Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
English Football League. All televised EFL games are broadcast on Sky Sports, with two games (usually Championship) per weekend broadcast at 20:00 on a Friday and 12:30 on a Saturday. Other games may be additionally scheduled at different times, such as 17:30 on Saturday, 12:00 on Sunday or, very occasionally, 20:00 on a Monday.
Among the output is a Saturday afternoon scores service called Football First. This is ITV's first results programme for six years. 1999. ITV makes a brief return to snooker when it televises the Champions Cup and the Nations Cup. September – Champions on 28 and Champions on 99 launch to provide live and recorded coverage of the UEFA ...
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. BT Sport Score was hosted by Darrell Currie and Jules ...
This is the first weekly programme to show highlights of Football League and FA Cup matches. The first edition includes a Scottish League match between Rangers and Stirling Albion. 22 September - Independent Television (ITV) launches in the London area. 12 October - ITV shows live football for the first time.
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
You Bet! is a British game show, based on the German series Wetten, dass..?, that aired on ITV between 20 February 1988 and 12 April 1997, initially hosted by Bruce Forsyth from 1988 to 1990, then by Matthew Kelly from 1991 to 1995 and finally by Darren Day from 1996 to 1997.
August 10, 2024 at 10:11 AM. NFL fans' long-awaited return of the regular season is still four weeks out. However, the NFL at least has given fans something to help bridge the gap from mid-August ...
Release. 11 September 1986. ( 1986-09-11) –. 17 December 1992. ( 1992-12-17) This Week was a British weekly current affairs television programme that was first produced for ITV in January 1956 by Associated-Rediffusion (later Thames Television ), running until 1978, when it was replaced by TV Eye. [1] In 1986, the earlier name was revived and ...