Charles Colvile (commentator)

Colvile is a cricket commentator, interviewer and journalist[1] for Sky Sports, especially for English domestic matches.

Contents

Early life

Charles Colvile was born on 29 March 1955, Westfield, Woking)[2]

Education

Colvile was educated at Westminster School, an independent school for boys in London.

Life and career

Colvile is a cricket commentator, interviewer and journalist[3] for Sky Sports, especially for English domestic matches. He has worked for Sky since 1990 and presented some major series for Sky from various grounds: such as the 1990/91 Ashes series in Australia, the 1994 England tour to the West Indies and the 1995/6 England tour to South Africa. Before Mark Nicholas signed up as anchorman for Sky Sports in 1996 he was the senior cricket presenter. The majority of his work now is presenting live internationals not involving England, presenting England highlights and heading up Sky's domestic cricket coverage. Unlike the majority of cricket commentators, Colvile never played cricket professionally (a source of amusement amongst some of his fellow TV pundits), but is instead a respected professional sports commentator. He has however always been an enthusiastic club cricketer, playing in the Surrey Championship for Pyrford Cricket Club since the 1970s. Colville is generally considered to be an outcast of the Sky Sports cricket commentary team, due to the fact he's never been anywhere near good enough to play, and to this day it remains a mystery to cricket followers across the UK as to how Sky Sports employed somebody as inept as a player as Colville to present their domestic cricket coverage.

His catchphrase is "Got Him" when a bowler takes a wicket - this became folklore when Angus Fraser ripped through the West Indies in the 1994 Barbados Test match live on Sky TV. He even has his own Facebook group dedicated to him by fans. Before joining Sky, Colvile was one of several sports journalists who covered the sports slots just before the half-hours in BBC Radio 4's Today programme. In 2005, Cricinfo released copies of a question and answer article by The Wisden Cricketer on cricket commentators that contained both positive[4] and negative views on Colvile's commentating.[5][6]

Colvile is a member of the Marylebone Cricket Club.

Notes

  1. ^ Marvelous Monty's story free of wrong kind of spin The Independent retrieved 29 August 2007
  2. ^ YouTube
  3. ^ Marvelous Monty's story free of wrong kind of spin The Independent retrieved 29 August 2007
  4. ^ Turn the volume down Cricinfo retrieved 29 August 2007
  5. ^ Death seems a better option than listening to those zombies Cricinfo retrieved 29 August 2007
  6. ^ Sound and Vision The Reverse Swing Manifesto retrieved 29 August 2007

External links