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Eilidh Margaret Barbour [3] (/ ˈ eɪ l i ˈ b ɑːr b ʊər /; born 14 December 1982) [4] is a Scottish television presenter and reporter. In 2017, she was named as the main presenter for the BBC's golf coverage, replacing Hazel Irvine in the role.
Sportscene Rugby Special was the title of BBC Scotland's domestic rugby union programming when it held the rights to the Scottish leagues with the live matches & highlights broadcasting on BBC Two Scotland on Sunday teatimes starting on 30 October 1994 until the end of the 1996–97 season [2] also on Sunday lunchtimes for the 1997–98 season ...
Irvine joined the BBC in 1990, working as presenter on BBC Scotland's Sportscene programme and becoming the youngest-ever presenter of the BBC's flagship sports programme Grandstand on 19 June 1993. She also anchored BBC Scotland's coverage of Children in Need for ten years.
She originally fronted Border TV's Lookaround news magazine in 1993 before moving to present BBC Scotland's rugby union coverage on Sportscene in 1997. In 1999, she joined Sky Sports as a sports news presenter, and was involved in both the rugby and Golden League athletics coverage.
In 1988 she joined BBC Radio Scotland as a reporter/presenter, moving on to produce Sportsound. Her radio work has been combined with presentation and reporting roles for BBC Scotland television, with regular contributions to Sportscene and Reporting Scotland where she was the main sports presenter from 2003 to 2009.
It includes television presenters that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Pages in category "Scottish women television presenters" The following 80 pages are in this category, out of 80 total.
She then began working as a sport reporter for BBC Scotland's The Nine [4] has co-hosted the football-themed podcast Sacked in the Morning alongside Craig Levein since 2021. [6] She has since hosted numerous other BBC programmes, including Reporting Scotland, Sportscene and BBC Scotland's Hogmanay. [7] Irons is the daughter of former footballer ...
Crichton was part of Tony Gervaise's Scotland youth squad which qualified for the finals of the 2005 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship in Hungary. [3] [4] While playing for the Edinburgh Ladies, she earned her first call up to the senior Scotland women's squad in August 2006 and made her debut in a challenge match against Belgium the following ...