England Lionesses nominated for World Team of the Year in the Laureus Awards

Fresh from lifting their maiden Women’s European Championship in July last year, the England Senior Women’s National Team has been nominated for the Laureus World Team of the Year.

The England Lionesses defeated old rivals and eight-time champions Germany 2-1 in a pulsating EURO 2022 final at Wembley – with substitute Chloe Kelly netting the winner in extra time with 10 minutes remaining.

Earlier Ella Toone had also come from the bench to give the hosts the lead in the 62nd minute, which was cancelled by Germany’s Lina Magull 17 minutes later to take the match to extra time and a nervy finish at a sold out Wembley with a record crowd of 87,192.

This was England’s first major football title since their male counterparts won the FIFA World Cup in 1996.

For the Laureus nomination, Sarina Wiegman’s side faces very stiff competition from the recently crowned men’s FIFA World Cup champions, the Lionel Messi-led Argentina and Karim Benzema’s Real Madrid who won the EUFA Champions League.

Also on the nomination list are France’s men’s rugby team, NBA side the Golden State Warriors and Formula 1 World Champions Red Bull.

Italy’s Men’s Football National Team won this award in 2022.

Since the inception of the awards in 2000, several women’s football teams have been nominated, but are yet to lift the trophy: USA Women’s National Team – 2000, 2016 Germany Women National team – 2004, 2008, 2010; Japan Women’s National – 2012;Barcelona Women Football Team – 2022.

In individual awards, FC Barcelona Femeni and Spain’s Alexia Putellas has strong competition in the Sportswoman of the Year category.

One of the most decorated footballers in the world in women’s football, the midfielder is considered the best in the game. She has won six league titles, six Copa de la Reina trophies  and a Women’s Champions League with the Spanish giants.

In the 2020/21 season, Putellas won the Ballon d’Or Féminin, the Best FIFA Women’s Player, and UEFA Women’s Player of the Year all in the same year – and went on to retain the Ballon d’Or award the following season, beating hot stars Beth Mead and Sam Kerr.

For the Laureus award, the FC Barcelona captain battle it out with Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (Jamaica) – Athletics; Katie Ledecky (USA) – Swimming; Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone (USA) – Athletics; Mikaela Shiffrin (USA) – Alpine skiing and Iga Swiatek (Poland) – Tennis.

This is Putellas’ second nomination in a row – last she was pipped to the title by Jamaican track and field sensation Elaine Thompson-Herah.

The 2023 winners will be revealed at an awards ceremony later this year.

Full list of nominees:

Team of the Year

England women’s football team

Argentina men’s football team

France men’s rugby team

Golden State Warriors (USA) – Basketball

Red Bull Racing – Formula 1

Real Madrid (Spain) – Football

Sportswoman of the Year:

Alexia Putellas (Spain) – Football

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (Jamaica) – Athletics

Katie Ledecky (USA) – Swimming

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone (USA) – Athletics

Mikaela Shiffrin (USA) – Alpine skiing

Iga Swiatek (Poland) – Tennis

Sportsman of the Year:

Steph Curry (USA) – Basketball

Armand Duplantis (Sweden) – Athletics

Kylian Mbappe (France) – Football

Lionel Messi (Argentina) – Football

Rafael Nadal (Spain) – Tennis

Max Verstappen (Netherlands) – Formula 1

Breakthrough of the Year:

Carlos Alcaraz (Spain) – Tennis

Tobi Amusan (Nigeria) – Athletics

Nathan Chen (USA) – Figure skating

Morocco men’s football team

Elena Rybakina (Kazakhstan) – Tennis

Scottie Scheffler (USA) – Golf

Comeback of the Year:

Francesco Bagnaia (Italy) – MotoGP

Christian Eriksen (Denmark) – Football

Jakob Ingebrigtsen (Norway) – Athletics

Klay Thompson (USA) – Basketball

Annemiek van Vleuten (Netherlands) – Cycling

Tiger Woods (USA) – Golf

Sportsperson of the Year with a Disability:

Diede de Groot (Netherlands) – Wheelchair tennis

Catherine Debrunner (Switzerland) – Para-athletics

Declan Farmer (USA) – Para-ice hockey

Cameron Leslie (New Zealand) – Para-swimming and wheelchair rugby

Oksana Masters (USA) – Para-cross-country skiing

Jesper Saltvik Pedersen (Norway) – Para-alpine skiing

World Action Sportsperson of the Year:

Justine Dupont (France) – Big wave surfing

Stephanie Gilmore (Australia) – Surfing

Eileen Gu (China) – Freestyle skiing

Chloe Kim (USA) – Snowboarding

Rayssa Leal (Brazil) – Skateboarding

Filipe Toledo (Brazil) – Surfing

Sport for Good Award:

Boxgirls (Kenya) – Boxing

High Five (Germany) – Action sports

Made For More (South Africa) – Multi-sport

Slum Soccer (India) – Football

TeamUp – Support for refugee children

By Matlhomola Morake