Lindsey Vonn, Shaun White Big Winners at the 18th Annual ESPYs

Los Angeles, CA – Many of the biggest stars from the worlds of sports and entertainment gathered in downtown Los Angeles at the NOKIA Theatre last week to celebrate the best sports stories of the year at The 2010 ESPYs. Best Female Athlete and Best Female U.S. Olympian awards went to ski racer Lindsey Vonn, while snowboarder Shaun White won for Best Male U.S. Olympian and Best Action Sport Athlete, making him a winner of seven overall ESPYs.nWhite and Vonn also served as guest presenters at Wednesday night’s gala, awarding the Best Record Breaking Performance nod to John Isner and Nicolas Mahut, who produced the longest match in tennis history, lasting 11 hours, five minutes when Isner defeated Mahut 70-68 at Wimbledon. Seth Meyers entertained the all-star audience throughout the night with a humorous and creative performance that emphasized his passion for sports.

“This is such an incredible honor that wouldn’t have happened without such amazing fans who supported me and the U.S. Ski Team not just at the Olympics, but throughout the season,” said Vonn, who defeated tennis great Serena Williams and basketball players Maya Moore of the back-to-back National Champion Connecticut Huskies and WNBA superstar Diana Taurasi of the Phoenix Mercury for the Best Female Athlete honor.

Vonn also was up for the Best Female Athlete honor in 2008 after winning her first of three consecutive Audi FIS Alpine World Cup overall titles, but was edged by WNBA standout Candace Parker. It was the first time a skier, male or female, had been nominated in the Best Athlete category.

ESPY winners are determined entirely by popular vote by fans through text messages, Facebook and ESPN.com.

“This is coming from the fans,” said Vonn, who was awestruck in 2008 during her first trip to the ESPYS. “Alpine skiing isn’t basketball, tennis or golf, but the fans are showing that they’re looking to see more of our exciting sport in the mainstream. Just by voting and cheering for us, they’re helping to get it there.”

Also representing alpine skiing as a nominee was Julia Mancuso, who won silver in both downhill and super combined in Vancouver to become the most successful Olympic female alpine skier in U.S. history. As a 21-year-old, Mancuso rocked the 2006 Olympics with gold in giant slalom. Hannah Kearney, 2010 moguls gold medalist, was also nominated in the Best Female Olympian category.

White’s competition for the Best Male Olympian honor included Olympic super combined gold medalist Bode Miller, who garnered the full complement of medals in 2010 to become the most successful Olympic alpine skier in American history.

White garnered the Best Male Action Sports award too, a category he’s owned with wins in 2006, 2008, 2009 and now 2010. Of the seven years the category has existed, White has won it four times.

In the Best Female Action Sports division, X Games champion Jen Hudak of Salt Lake City was edged by Olympic halfpipe gold medalist Torah Bright of Australia. Hudak captured both the U.S. and Europe X Games skier halfpipe titles last winter in addition to the U.S. Championship. Skier halfpipe will make its debut at the 2011 Freestyle World Championships held Feb. 2-5 at Deer Valley Resort with the halfpipe at nearby Park City Mountain Resort in Utah and is positioning for Olympic inclusion in 2014.

Other snowsports athletes represented at the ESPYS were first-time winter Paralympian Alana Nichols and veteran Paralympic alpine skier Stephani Victor. Nichols rolled to a four-medal alpine skiing haul in Vancouver with gold in both downhill and giant slalom, plus silver in super G and bronze in super combined. With that, she became the first American woman to earn gold in both summer and winter Paralympics. A three-time Paralympian Victor hoisted a 2010 gold medal in super combined and silver medals in both super G and giant slalom.

Despite an impressive haul of seven 2010 Paralympic medals between the pair, Nichols and Victor were edged in the Best Female Athlete with a Disability category by Amy Palmiero-Winters, who holds 12 world running records for female amputees and recently won the AAU Sullivan Award as the nation’s top amateur athlete. Palmiero-Winters lost her left leg below the knee after a motorcycle accident.

On the men’s side, the snowsport contingent was boosted by 2010 Paralympic biathlon bronze medalist Andy Soule, a military veteran who lost his legs during active duty in Afghanistan, captured bronze just five years after being introduced to nordic skiing. Soule missed out on an ESPY to Steve Cash, who recorded four straight shutouts in the net for the gold medal winning U.S. Sled Hockey Team in 2010.

“Across the board, it’s amazing to have so many snowsport athletes represented at the ESPYS,” added Vonn. “What Bode (Miller) and Julia (Mancuso) did at the Olympics was outstanding for U.S. alpine, but it was also amazing to be a part of a U.S. Olympic Team that was successful across the board. From Shaun (White) on down, we’re showing the world how incredible these sports are and the fans are supporting us.”

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