Sunday Supplement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sunday Supplement
Format Football chat show
Presented by Neil Ashton
Former: Jimmy Hill, Bill Bradshaw, Brian Woolnough
Country of origin United Kingdom
Production
Producer(s) Sky Sports
Running time 90 Minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Sky Sports
Original airing 1999 – Present

Sunday Supplement (formerly Jimmy Hill's Sunday Supplement) is a Sunday morning television programme in the United Kingdom about football. It is broadcast on Sunday mornings on Sky Sports 1, during the football season. The length of the show is 90 minutes, including commercials, although it is occasionally cut down to 60 minutes.

History

Launched under the stewardship of Jimmy Hill, three guest football journalists sit around a table over breakfast/brunch and discuss the latest football matches, news and gossip, including a look at the football stories in the Sunday newspapers.[1]

The proposal was that it was set in Hill's actual kitchen, with fans trying to guess where his home was from the window view.[2] But the truth came to light on several occasions in 2006 when Hill was late claiming to be stuck in traffic.

Revamp

In 2007, Sky Sports decided not to renew Hill's 12 month contract,[2] which coincided with the removal of his name from the title.

The presenter role was given to either Bill Bradshaw and Brian Woolnough. The format and setting remained consistent set over a breakfast/brunch table, but guest football journalists increased from two to three. Woolnough later took on the permanent presenter role, with regular hacks including Patrick Barclay, Oliver Holt, Martin Samuel, Paul Smith and Henry Winter. Since Woolnough's death in September 2012 Neil Ashton has been the host, having initially stood in during his predecessor's illness.

Occasionally, the show will air on a Friday evening, and the name of the show will change to Hold The Back Page.

Beginning in 2009, a podcast of the show was made available on the Sky Sports website[3] and iTunes.[4]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.