Final Score
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Final Score is a BBC Television football news and results programme produced by BBC Sport. The programme is broadcast on late Saturday afternoons in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, usually on BBC One. BBC Northern Ireland opts away during the last ten minutes to cover local results in Final Score from Northern Ireland, normally just after the Premier League scores are read out. BBC Scotland runs a different programme altogether – Sportscene Results. Final Score is also broadcast on Boxing Day and New Year's Day and sometimes on either Good Friday or Easter Monday. A special Sunday edition is broadcast on the final day of the Premier League season.
Final Score is also broadcast on Saturday afternoons on the
Format
The programme provides viewers with the results from the main football matches played on that day. The presenters are joined by two studio pundits discussing the day's play whilst watching the Premier League games in the studio and this is supplemented by reporters at all of the Premier League matches. There are also reporters at every EFL Championship match and at the top games in EFL League One and EFL League Two, and at least one Scottish Professional Football League game. Mark Clemmit or Kelly Somers provides regular roundups of the top stories from the rest of the EFL matches. The programme also includes interviews with managers and players.
Just after 17:00, when all of the results are in, they are read by Mike West. The round-up covers games from the
History
Early days
Final Score had been part of the BBC's
The results would come from the
After the majority of the results came in, the scores would then be collated and announced as the 'Classified Football Results' in alphabetical order starting with the highest leagues first. Remarkably, only three people have regularly read the football results on the programme: Len Martin (from 1958 until 1995), Tim Gudgin (from 1995 until 2011) and Mike West since 2011. Gudgin read the results for the last time on 19 November 2011, then retired at the age of 81. He cited the BBC's decision to move the programme from London to Salford Quays as one of the reasons for his departure and the difficulty of travelling from his home in Hampshire, particularly in winter.[5] The classified results were followed by the pools news and score draws and then by the league tables, although the pools news element was dropped due to its decline.
Whilst football was always the mainstay of Final Score, news and results from other sports, such as rugby union, and until 1987 racing results, were also included.
A brief version, usually lasting for five to ten minutes, was aired in the summer during the football close season and these summer editions included a cricket scoreboard.
Stand-alone editions of Final Score were broadcast on Boxing Day, New Year's Day and Easter Monday when there was a full programme of football fixtures and when Grandstand was not being shown. These editions were generally fifteen minutes long and did not include the vidiprinter sequence as they usually began at 16:50.
Changes
Technology has gradually improved and by the 1980s a live shot of the actual Teleprinter was replaced by a computer screen version, at which point the Teleprinter became referred to as "the
21st century
During its last few years there was no longer a main presenter for Grandstand, so from the start of the 2001–02 season Final Score was broadcast as an individual programme with Ray Stubbs as the regular presenter and Mark Lawrenson providing comment on the results as they came in. At this point, Final Score became a football-only programme and was only broadcast during the football season. The following season saw Final Score beginning earlier and by the end of that season it had settled to a start time of 16:30.
The half time round-up remained part of Grandstand until the start of the 2004–05 season when an afternoon-long version of the programme was launched on the BBC's interactive service. Initially called Score Interactive, the programme broadcast from 14:30 and provided a rolling mix of scores, reports and punditry. At 16:30, BBC One joined the programme and after the end of the BBC One broadcast, it would continue on the interactive service until 18:00.
In November 2007 a midweek version of the programme was introduced. Rather than being a programme in its own right, it is a simulcast of
When the BBC regained the rights for the FA Cup in 2014–15, the programme would be renamed FA Cup Final Score when the competition is the main focus, including a modified logo featuring the FA Cup trophy and Sunday broadcasts which show the key incidents from the day's games. Although focussing on the FA Cup, there are also updates from matches in other domestic competitions that are taking place.
Beginning with the 2017/18 season, the show's graphics were updated to tie in with a rebrand of BBC Sport.
Studio
In the autumn of 2011, Final Score moved from studio TC5 at Television Centre in London, which had been its home for many years. Its new home is located in Salford Quays at Dock10, MediaCityUK. The last programme from TC5 was broadcast on 19 November 2011.
Ahead of the 2019–20 Premier League season, BBC Sport upgraded the studio that Match of the Day, Match of the Day 2, Football Focus, and Final Score broadcasts from.
The facility uses a "
technology.The studio is located at the Dock10 facility at MediaCityUK in Salford.[9]
Presenter and pundits
The current main presenter of Final Score is Jason Mohammad, who replaced Gabby Logan at the start of the 2013–14 season.[10] Stand-in presenters include Eilidh Barbour, Kelly Somers and Will Perry. The programme was previously presented by Ray Stubbs until he left the BBC at the end of the 2008–09 season.
Two (or occasionally three) pundits appear per episode. Pundits who appear on the programme most commonly as of the 2021/22 season are
Reporters appearing most weeks include Ivan Gaskell, Hamish Marshall, Marc Webber, Juliette Ferrington, Roddy Forsyth, Martin Fisher, Sohail Sahi, Alastair Yeomans, Naz Premji, John Southall, John Acres, Will Perry, Eilidh Barbour, Laurence Herdman, Mike Williams, Andy Stevenson, Vicki Sparks, Katherine Downes, Robyn Cowen, Chris Wise, Mark Scott, Adam Cottier, Nick Hatton, Henry Moeran, Dan McCarthy, Adam Whitty, Tom Gayle, John Bennett, Nesta McGregor, Aaron Paul, Andy Sixsmith, Nikesh Rughani, Maz Farookhi, Betty Glover, Shourjo Sarkar, Connie McLaughlin, Ben Mundy, Laura Kenyon, Paul Scott, Niall McCaughan, Ben Croucher, Joshua Adu-Donkor, Lee Blakeman, Charlotte Richardson, Chris Coles, Rebecca Adams, Rich Wolfenden, Kate Mason, Flo Pollock, Gavin Wallace, Eisha Acton, Ellen Ellard, Gavin Ramjaun, Cameron Pope, Ryan Bromliow, Owain Gwynedd, Qasa Alom and Alex Howell.
Theme tune
The current theme tune is "I Saw" by
References
- ^ "Final Score – BBC World News". BBC.
- ^ Brief clips of the teleprinter on Grandstand
- ^ Grandstand 1984 which starts with a clip of the vidiprinter
- ^ "Opta to become official data provider for Premier League and Football League..." Opta Sports. 3 March 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
- ^ Stoddard, Michael. "Final Score for voice of the football results Tim Gudgin". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
- ^ "BBC – BBC Internet Blog: Changes to BBC Red Button".
- ^ "BBC Sport – Football – Press red for Final Score". news.bbc.co.uk. 12 May 2010.
- ^ "Sport on the BBC: Best of this week's TV & radio coverage". BBC Sport.
- ^ "Match of the Day Moves into Dock10's VR Studio".
- ^ "FOOTBALL: Jason Mohammad announced as new presenter of BBC's Final Score". Sport on the Box. 25 January 2013.
- ^ https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jan/02/ex-england-star-trevor-sinclair-admits-drink-driving-and-racialist-abuse [dead link]