Both male and female athletes are considered for the award by a panel of 27 international news agencies.
[1] The inaugural winner of the award was Olympic gold medallist Zdzisław Krzyszkowiak who specialized in the 3000 metre steeplechase.
The 27 agencies that are part of the panel are: EFE (Spain) France Presse (France), Agerpress (Romania), ANP (Netherlands), APA (Austria), ATA (Albania), Belga (Belgium), Belta (Belarus), BTA (Bulgaria), CTK (Czech Republic), DPA (Germany), Elta (Lithuania), FENA (Bosnia and Herzegovina), HINA (Croatia), LETA (Latvia), Lusa (Portugal), Moldpres (Moldova), SDA-ATS (Switzerland), SHGSK (Kosovo), SID (Germany), Sita (Slovakia), STA (Slovenia), Tanjug (Serbia), TASS (Russia), Ukrinform (Ukraine) and PAP (Poland).
So far, 47 male and 17 female athletes received the title of PAP European Sportsperson of the Year.
List of past winners from 1958 to 2010: Zdzisław Krzyszkowiak (Poland, 1958), Vasili Kuznetsov (USSR, 1959), Yury Vlasov (USSR, 1960), Valeriy Brumel (USSR, 1961, 1962, 1963), Lidiya Skoblikova (USSR, 1964), Michel Jazy (France, 1965), Irena Kirszenstein (Poland, 1966), Jean-Claude Killy (France, 1967, 1968), Eddy Merckx (Belgium, 1969, 1970), Juha Väätäinen (Finland, 1971), Lasse Virén (Finland, 1972), Kornelia Ender (East Germany, 1973), Irena Szewińska (Poland, 1974), Kornelia Ender (East Germany, 1975), Nadia Comăneci (Romania, 1976), Rosemarie Ackermann (East Germany, 1977), Vladimir Yashchenko (USSR, 1978), Sebastian Coe (Great Britain, 1979), Vladimir Salnikov (USSR, 1980), Sebastian Coe (Great Britain, 1981), Daley Thompson (Great Britain, 1982), Jarmila Kratochvílová (Czechoslovakia, 1983), Michael Gross (West Germany, 1984), Sergey Bubka (USSR, 1985), Heike Drechsler (East Germany, 1986), Stephen Roche (Ireland, 1987), Steffi Graf (West Germany, 1988, 1989), Stefan Edberg (Sweden, 1990), Katrin Krabbe (Germany, 1991), Nigel Mansell (Great Britain, 1992), Linford Christie (Great Britain 1993), Johann Olav Koss (Norway, 1994), Jonathan Edwards (Great Britain, 1995), Svetlana Masterkova (Russia, 1996), Martina Hingis (Switzerland, 1997), Mika Häkkinen (Finland, 1998), Gabriela Szabo (Romania, 1999), Inge de Bruijn (Netherlands, 2000), Michael Schumacher (Germany, 2001, 2002, 2003), Roger Federer (2004), Roger Federer and Yelena Isinbayeva (Switzerland and Russia 2005), Roger Federer (Switzerland, 2006, 2007), Rafael Nadal (Spain, 2008), Roger Federer (Switzerland, 2009), Rafael Nadal (Spain, 2010).