Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry hosts ESPYS, takes home two awards
The Golden State Warriors were front and center at Wednesday night's ESPYS, with star Stephen Curry hosting and taking home multiple awards and the club winning the Best Team statue.
Curry won the ESPY for Best NBA Player and for Best Record-Breaking Performance, which was presented for passing Ray Allen for most 3-pointers made in NBA history this past season.
Curry joked after accepting the record-breaking performance statue from actor Simu Liu and ski racer Lindsey Vonn: "The only reason I wanted to host is I thought I'd be able to present myself with the award."
"Definitely a great honor," Curry added. "In the same way I looked up to my dad, Reggie Miller, Ray Allen, the guys who came before me, all records are meant to be broken, so I know there's a lot of young kids that are out there that are working hard. I can't wait to be in the arena when you break this record."
Curry's teammate, Klay Thompson, won the award for Best Comeback. He made his triumphant return to action on Jan. 9, after being sidelined for more than two years while rehabbing a pair of career-altering injuries.
"It's just an incredible honor," Thompson said during his acceptance at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California.
The was the 29th year of the ESPYS, an event that helps raise awareness and funds for the V Foundation for Cancer Research. That charity was founded by ESPN and the late basketball coach Jim Valvano at the first ESPYS in 1993.
Jimmy V Award for Perseverance
Iconic ESPN broadcaster Dick Vitale, 83, was the recipient of this year's award.
Last August, he announced he had undergone multiple surgeries to remove melanoma. In October, he announced he had been diagnosed with lymphoma. His chemotherapy treatment for lymphoma forced Vitale to step back from ESPN's college basketball coverage.
Vitale announced in April that he is cancer-free.
"I sit here and tell you that, obviously, it's been a tough eight months," said Vitale, who thanked his wife, Lorraine, and his family. "If you know someone who is battling cancer, extend a message, send prayers. Those messages picked me up at the darkest moment. I hear Jimmy's [Valvano] words in my head, 'Don't give up, don't give up.' ... We are not going to stop chasing the dream. Jimmy's dream was to beat cancer, and we must do it."
Best Play
Megan Rapinoe added another ESPY to a decorated career that as of this month also includes a Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Competing in her second Olympics with Team USA in Tokyo last summer, Rapinoe scored directly off a corner kick -- known as an "Olimpico" -- in the Americans' bronze-medal match against Australia, one of her two goals in the game.
In accepting her award, Rapinoe drew attention to WNBA star Brittney Griner, whom the United States considers wrongfully detained by Russia.
"I think honestly what we've witnessed tonight is the importance of sport and how much we can bring and how much we can get done in the world with our collective power," Rapinoe said. "Every time we say her name, it puts pressure on everyone -- puts pressure on the administration, puts pressure on Russia. The most striking thing is that BG isn't here. BG deserves to be free.
"We can support her more and let her know that we love her so much."
Curry joined WNBA players Nneka Ogwumike and Skylar Diggins-Smith in also calling attention to Griner's plight.
"It's been 153 nights now that BG has been wrongfully detained thousands of miles away from home, away from her family, away from her friends, away from her team,'' Diggins-Smith said. "All throughout that time, we've kept her in our thoughts and in our hearts, even though we know that ain't nearly enough to bring her home, y'all."
Wearing Griner's Phoenix Mercury jersey under his tracksuit, Curry noted the effort being made to free Griner.
"But as we hope for the best, we urge the entire global sports community to continue to stay energized on her behalf,'' he said. "She's one of us, the team of athletes in this room tonight and all over the world. A team that has nothing to do with politics or global conflict."
They were applauded by Griner's wife, Cherelle Griner, who was in the audience.
Best Athlete, Women's Sports
Swimming star Katie Ledecky took home the award, winning over gymnast Sunisa Lee, Chicago Sky star Candace Parker and Oksana Masters, a cross-country skiier, cycler and biathlete.
At the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, Ledecky won two golds to increase her career individual gold medal count to six. At the FINA world championships this summer, she won four golds to become the most decorated female swimmer at the event with 22 career world medals.
In accepting her award, Ledecky implored young athletes to "find something you really love, that you're good at, that can be a positive force in our world, something that can inspire somebody else, something that can help somebody else, anything that can change our world." She added: "I think there are so many heroes not just in sports, but all around us -- look to those people as role models and go for the gold."
Best Athlete, Men's Sports
Los Angeles Angels star Shohei Ohtani took home the award in this category, beating out Curry, Green Bay Packers QB Aaron Rodgers and Edmonton Oilers star Connor McDavid.
Ohtani also won the Best MLB Player trophy over Bryce Harper of the Philadelphia Phillies, Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees and Jorge Soler of the Atlanta Braves.
Ohtani was the unanimous winner of the American League MVP award last fall, amassing 46 home runs and making 23 starts on the mound for the Angels.
Arthur Ashe Award for Courage
Vitali Klitschko, the Hall of Fame boxer and mayor of Kyiv, was honored with the award.
The mayor of Ukraine's capital since 2014, the former heavyweight champion is a longtime outspoken critic of Russian president Vladimir Putin.
Since Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, Vitali, along with his younger brother and fellow Hall of Famer, Wladimir, has served as one of the faces of the resistance. The Klitschkos took up arms in a territorial defense battalion in Kyiv; star boxers Vasiliy Lomachenko and Oleksandr Usyk followed suit in other parts of Ukraine.
Best Breakthrough Athlete
Eileen Gu, one of the breakout stars of the 2022 Winter Olympics, was fittingly awarded the ESPY. The standout California-born freestyle skier, who represented China in the Games, won two gold medals (big air, halfpipe) and one silver (slopestyle) while competing in her mother's hometown of Beijing.
Juggling an exhausting schedule and facing enormous expectations, the 18-year-old Gu would go on to become the first freeski athlete to medal in three events in a single Olympics.
"This is insane!" a surprised Gu exclaimed after winning. In her speech, Gu thanked her mom -- who "shows me what it means to be a strong, empowered woman" -- and grandmother, along with the "many pioneering women athletes" who came before her, many of whom were in the same room.
Gu also gave a shoutout to "the girls who come after me" and who will push the sport of freestyle skiing forward.
Best Championship Performance
Los Angeles Rams star receiver and Super Bowl MVP Cooper Kupp won the ESPY for doing exactly what he had done all season long: Delivering when it mattered most. He hauled in the game-winning 1-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Matthew Stafford with 1:25 remaining to give the Rams their second Super Bowl championship and first title in Los Angeles since 1951.
Kupp, who also won the NFL's receiving triple crown, finished with eight catches for 92 yards and two scores against the Bengals, his MVP effort coming in the Rams' own SoFi Stadium.
Kupp thanked his wife, Anna, and their two sons -- who are staying with their grandparents and to whom Kupp promised "extra dessert" this evening. He called the ESPY "a team award" and gave a shoutout to Rams defensive tackle and three-time Defensive Player of the Year Aaron Donald, who was also in attendance.
"Just to be in this room with so many people playing at the peak of their professions, this is truly an honor," Kupp said in concluding his speech.
Other winners announced:
Pat Tillman Award for Service: Gretchen Evans
Muhammad Ali Sports Humanitarian Award: Albert Pujols, St. Louis Cardinals
Billie Jean King Youth Leadership Award: Noor Abukaram, Kendall Dudley, Sydney Moore, Alicia Serratos, Lucy Westlake
Best NWSL Player: Ashley Hatch, Washington Spirit
Best MLS Player: Carlos Vela, LAFC
Best Athlete with a Disability, Men's Sports: Brad Snyder, paratriathlon
Best Athlete with a Disability, Women's Sports: Jessica Long, swimming
Best Athlete, Men's Action Sports: Eli Tomac, Supercross
Best Athlete, Women's Action Sports: Eileen Gu, Skiing
Best College Athlete, Men's Sports: Bryce Young, Alabama football
Best College Athlete, Women's Sports: Jocelyn Alo, Oklahoma softball
Best International Athlete, Men's Soccer: Kylian Mbappe, PSG
Best International Athlete, Women's Soccer: Sam Kerr, Chelsea
Best MLB Player: Shohei Ohtani, Los Angeles Angels
Best MMA Fighter: Charles Oliveira
Best NBA Player: Stephen Curry, Golden State Warriors
Best WNBA Player: Candace Parker, Chicago Sky
Best NHL Player: Connor McDavid, Edmonton Oilers
Best Athlete, Men's Golf: Justin Thomas
Best Athlete, Women's Golf: Nelly Korda
Best Athlete, Men's Tennis: Rafael Nadal
Best Athlete, Women's Tennis: Emma Raducanu
Best Bowler: Kyle Troup
Best Boxer: Tyson Fury
Best Driver: Kyle Larson, NASCAR
Best Game: Kansas City Chiefs defeat the Buffalo Bills in OT
Best Jockey: Jose Ortiz
Best Olympian, Men's Sports: Caeleb Dressel, Swimming
Best Olympian, Women's Sports: Katie Ledecky, Swimming
Best WWE Moment: Cody Rhodes returns to WWE at Wrestlemania
The Associated Press contributed to this report.