LOS ANGELES -- LaDainian Tomlinson won four trophies at the
ESPY Awards on Wednesday night, including male athlete of the year
for his record-setting season with the San Diego Chargers.
ESPY Awards show

The 15th annual ESPY Awards show airs on Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT on ESPN.
Tomlinson defeated LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers,
Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning, Wimbledon champion
Roger Federer and Tiger Woods for athlete of the year.
James and comedian Jimmy Kimmel co-hosted the 15th annual show
honoring the year's best sports moments and athletes at Hollywood's
Kodak Theatre. It airs Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT on ESPN.
Tomlinson also won best NFL player, record-breaking performance,
and the Like Nothing Else award. The NFL MVP scored 31 touchdowns
and 186 points, both league records, and rushed for 1,875 yards.
Tomlinson declined to appear backstage to talk with reporters.
James won best NBA player; Federer earned his third straight
male tennis player trophy; Manning won championship performance for
his Super Bowl triumph; and Woods was chosen best golfer for the
third year in a row, his record 18th ESPY.
"I'm kind of glad to bring it back home to Indianapolis,"
Manning said. "The city of Indianapolis has just embraced this
championship. It truly was a team championship and part of the team
was the city."
James did a song-and-dance routine in glasses and a wig to Bobby
Brown's "My Prerogative" with rewritten lyrics.
"Bobby Brown just checked back into rehab as a result of that
performance," Kimmel joked.
Manning, who hosted "Saturday Night Live" last season, gave
James a good review.
"It's hard to do," he said. "The dancing was probably the
highlight."
James clearly enjoyed playing comic foil to Kimmel, who called
the basketball superstar's singing "terrible."
"This is what I do off the court -- have fun, tell jokes, I'm
very outgoing," James said backstage. "This was perfect for me,
especially when you got a guy like Jimmy working beside you."
The Colts were named best team, while Tony Dungy, the first
black coach to win a Super Bowl, captured the best coach-manager
category.
Arizona softball star Taryne Mowatt won female athlete of the
year and female college athlete honors. She pitched every inning,
including eight complete games and threw more than 1,000 pitches in
six days, to lead the Wildcats to the NCAA championship.
She defeated Los Angeles Sparks center Lisa Leslie, LPGA golfer
Lorena Ochoa and Tennessee basketball star Candace Parker for
athlete of the year.
"I definitely was a little surprised to win," Mowatt said
backstage. "Being up against them, it's just surreal."
Boise State's football team won awards for best game and best
play. The Broncos upset Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl on a two-point
conversion using the Statue of Liberty play.
The best moment award went to the New Orleans Saints, who
returned to the Superdome for the first time since Hurricane
Katrina and defeated the Atlanta Falcons on "Monday Night
Football."
The best finish category was added this year. The
Los Angeles Dodgers won for a victory over the San Diego Padres in which they
hit four consecutive homers to force extra innings and then won on
a two-run homer by Nomar Garciaparra.
North Carolina State women's basketball coach Kay Yow won the
inaugural Jimmy V ESPY for Perseverance. She was undergoing
chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer while coaching the
Wolfpack during this year's NCAA tournament.
The Arthur Ashe Courage award went to Trevor Ringland and Dave
Cullen from Northern Ireland. They founded PeacePlayers to bring
Protestant and Catholic children together to play basketball.
Winners in all but the Jimmy V and Arthur Ashe categories were
determined by online fan voting. ESPN said a record 12.5 million
votes were cast.