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A Question of Sport

 
Wikipedia: A Question of Sport
A Question of Sport
A Question of Sport.jpg
Sue Barker, Matt Dawson and former captain Ally McCoist
Format Sport, Comedy, panel game
Created by Nick Hunter
Starring Sue Barker,
Matt Dawson,
Phil Tufnell
Country of origin  United Kingdom
No. of episodes 800+
Production
Executive producer(s) Mike Adley
Carl Doran
Caroline Roberts
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel BBC One
Original run 2 December 1968 (Regionally), 5 January 1970 (Nationally) – present
External links
Official website

A Question of Sport is a long-running BBC quiz show which started on 2 December 1968 and continues to this day.

It involves two teams of sports stars answering questions on their own and other sports. Each team has a resident captain, each of whom is joined by two stars of the sport's world

Having run almost uninterrupted since 1970, the show is now Britain's longest continuously-running game show [1]. As of 9 November 2007, there have been 800 shows.

Contents

Presenters and team members

The show was hosted by Stuart Hall 1968-69 (North of England editions only), David Vine 1970-78, and then from 1979 until 1997 was anchored by veteran BBC sports commentator David Coleman. Since his retirement, the show has been hosted by ex-tennis star Sue Barker.

Many team captains have enjoyed stints on the show down the years, including:

Over the years there have been several guest captains standing in for one of the regulars when they have other commitments. Following Ally McCoist's departure, several guests, including Phil Tufnell, sat in the captain's chair before Tuffers was eventually selected as McCoist's permanent replacement:

Of these, Cooper, Charlton, Moore, Hughes, Beaumont, Carson, Botham, Parrott, McCoist, Dettori, Owen and Dawson were still active participants in their sport while appearing in the show. The others had retired.

Sports stars often say they know they have 'made it' when they are invited to appear on A Question Of Sport. The sports personality with most guest appearances is Steve Davis, who has appeared 18 times.

There was also embarrassment for the show's hostess, Sue Barker, many years before she took on the role of the show's presenter. When she appeared as the Mystery Guest, captain Emlyn Hughes incorrectly guessed that she was boxing champion Alan Minter. In 1987, Princess Anne appeared as a guest on Hughes' team, just weeks after the ex-footballer had embarrassed himself by claiming a photo of her on a horse was jockey John Reid. The show achieved Question of Sport's highest ever ratings of approximately 19 million viewers. It was the first time a member of the royal family had appeared on a television quiz show. Anne's daughter Zara Phillips also appeared on the show twice in 2006, the latter for a Sport Relief edition.

However Hughes' embarrassment would not be as bad as Ally McCoist or Shane Warne in 2007. During the part of the show called Mystery Guest (see Quiz Format), it was McCoist's turn and he failed to realise it was his own boss at Rangers, Walter Smith, who was disguised. Also, in the 700th edition of the show, a compilation of Mystery Guests was shown as a special round. Here McCoist also failed to recognise himself as a showjumper from a clip some years previous. As for Warne, when the opposing team incorrectly guessed Venus Williams as the sports star shown, the answer was obviously Serena Williams but Warne thought differently and thought it was Roger Federer, despite the two having different skin tone and being of a different gender. Another embarrassing moment for a team captain happened in 2003, when during the Home or Away round where the captains had to guess an anagram, and Frankie Dettori could not recognize his name.

A humorous embarrassment happened when former team captain Ian Botham appeared as a guest on the show many years after "retiring" as captain. He failed to identify his own son, Liam, during the mystery guest round.

Quiz format

The rounds played include:

  • Picture Board - numbered squares reveal sports person for contestant to identify
  • Action Round - contestants are asked questions about a montage of sporting action
  • What Happened Next? - sports footage is halted at optimum moment and teams are asked what occurred thereafter (often an answer of amusement)
  • Observation Round - sports action is shown and contestants are asked questions about details of what they have just seen, e.g. "What colour hat was a certain person wearing?", "How many balls can you see in the following clip?". The footage for the latter question will be of many different events and all show balls, or whatever item has been asked
  • Mystery Guest - teams have to identify a sports star in unfamiliar circumstances and with unconventional camera angles
  • Home Or Away - contestants can answer a question on their own sport for one point ('home'), or a question on any sport for two points ('away'). Team captains always receive 'away' questions.
  • Captain's Challenge - The captains have a contest in different feats
  • One Minute Round - teams are asked nine questions in 60 seconds
  • On The Buzzer - teams answer questions at quickfire pace (this was only introduced in later years - in the Vine and Coleman eras, the show would end with the remaining six Picture Board questions)

Spin-offs

The A Question of Sport format has been applied to various other areas of knowledge. The following spin-off series were all made by the BBC:

Roslin also hosted a one-off special, A Question of EastEnders, in 2000. Another one-off special, "A Question of Comedy" was to have been aired on 16 March 2007 as a part of Comic Relief 2007, but after a scandal involving contestant Jade Goody it was replaced with a special edition of Top Gear.

A Question of Sport Relief is a special version of the show usually presented by a guest presenter on Sport Relief night since 2002. The 2002, 2004 & 2006 versions were hosted by Stephen Fry. 2008's version was hosted by Jimmy Carr after Fry had to pull out having broken his arm.

BBC One Scotland aired a one-off A Question of Scotland as part of Children in Need 2008, with Jackie Bird as quizmaster.

External links

References


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