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Saturday Sport

by Kenneth Wolstenholme

From 'Kenneth Wolstenholme's Book of World Soccer.' (1963) Published by World Distributors (Manchester) Limited.

The BBC camera crew take protection from the blazing sun of Mexico City.
From left to right: Fred Clarke (sound recordist), Kenneth Wolstenholme (commentator), Paul Fox (producer, now {1963} head of BBC TV Public Affairs Programmes), Hugh Wilson (camerman)

Every Saturday night during the football season, six million people tune in to B.B.C.
Television to watch "Saturday Sport", the thirty-five minute programme which mirrors the day's sport on film.

"Saturday Sport" has come a long way since the days of the old "Sports Special", the title under which the programme first came on to the television screens some nine years ago. In those days, an entirely new filming technique had to be devised, and as processing facilities existed only in London, film had to be flown, in all weather conditions, to the laboratories for processing. Today film can be processed in a number of provincial centres, such as Birmingham, Bristol and Manchester.

The B.B.C.'s Sport Department is responsible for "Saturday Sport" as well as for the other three sports programmes on the BBC network ..."Sportsview","Grandstand" and "To-day's Sport". It does, therefore, come under the general direction of the Head of Sport, Bryan Cowgill. But the general day-to-day editing of "Saturday Sport" was, last season, the job of Lawrie Higgins.

Higgins was originally a sports journalist with Kemsley (now Thomson) Newspapers and then graduated into television via Associated Television, one of the commercial companies. He joined the B.B.C. in November,1961.

His introduction into the editorship of "S' d S' " h .H k atur ay port was chaotic. e too over for the edition which was due on the air on December 29, 1961, but widespread fog cut the programme to ribbons. One camera unit was in the North of England going from town to town in an effort to find a match that could be played. It failed. Every northern match except one was postponed.

Another unit was in the South, but London, too, was fogbound. Match after match fell out until just one was left -- Tottenham Hotspur v. Chelsea. Yet some viewers, wrote to complain that a London "derby" was chosen for coverage !

Kenneth Wolstenholme

Kenneth Wolstenholme at the BBC

(picture from BBC SPORT FOOTBALL)

Under the terms of the B.B.C.'s contract with the Football League, two League matches can be covered each week on "Saturday Sport". On cup day's, three matches may be covered. So Higgins has to plan some weeks ahead so that the Football League and the clubs concerned can be notified which games will be covered. Then there are other big events to be considered -Rugby Union, Rugby League, racing and the like.

Working some weeks in advance is not easy. Some matches increase in importance because of recent results or because a star player has been signed. Other matches decrease in importance.

Which matches should be covered ? Some people feel that the net should be spread far and wide so that by the end of the season everyone of the 92 Football League clubs would have had at least one showing. But experience has shown that the public is interested only in the big matches, the clashes involving the leading First Division teams or those battling for promotion from the Second Division. That is why last season, Everton, Leicester and Tottenham Hotspur were featured more than the other clubs. After all, they were the front runners in the race for the league championship.

Some people in the North complain that Spurs were shown too many times, but then those in the South prorested that Higgins showed a bias towards the North with the continual coverage given to Burnley and Everton. Those who kept records of the matches will know that 50 per cent of the teams which appeared on "Saturday Sport" were from the North, with Burnley and Everton leading the way in the number of appearances. But that is only to be expected when one remembers how many of the league teams are situated in the North.

Once he has decided on his programme, editor Lawrie Higgins has to consult Ronnie Spillane, who is responsible for the briefing of the camera crews, provision of scaffolding for cameras and arranging for the despatch of film to the nearest laboratories.

Come Saturday afternoon, everything is ready to mount yet another programme. The "Saturday Sport" office staff report for duty towards the end of "Grandstand" and take over all the news-providing equipment, such as tape machines. Meanwhile, the crews in the field are at work.

At each match there is a commentator. Walley Barnes, Alan Weeks and I are the three main ones used - and a camera team of three - cameraman, assistant and sound recordist. In the early days, we attempted to film the game in snatches, but it was found that with this method it was very easy to miss goal or other vital incidents. So now filming goes on continually throughout the match.

Filming presents problems all its own.

When a football game is covered by what we call "live" cameras, three cameras are used and they are under the direction of a producer. By this method, every portion of the field is covered all the time, and furthermore, television cameras can pierce the weather much easier than can film cameras.

Light is the great problem for the film cameraman, and the months of November, December, January and February are particularly troublesome. You can meet any mixture of weather in those months. It can be foggy, hazy, sunny, frosty or there can be a blizzard. Often the cameraman has to cope with four differing conditions of light in the space of ninety minutes. The game can start in sunshine, followed by a fading of the light as darkness sets in. Then the light meter reading leaps upwards as the floodlights are switched on, and the last I5 minutes of the game can be played under floodlights with the ground shrouded in haze or thickening fog. All these conditions call for different types of film, different exposures.

There is no time for commentary to be put on the edited film. Nor, indeed, is such a method desirable because no commentator can get the thrill of a big match sitting in a dubbing theatre. So the commentaries for the matches shown on "Saturday Sport"and on other special B.B.C.-T.V. films- are recorded on the spot, and as the film is cut, so, too, is the commentary.

Commentating on such occasions calls for a much different approach than the live outside broadcast. First and foremost, the commentator has no monitor set so he can never be certain what picture is actually in the camera frame. He must, therefore, be certain to explain near misses at goal in case the camera has not recorded them faithfully.

Then the commentator must explain the game much more fully because the viewer is only going to see a cut version of the game, reduced from ninety minutes to fifteen or even less. He has to tell the viewer how the game is going because the viewer can never judge-how can he when he sees an incident in, say, the eighth minute, and the next shot is from the thirtieth minute ? In short, what the commentator must do is attempt to give a Sunday newspaper report and assessment of the game while it is actually taking place.

Film is taken from the commentary position by relays of despatch riders to the laboratories, where it is quickly processed and then sent to the film editors. (A point herethe film is not developed. It is edited and transmitted in the negative state.) The editors are helped by a dope sheet telephoned to them by the cameraman's assistant. These dope sheets give such details as: "Roll 1, 50 feet, disallowed "goal". Roll 2, 80 feet, "penalty" and so on. From this information and from his own viewing of the film, the film editor cuts the film to make a story of the required length.

The actual length of each story is decided upon by Lawrie Higgins, who by now has a report on what sort of entertainment the various games provided. At six o'clock on Saturday evening, Lawrie Higgins goes into conference with Richard Tilling, who dircets the studio cameras, and me. It is at this conference that the running order is decided.

The two soccer films are the mainstays of each programme, but there might be other stories, specially filmed, or highlights from the afternoon's "Grandstand" programme which are on video-tape. Some people say that these highlights should not be used, but there is a wide sporting audience that has been playing or watching during the afternoon so will have had no chance of seeing the exciting finish to that race, or some other highlight from an afternoon's outside broadcast.

Meanwhile, a sub editor is sifting through the news that chatters in on the tape machines. He comes up with - we hope - good stories and it might be decided that we can do a caption routine, or even a film routine of individuals who have hit the headlines that afternoon.

Richard Tilling then settles down to work out which machines which film will be on, how he will operate his studio cameras. If one or both of the matches we have covered has affected the positions at the top or the bottom of the division, then it might be decided to show the new league positions. In that case, caption artists are called in to make up a "fish and chip board" . . . this is really a board on to which individual letters are stuck, so spelling out the necessary words.

While Lawrie Higgins is checking with film editors and with Ronnie Spillane about the progress of the editing of each story, I am writing the script-and my almost illegible handwriting is expertly read by a typist who duplicates a number of copies.

An hour before the show goes on the air, rehearsal begins. For this, Tilling is upstairs in the gallery with his production assistant, Janet Driver, by his side. Lawrie Higgins is also there. Tilling can talk to everyone on the studio floor by means of an inter-communication system, and these days most comperes or link-men wear deaf-aids specially made for them. I don't. I found them uncomfortable and I found myself shouting to raise my voice over the sounds I could hear from the gallery in my ear. So I rely more than ever on Bill Adams, the floor manager, who is Tilling's second-in-command as far as the studio floor is concerned.

Rarely do we see the films on rehearsal. They are still in the hands of the editors. But all the links can be timed, and so, too, can the telecine cues-the actual words spoken by me to cover the ten feet of film which is put on the front of each story as a leader . Rehearsal over, there is a short break until transmission. Then, with five minutes to go, it is the commanding voice of Bill Adams calling: "Five minutes, studio. Settle down." He checks with me that I've got a jug of fresh water and a glass and that there's an ashtray on my desk, just out of sight of the cameras - just as I smoke throughout a commentary, I also smoke while films are running. Bill Adams continues his countdown, ticking off each minute.

Kenneth Wolstenholme at the BBC

Kenneth Wolstenholme at the BBC

(Picture from BBC SPORT FOOTBALL  Wolstenholme The voice of football)

Then it is stand-by. Bill Adams stands by the side of the camera which is focused on me, arm raised. Suddenly it's, "Here we go", and on one of my two monitor sets I can see the ten feet of leader to the opening titles ticking over. Then up comes the sound and the opening titles. I can see when I come into view-in fact I know the opening titles backwards. But as a safeguard, Tilling calls over the inter-com, "Cut to 4 (meaning camera No.4), cue Ken." Bill Adams drops his arm and another show is on the road.

During the programme I can be given late news flashes to read, and over the telephone Tilling can keep me informed about the timings, whether we are over-running or under-running. And if all goes well, we are out right on time.

But things often go wrong for "Saturday Sport" and last season we had nightmares during that almost never-ending arctic spell. Then decisions have to be taken in seconds. . . and might prove to be wrong. There was the time last season when a camera team went to cover the important Second Division match between Huddersfield Town and Sunderland. As he drove into Huddersfield, the camera car driver had to use his headlights because of the poor visibility-just three hours before the kick-off'. When this was reported to London, the editor, realising that there were no floodlights on the Huddersfield ground, ordered a change of plans. The camera team was switched to Manchester . . . and the visibility in Huddersfield improved.

The big freeze-up of last season almost drove Higgins and Spillane to distraction.

They had to try and develop some order out of chaos-and all at the last minute. Friday became nightmare day as matches were called off, causing changes of plans. Camera crews were sent on what proved to be wild goose chases. So were commentators. Yet every week the programme went out, and on January 5, 1963, the day on which only three Third Round F.A. Cup ties were played, "Saturday Sport" covered all three. . . even though I did have to travel overnight to Leeds and then race over the snowbound Pennines and across Lancashire into Cheshire to cover the Tranmere Rovers v. Chelsea match.

But all that is part of the fun of working on such a programme, a programme which is not only shown on the B.B.C. network but is also sold to various Commonwealth and overseas countries. So world wide is "Saturday Sport" these days that Alan Prentice, our chief soccer cameraman who was deservedly awarded the M.B.E. in the New Year's Honours List, was able to watch the programme in Australia during the Commonwealth Games.


On this site also see Commentators

Kenneth Wolstenholme's Obituary

 
Bob Dunning
27 March 2002

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