Sportscall
(→Synopsis: not so, says writer Bill Matthews.) |
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== Host == | == Host == | ||
- | [[Danny Baker]] ( | + | [[Danny Baker]] (1990-2) |
- | [[Nicky Campbell]] | + | [[Nicky Campbell]] (1992-3) |
- | [[Dominik Diamond]] | + | [[Dominik Diamond]] (1993- |
- | [[ | + | Stand-ins: [[Simon Potter]], Tim Smith, [[Ross King]], Andy Peebles, [[Dougie Donnelly]], Lee Chapman, Tom Watt, [[Rob Curling]], Adrian Goldberg, Marcus Buckland |
== Broadcast == | == Broadcast == | ||
- | BBC Radio 5, 2 September 1990 to 25 March | + | BBC Radio 5, 2 September 1990 to 25 March 2000 |
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Revision as of 19:59, 25 August 2016
Contents |
Host
Danny Baker (1990-2)
Nicky Campbell (1992-3)
Dominik Diamond (1993-
Stand-ins: Simon Potter, Tim Smith, Ross King, Andy Peebles, Dougie Donnelly, Lee Chapman, Tom Watt, Rob Curling, Adrian Goldberg, Marcus Buckland
Broadcast
BBC Radio 5, 2 September 1990 to 25 March 2000
Synopsis
Sportscall was originally created as a cheap piece of radio to fill the gap between Radio 5's Saturday morning children's programes and the afternoon's sports commentaries. Items included the phone-in quiz, alphabet quiz, archive quiz and sudden death quiz. It soon emerged that listeners weren't tuning in for the games - no, people were tuning in because the presenter, Danny Baker, was making the show entertainment, even for people who didn't really like sport.
In 1991, Baker was given an after-match phone-in show, 606, and became Radio 5's breakfast presenter in 1992. He moved to Radio 1 in late 1993, creating a vacancy for the lunchtime sports quiz. Dominik Diamond turned out to be the presenter to continue in Baker's footsteps. Already a familiar voice from Gamesmaster, Diamond expanded the programme's range, making it as much a commentary on the week's sports news as a phone-in quiz.
Diamond hosted a spin-off show, Newscall, which was not renewed after a four-week broadcast pilot in 1994. He remained with the original programme until it came to a natural end in 2000.