Serena Williams named Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson of the Year

Serena-Williams-01December 14 : Serena Williams was named  Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson of the Year — the first female athlete to be  honoured by the magazine in more than 30 years. Williams came within two matches  of tennis’ first calendar-year Grand Slam since 1988, a bid that ended with a semifinal loss at the U.S. Open. The 34-year-old American  won 53 matches out the 56 matches she played   with a record  53-3 during 2015 with five titles, including the three major  titles   Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon. Williams was number one for every week of the season for the second straight year. “She was the most deserving person for the award. She had an amazing year. The way she won her events; the fact that she’s done this for so many years at such a high level,” said Paul Fichtenbaum, editor of the Sports

Illustrated Group. “She was a terrific candidate in a year of terrific candidates.”

The cover photo of Williams in high heels, sitting on a throne was “her idea, intended… to express her own ideal of femininity, strength, power,” managing editor Christian Stone said on SI.com.

Serena Williams also returned to play at Indian Wells where she was greeted with jeers and boos. Monday’s announcement marks a switch to the formal name of the SI award. The  magazine earlier had been  honouring the recipient  as Sportsman or Sportswoman of the Year.“We just felt this was a natural evolution… We’re not making a huge deal out of it,” Fichtenbaum said. “It just feels like the right time to make the change.”

Serena is the first person to be honored solo since 1983 when runner   Mary Decker was honored by the magazine.The U.S. women’s national soccer team was picked by SI in 1999; speedskater Bonnie Blair in 1994 and gymnast Mary Lou  Retton in 1984 were co-honorees with male Olympians. In 2011, Tennessee women’s basketball coach Pat Summitt shared the award with Duke  men’s coach Mike  Krzyzewski. Despite her dominance in the tennis circuit for several years Williams hardly earn half of what Maria Sharapova Earns from endorsements.

“Men’s sports has dominated until recently, when women’s sports has grown in popularity, and the competition is better than ever,” Fichtenbaum said. “There’s more of a focus on women’s sports now. It’s grown considerably. Specifically why? I’m not sure.”

Other tennis players   honoured by the magazine  were Arthur Ashe in 1992, Chris Evert in 1976,  Billie Jean King in 1972.