The Premiership | |
---|---|
Presented by | Des Lynam Gabby Logan |
Starring | Ally McCoist Andy Townsend Barry Venison Ron Atkinson Terry Venables |
Theme music composer | Bono |
Opening theme | "Beautiful Day" by U2 |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Production | |
Running time | Variable |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 18 August 2001 – 15 May 2004 |
Related | |
The Premiership on Monday On the Ball The Goal Rush Match of the Day |
The Premiership (also known as The Premiership on ITV) is a television programme which showed highlights of the FA Premier League. It was ITV Sport's flagship football show from August 2001 to May 2004. The show was created after the ITV network won a multimillion-pound deal to air Premier League highlights once owned by the BBC. The programme was presented by Des Lynam, with Gabby Logan as a stand-in and Ally McCoist, Ron Atkinson, Terry Venables, Barry Venison and Andy Townsend frequently serving as pundits.
The Premiership ended in 2004, when the rights returned to the BBC from the 2004–05 season.
Match of the Day , the BBC's long-running football programme, was in its eighth year of terrestrial Premier League coverage and about to start a record ninth in 2000. Bidding for a further three seasons to the Premier League panel, the broadcaster went in as favourites to retain the exclusive highlights package. The contract was however awarded to rival network ITV at the last possible moment, outbidding their rivals by £60 million and securing the rights from the start of the 2001–02 league season at a reported cost of £183 million. [1] This meant that they were splashing out roughly £1.3m per show.
In June 2001, ITV secured a three-year deal with the soft drink corporation Coca-Cola to help sponsor their new programme. [2] At a fee of £50 million, it was the biggest sports sponsorship deal in British television history and was enough to overcome competition from rivals Pepsi and Budweiser. [3] [4] A remixed version of U2's Grammy Award-winning track, "Beautiful Day" was selected as the show's signature tune. [5] To reflect the supplementary changes on the network, ITV extended their lunchtime football show, On The Ball to an hour and introduced The Goal Rush , which was billed as the fastest and most comprehensive results service in the country. [5]
ITV decided to air the show on Saturdays at 7pm, the earliest time permitted by their joint broadcasting partner BSkyB. [6] Their initial plan to broadcast the programme an hour earlier at 6pm was blocked by Sky. [7]
An extended late-night edition of the show was also broadcast on Saturdays (its first edition at 11:15pm). [8] ). It included further highlights, post match interviews and comments from Sunday newspapers.
In order to cut back on the department's resources,[ citation needed ] ITV decided to send four of its commentators, Clive Tyldesley, Jon Champion, Peter Drury and Guy Mowbray, to the high profiled matches of the weekend. Gabriel Clarke, Ned Boulting and other freelancing reporters provided match reports for the other games in addition to opinions from both sets of fans and interviews with the managers and players.
Fans were promised technological advances in the coverage such as player tracking to aid analysis of the match. On Monday nights, The Premiership Parliament, later titled The Premiership on Monday was presented by Ally McCoist and Gabby Logan and featured 20 fans – one representative from each club to debate about the weekend's action. [8] [9]
The first show aired at 7pm on 18 August 2001 and was presented by Des Lynam. [10] The main game featured was Middlesbrough and Arsenal at the Riverside Stadium with commentary provided by Peter Drury. [10] Liverpool's home fixture against West Ham United was the other featured game, broadcast towards the end of the programme. [10]
The Premiership was watched by a peak figure of five million viewers, in comparison to The Weakest Link which drew an average of seven million when shown on rival channel BBC One at the same time. [11] Despite ITV declaring that it was a positive start to the season, media and football critics – most notably the Daily Mirror - were outspoken about the programme's highlights. Out of the 70 minutes on air, the first show included only 28 minutes of action, compared to the average of 58 minutes on Match of the Day the previous season. [12]
Many football fans[ who? ] bemoaned that what should have been the featured game, Bolton Wanderers' 5–0 drubbing of Leicester City at Filbert Street, only got the briefest of autodubs by Gabriel Clarke and analysis from the studio which lasted for about two minutes. The overuse of football technology to support the decisions was also controversial in spite of praise by top league managers such as Arsène Wenger and Sir Alex Ferguson.[ citation needed ]
A week later saw ITV suffer their worst Saturday night ratings for five years when an average of 3.1 million viewers watched The Premiership. [13] After two months, figures had not greatly improved: only 4.6 million viewers tuned in, and the 7pm slot was a clear failure.
The decision was made in early October 2001 to shift The Premiership from its original slot to a permanent later time of 10:30pm, from 17 November, with repeats shown early on Sunday mornings.[ citation needed ]
Desmond Michael Lynam, is an Irish-born British television and radio presenter. In a broadcasting career spanning more than forty years, he has hosted television coverage of many of the world's major sporting events, presenting Grandstand, Match of the Day, Wimbledon, the Grand National, Sportsnight, the World Cup and Olympic Games, as well as presenting non-sporting programmes such as Holiday, How Do They Do That? and Countdown.
The Championship is a British football television programme featuring highlights from the Coca-Cola Football League. It was almost always shown on Sunday mornings on ITV, presented by Matt Smith. Despite its name, it also covered Football League One and Football League Two matches, albeit to a lesser extent than Championship matches.
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.
Match of the Day is a football highlights programme, typically broadcast on BBC One on Saturday nights, during the Premier League season. The show's current presenter is former England international striker Gary Lineker, with regular analysis from fellow former players Alan Shearer, and occasional relief analysts such as Micah Richards, Frank Lampard, Shay Given, Ashley Williams, Danny Murphy, Martin Keown, Theo Walcott and Dion Dublin.
John Walker Motson was an English football commentator. Beginning as a television commentator with the BBC in 1971, he commentated on over 2000 games on television and radio. From the late 1970s to 2008, Motson was the dominant football commentary figure at the BBC, apart from a brief spell in the mid-1990s.
English football on television has been broadcast since 1938. Since the establishment of the Premier League in 1992, English football has become a very lucrative industry. As of the 2013–14 season, domestic television rights for the 20-team Premier League are worth £1 billion a year. The league generates €2.2 billion per year in domestic and international television rights.
ITV Sport is the sports department of ITV plc, which produces and presents sports programming for the ITV network and ITVX. The branding was originally introduced in 1985 as an umbrella title for networked sports programming produced by ITV's regional franchises. The division took its current form in 2004 amid the acquisition of Carlton Television by Granada Television to form ITV plc, after which the sports departments of Granada, Carlton, and London News Network were amalgamated to form ITV Sport.
Angus Scott is an international broadcaster, journalist, university lecturer and academic. He has worked for Al Jazeera, beIN SPORTS, ITN, ITV Sport and Setanta Sports. He mainly covers football and rugby union, but has also hosted cricket and motorsport coverage. In 2021 he completed a doctorate at the University of Winchester on Al Jazeera.
Matt Smith is a British broadcaster who worked with ITV Sport between 2001 and 2015. He currently presents TNT Sports' coverage of Premier League, FA Cup, Champions League, Europa League, Conference Football and England Under 21 matches.
RTÉ Sport is a department of Irish public broadcaster RTÉ. The department provides sporting coverage through a number of platforms including RTÉ Radio, RTÉ Television, RTÉ.ie, RTÉ Player Sport and RTÉ Mobile. RTÉ holds the television and radio broadcasting rights in the Republic of Ireland to several sports, broadcasting the sport live or alongside flagship analysis programmes such as The Sunday Game, Thank GAA It's Friday, Soccer Republic and RTÉ Racing on RTÉ Television, and Game On, Saturday Sport, and Sunday Sport on RTÉ Radio.
The Goal Rush was a live ITV television programme that aired from 2001 to 2003, produced by Granada Television. The programme was broadcast on Saturdays as a rival show to Final Score on BBC One, and provided live football scores from the Premier League and The Football League. Coverage began on ITV2 and then continued on ITV1. The programme was presented by Angus Scott.
On the Ball is an English ITV Saturday lunchtime television show about football, which ran as part of World of Sport from 1968 until the mid 1980s, and as a stand-alone show from 1998 to 2004. There was another ITV television show called On the Ball which was a game show hosted by Nick Weir in 1997, shown only in the Granada region.
Sky Sports is a group of British subscription sports channels operated by the satellite pay television company Sky Group, and is the dominant subscription television sports brand in the United Kingdom and Ireland. It has played a major role in the increased commercialisation of British sport since 1991, and has sometimes played a large role inducing organisational changes in the sports it broadcasts, most notably when it encouraged the First Division to break away from the Football League to form the Premier League in 1992.
A vidiprinter is a sports scores and results ticker service provided to media organisations. It is shown on BBC One, BBC Red Button and Sky Sports News to provide a live on-air feed of football scores from country-wide and European competitions. It appears on-screen when a significant number of games are in progress.
TNT Sports is a group of pay television sports channels in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Now owned by Warner Bros. Discovery and BT Group, they first launched as BT Sport on 1 August 2013.
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 sports broadcasting on Channel 5.
This is a timeline of the history of football on television in the United Kingdom.
This is a timeline of the history of rugby union on television in the UK.