There is one obvious reason Jonathan Rea’s name does not appear on a BBC Sports Personality of the Year shortlist that Tyson Fury wants to make shorter.

He might win it.

Rea came close in 2017, when he was beaten in the voting only by Mo Farah, and the Beeb are not going to take that risk again.

Having won the Superbike World Championship for a third time on the spin, Rea was amongst the 12 names the public were asked to choose from three years ago.

Since then, Rea has won a fourth, fifth and, now, sixth, world championship.

He has broken pretty much every Superbike record. He is a phenomena.

Jonathan Rea poses with his latest championship ring (
Image:
JOSE SENA GOULAO/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)

But on mainland Britain, few would recognise Rea, so the celebrity-obsessed TV types are not having that.

They are taking a chance the magnificent Hollie Doyle might get a decent number of votes but they had to have at least one female on the short list.

Not that there is a dearth of exceptional British sportswomen, it is just that the likes of cyclist Lizzie Deignan and triathlete Jessica Learmonth are not household names - unless you are in the Deignan or Learmonth household.

And with a chronic shortage of actual footage to show, the BBC needs stardust.

In fact, it needs to ramp up any publicity it can possibly get.

Fury says he doesn't want to be considered (
Image:
PA)

Which is why executives are probably not bothered about Fury’s request to be removed from the short list.

Leave him on it, the controversy is good and he is probably not going to win it anyway.

Lewis Hamilton finished second last year and there is no epic hero such as Ben Stokes to contend with in this Covid-19 edition of the award.

Don’t forget, Fury has not fought for 10 months.

Jordan Henderson will mobilise a decent Liverpool vote, Ronnie O’Sullivan has his backers, Stuart Broad is popular.

Finally O'Sullivan is being considered (
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Copyright (c) 2020 Shutterstock. No use without permission.)

But none of them are going to get votes in Stokes-style numbers.

There is a school of thought that believes the award should not be given this year, there is a school of thought that believes it’s a bit of a joke and there is a school of thought that believes Marcus Rashford should have been allowed to win it.

Valid arguments.

The award is deeply flawed - that is why Rea is not on the short list - but Hamilton will deserve, for a second occasion, the recognition of a prime time, terrestrial TV show.

If you disagree, think of those images from Bahrain on Sunday. The fact remains these drivers put their life on the line every single time they lower themselves into the cockpit of a Formula One car.

Lewis Hamilton has been consistently brilliant and is consistently underrated (
Image:
James Moy Photography/PA Images)

Imagine having the mentality to drive a flawless race when a mate has just been through what Romain Grosjean went through.

Imagine having that mentality for so long, for seven world titles, for 95 Grand Prix wins, for 265 races.

And if you do want non-sporting deeds taken into consideration, few sportsmen or women have been as proactive as Hamilton in campaigning for far greater inclusivity in his and other sports.

In the same way as Fury, Hamilton knows what he is and knows what he has done in sport.

In the same was as Fury, Hamilton does not need ‘verification’.

But it would be fitting to give it to him anyway.

And don’t let Tyson tell you any different.