AccaMate logo

Football News

Latest Sports Stories

Filtered by tag:Television industryClear filter
ITV delivers feisty start to World Cup coverage – and taunts BBC from glitzy studio

Football News

ITV delivers feisty start to World Cup coverage – and taunts BBC from glitzy studio

Mark Pougatch acknowledged the controversies surrounding the tournament, while capturing the excitement of football fansDon’t mention the war. Mark Pougatch mentioned it, right at the start of ITV’s World Cup coverage, but I think he got away with it. He also, to his credit, highlighted the outrageous ticket prices, as well as the disgraceful treatment of the teams, fans and officials who now find themselves persona non grata in the US. Even Donald J Trump, the first (and quite possibly last) holder of the Fifa Peace Prize, got a mention. Pougatch also gave a visibly emotional Ian Wright the chance to suggest that the US has “no idea of the spirit of the game”. All unexpectedly and encouragingly feisty.Of course, it was no Gary Lineker, railing against the hosts’ human rights record while launching the BBC’s coverage of Qatar 2022. But Lineker is a corporation ghost now – no longer at the Beeb but podcasting for Netflix. The BBC have, on the grounds of cost, opted to present this World Cup from an austerity bunker in Salford. The Telegraph derided this as a “work from home” operation. ITV are already having some fun with it too.Pougatch began the broadcast striding ostentatiously through downtown New York. The studio, with interior vaguely resembling an open-plan version of the Friends apartment, offers “a great view of Lower Manhattan”. Take it down a notch, Mark. You’re presenting football from it, not trying to sell it to a merchant banker.Mystifyingly, there’s a second sofa situation on the roof, which involves Semra Hunter and Man v Food refugee Adam Richman offering lighthearted colour. At this early stage, it seems to exist only as a means of further taunting the BBC with the studio’s view of the Brooklyn Bridge, and may not survive a month in the irritable company of Roy Keane. Expect to see the sofa bobbing around in the Hudson River by the middle of next week.Anyway, enough of grumpy old Roy. It’s off to the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City (the US, of course, aren’t the only hosts) for Mexico v South Africa. We’re greeted by the insufferable rictus grin of Fifa’s Gianni Infantino, but let’s gloss over that. That’s because Jon Champion and Ally McCoist are there too, and McCoist in particular will not be dialling it down. This is a man who can hyperventilate with excitement over a UEFA Conference League tie between Crystal Palace and Shakhtar Donetsk. How on earth will he be coping with the opening game of a World Cup? Let’s just say he may be needing a new thesaurus.Still, there’s anticipation and emotion in the air and, in the context of the overpowering (and understandable) cynicism that dominated the buildup to this tournament, that’s refreshing. ITV managed just about the right balance between acknowledgment of the issues that seem likely to make this tournament a guilty watch for many, and excitement about the essence of it, which remains just about intact.Earlier, there was a discussion of the legendary 1970 final that was also played at the Azteca. Ian Wright positively glowed while talking about going round to a mate’s house and watching it in colour. ITV also showed a moving short film about Sir Geoff Hurst, the last man standing from the boys of 1966. It was a reminder that the World Cup is special to so many of us, and that is precisely why Fifa’s casual contempt for its magic has been so dismaying.We shouldn’t let them have it. At the start of the coverage, Pougatch said something charmingly gauche: “Essentially, football is great.” Deep down, everyone watching knows this to be true. It was for the best that the opening salvo of this tournament took place away from the oppressive air of 2026 US.This is Mexico and Canada’s party too, and for all of the problems – which ITV and the BBC must be brave enough to draw attention to when they arise – it’s still the World Cup. When Mexico took the lead, the electricity in the air was palpable. Sorry BBC, but being there may turn out to be important after all. Not even Donald Trump can ruin this. Can he?

Phil HarrisonThu, 11 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Will the BBC score an own goal by broadcasting the World Cup from Salford?

Football News

Will the BBC score an own goal by broadcasting the World Cup from Salford?

Football’s staying home for the belt-tightening Beeb, while ITV and Gary Lineker’s popular podcast present from glitzy studios in New YorkIt is the biggest World Cup in history, and perhaps the most unpredictable. How will England and Scotland fare in the heat? Who drew Curaçao in the office sweepstake?And, crucially, will anyone notice that the BBC is broadcasting this giant sporting spectacle from 4,000 miles away in Salford?In an era of belt tightening, football is staying home for the corporation while rivals – including its former frontman Gary Lineker – showcase the tournament from glitzy studios in New York.ITV will show off its trendy Brooklyn base, with views of the Manhattan skyline, when it broadcasts Mexico against South Africa in the opening game of the 104-match extravaganza on Thursday night.Lineker, meanwhile, has signed a reported £14m deal with Netflix to stream daily versions of his incredibly lucrative The Rest Is Football podcast from a studio overlooking New York City’s Times Square.The former England striker turned media mogul had been due to front his seventh World Cup for the BBC until he left last May after another row about his social media posts.He appears not to regret the move, commenting archly in April: “I would have been in Salford in a green box and now I’m going to be in New York City overlooking Times Square with lots of great guests.”Yet while the BBC’s Salford studio may lack the stateside pizazz of its rivals – it is round the corner from a Greggs and a Holiday Inn – the corporation may yet win the battle for eyeballs.Presenters Gabby Logan, Kelly Cates and Mark Chapman will host matches from what the BBC calls a “brand-new, state-of-the-art immersive studio”, featuring a giant LED backdrop of each of the 16 host cities in the US, Mexico and Canada.Viewers expecting a backdrop of the Manchester ship canal will instead be treated to digitally enhanced vistas from Miami to Monterrey, with producers able to change the weather and time of day to match the conditions at each venue.For the post-match analysis, pundits including Wayne Rooney and Micah Richards will be cast on to what looks like a rooftop terrace or riverside balcony – complete with elevated fans blowing a gentle breeze to give the impression they are outside.“The actual end product that people are getting at home, I don’t really think it’s that different,” said Alex Kay-Jelski, the director of BBC Sport, as he showed off the studio to journalists on Tuesday.Predictably, critics have denounced the BBC’s plans. The Telegraph derided the corporation’s “work-from-home World Cup coverage” while two of its own hosts, Logan and Cates, admitted they would prefer to be at the stadiums for every game. Both have endorsed the BBC’s cost-saving approach nonetheless.Hosting the tournament from Salford would save “a few million” pounds and achieve a 19% reduction in its carbon emissions compared with the Qatar World Cup in 2022, Kay-Jelski said. “If I was standing here saying everything is going to be done from a studio in Dallas, you would rightly be saying to me: how can you justify that spend?”The BBC is expected to send one or more of its hosts to the US later in the tournament, particularly if England or Scotland advance, and several of its reporters and pundits will be on the ground throughout.The former England duo Alan Shearer and Danny Murphy will contribute to the BBC’s coverage from the US. Meanwhile, Rooney and Richards will be joined by pundits including Scotland’s Scott Brown and Rachel Corsie, as well as France’s World Cup winner Olivier Giroud in Greater Manchester.Somewhat awkwardly, Shearer and Richards will also appear alongside Lineker on The Rest Is Football, although the BBC has made clear it will not fund its presenters appearing on rival outlets.Kay-Jelski said the BBC had not struggled to attract on-screen talent for its coverage – “no one’s turned us down because they didn’t want to be here” – and that he was confident of being able to convey the atmosphere of the tournament from thousands of miles away.With some matches starting as late – or early – as 3am in the UK, the BBC’s World Cup team will be living in a bizarre quasi-US time zone. Staff have been encouraged to get as much rest as possible to avoid burning out before the quarter-finals, which kick off in Boston on 9 July.“Right now I’m incredibly happy,” Kay-Jelski said. “It’s a six-week, high-profile tournament – we’re going to get some stuff wrong and we’re going to get hopefully way more right. There is not a world in which everything can be perfect [but] I have no doubt we are doing more than ever before and it’s gonna be incredible. That doesn’t mean it’s going to be perfect. No one can attain perfection.”

Josh Halliday North of England editorWed, 10 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story