or even 'a' Royal family see Man City. Your middle class disregard of Tony McCoy is shockingly obvious. Who is your favourite bridge/polo player?
Clearly I'm talking about the British royal family on the basis that we are talking about British honours.
Oh I also I see the good old fashion class warfare is out in force. I'm not making any comment about the validity of the individuals knighted, merely pointing out the bias in favour of some sports over others.
I'm not really interested in horse racing, not because I'm middle class, but because I've never really seen the attraction in watching horses running around a track, and also because I'm not into betting, which is a critical factor in horse racing in a manner it isn't in most other sports.
So I've nothing against Tony McCoy, very clearly a great in his sport, but interesting to note that he was knighted immediately on his retirement in 2015. As far as I can see there are no footballers ever who have been knighted for their contribution as a player (i.e. knighted during their career or immediately on retirement). The only football knights have been knighted for services in football administration well after their playing careers ended.
So as a comparison, McCoy was knighted straight after the end of his glittering career, why not Bobby Charlton who was knighted only in 1994 for 'services to football (effectively administration) - why not directly after he retired in the late 70s after the most glittering career (World Cup and top scorer for England) - how come Gary Lineker remains stuck on an OBE despite a glittering career as a player and subsequently in all sorts of areas.
But if we are on class warfare - important to not that racing is the 'Sport of kings' although also a big working class sport, football has historically been a working class sport, and even though it now is firmly established in the middle classes it has never been the preserve of the establishment elite.