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Sam Wallace is a British sports journalist, the Chief Football Writer at the Daily and Sunday Telegraph since 2015. In 2021, he was the recipient of the Scoop of the Year and Football Journalist of the Year at the SJA Awards, [1] as well as the Hugh McIlvanney Sports Journalist of the Year and Sport News Story of the Year at The Press Awards.
The Daily Telegraph, ... – its 2016 undercover investigation on the England football manager Sam Allardyce, ... Telegraph.co.uk is the online version of the ...
Celtic and Leeds United met in the semi-final of the 1970 European Cup, which was the first contest to be popularly described as a "Battle of Britain". [14] Celtic won the first leg at Elland Road 1–0, and the second leg was played at Hampden Park to allow a bigger crowd to attend than could be held at Celtic Park, with the resultant attendance of 136,505 the largest ever crowd for a ...
Football Journalist, Specialist Correspondent of the Year, British Sports Journalism Awards Henry Winter (born 18 February 1963) is an English sports journalist . He currently writes for World Soccer , having previously been the Chief Football Writer for The Times and a Football Correspondent for The Daily Telegraph .
This is a list of media commentators and writers in the United Kingdom on the sport of Association football. ... The Daily Telegraph (1961 ... (UK) (2009–2013 ...
Sam Allardyce resigned as England national football team manager following the scandal. The 2016 English football scandal was a sports corruption scandal which began on 26 September 2016 following the publishing of the first part of the Daily Telegraph newspaper's "Football for Sale" investigation into corruption in English football. [1]
Paul Hayward (born 6 January 1965) is a British sports journalist and author of 'England Football - The Biography (1872-2022)' - a 150-year history of the England men's team. He was until recently Chief Sports Writer at The Daily Telegraph . [ 1 ]
The fixer accurately predicted how many goals would be scored in a football match during the following day. [1] The fixer asked The Daily Telegraph for €60,000 so that players could be paid. [1] The fixer claimed to be connected to the convicted match fixer Wilson Raj Perumal, a fellow Singaporean, describing Perumal as "the king".