Sportsnight

Sportsnight was a midweek BBC television sports programme that ran from 1968 until 1997.

Sportsnight
The word 'Sportsnight' written in green with a cursive font, on black background
Sportsnight title card, from 1983
Also known asSportsnight with Coleman (1968–1972)
GenreSport highlights
Presented by
Theme music composerTony Hatch
Opening themeSportsnight theme[1]
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
Production
Production companyBBC Sport
Release
Original networkBBC One
Original release12 September 1968 (1968-09-12) 
14 May 1997 (1997-05-14)
Related
Sportsview (1954–1968)

Sportsview

Sportsnight was a successor to Sportsview which started on 8 April 1954.[2] Sportsview was devised by Paul Fox, later Controller of BBC1 and Peter Dimmock was the original host for a decade (and did host occasional editions from 1964 to 1968).[3] The BBC Sports Personality of the Year award evolved as a spin-off from Sportsview when the last show of its inception year featured the Sports Review of 1954. Frank Bough took over as main host in 1964 and Sportsview was replaced by Sportsnight with Coleman from 12 September 1968.[4] A junior version of Sportsview also ran from 1956 to 1962.

Sportsnight

Sportsnight was originally shown on Thursday nights. The original presenter was David Coleman and the programme was billed as Sportsnight with Coleman. It moved to Wednesdays in 1973. The theme tune was composed by Tony Hatch.[1]

The show broadcast many sports and acted as a midweek version of Grandstand, although almost all of its coverage was in highlights form, often featuring midweek football action, particularly international matches and FA Cup replays. The exception to this was boxing, which featured prominently in the programme from its inception, throughout the 1970s and into the early 1980s. Typically, the top-of-the-bill fight from Wembley Arena or the Royal Albert Hall would be shown live shortly after the programme came on air at 9:30pm. If the fight's duration was short, highlights of the undercard would be shown following the live fight. If the top-of-the-bill live fight went the distance, or close to the distance, highlights of the undercard would be shown on Grandstand the following Saturday. Other occasional live action included greyhound racing, namely the TV Trophy race each year, and on at least one occasion in the late 1970s or early 80s, live coverage of a darts match involving Jocky Wilson from the BDO World Darts Championship was shown one January when the night's scheduled FA Cup football match highlights were postponed due to bad weather. Pre-recorded features were also part of the programme. In the final few years, the Sportsnight brand was used when the BBC was showing live European football.

The programme was not broadcast during the summer months, airing from September until the following April.

The final edition of Sportsnight was broadcast on 14 May 1997, with live coverage of that year's UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Final.[5]

Regular hosts

References

  1. "Theme from Sportsnight". BBC Music. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  2. Sports Personality of the Year Television Heaven
  3. BBC Genome
  4. "Search: Sportsnight – Oldest first". BBC Genome. BBC. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  5. "Search: Sportsnight – Newest first". BBC Genome. BBC. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.