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A Question Of Sport

Neil_HarrisNeil_Harris Posts: 1,822
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I haven't watched this programme in years, but I stumbled across this blog which describes it's heyday when I didn't miss an episode. Those were the days!!

The BBC quiz show peaked in the Bill Beaumont v Emlyn Hughes era, thanks to great presenting from David Coleman, a funky theme tune and a royal guest who attracted 19m viewers
As I sit down to watch the new series of A Question of Sport on Friday 21 October, it is inevitable that, as ever, nostalgia will engulf me. Don't get me wrong, I do enjoy the current show, but in my opinion, it suffers in comparison to the quiz programme I grew up watching as a boy. This may be simply because I am an old fool unable to accept that things have to move on and nothing stays the same forever. Yet, I am sure there are many like-minded people out there who will recall with fondness a glorious era for A Question of Sport.
So, here is a look back at what made A Question of Sport special for me in the 1980s. From the opening credits, to the time when 19 million tuned in to watch a very royal episode, a few of my memories of a classic 1980s TV show.
Theme tune
It is fairly hard to write a description that waxes lyrical about a theme tune, but I'll try and give it a go. Even the music for A Question of Sport in the 1980s was great. There, that was easy.
The theme tune I remember mainly is this one, a belter of a tune which someone really should remix and turn into a modern dance anthem. I also have a vague recollection of this jolly version, although with my fading memory I can't quite recall when this superseded by my favourite.
Admittedly the tune is probably only cool in a 1980s kind of way, but from the very first drum beats and the computerised roar of the crowd, it propels me back to a time of eager anticipation, as I waited to see who was on the show and, more importantly, settled down in preparation for half an hour in which I could show off my sporting knowledge. I probably needed to get out more.
David Coleman
Forget Paul Ince, the real governor was David Coleman. Through the whole of the decade, the voice of athletics (and he of the infamous scorer/score football commentary of the 1970s e.g. Porterfield, one-nil) hosted the quiz, with a calm authority and, where necessary, just the right level of humour.
His almost gleeful joy when one of the captains got a question wrong was always amusing – probably not for Bill Beaumont, Emlyn Hughes and others – yet this was not the only trait that made Coleman special.
"The it's-bad-news-ha-no-actually-it's-good-news technique is one I've always enjoyed. It was really pioneered by David Coleman on Question of Sport when he'd tonally suggest Bill Beaumont had got an answer wrong... only to reveal at the end of the sentence that he'd got it right." If someone as respected as Alan Partridge can write that about you, then you know you've done something right.
Coleman and A Question of Sport fitted together so well. That he probably knew most of the answers to the questions he posed (without taking a sneaky look at the bottom of the card) gave him that extra gravitas which in my eyes made him the perfect man to host the programme.
Format
There is an old quote along the lines of "give me a child until he is seven and I will give you the man". Sadly, I can now see from personal experience, that this is not far off the mark.
I like routine, a sense of familiarity. That is one of the reasons A Question of Sport appealed to me in my formative years. From one week to the next you would find exactly the same format to the quiz: Picture Round, Individual Round, Home or Away, Mystery Guest, What Happens Next?, One Minute Round, and then back to the Picture Round. A simple and effective structure that worked so well.
I also liked the way a score was maintained throughout the series, which Coleman would let us know at the start of each programme. Sports fans like things to be quantifiable and little things like this made the show what it was in the 1980s.
Captains
I'm a little too young to remember the era of Gareth Edwards, Willie Carson and Emlyn Hughes (pre-1981), so for me the 1980s were all about Beaumont versus Hughes.
Of course, both had been very successful sporting captains in their own right, so there was a fair level of competitiveness among the rivalry. Beaumont was a big, friendly giant, capable of the odd moment of dry humour, whereas the livewire Hughes was forever entertaining, amusing viewers with his boyish enthusiasm.
When Hughes did the unthinkable and left the show in 1988, I was shocked, although as his replacement was Ian Botham (my cricketing hero) I soon got over it.
Hughes went on to captain a team on the woeful Sporting Triangles but even he could not rescue that sinking ship. A Question of Sport carried on regardless, yet for me it lost a little something after Hughes' departure. I've never been one for change though.
Humour
I'm not sure the word banter existed in the 1980s, although A Question of Sport contained many jovial exchanges between team captains, with Coleman also getting involved. Beaumont would be teased mercilessly for his inability to recognise the correct sex of a mystery guest; Hughes' elaborate guesses in the What Happened Next round were always a giggle; and Coleman would find it hilarious if Bill or Emlyn failed to answer a question on their own sport.
There were other moments too, my favourite being when Ian Woosnam twice "guessed" the mystery personality, only to reveal that on both occasions he had seen the crew filming the event (Bill Rogers and Greg Norman, I think). Admittedly, I may have found this a lot funnier than it actually was, as I was young at the time, though it was these unforced amusing bits of the show which I enjoyed so much. During one famous edition of the show in 1987, the humorous moments were plentiful.
Princess Anne
"Is it John Reid?" Those few words uttered by Emlyn Hughes were the foundations for the most famous episode of A Question of Sport, the opening gambit in a series of events that still bring a smile to the face.
"John Reid!" guffawed Coleman, in response to Hughes' Picture Round guess. Coleman sounded even happier than usual at Hughes' wrong answer, and it soon became apparent why. When Beaumont tentatively suggested that the mud-splattered jockey may in fact be Princess Anne, Hughes was beside himself: "Don't put that out. They'll hang me." Not only did the clip survive the edit, but a chuffed Coleman informed Hughes that Princess Anne was to appear on the show in two weeks' time.
So it transpired that on Thursday 5 February 1987 an estimated 19 million viewers tuned in to watch the eagerly awaited appearance of HRH on Hughes' team, the 200th episode of the programme. The viewing public were not disappointed.
Princess Anne showed the nation that she possessed a mischievous sense of humour: teasing Hughes as to whether he could ascertain the right gender of a sporting figure on the Picture Board; criticising her captain's spelling; and cheekily challenging Coleman at one point, leading to the host crying: "I can see you're on the right team."
Hughes for his part tried his very best to stop himself hugging his royal team-mate, though the threat of a handbag around his head partly did the trick. A classic moment in the history of the show, and with just four channels on UK television at the time, it was a highly publicised and watched event. It was a lot better than It's a Royal Knockout.
Board Game
It was only natural that with such a hit on their hands, the BBC should tap into the merchandise market. There were no David Coleman dolls to my knowledge, but there was the Elite computer game and a board game, which you can still buy on eBay, although the questions may be a little dated.
I was pleased one Christmas morning when I unwrapped a present and saw the smiling faces of Coleman, Hughes and Beaumont on the lid of the game. And what a board game it was. All the usual rounds were there, along with flip chart scoreboards which I would change with great gusto on answering a question correctly. My dad was less enamoured with this for some reason.
And therein lay the problem. Being a bit of a sports nerd, I would often beat my competitive dad, so much so that soon he stopped playing me at it completely. I remember thinking that this refusal to play was lame – until I had children of my own. After my umpteenth defeat at the hands at my son in his Flags of the World game, my enthusiasm towards the game mysteriously dwindled. Like father, like son. But what a board game it was.
Viewers' Mystery Guest
There are more questions than answers. Too right Johnny Nash. The end of series viewers' competition was a chance to grab some tickets to a major sporting event, all answers on a postcard of course. You could probably Google the answers if the quiz ran nowadays, but back in the 1980s we didn't have such luxuries.
If you were lucky and owned a video recorder then you could at least get your fingers ready to record the mystery guest. Then you could spend ages trying to work out who the sporting star was, but even if you completed the set, you had an inkling that this wasn't going to be your year. Still, at least you had the hope, and that classic tune by Johnny Nash to enjoy too.
• This is an article from our Guardian Sport Network
• This blog first appeared on That 1980s Sports Blog
• Follow Steven Pye on Twitter

Comments

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    ftvftv Posts: 31,668
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    Actually a new series of QOS is recording at Salford from October 22.
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    singhss1singhss1 Posts: 2,243
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    ftv wrote: »
    Actually a new series of QOS is recording at Salford from October 22.

    Time to quit methinks. It is not the same as before. Do they still have Z-list celebrities on it or they stopped that now.
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    Mark FMark F Posts: 54,215
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    Didn't seem to have that many last time but usually tended to be older pros who had retires or from not so high profile sports?
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    Darren LethemDarren Lethem Posts: 61,733
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    Like Neil I grew up watching it in the 70s and 80s so was used to David Coleman, Willie, Bill, Emlyn and Ian etc as captains. I fell out of love with the show a few years ago but it doesn't mean it doesn't still have a place in the TV schedules. As far as I am aware it is still popular as the ticket waiting list and live shows will testify. But it just isn't for me, time's change as do what the audience wants. The show is for the generation we were 30 years ago now.
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    JSemple3JSemple3 Posts: 8,652
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    OK QoS probably isn't the same show it was all those years ago at it's peak but I still watch every week when it's on. Glad that new shows are getting made soon
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    ShrewnShrewn Posts: 6,856
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    I thinks its one of those shows that seems to be on all the time and at various time slots and suffers because of it. When they stick old ones on where Grandstand used to be, i'd rather they showed some of the old Coleman ones, but they won't
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    Darren LethemDarren Lethem Posts: 61,733
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    Shrewn wrote: »
    I thinks its one of those shows that seems to be on all the time and at various time slots and suffers because of it. When they stick old ones on where Grandstand used to be, i'd rather they showed some of the old Coleman ones, but they won't

    Why would they ? I loved those shows but I would rather watch one were the answers werent woefully out of date.

    As I have said millions of times on DS, times change and move on.
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    ShrewnShrewn Posts: 6,856
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    Why would they ? I loved those shows but I would rather watch one were the answers werent woefully out of date.
    .

    I spose there is that, but I was just thinking that they're showing some pretty ancient editions of Antiques Roadshow, Mastermind etc at the moment. No big deal
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    Darren LethemDarren Lethem Posts: 61,733
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    Shrewn wrote: »
    I spose there is that, but I was just thinking that they're showing some pretty ancient editions of Antiques Roadshow, Mastermind etc at the moment. No big deal

    Yes but on the Antiques Roadshow from 1985, Michael Aspel doesnt say "in the last World Cup, who scored the opening goal ?" etc. Most of the sports questions are topical to the time.
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    ShrewnShrewn Posts: 6,856
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    Yes but on the Antiques Roadshow from 1985, Michael Aspel doesnt say "in the last World Cup, who scored the opening goal ?" etc. Most of the sports questions are topical to the time.

    Ha - good point ;) (though sadly i'd probably be more likely to answer those questions than more recent stuff :o )
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    Darren LethemDarren Lethem Posts: 61,733
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    Shrewn wrote: »
    Ha - good point ;) (though sadly i'd probably be more likely to answer those questions than more recent stuff :o )

    ditto :)
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    PizzatheactionPizzatheaction Posts: 20,157
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    A new edition is provisionally scheduled for Monday 21st October at 8.30pm on BBC One. :)
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    mrblankmrblank Posts: 5,687
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    it was a very differnt show at the start with david vine as host all very earnest and serius back then
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    ShrewnShrewn Posts: 6,856
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    mrblank wrote: »
    it was a very differnt show at the start with david vine as host all very earnest and serius back then

    I think it was Coleman's idea that they all have a meal and a drink before the recording to relax everyone. I believe they still do this now
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