Results Service

Last updated

Results Service was a British television programme that ran from October 1985 until the end of the 1991/92 football season on the ITV network late on Saturday afternoons during the football season.

Contents

History

The programme began as a segment in the long-running programme World of Sport , a sports magazine programme that aired on the ITV network from 2 January 1965 to 28 September 1985. At around 16:45, when football matches across Britain were starting to finish, World of Sport would air Results Service, taking reports from major football matches before a full classified check read by Bob Colston.

Following World of Sport's demise, ITV committed itself to broadcast sport on Saturday afternoons, albeit as stand-alone programmes rather than as a magazine show. Typically, this would begin around midday with British wrestling (formerly a teatime staple on World of Sport), followed by Saint and Greavsie , a football preview show and successor to the On the Ball segment of World of Sport. This would often be followed by an hour of non-sports programming, typically an American adventure series like Airwolf , which would be followed by a two-hour block of sports programming, focusing on a single event from sports such as snooker, darts, athletics, gymnastics, ice skating or hockey, after which, at 16:45, Results Service would begin. Horse racing coverage, previously an integral part of World of Sport, had moved to Channel 4 prior to the cessation of World of Sport.

Format

The programme was usually presented by Elton Welsby, who, at its beginning, was making a name for himself at ITV Sport having already become firmly established as a presenter in the Granada Television region. In its early years, the theme tune was a variant of the 1983 World of Sport theme, though two other themes were used in later years.

Football was always the predominant sport covered in the programme, though until the 1988/89 season, results of other sports, especially rugby union, cricket and snooker, also featured. Following ITV's contract to live and exclusive coverage of the Football League from the start of the 1988/89 season, the programme focussed almost entirely on football, and also included goal action from the day's matches, where video could be transported to the studios for broadcast in time.

Typically, the programme would begin with Welsby giving the latest scores, and in later years some goal action, followed by match reports from ITV commentators at the games, as well as from reporters working for various independent local radio stations around Britain, such as Tom Ross from BRMB or Richard Park from Radio Clyde. Bob Colston continued his role as reader of classified results throughout the programme's run, which he would do towards the end of the programme, after which Welsby would provide a run-down of the league tables and briefly preview the following Sunday's live match on ITV.

Demise and aftermath

ITV lost the rights to top-flight football when the Premier League was formed in 1992, and therefore the decision was made to end the programme at the conclusion of the 1991/92 season.

From the start of the 1992/93 seasons, several ITV regions broadcast their own programmes called Goals Extra, and Welsby presented the Granada version of this programme for much of its run. Goals Extra featured results and reports from the Premier League, but actual action was restricted to goals from the lower divisions, as ITV still had access to the three remaining Football League divisions.

However, much of the country did not have a Goals Extra programme, so ITV chose to incorporate a football round-up into the teatime news bulletin from ITN, which would normally be broadcast at or close to 17:00. At the end of the news segment, the newscaster would hand over to a sports specialist, usually Graham Miller or David Bobin, for a roundup of the day's sports news, focussing heavily on football. This would include a full classified check, initially with Bob Colston continuing in his role, but later Miller, Bobin or whoever was presenting the bulletin would read it.

The ITN teatime classified results check continued into the new millennium, but from 1998, the newly launched ITV2 had a programme called Football First , which ran throughout Saturday afternoons, giving goal updates, analysis and a results check. Some ITV regions (Anglia, Meridian and HTV) showed the latter part of the programme from 2000 onwards, albeit sporadically. In 2001, it was renamed The Goal Rush , was broadcast on the main ITV channel, but by now it went off air prior to a full classified check, which was still part of the ITV News teatime news bulletin.

The Goal Rush was axed mid-season in 2003, and around this time ITN stopped providing a full classified check on the teatime news, though brief clips and major stories from the day's football remained.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">ITV (TV network)</span> TV network in the United Kingdom

ITV, legally known as Channel 3, is a British free-to-air public broadcast television network. It is branded as ITV1 in most of the UK except for central and northern Scotland, where it is branded as STV. It was launched in 1955 as Independent Television to provide competition, eliminating what had hitherto been the monopoly of BBC Television. ITV is the oldest commercial network in the UK. Since the passing of the Broadcasting Act 1990, it has been legally known as Channel 3 to distinguish it from the other analogue channels at the time: BBC1, BBC2 and Channel 4.

<i>Grandstand</i> (TV programme) British television sports programme (1958–2007)

Grandstand was the flagship sports programme of the BBC which was broadcast on Saturday afternoons on BBC1 between 1958 and 2007, and from 1981 on Sunday afternoons as Sunday Grandstand on BBC2, although until 1998 the Sunday edition aired only during the summer.

<i>Scotsport</i> Scottish sports television programme

Scotsport is a Scottish sports television programme, broadcast on STV in northern and central Scotland between 1957 and 2008, as well as on ITV Border in southern Scotland.

Gillette Labs Soccer Saturday is a weekly television programme broadcast on Sky Sports in the United Kingdom and Scotland during the football season.

Roger Elton Welsby is an English television sports presenter.

Peter Brackley was an English football commentator, perhaps most famous for commentating for Football Italia on Channel 4 in the 1990s, for the computer game series Pro Evolution Soccer until Pro Evolution Soccer 6, and for Michael Owen's World League Soccer '99.

<i>World of Sport</i> (British TV programme) ITV Saturday afternoon sports show (1965–85)

World of Sport is a British television sport programme which ran on ITV between 2 January 1965 and 28 September 1985 in competition with the BBC's Grandstand. Like Grandstand, the programme ran throughout Saturday afternoon.

ITV Sport is a sport producer for ITV. It was formed following the merger between Granada Sport and Central Sport.

<i>Sportscene</i> British sports television programmes

Sportscene is the name of a range of Scottish sports television programmes produced by BBC Scotland.

The Big Match was a British football television programme, screened on ITV between 1968 and 1992.

Final Score is a BBC Television football news and results programme produced by BBC Sport. The programme is broadcast on late Saturday afternoons in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, usually on BBC One. BBC Northern Ireland opts away during the last ten minutes to cover local results in Final Score from Northern Ireland, normally just after the Premier League scores are read out. BBC Scotland runs a different programme altogether – Sportscene Results. Final Score is also broadcast on Boxing Day and New Year's Day and sometimes on either Good Friday or Easter Monday. A special Sunday edition is broadcast on the final day of the Premier League season.

Football on 5 is the principal football programme on Channel 5 in the UK. The show first ran from May 1997 until July 2012. The show returned in August 2015 under the name Football League Tonight. For the 2016–17 Football League season the Football on 5 name was revived with the highlights show now called Football on 5: The Championship and Football on 5: Goal Rush being broadcast from 9pm-10.30pm on a Saturday with a repeat on Sunday morning. The show itself was initially sponsored by Wilkinson Sword, and would eventually be sponsored by Soccernet.com, Peugeot and SEAT, among others.

Robert Colston was a broadcaster who was famous in the United Kingdom as the voice of the football results on ITV's various Saturday afternoon football results programmes for 27 years between 1972 and 1999.

Saint and Greavsie was a British television show in which former footballers Ian St John and Jimmy Greaves discussed current football themes such as the day's matches. It ran on ITV from 1985 to 1992.

A vidiprinter is a sports scores and results ticker service provided to media organisations. It is shown on BBC One and Sky Sports News to provide a live on-air feed of football scores when significant games are in progress.

BT Sport Score is a weekly television programme which was broadcast between 2016 and 2023, on BT Sport, during the football season. The programme updated viewers on the progress of football games in the United Kingdom on Saturday afternoons, and aired between 2:45pm and just after 5pm.

This is a timeline of the history of ITN, a British production company providing news programmes for British broadcasters.

This is a timeline of the history of BBC Sport.

This is a timeline of the history of ITV Sport, provider of sports coverage for the British ITV network and ITV Digital Channels.

This is a timeline of the history of rugby union on television in the UK.