When half-past
five on Saturday comes round
For week-end
stimulation will resort
To Andrew and
Mackay and Sports Report
For over six
decades the jaunty tones of Out of the
Blue have both presaged the latest sports results and to evoke the
nostalgia of simpler times – an era of football fixtures that always kicked off
at 3 o’clock, filling in the Vernons pools coupon or reading the late edition
of the Hull Daily Mail Sports Green (a memory for readers in East Yorkshire
there). Depending on your age, and memory, you may recall the radio
voices of Eamonn Andrews, Peter Jones, Bryon Butler, Bill Bothwell and Larry
Canning. In this post I review the history of Sports Report and the Saturday afternoon sports sequence in the
days before sponsorship, the premiership and Sky Sports HD.
NARRATIVE
ACCOUNTS
From the
early days of the BBC there was coverage of the major sporting events. Pre-war,
the voices of John Snagge at the Boat Race and George Allison’s football
commentaries (his first match between the Corinthians and Newcastle United on
29 January 1927 was the second ever football commentary transmission) were
already familiar to listeners.
The press
and news agencies were initially reluctant to allow the fledgling broadcaster live
coverage. The Radio Times of 30 April 1926 argued that “the BBC have repeatedly
requested permission to broadcast from all stations narrative accounts of a
very limited number of outstanding events while they are in progress, such as
the Boat Race and the Cup-Tie Final, but they are prevented from doing so by
the terms of the Agreement made with the Press before the Company was licensed
by the Postmaster-General, and relaxation in this direction has so far been
declined.”
With the
licensing of the newly formed Corporation starting on 1 January 1927 that all
changed and the BBC proclaimed that it would “broadcast running narratives and
commentaries on all the leading sporting events and great public occasions, as
well as put out more comprehensive and varied news bulletins, the first to be
aired at 6.30, half-an-hour earlier than before.”
By the end
of the year the first ever live commentaries had taken place for rugby matches,
cricket, Wimbledon, the Grand National and the Derby.
Some 1927
sports broadcasts highlights:
January 15
1927 – first rugby match, England v Wales, at Twickenham
January 22
1927 – first football match, Arsenal v Sheffield United, with Teddy WakelamMarch 25 1927 – first Grand National, described by Meryick Good and George Allison
March 26 1927 – first athletics meeting the Inter-Varisty Sports at Queens Club, narrated by Harold Abrahams
April 2 1927 – first Boat Race with narrators Oliver Nickalls and JC Squire
April 23 1927 – first FA Cup Final with George Allison and Derek McCulloch
May 14 1927 – Essex v New Zealand cricket match at Leyton, described by P.F. (Plum) Warner
June 1 1927 – first Derby, narrated by Geoffrey Gilbey and George Allison
July 2 1927 – running commentary on the Wimbledon finals
September 7 1927 - running commentary of the St Leger by Geoffrey and Quintin Gilbey
Although the
BBC continued to cover an increasing number of sporting events there was, up
until 1939, still an embargo on the reporting of sports news and results until
after 6.15 p.m.
HELLO THERE
SPORTS FANS
The idea of a round-up of Saturday’s sports news just after the final whistle didn’t surface until late 1947 when news producer Angus Mackay (pictured above) was approached to start what would be called Sports Report. Writing in 1954 he recalled that it was October 1947 “when I received a phone call from John McMillan, who was then the first assistant to Norman Collins, Controller, Light Programme. McMillan asked me in his laconic way ‘would you like to try your hand at putting a sports programme out on the air at 5.30 p.m. in the Light Programme?”
This would
technically be quite demanding as the match reports had to come from studios,
so only those grounds that were within a fast car drive away of a BBC studio
could be considered. Mackay continues: “A lightning trip round the BBC Regions
followed. Would the North, Midlands, Wales and West of England co-operate? They
would, but ominously the generous offers to help were generally accompanied by
bland statements to the effect that whether they did or not we would never get
a programme on the air as early as 5.30 p.m. Personally, I was inclined to
agree, but nevertheless we forged ahead and on 3rd January 1948 we went on the
air with the very first edition of Sports
Report.”
At the
microphone was Raymond Glendenning, the BBC’s moustachioed all-rounder
commentator. No recordings of that first show exist but the script went as
follows:
Hello there, sports fans, and welcome to Sports Report – a weekly programme on the air at this time every Saturday, with a roving microphone, to bring you not only the football results, but up-to-the-minute accounts of major sporting fixtures from all parts of the country, and an “open” microphone over which we shall be airing the personal views of experts on sport on topics of the moment. Now our aim is to bring into your home, wherever you may be, a half-hour coverage of sport, wherever it may be taking place. How well we have succeeded in this first edition, you will be able to judge after the next 29 minutes.”
The first programme
featured reports from three football matches: Portsmouth v Huddersfield with
John Arlott and Manchester City v Aston Villa with Alan Clarke (who would stay
with the BBC for another 20 years as football commentator). The Scottish League
match was Rangers v Dundee and the England v Australia Rugby Union fixture was
covered by Frank Shaw.
For many
years the programme would also feature longer talks on sporting news and
previews. So we heard newspaperman Peter Wilson, of the Daily Mirror, talk about US sports events and personalities whilst
Alan Hoby, of the Sunday Express,
argued in favour of part-time payments to athletes.
As John Arlott recalled there were several different types of contributors:”the outside reporter, dashing to a microphone to hustle his hot news over the air; the talker who would discuss a situation authoritatively; and, finally, the personality, from a world champion at any kind of sport to a man who had just made the news.”
Sports Report 14 March 1959 |
Mackay’s
favoured use of Fleet Street sports journalists- as well as Wilson and Hoby,
J.L.Manning of the Daily Mail was
another regular- raised tensions between two BBC departments for the best part
of two decades. The programme itself was under the News division whilst the
commentators worked Outside Broadcasts. “A Chinese wall soon developed between
these two departments” recalled racing commentator Peter Bromley, “and there
was little or no co-operation and certainly no goodwill.”
It wasn’t
until the Head of OB Charles Max Muller retired in 1969 and Robert Hudson took
over that plans to amalgamate Outside Broadcasts and Sports News were made. In
the event this didn’t happen until Mackay also retired in 1972 and Cliff Morgan
became the new Editor of Sport.
The
inclusion of Out of the Blue as the
theme for Sports Report was a last
minute addition. Here’s Angus Mackay again:
For several weary days Hugh Driver, one of my colleagues, and I had been listening to literally dozens of gramophone records trying to find a suitable melody. It seemed to us that we had exhausted the reserves of the gramophone library, and we were not very happy about the disc we had chosen when, in the late afternoon of our first broadcast, the library came through to say that there were a few more discs available if we had time to hear them. We did find time that afternoon and one of the first we heard was a march called Out of the Blue composed by Hubert Bath. This was just what we had been looking for and almost immediately it was whisked up to the studio, slapped on the turntable and used to introduce the first edition.
Eamonn Andrews was much used on BBC TV and radio. In this Radio Times from 1962 he featured on Sports Parade, Sports Report, What's My Line?, This is Your Life and Crackerjack |
Andrews had been a sports commentator on Radio Éireann before joining the BBC in 1950, taking over from Stewart MacPherson as question-master on Ignorance is Bliss. When that ended he read a few morning stories and set about pestering the OB Department for commentary try-outs. Following an introduction to Mackay by colleague Brian George, Andrews was hired to host Sports Preview on the BBC’s General Overseas Service. Shortly after he was asked to take on Sports Report – his first edition airing on 9 December 1950.
THE STERN SCOT
The combination of Mackay “the stern, methodical Scot”
and Andrews “the affably engaging Irishman” was perfect chemistry and,
according to sports writer Patrick Collins “the results were stunning. The
essential service of reports and statistics was never disregarded, but a
newspaper of the airwaves consists of more than a back page, and one of the
strengths of the programme became its willingness to air controversy and
encourage strong opinions.”
Angus Mackay
instilled a discipline into sports reporting that endures to this day.
Remembering the early programmes he wrote that “we used to think we were
putting on fast, slick shows. In those days we used to give as much as two and
a half minutes to a report on a soccer match, and we got what we deserved-
flowery, well-padded stories which contained a good deal of wholly unnecessary
information. We learned the hard way because there was no precedent for a
programme such as this, but it wasn’t long before we realised that a good radio
reporter could give us an accurate, informative picture of a game in something like a minute and a quarter or a
minute and a half.”
Mackay and Andrews in the studio |
From 20
August 1955 Sports Report was
extended to run for one hour, occupying its now familiar 5-6 p.m. slot during
the football season. In 1949 another sports programme had been added to the
Light Programme schedule:Sports Parade.
Starting on 15 January and subtitled “What’s on Today?” it aired on Saturday
lunchtimes all year round. An early presenter was Michael Brooks but it was
later presented by whoever was in charge of Sports
Report later that afternoon.
As the
technology developed Sports Report
was able to cover more matches. Mackay had pushed for the SOOBE, the Self-Operated
Broadcast Equipment. This was a briefcase the reporter took to the match,
plugged into a telephone point that connected to the Post Office and onto
Broadcasting House. There was no more mad dash to the nearest studio.
John Webster reads the classifieds |
Describing
the announcers in 1955 Eamonn Andrews talks about them drifting “into the
studio at five-twenty-nine, calmly slip the written results from the hands of
some breathless attendant, slide into a chair, give a sly sidelong glance at
the clock and bestow a sort of silent benediction to the gabbling, whispering
reports in the four corners of the studio. A half-smile in my direction and I
feel they saying ‘Relax, I’m ready.’
Here’s a
short clip of John Webster reading the results followed by an extract of a Home
Service news bulletin in 1961.
In this recording of Sports Report from 30 October 1948 you’ll hear presenter Stephen Grenfell and then announcer Robin Boyle reading the results - but surely it’s ‘nil” not “nought”.
FROM THE REGIONS
Whilst Sports Report covered the day’s results
the actual sporting coverage was a little more random, scattered throughout the
afternoon on either the Light Programme or the Home Service, or even, from 1957
the wavelengths of the Third Programme when they carried Test Match Special for
the first time. As the Home Service was regional it tended to look after things
like Rugby League, for us Northerners, or Scottish Association football north
of the border.
Here’s a
typical Saturday of sport from 14 March 1959 if you’d been living in the North
of England:
1245-1310 Sports Parade with Eamonn Andrew (Light)
1505-1520 Racing at Sandown Park with Raymond
Glendenning and Roger Mortimer (Light)1540-1635 Rugby League GB v France with Keith Macklin and Harry Sunderland (Home)
1545-1650 FA Cup Semi-Finals with commentary from Alan Clarke (Light)
1700-1800 Sports Report with Eamonn Andrews (Light)
1820-1855 Sport Spotlight with George Carr (Home)
1924-1930 Association Football with games summaries from Charles Buchan (Light)
The Home
Service also provided its own regional sports round-ups after the 6.00 p.m.
news. These companion programmes to Sports
Report started in the 1950s and continued until the summer of 1974.
Flicking
through some old editions of the Radio Times reveals the following regional
shows:
Welsh Home
Service (1960)
Sports Medley with Clem Thomas and T. Eyton Jones
North Home
Service (1959)
Sport Spotlight with George Carr and Norman Turner
with reports from Bill Bothwell, Victor Bernard, Stuart Hall, Barney Colehan,
Bernard Taylor, Bill Grundy, Barney Mulrenan, Michael Betts, George Potts,
Harry Sunderland, Cyril Briggs and Alan Dixon.
Midland Home
Service (1957)
Sport in the Midlands with David Coleman
West Home
Service (1958)
Sport in the West with Bernard Fishwick with reports
from Arthur Vickerage, Bill Latto, Jimmy Ure, Peter Cranmer, Alan Gibson, David
Haines and Peter Hunter
Scottish
Home Service (1960)
Sportsreel with R.F. Dunnett
London Home
Service (1963)
Sports Session with Gerald Sinstadt, produced by
Godfrey Dixey
Northern
Ireland Home Service (1962)
Ulster
Sports Report with Ronald Rosser with reports from Harry Thompson, Rupert
Millar, Syd Maguire, Eddie McFall, Jack Sloane, Bill Heaney, Jack Carroll,
Derek Johnston, Billy McMaster, Billy Mackey and Hugo Patterson
In October 1958 Grandstand was to start on BBC TV with former Midlands Region sports presenter David Coleman at the helm. But BBC Radio still didn’t have a full year-round Saturday afternoon sports programme, though for the summer months from 1955 the Saturday and August Bank Holiday coverage on the Light Programme was grouped together under the umbrella title of Out and About, the whole held together by announcers such as Robin Boyle or Jimmy Kingsbury. There was still a break for music though with Bandstand.
In October 1958 Grandstand was to start on BBC TV with former Midlands Region sports presenter David Coleman at the helm. But BBC Radio still didn’t have a full year-round Saturday afternoon sports programme, though for the summer months from 1955 the Saturday and August Bank Holiday coverage on the Light Programme was grouped together under the umbrella title of Out and About, the whole held together by announcers such as Robin Boyle or Jimmy Kingsbury. There was still a break for music though with Bandstand.
THE POWER OF
THREE
Out and About ended in 1960 and from 29 April 1961
the BBC was now making use of the Network Three wavelengths (as the daytime
service of the Third Programme was called) to broadcast the new Sports Service; running throughout the summer
months and Bank Holidays consisting of live commentaries interspersed with
classical and light music. Sports Parade
and Sports Report continued on the
Light with music programmes in between, though there was still the odd bit of
cricket and racing.
In 1964 the Sports Service programmes resumed again
from 25 April, but this time it was the start of what we now recognise as the
regular Saturday afternoon sports magazine. Sports
Parade and Sports Report moved
across from the Light Programme on 22 August 1964 to top and tail the main
programme. The Radio Times of 19 September 1964 explained:
In previous years the Third Network Sports Service has been a strictly summer adventure on Saturdays and Bank Holidays. This year, for the first time, it is going on indefinitely. The programme will in future deal with all the Saturday sport which was formerly covered by the other Services; it will take over rugby from the Home, and association football and horse racing from the Light. The only exception is that the Regional and national Home Service will still carry commentaries and reports on some events which are of particular concern to their own listeners – such as Scottish football or the first half of an international rugger match.
The Sports Service
on that date ran as follows:
Sports Parade
Sporting Chance – repeat of a quiz with question
master John SnaggeSailing – reports from (surprisingly) Ken Sykora, best known for presenting music shows
Motor Cycling from Scarborough with Alan Clarke & Eddie Fitch
Motor Racing from Oulton Park with Robin Richards and Eric Tobitt
Olympic Preview with Rex Alston
Racing from Haydock Park with Peter Montague-Evans (Peter Bromley presumably at another meeting)
Association Football with second-half commentary from Brian Moore and Simon Smith
Sports Report
Of course
this move just wasn’t to please sports fans. Earlier that year Radio Caroline
had started its transmissions so the Beeb wanted to stop the tide of listeners
tuning into the pirates, moving all the sport to the Third Network cleared the
Light’s schedule for more music in Saturday
Swings and a new weekend edition of Roundabout.
19 September 1964 |
The first major defection to "the other side". World of Sport started in 1965 |
Behind the
scenes alongside Angus Mackay were producers Geoff Dobson and Jacob de Vries. Jacob
had started with the BBC in the 1950s on Sports
Session. He became the main sports editor presenting Sunday Sport (Home Service from 1966) and World Service programmes Spectator and Bulletin from Britain. In the 1970s he worked for West Nally, a
sports marketing company set-up by BBC commentator Peter West and Patrick
Nally.
IT TAKES TWO
Following
the internal review of the BBC’s radio services, Broadcasting in the Seventies, it was decided to realign the four
national stations. One consequence of this was that all sport was to move to
Radio 2. The final Sports Service
aired on 28 March 1970 and Sport on 2
the following Saturday 4 April – both presented by the now regular host Peter
Jones.
That first Sport on 2 included coverage of The
Grand National with commentary from Peter Bromley, Michael O’Hehir, Michael
Seth-Smith and Roger Mortimer; Rugby Union commentary on the Wales v France
game from Alun Williams and Alan Gibson; and second-half football commentary
with Maurice Edelston and Bryon Butler. The running time for the first few
months was just 2.30 to 5.45 p.m. but it soon extended to start at 2.00 p.m.and
end at 6.00 p.m. By 1973 it was carried on long wave only, Radio 1 grabbing the
scare VHF resource on Saturday afternoons, and by 1974 it was starting at its
long-running regular time of 1.30 p.m.
The great Peter Jones |
In fact
sport didn’t entirely disappear from Radio 4. The Sports Parade broadcasts moved to that channel from 4 April and
continued its run until the end of the football season in 1974. A new sports
preview programme, Sport on 4, joined
the schedules in 1977, but that’s for a future post.
Sport on 2 got its own theme too, Number 1 by The Delle Haensch Band,
those first few notes perfectly punctuating the programme’s opening
announcement, and conveniently a definite end to dovetail into the next
programme junction or the pips. It continued to be used as the theme for Sport on Five but was dropped some years
ago, if you know exactly when please let me know.
Jim Rosenthal presents Sport on 2 from the Thames for coverage of the Boat Race (Photo Roger George Clark) |
This is Peter Jones with part of the Sports Report programme for 25 August 1984, the start of the new season, with reports from Ian Carnaby, George Hamilton, Mike Ingham and Stuart Hall.
One constant on Saturday afternoons for the last 30+ years is that of James Alexander Gordon (above), reading the classified football results in his own inimitable style. The previous main reader, John Webster, had retired from the BBC in October 1970 and so the task was picked up by other staff announcers such as Jimmy Kingsbury and even Simon Bates. In 1974 James Alexander Gordon joined the rota of readers – Kingsbury, by then Presentation Editor, asking him to “nip over to sport and read the classifieds” – alongside David Bellan and Len Jackson, and he became the sole reader from the early 80s and continues to this day.
Mike Ingham in the studio in 1982 |
Just before “the five o’clock show” as Sports Report was known to the production team, there was a live link-up with Grandstand:
TWO INTO
FIVE
By 1990 BBC
radio was having to relinquish some of the FM/AM simulcasting and Radio 2’s
medium wave frequencies were allocated to the first new national station in 23
years, the rag-bag of programmes that became Radio 5. All the sports coverage
moved across along with children’s programme, youth-orientated shows, schools
programming, the Open University, bits of the World Service and a new breakfast
show.
Here’s John
Inverdale with the final Sport on 2
on 25 August 1990. The following weekend the programme moved lock, stock and
barrel to become Sport on Five.
2 April 1994. Note a displaced Sports Report due to the extra football commentary. And when did Sport on Five drop the racing results? |
Over the
years the Saturday afternoon programme was seen an increase in its duration and
11 a.m. or 12 noon start times are not uncommon as matches kick off earlier to
accommodate the demands of TV. Sports
Report itself has remained a fixture during the football season but has
sometimes been cut to just 15 or 30 minutes when there’s an evening match.
Sport is no longer mainly just a Saturday event: summertime sports coverage was
introduced on Radio 2 medium wave back in the mid-80s. And of course there’s plenty of opportunity
to chew the sporting cud in 606 orSportsweek.
The armchair
sports fan is now well served by the broadcasters: 5 Live, 5 Live Sports Extra,
talkSport, Sky Sports, ESPN, BT Vision but the old warhorse, Sports Report, is there. It’s theme may
sound dated amongst the electronic whooshes and beats but, to quote one-time
presenter Des Lynam, “it’s part of the fabric of sports broadcasting. It’s a
tradition.” Altogether now: De Dum De
Dum De Dum De Dum Diddly Dum De Dum.
Sources:
Sports Report edited by Eamonn Andrews & Angus
Mackay (Sportsmans Book Club 1955, originally Heinemann 1954)
Sports Report: 40 Years of the Best edited by Bryon Butler (Queen Anne
Press 1987)50 Years of Sports Report edited by Audrey Adams (CollinsWillow 1997)
Fantastic, wonderful, etc.
ReplyDeleteThe last time 'Number One' was heard in its original version was, I think, 30th December 2000. From 1st January 2001 the name 'Sport on 5' was used throughout the week - with names like 'Sunday Sport', 'The Monday Match' etc. being dropped - and at that point an updated version of the theme was introduced (probably dropped when it became 'Five Live Sport' in 2006).
Interesting that the 27.12.77 Sport on 2 intro is FM quality - this edition was actually broadcast on VHF which it usually wasn't (the last VHF Saturday edition before Radio 1 took over the frequencies was 31.03.73, the one with the famous Red Rum/Crisp Grand National), perhaps that was why you recorded it? (Assuming it was you!)
Thanks for theme tune info Robin.
ReplyDeleteYes that 27.12.77 recording is mine and you're right it was a rare opportunity to hear the programme start on VHF. At the time I think my local BBC station (Humberside) used to link up with Radio 2 for Sports Report so you'd get to hear that bit in clearer quality.
Did you deliberately cut out the Scottish stuff in the 1988 audio as you thought no one would care, I'm Scottish myself and if you did then I am so insulted!
ReplyDeleteI'm married to a Scot so I don't think I'd deliberately edit it out!!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much for an amazing trip around my own memory lane. I was never a sportsman but was always a follower of BBC Radio and in the early Fifties would be forced to listen to soccer commentary whilst suffering a haircut in the local barber's shop, then again the results whilst dad ticked off his never-ever-won draws on the pools sheet. Those magical voices were later to become much more than names when many, many years later I was appointed Senior Events Producer in the Travel and Events outpost of Radio Sport, following in Robert Hudson's footsteps and shortly after the untimely death of Peter Jones. I knew and worked with many of the names mentioned including Cliff Morgan, Cliff Michelmore, Robin Boyle and, yes, John Inverdale who persuaded me to (just once and never again) commentate on a football match. Sadly, because of John Birt, I was to be the last holder of that distinguished title. What a wonderful history and worth telling again and again.
ReplyDeleteMarvellous stuff. I especially liked being reminded of Sports Parade at Saturday lunchtime. Not sure now if you mentioned it was hosted by Charlie Buchan.
ReplyDeleteAlso excellent to get to see what John Webster looked like. Perhaps you could create a page for him on Wiki. I MUCH preferred his way of reading the results over J.A.Gordon who'd give away the result before we got to the away team's score - so annoying.
Very best wishes from another radio fan.
Ivor Solomons
Can any please tell me who the Scottish reporter was? I know Andy Gill was one of them, but there was also a very disctinctive highlander who used to talk at great speed and passion. He sounded a bit like the Rugby legend Bill McClaren. This has been bugging me for years, but I don't think he's been on for the best part of a decade (and it might have been Grandstand for some of his reports too)
ReplyDelete