5 Live Sport
BBC Radio 5 programme, formerly Sport on 5 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
5 Live Sport is the banner of live sports coverage on BBC Radio 5 Live. The regular presenters are Mark Chapman (Monday, Wednesday and Saturday), Kelly Cates (Tuesday), Steve Crossman (Thursday and Sunday) and Darren Fletcher (Friday). The programme is on air from Monday to Wednesday 7pm to 10:30pm, as well as Thursday and Friday 7pm to 10pm. It is also broadcast at weekends from 12pm until the early evening, depending on the events being covered.
History
5 Live Sport evolved from the Saturday afternoon radio sports programme Sport on 2, which started on BBC Radio 2 on 4 April 1970. The programme was also broadcast on most bank holiday afternoons. Afternoon-long sporting coverage on Sundays, using different names during the Radio 2 era, was introduced in 1984 although this was confined to the summer months and it took on a format mixing sport and music. It changed its name to Sport on 5 on 1 September 1990 following the transfer of BBC Radio's sports coverage to the newly launched BBC Radio 5. The programme continued to be called Sport on 5 following the replacement of BBC Radio 5 with BBC Radio 5 Live in March 1994. The 5 Live Sport name has been used since 2006.
Format
Summarize
Perspective
Original format
The original format featured the major sports events each Saturday afternoon, broadcasting between 1:30 pm and 5 pm, with updates from the major footballing fixtures and second half commentary on a top match. The location of the commentary game would usually be revealed around 3 pm. Sports Report then followed at 5 pm. During the summer, Sports Report was not broadcast, meaning that Sport on 2 ran from 1:30 pm and 6 pm, extended to 7 pm during the Wimbledon fortnight.
Current format
The main focus of the programme, especially between August and May, is still on the football season, and in particular the Premier League. 5 Live Sport has live Premier League commentaries on Saturdays at 3 pm and 5:30 pm, as well as on Sundays at 2 pm and 4:30 pm. They also have live commentaries from the Champions League and FA Cup. The programme also has extensive coverage of the England national team. Mark Chapman is the main presenter. Other major events such as the Formula One, Six Nations and The Ashes are also aired. In the summer, major sporting events such as the Olympics, the Commonwealth Games, Wimbledon and the Open are all given extensive coverage.
Presenters
- Eilidh Barbour
- John Bennett
- Kelly Cates
- Mark Chapman
- Steve Crossman[1]
- Darren Fletcher
- Sonja McLaughlan
- Eleanor Oldroyd
- Aaron Paul
- Gigi Salmon[2]
- Katie Smith
- Kelly Somers
Notable former presenters
Correspondents
- Cricket – Jonathan Agnew
- Football – John Murray
- Golf – Iain Carter[3]
- Rugby Union – Chris Jones[4]
- Tennis – Russell Fuller
Reporters
- Cricket – Adam Mountford,[5] Eleanor Oldroyd, Nikesh Rughani[6]
- Football – Nathan Albon, John Acres,[7] Eilidh Barbour, John Bennett, Lee Blakeman, Chris Coles, Kenny Crawford, George Cummins, Ellen Ellard, Maz Farookhi, Gary Flintoff, Tom Gayle, Andy Gilles, Betty Glover, Emily Herbert, Becky Ives, Jane Lewis, Nesta McGregor, Connie Mclaughlin, Mike Minay, Henry Moeran, Pat Murphy, Rob Nothman,[8] Aaron Paul,[9] Will Perry,[10] Charlotte Richardson, Flo Pollock, Naz Premji, Sanny Rudravajhala, Nikesh Rughani,[11] Sohail Sahi, Shourjo Sarker, Mark Scott, Andy Sixsmith, Charlie Slater, Katie Smith, John Southall,[12] Kris Temple, Gavin Wallace, Chris Wise,[13] Rich Wolfenden, Alistair Yeomans
- Formula One – Jennie Gow, Rosanna Tennant
Commentators
- Athletics – Katharine Merry and Ed Harry[14]
- Cricket – Jonathan Agnew, Charles Dagnall, Isa Guha, Alison Mitchell, Henry Moeran,[15] Nikesh Rughani
- Football – Alistair Bruce-Ball,[16] Ian Dennis, Tom Gayle, Conor McNamara, John Murray, Jonathan Pearce, Mark Scott, Vicki Sparks,[17] Chris Wise
- Formula One – Harry Benjamin, Ben Edwards (relief)
- Golf – Alistair Bruce-Ball,[18] Iain Carter,[19] Katherine Downes, James Gregg, Conor McNamara, John Murray
- Racing – John Hunt[20]
- Rugby League – Matt Newsum, Sharon Shortle, Dave Woods,
- Rugby Union – James Burridge, Iain Carter,[21] Andrew Cotter, Chris Jones,[22] Gareth Lewis, Conor McNamara, Sara Orchard,[23] Claire Thomas
- Tennis – Iain Carter, Naomi Cavaday, Russell Fuller, Abigail Johnson, David Law, Sara Orchard, Jonathan Overend, Gigi Salmon[24]
Notable former commentators
- Athletics – Mike Costello
- Football- Ian Brown, Simon Brotherton, Bryon Butler, Jon Champion, Peter Drury, Roddy Forsyth, Alan Green, Seb Hutchinson, Rob Hawthorne, Mike Ingham, Peter Jones, Pien Meulensteen, John Motson, Jacqui Oatley, David Oates, Mike Sewell, Arlo White, Steve Wilson, Dave Woods
- Formula One- David Croft, Maurice Hamilton, Jack Nicholls
- Rugby League- David Oates, Stuart Pyke
- Rugby Union- Alastair Eykyn, Alastair Hignell, Nick Mullins, Ian Robertson
Pundits
- Athletics – Darren Campbell, Allison Curbishley
- Boxing – Steve Bunce
- Cricket – James Anderson, Ebony Rainford-Brent, Alec Stewart, Phil Tufnell, Michael Vaughan
- Cycling – Rob Hayles
- Football – Karen Bardsley, Michael Brown, Izzy Christiansen, Rachel Corsie, Dion Dublin, Robert Green, Neil Lennon, James McFadden, Clinton Morrison, Leon Osman, Pat Nevin, Micah Richards, Paul Robinson, Andy Reid, Robbie Savage, Mark Schwarzer, Alan Shearer, Steve Sidwell, Chris Sutton, Matthew Upson, Chris Waddle, Stephen Warnock, Theo Walcott, Ellen White
- Formula One – Jolyon Palmer, Alice Powell, Sam Bird, Marc Priestley, Damon Hill
- Rugby Union – Chris Ashton, Tommy Bowe, Danny Care, Matt Dawson, Paul Grayson, Denis Hickie, Andrew Mehrtens, Katherine Merchant, Ugo Monye, Bob Skinstad
- Tennis – Marion Bartoli, Naomi Broady, Pat Cash, Kim Clijsters, Annabel Croft, John McEnroe, Laura Robson, Greg Rusedski, Jeff Tarango, Mark Woodforde
Podcasts
See also
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.