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Premier Soccer Saturday

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Premier Soccer Saturday
StarringBill O'Herlihy
Peter Collins
Darragh Maloney
Johnny Giles
Liam Brady
Eamon Dunphy
Ray Houghton
Ronnie Whelan
Kenny Cunningham
Richie Sadlier
Trevor Steven
George Hamilton
Country of originIreland
No. of seasons15
Production
Running time90 minutes
Original release
NetworkRTÉ One
ReleaseSeptember 1998 (1998-09) –
May 2013 (2013-05)
Related
Monday Night Soccer
Soccer Republic

Premier Soccer Saturday (formerly The Premiership) was the principal weekly club association football programme on RTÉ television.

In June 2013, RTÉ Sport confirmed that due to cost-cutting initiatives to save the station up to €1.3m a year, it would no longer have the Irish rights to television coverage of the Premier League, with the 2012-13 Premier League season being the final season shown on RTÉ Sport.[1][2]

The programme was broadcast on RTÉ Two every Saturday evening between 19:30 and 21:00 and occasionally on Sunday (when there was an important game played that day) during the English league soccer season, showing highlights of Premier League football matches. When the show was aired on a day other than Saturday, it used the appropriately customised title (e.g. Premier Soccer Sunday). The programme only showed English association football, as Monday Night Soccer covered Irish association football.[citation needed]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Soccer Saturday's Funniest Moments of 2017! 😂
  • Premier Soccer Saturday Season Closer - 2010/11
  • Soccer Saturday - Survival Sunday 2010/2011 highlights

Transcription

History

The programme was first broadcast in September 1998 as The Premiership. Between August 2004 and May 2007, RTÉ also had the broadcasting rights to 15 live Premier League matches on Saturday afternoons (kick off: 15:00). These programmes were called Premiership Live. Setanta Sports obtained exclusive rights to the games from the 2007–08 season onwards.[citation needed]

The show was reformatted or not broadcast on several occasions during the 2010 snowstorms in Great Britain and Ireland. For example, on Saturday 18 December 2010, the show's format was changed to show extended highlights of the only two Premiership games that were played. And, on Sunday 19 December 2010, a proposed Premier Soccer Soccer Sunday special was cancelled.[citation needed]

One feature introduced to Premier Soccer Saturday involved fans providing match analysis. When this segment, nicknamed "fanalysts", was aired, the shows were extended to over 2 hours.[citation needed]

On 30 April 2012, there was a special Premier Soccer Monday that showed highlights of the Manchester Derby between the top two teams of that year's Premier League. Because the game, which was won by Man City, began at 19:45, the highlights show ran from 23:00 to 00:00.[citation needed]

In May 2013, RTÉ Head of sport Ryle Nugent announced that RTÉ Sport would not pay for the rights of Premier League to show highlights. Therefore, Premier Soccer Saturday/Sunday was finished.[1]

Presenters

The programme was most recently presented on a rotational basis between Peter Collins and Darragh Maloney. Bill O'Herlihy was previously the sole presenter of the program.[citation needed]

Contributors

Pundits that sometimes featured on the show included Eamon Dunphy, Johnny Giles, Ray Houghton, Trevor Steven, Kenny Cunningham, Ronnie Whelan, Liam Brady, Richard Sadlier and Graeme Souness.[citation needed]

Former Prime Minister Bertie Ahern made an appearance on the show in 2001,[3] providing analysis on a Manchester United game, of whom he is a lifelong supporter.[citation needed]

Commentary on the match highlights and reports were provided by, amongst others, George Hamilton, Ger Canning, Joanne Cantwell, and Jimmy Magee.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b "RTÉ announces end of Premier League coverage". RTÉ Sport. 13 June 2013. Retrieved 13 June 2013.
  2. ^ "RTÉ axes its Premier League show to save station €1.3m a year". Irish Independent. 13 June 2013. Retrieved 13 June 2013.
  3. ^ Ahern: 'Don't blame the recession on me'. 20 August 2008.
This page was last edited on 12 January 2024, at 06:39
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