken by fans over the Internet from between three and five choices selected by the ESPN Select Nominating Committee, which is composed of a panel of experts.[3] It is conferred in July to reflect performance and achievement over the preceding twelve months.[4]

Best Female Action Sports Athlete ESPY Award
Awarded forbest female action sports athlete
LocationMicrosoft Theater, Los Angeles (2017)[1]
Presented byESPN
First awarded2004
Currently held byChloe Kim (USA)[1]
Websitewww.espn.co.uk/espys/

The inaugural winner of the award was the American wakeboarder Dallas Friday.[5] During 2003 and 2004, Friday won 12 of the available 14 professional women's titles, including national and world championships. She became the first wakeboarder to be nominated for, and hence to win, an ESPY Award.[6] Athletes from the United States have won more times than any other nationality with seven (three times to snowboarder Jamie Anderson), followed by Australians with three, two of which went to the surfer Stephanie Gilmore. Snowboarders are most successful sportspeople (with eight awards), followed by surfers (four). It was not awarded in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[7] The 2017 winner of the Best Female Action Sports Athlete ESPY Award was the Austrian snowboarder Anna Gasser.[1]

Winners

Best Female Action Sports Athlete ESPY Award winners and nominees
Year Image Athlete Nation of citizenship Sport(s) regularly contested Nominees Refs
2004 Dallas Friday  United States Wakeboarding Layne Beachley ( AUS) – Surfing
Aleisha Cline ( CAN) – Ski cross
Hannah Teter ( USA) – Snowboarding
[5][8]
2005 Sofía Mulánovich  Peru Surfing Karin Huttary ( AUT) – Ski cross
Janna Meyen ( USA) – Snowboarding
Hannah Teter ( USA) – Snowboarding
[9][10]
2006 Hannah Teter  United States Snowboarding (half-pipe) Gretchen Bleiler ( USA) – Snowboarding
Cara-Beth Burnside ( USA) – Skateboarding
Dallas Friday ( USA) – Wakeboarding
Janna Meyen ( USA) – Snowboarding
[11][12]
2007 Sarah Burke  Canada Freestyle skiing Jamie Anderson ( USA) – Snowboarding
Layne Beachley ( AUS) – Surfing
Torah Bright ( USA) – Snowboarding
Elissa Steamer ( USA) – Skateboarding
[13][14]
2008 Gretchen Bleiler  United States Snowboarding (half-pipe, slopestyle) Stephanie Gilmore ( AUS) – Surfing
Lindsey Jacobellis ( USA) – Snowboarding
Jessica Patterson ( USA) – Motocross
[15][16]
2009 Maya Gabeira  Brazil Surfing Torah Bright ( USA) – Snowboarding
Sarah Burke ( CAN) – Freestyle skiing
Ashley Fiolek ( USA) – Motocross
[17][18]
2010 Torah Bright  Australia Snowboarding (half-pipe) Ashley Fiolek ( USA) – Motocross
Stephanie Gilmore ( AUS) – Surfing
Jen Hudak ( USA) – Freestyle skiing
Ashleigh McIvor ( CAN) – Freestyle skiing
[19][20]
2011 Stephanie Gilmore  Australia Surfing Sarah Burke ( CAN) – Freestyle skiing
Kelly Clark ( USA) – Snowboarding
Ashley Fiolek ( USA) – Motocross
[21][22]
2012 Jamie Anderson  United States Snowboarding (slopestyle) Kelly Clark ( USA) – Snowboarding
Carissa Moore ( USA) – Surfing
Kaya Turski ( CAN) – Freestyle skiing
[23][24]
2013 Stephanie Gilmore  Australia Surfing Letícia Bufoni ( BRA) – Skateboarding
Kelly Clark ( USA) – Snowboarding
Laia Sanz ( ESP) – Motocross
[25][26]
2014 Jamie Anderson  United States Snowboarding (slopestyle) Maddie Bowman ( USA) – Freestyle skiing
Kelly Clark ( USA) – Snowboarding
Vicki Golden ( USA) – Motocross
Carissa Moore ( USA) – Surfing
[27][28]
2015 Kelly Clark  United States Snowboarding (half-pipe) Paige Alms ( USA) – Surfing
Stephanie Gilmore ( AUS) – Surfing
Laia Sanz ( ESP) – Motocross
[29][30]
2016 Jamie Anderson  United States Snowboarding (slopestyle) Keala Kennelly ( USA) – Surfing
Chloe Kim ( USA) – Snowboarding
Carissa Moore ( USA) – Surfing
[31][32]
2017 Anna Gasser  Austria Snowboarding (slopestyle) Lacey Baker ( USA) – Skateboarding
Kelly Sildaru ( EST) – Freestyle skiing
Tyler Wright ( AUS) – Surfing
[1][33]
2018 Chloe Kim  United States Snowboarding (slopestyle) Jamie Anderson ( USA) – Snowboarding
Stephanie Gilmore ( AUS) – Surfing
Brighton Zeuner ( USA) – Skateboarding
[34]
2019 Chloe Kim  United States Snowboarding (slopestyle) Kelly Sildaru ( EST) – Skiing
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott ( NZL) – Snowboarding
Stephanie Gilmore ( AUS} Surfing
[35]
2020 Not awarded due to the COVID-19 pandemic [7]

See also

References

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  3. Nelson, Murry R. (2013). American Sports: A History of Icons, Idols and Ideas. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. pp. 399–401. ISBN 978-0-313-39753-0. Archived from the original on March 25, 2018. Retrieved March 25, 2018.
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