On Sunday afternoons, we would tune to ITV for LWT’s The Big
Match, presented by Brian Moore with the more opinionated Jimmy Hill adding his
tuppence-worth at his side. Even when John Motson and Barry Davies took over as
principal commentators on MOTD – and we would always watch the Wembley
showpieces on the Beeb – I’d have to grudgingly admit that Moore was their
superior. He combined the old-school voice of Coleman with knowledge not only
of football but also what the football fan
would be thinking and feeling.
I recall sometime in the early Nineties one lunchtime eating
in Broadcasting House’s top-floor canteen – sorry, restaurant – when I observed at an adjacent table the holy trinity
of Motty, Davies and Moore in conversation. Presumably they’d been involved in
a Radio 4 programme but I’d love to have been close enough to eavesdrop on
those three legendary voices.
For at least two decades, it felt that Motson, Davies and
the equally versatile duo of Tony Gubba and Alan Weeks were permanent fixtures
in the BBC commentary boxes, with Archie Macpherson’s cheery Scottish accent,
warm coats and uncontrollable hair brought in for Celtic and Rangers fixtures. Motty
may have become the favourite amongst ordinary fans but I have always found him
too irritating, either stating the obvious or, increasingly, finding bizarre
ways of doing so. Phrases along the lines of “Was that a foul?” or “Unless I’m
very much mistaken that was a goalkeeping error” really irked me, and his bias
during England internationals crossed the line. Of course that probably
endeared him to many supporters but I prefer my commentators to play it
straight, not to the gallery. He kept going until the age of 72, by which time
his eccentricity had taken over. It was time to go.
One man I had heard on Channel 5, Jonathan Pearce, annoyed
me even more. His sudden bursts of deafening exuberance whenever a goal was
scored were such that when he moved to MOTD I was horrified. However, I learned
to appreciate his commentaries and obvious affection for the sport to such an
extent that since the Noughties he has been one of my favourite football
voices.
There were many Saturdays when Dad tuned to BBC Radio’s live
Saturday afternoon broadcasts for commentaries. Peter Jones - not the tall,
suave Dragon’s Den squillionaire, I should add – was the main man for many
years. Unlike his successor, Alan Green, Jones was universally popular until
his untimely death in 1990 aged just 60. I also liked listening to the more
distinctive voice of his contemporary, Bryon Butler.
These days I confess I struggle to identify the different
commentators I hear on MOTD or Sky Sports. Like most commercial radio
presenters, they seem to have been manufactured on the same assembly line
somewhere in the Home Counties. It doesn’t make them bad at their job – far
from it – but something unique, offbeat or any distinguishing feature would be
welcome provided it wasn’t at the expense of professionalism or knowledge. I
guess that’s why the sidekick has become integral to the commentary box
experience. Putting aside their respective strengths and foibles, at least the
likes of Mark Lawrenson, Glenn Hoddle and Alan Smith are easily recognisable.
It seems that a prerequisite for pundits and co-commentators
is to have played the game at the highest level. I tend to disagree that only
ex-internationals are qualified to voice sensible opinions on football.
However, provided they are articulate with a neat turn of phrase and ability to
bring their personal experience to bear, I have no objection. Some are really
good, of course. It’s even reached the point that I forget that Lee Dixon,
Danny Murphy or even Gary Lineker were once stopping, creating or scoring for
the best clubs in the land.
For intelligent humour, I don’t think you can beat Jeff
Stelling’s handling of Sky’s live Soccer Saturday. I never thought I’d heap
praise on anything from the Murdoch stable but once I warmed to The Simpsons
anything was possible. Stelling, his studio sidekicks and the location
reporters now seem part of my extended family. They even include the obligatory
eccentric, the one you can’t decide whether to love or hate. Chris Kamara just about sits in the
former camp. His “Unbelievable, Jeff!” catchphrase is over-used but there’s
always something to make you chuckle, even when the goal alerts at the foot of
the screen show QPR going 2-0 down at home.
However, for outlandish whimsy I’d place Stuart Hall at the
summit. I know he’s since been outed as a poisonous pervert but the former It’s a Knockout presenter was a football
reporter par excellence. His summaries on BBC Radio were more
Shakespearean soliloquy than post-match review, a few minutes of wondrous
wordsmithery that made me want to stand and applaud instead of hang around for
Six-O-Six.
However, perhaps the voice that became a greater part of my
football-related TV life than any other belonged to a man you never saw until
he died. I’m talking about Len Martin. For 37 years he read the
classified results on Grandstand, and for me the score could not possibly be
accepted as truth unless I’d heard it from Martin’s dulcet tones. For many, the
greatest was James Alexander Gordon, Len’s counterpart on BBC Radio, or perhaps
his successor Tim Gudgin, but for all the Moores and Motsons, Halls and Hills
across the past fifty years, Len’s the boss!