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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. From the programme's launch until the lifting of restrictions on broadcasting hours in 1972, sports coverage was one of ...
Stuart Hall (presenter) Paul Hand. Alan Hansen. Alex Hay. Paddy Henderson (journalist) Stephen Hendry. Jimmy Hill. Ronald Hill. Celina Hinchcliffe.
January – Just four months after going on air, Eleven Sports relinquishes most of its football rights, passing many of them onto Premier Sports. February – Amazon Prime takes over as the UK broadcaster of the tennis ATP World Tour. [107] 30 June – After 18 seasons on air, Chelsea TV closes as a linear channel.
Sky Sport Serie A. Sky Sport Tennis. Sky Sport Uno. Sky Sports. Sky Sports F1. Sky Sports News. Sky Sports Racing. Sky Sports Tennis. Sports Tonight Live.
FA Cup: BBC One/TV 1937 – 1996, 2002 – 2008 & 2014 – present (shared with BT Sport) Wimbledon Championships: BBC TV/BBC One 1937 – present, BBC Two 1964 – present; The Boat Race: BBC TV/One 1938 – 2004 & 2010 – present (ITV covered the Boat Race from 2005 – 2009) Live England Test Cricket: BBC TV 1938 – 1998
He also hosted the BDO World Darts Championship 2017 for BT Sport. Since 2015 he has also returned to the BBC News Channel (formally BBC News 24) as a sports reporter/presenter and has also presented shows such as Kick Off and Weekend Sports Breakfast for Talksport. [citation needed] Personal life. Smith is a fan of Liverpool Football Club.
World of Sport (UK TV programme), a 1965–1985 British television sport programme broadcast nationwide on ITV. Johnny Vaughan's World of Sport - a short lived revival of the ITV programme on digital channel BBC Three, hosted by Johnny Vaughan. World of Sport Wrestling, promoted as a 2018 reboot of the wrestling segment of the original UK ...
BBC One. Flagship channel and broadcasts a variety of mainstream programming. 24 hours. BBC Two. Secondary channel and broadcasts a range of alternative programming. BBC Three. Broadcasts a variety of youthful programming. 9 hours (19:00 to 04:00) BBC Four.