2019 ESPY Awards

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2019 ESPY Awards
DateJuly 10, 2019 (2019-07-10)
LocationMicrosoft Theater,
Los Angeles
Country United States
Hosted byTracy Morgan
Television/radio coverage
NetworkABC
Runtime180 minutes
Viewership3.871 million[1]

The 2019 ESPY Awards were presented at the 27th annual ESPY Awards show, held on July 10, 2019 at 5 PM Pacific at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles and broadcast on television nationwide in the United States on ABC at 8 PM Eastern/7 PM Central. Tracy Morgan served as the host.[2]

Winners and nominees[]

Best Male Athlete
  • Giannis Antetokounmpo – Milwaukee Bucks, NBA
    • Mookie Betts – Boston Red Sox, MLB
    • Brooks Koepka – Golf
    • Patrick Mahomes – Kansas City Chiefs, NFL
Best Play (Elimination Format)
Best College Athlete
  • Drew Brees surpassing Peyton Manning's 71,940 NFL passing yards on Monday Night Football; he also surpassed Brett Favre's completion record
    • Matthew Boling breaks the national high school record for the boys' 100 meter dash.
    • Sabrina Ionescu scoring her 13th triple double in her NCAA career, making her the record holder for most triple doubles, male or female, in NCAA history
    • Klay Thompson scoring 14 3-point field goals in an NBA game, breaking Stephen Curry's previous record
  • Patrick Mahomes – Kansas City Chiefs
    • Drew Brees – New Orleans Saints
    • Aaron Donald – Los Angeles Rams
    • Todd Gurley – Los Angeles Rams
  • Christian Yelich – Milwaukee Brewers
    • Mookie Betts – Boston Red Sox
    • Jacob DeGrom – New York Mets
    • Blake Snell – Tampa Bay Rays
  • Giannis Antetokounmpo – Milwaukee Bucks
    • Kevin Durant – Golden State Warriors
    • Paul George – Oklahoma City Thunder
    • James Harden – Houston Rockets
  • Alexander Ovechkin – Washington Capitals
    • Nikita Kucherov – Tampa Bay Lightning
    • Connor McDavid – Edmonton Oilers
    • Nathan McKinnon – Colorado Avalanche
Best International Men's Soccer Player
  • Lionel Messi – FC Barcelona/Argentina
    • Kylian Mbappé – Paris Saint-Germain F.C./France
    • Cristiano Ronaldo – Juventus F.C./Portugal
    • Virgil Van Dijk – Liverpool F.C./Netherlands
Best International Women's Soccer Player
Best Driver
  • Kyle Busch – NASCAR
    • Scott Dixon – IndyCar
    • Lewis Hamilton – Formula One
    •  – NHRA
  • Andy Ruiz Jr. defeats Anthony Joshua in a heavyweight title fight
    • Columbus Blue Jackets sweep the top-seeded Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round of the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs
    • Old Domininon defeats #13 Virginia Tech
    • Naomi Osaka beats Serena Williams at the 2018 US Open
Best Male Athlete with a Disability
Best Viral Moment
  • Katelyn Ohashi scores a perfect 10 in gymnastics
    • Texas A&M athlete lunges for the gold at the SEC Championships
    • Sister Mary Jo's first pitch at a Chicago White Sox game is a curveball
Best WWE Moment
Best Bowler
Best Esports Moment (Elimination format)
  • Roger Federer
    • Novak Djokovic
    • Rafael Nadal
    • Stefanos Tsitsipas

Other awards[]

Arthur Ashe Award for Courage

  • Bill Russell

Best Coach

  • Jim Calhoun

Best Comeback

  • St. Louis Blues come from being at the bottom of the NHL standings to win the Stanley Cup

Best Moment

  • Rob Gronkowski, Lindsey Vonn and Dwyane Wade for their careers

Capital One Cup

Jimmy V Award

In Memoriam[]

The 2019 ESPY Awards was the first time that there was no "In Memoriam" segment aired live. The segment was replaced by a segment honoring players' assistance within their communities with a performance of "In Times Like These" by Grammy award-winning Gospel singer Tori Kelly, taking place during the award segment for the Arthur Ashe Courage Award, which was awarded to NBA legend and Civil Rights activist Bill Russell.

References[]

  1. ^ Metcalf, Mitch. "UPDATED: SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 150 Wednesday Cable Originals & Network Finals:7.10.2019 | Showbuzz Daily". Showbuzz Daily. Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  2. ^ "The 2019 ESPYS Nominees". Retrieved Jul 11, 2019.

External links[]

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