sport
Share icon

Share

Tyson Fury fans accuse the BBC of foul play in SPOTY vote

Published 10:13 21 Dec 2015 GMT

Updated 15:58 21 Dec 2015 GMT

Tom Victor
Tyson Fury fans accuse the BBC of foul play in SPOTY vote

Homesport

Tyson Fury fell short in his bid to be named Sports Personality of the Year, but some fans claim the voting process wasn't entirely fair.

The boxer came under fire for his public views on homosexuality and gender equality, yet still took fourth place in the public vote for the award. But there have been many complaints from supporters of the heavyweight champ that they were unable to vote for him. https://twitter.com/oldheatonian/status/678687063194083329 https://twitter.com/JoelDancer64/status/678684252926529536 https://twitter.com/Airmiles23/status/678683133382791168 https://twitter.com/Fergz16/status/678682718255845376 https://twitter.com/ParodyDoherty/status/678683499906400256 Fury, who defeated Wladimir Klitschko to claim a shock victory in Dusseldorf, came fourth behind Jessica Ennis-Hill, Kevin Sinfield and eventual champion Andy Murray. But his comments away from the ring earned him plenty of enemies, despite claims he was misquoted, and could explain why he missed out on the award. There is certainly no indication that the BBC deliberately manipulated the vote. A BBC spokesperson told the Daily Mirror: “Over a million votes were cast during Sports Personality of the Year and we experienced no problems registering phone or online votes.”
Tyson Fury fans accuse the BBC of foul play in SPOTY vote