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- Sports_Report abstract "Sports Report is one of the longest-running programmes on British radio. It started in the first week of 1948, and has always been aired from 5.00 to 6.00 p.m. on Saturday evenings during the football season, although commentaries on evening matches kicking off shortly after 5pm on Saturdays had often curtailed it in recent years, however, it regained its full hour for the start of the 2010-11 football season after 5 Live lost the Saturday evening Premier League radio rights to talkSPORT. Originally produced by Angus Mackay it went out on the BBC Light Programme, where it stayed until 25 April 1964. On 22 August 1964 it became part of Sports Service and moved to the wavelengths of the BBC Third Programme (used for other purposes during daytime hours), where it initially started at the earlier time of 4.42 p.m.. On 4 April 1970, however, it moved back to what had by then become BBC Radio 2, where it stayed until 25 August 1990 (throughout this time it was part of Sport on 2). From 1 September 1990 to 26 March 1994 it was on the original BBC Radio 5, and since 2 April 1994 it has been heard on BBC Radio 5 Live (on both of these networks it has been part of Sport on 5 then renamed 5 Live Sport in 2006).Presenters have included Raymond Glendenning (1948–55), Stephen Grenfell, Eamonn Andrews (1955–64), Robin Marlar (1964–68), Peter Jones (1968–70), Des Lynam (1970–80), Mike Ingham (1980–85), Renton Laidlaw (1985–87), John Inverdale (1987–94), Ian Payne (1994–2000) and Mark Pougatch (2000-) among many others.The football results were originally read out by John Webster, with James Alexander Gordon taking over from 1974-2013. Charlotte Green starting 28 September 2013 is the current incumbent. The programme, almost uniquely, has used the same theme music since its inception - "Out of the Blue", written by Hubert Bath. This already sounded old-fashioned in the early 1970s, and it is said that Lynam prevented it from being dropped. Now, the theme has the status of a charming anachronism, a very British institution, amid the fast-paced modern style of the rest of Five Live.On Saturday 5 January 2013, FA Cup Third round day, the Sports Report theme music was inexplicably changed, prompting a string of furious tweets and key presenter Mark Pougatch to tweet within four minutes that: "For clarification. The Sports Report music has not been axed...."".
- Sports_Report wikiPageID "3632931".
- Sports_Report wikiPageLength "3024".
- Sports_Report wikiPageOutDegree "27".
- Sports_Report wikiPageRevisionID "618828636".
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Angus_Mackay_(radio).
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Association_football.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink BBC_Light_Programme.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink BBC_Radio_2.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink BBC_Radio_5_(former).
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink BBC_Radio_5_Live.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink BBC_Third_Programme.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Category:BBC_Radio_5_Live_programmes.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Category:British_sports_radio_programmes.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Charlotte_Green.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Des_Lynam.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Eamonn_Andrews.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Football_(soccer).
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Hubert_Bath.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Ian_Payne_(sports_broadcaster).
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink James_Alexander_Gordon.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink James_Alexander_Gordon_(announcer).
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink John_Inverdale.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Mark_Pougatch.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Mike_Ingham.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Jones_(broadcaster).
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Premier_League.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Radio_in_the_United_Kingdom.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Raymond_Glendenning.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Renton_Laidlaw.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Robin_Marlar.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Stephen_Grenfell_(broadcaster).
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink TalkSPORT.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Talksport.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Tweet_(Twitter).
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLink Twitter.
- Sports_Report wikiPageWikiLinkText "Sports Report".
- Sports_Report hasPhotoCollection Sports_Report.
- Sports_Report wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:BBC_Programme.
- Sports_Report wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:BBC_Radio_5_Live.
- Sports_Report wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fact.
- Sports_Report wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italictitle.
- Sports_Report wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_British_English.
- Sports_Report wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Sports_Report subject Category:BBC_Radio_5_Live_programmes.
- Sports_Report subject Category:British_sports_radio_programmes.
- Sports_Report hypernym Programmes.
- Sports_Report type Article.
- Sports_Report type TelevisionStation.
- Sports_Report type Article.
- Sports_Report type Program.
- Sports_Report type Programme.
- Sports_Report comment "Sports Report is one of the longest-running programmes on British radio. It started in the first week of 1948, and has always been aired from 5.00 to 6.00 p.m. on Saturday evenings during the football season, although commentaries on evening matches kicking off shortly after 5pm on Saturdays had often curtailed it in recent years, however, it regained its full hour for the start of the 2010-11 football season after 5 Live lost the Saturday evening Premier League radio rights to talkSPORT.".
- Sports_Report label "Sports Report".
- Sports_Report sameAs m.09r6fn.
- Sports_Report sameAs Q7579781.
- Sports_Report sameAs Q7579781.
- Sports_Report wasDerivedFrom Sports_Report?oldid=618828636.
- Sports_Report isPrimaryTopicOf Sports_Report.