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Match of the Day (abbreviated to MOTD) is a football highlights programme, typically broadcast on BBC One on Saturday nights, during the Premier League season. [8] [1] The current presenter is former England international striker Gary Lineker with analysis from Danny Murphy, Micah Richards and Alan Shearer, among others.
Match of the Day was a program that aired on the now defunct NBCSN. The show, based on the BBC version also titled Match of the Day, featured highlights of the day's Premier League [1] action most Saturdays. A sister program, Match of the Day II, which also bears the same name as its BBC counterpart, highlighted the Sunday fixtures. [2]
Match of the Day, the BBC's main football television programme Match of the Day (American TV series), NBCSN soccer television program based on the above; Match of the Day, a Doctor Who novel; Message of the day, a message shown to computer users when they log in "Mothers of the Disappeared", a song by rock band U2
Match of the Day 2 is a Premier League football highlights programme. It is a companion show to Match of the Day , usually broadcast on BBC One on Sunday evenings, thus facilitating coverage of the respective week's PL matches that were played since the broadcast of the initial programme.
Today at Wimbledon is a BBC TV show, showing highlights and discussion from the day's play at the Wimbledon Championships currently hosted by Clare Balding. The show lasts for 60 minutes and is broadcast on BBC Two at 8:30 pm.
Match of the Day is a football television programme broadcast by the BBC. Match of the Day may also refer to: Match of the Day (American TV series), based on the BBC version; Match of the Day, a Doctor Who novel "Match of the Day" (Man About the House), a 1973 television episode "Match of the Day", a song by Genesis from the Spot the Pigeon EP
Match of the Day, the BBC's long-running football programme, was in its eighth year of terrestrial Premier League coverage and about to start a record ninth in 2000. Bidding for a further three seasons to the Premier League panel, the broadcaster went in as favourites to retain the exclusive highlights package.
This was the first time an edited football match, recorded on videotape, had been shown on television anywhere in the world. [14] League football was soon to gain a nationwide audience once more. In 1964, the BBC introduced Match of the Day – originally shown on BBC2 and intended to train BBC cameramen for the forthcoming 1966 World Cup.