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The book is a biographical overview of football manager Martin O'Neill's first two years in charge at Leicester City. Whilst at talkSPORT, Peters has read sports bulletins and presented a number of programmes, including rugby league and cricket shows, plus the Sunday afternoon football phone-in 'Call the Doc', where he worked alongside former ...
This is a list of media commentators and writers in the United Kingdom on the sport of Association football. A number of football players have had a second career as writers or commentators. However, many commentators never played the game at a professional level such as Dale Rowlinson and Gaz Mallachan, yet they have gone on to become famous ...
Talksport Legends & Anthems is a three-CD package, released in 2009, featuring 40 tracks by artists such as The Who, The Cure, The Killers, Stevie Wonder, Rod Stewart, and Elton John on two of the discs as well as a bonus CD with out-takes and highlights of Talksport [55] Ten Years of Talksport is a book describing the station's history ...
David Coleman – BBC Sport 1958–1982 (stayed with BBC until 2000 but didn't do football) Peter Collins – RTÉ Sport 1990–present Stan Collymore – BBC Radio 5 Live, 2003–2004, 2007–2008 & 2016, talkSPORT 2008–2016 & 2022-present, Channel 5 2008–2012, British Eurosport 2013, Fox Sports 2014, BT Sport 2014–2015
His professional broadcasting career started in 1991 with the now-defunct DevonAir, for whom he was a football reporter and later DJ.Proudfoot subsequently worked as a journalist and newsreader for TFM in the north-east of England before moving to Capital Gold in 1994, where he was part of the award-winning team headed by Jonathan Pearce.
Parry has written three books. His first, Rooney Tunes, is a biography of footballer Wayne Rooney, published in 2006. He co-wrote two autobiographies of his fellow talkSPORT presenter Alan Brazil: There's an Awful Lot of Bubbly in Brazil (2007) and Both Barrels from Brazil: My War On the Numpties (2008). [8] [9]
Alan Green (born 25 June 1952) is a Northern Irish former sports commentator, mainly on football but also on golf, rowing and the Olympic Games. [1]Green was one of BBC Radio 5 Live's most senior football commentators and was a winner of a Sony Radio Academy Award for Sports Broadcaster of the Year. [2]
He retired as a commentator in 1998 after France's 1998 World Cup final victory at the Stade de France against Brazil, but continued to broadcast, presenting an interview programme for Sky Sports in 1999, and hosting programmes for BBC Radio 5 Live and Talksport in addition to his commentary on Gladiators.