SAN FRANCISCO \u2013 Track superstar Allyson Felix has already won more world titles than Usain Bolt, more Olympic medals than Carl Lewis, and is the most successful woman in the world to ever compete in track and field at the Olympic Games. Earlier this year she was named one of Time magazine\u2019s Women of the Year.<\/a><\/p>\n On Thursday in San Francisco, Sports Illustrated<\/em><\/a> will present Felix with one more honor, one named after the legendary boxer and activist who rightfully called himself \u201cthe greatest of all time:\u201d The Muhammad Ali Legacy Award. <\/p>\n Felix is a Los Angeles native who, after 17 years and five Olympic Games in a row, only hung up her spikes less than a year ago. She is being feted at the Sportsperson of the Year Awards at The Regency Ballroom, not just for her accomplishments in her sport, but also for her continuing battle for what she calls \u201ca more equal world.\u201d<\/p>\n \u201cI\u2019m a person who is shy by nature and I don\u2019t like to rock the boat,\u201d Allyson Felix told Sports Illustrated<\/em><\/a>. \u201cSo it was really, really difficult to be able to find that place to come forward and to share what had been going on.\u201d<\/p>\n