Great bit of Blades trivia !

All advertisments are hidden for logged in members, why not log in/register?

blademark

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 6, 2009
Messages
3,753
Reaction score
6,389
On This Day: 1927 -

Exactly 91 years ago today, Sheffield United secured a unique place in football history.

The Blades' 1927 game against Arsenal was the very first football match to be given a running commentary.

It was on January 22, 1927 that from a wooden hut that largely resembled a garden shed, the first ever commentary of a league football match was broadcast.

Listeners of the BBC's radio service witnessed the unique experience of hearing football commentary from the comfort of their own homes.

The Division One clash between Arsenal and the Blades provided the entertainment for many families, who had eagerly tuned to their radio sets to hear the action.

The match, played at the Gunners' previous ground Highbury, ended 1-1.

Indeed, this activity would have occurred much earlier if not for strict sporting authorities and Fleet Street - convinced that the new medium would draw away paying customers and newspaper readers alike.

On January 1 1927, the sound, of radio changed forever.

The BBC received its Royal Charter and became a public Corporation, and with it, was granted the right to broadcast coverage of major sporting events.

The honour of being the first commentator of a game fell to Henry Blythe Thornhill Wakelam, a former rugby player with Harlequins.

The broadcast was arranged at very short notice, too late for proper billing in the Radio Times.

The producer at the time, Lance Sieveking, devised a plan of the pitch divided into eight numbered squares, which was published in the Radio Times.

The idea was that the listener at home could follow the play from his armchair using the grid on his lap.

Many believe this is the origin of the phrase "Back to Square One".

In his autobiography, Wakelam describes how he was approached by the BBC: "One January afternoon, I was working out some details of a tender, when my telephone rang.

"An unknown voice at the other end asked me if I was the same Wakelam who had played rugger for the Harlequins, and, upon my saying "yes", went on to inform me that the owner of it was an official of the BBC, who would much like to see me at once on an urgent matter."

Producer Lance Sieveking, organised a test commentary for Wakelam on a schools match, just days before making his commentary debut.

Fortunately, Sieveking's faith proved to be well-founded: no less a judge than John Arlott described Wakelam as "a natural talker with a reasonable vocabulary, a good rugby mind and a conscious determination to avoid journalese".

Unfortunately, Wakelam's earliest commentaries have long since been lost, though some commentaries from the early 1930s with references to "squares" have survived.

The correspondent of The Times commended Wakelam's description of play as "notably vivid and impressive", while the Spectator concluded, "That type of broadcasting has come to stay".
 

I knew we were involved in the 1st radio commentary (and the 'back to square 1' origins) but the extra details here was hitherto unknown to me.

Just 1 of our many firsts, first radio commentary, first United, first match under floodlights, first premier league goal.....
 
Huh a draw.
Well hopefully Wednesday lost then.

















I'm kidding.
 
Very interesting, but it begs the question...did we score the first goal for radio or did we let the first one in?
You can have your first like , for your name , i beg your pardon .btw have we had a minutes silence for Lynn Anderson yet ? she was someone who contributed , to my mis-spent youth .
 
I imagine they were 2-0 up at one stage, and "S.W.F.I.U.A." could be heard on the radio commentary towards the end. Meaning that we also beat the Sex Pistols to be the first group to use the F-word on the BBC.

It was ITV and Kenneth Tynan said it on TV twelve years earlier.
 

Very interesting, but it begs the question...did we score the first goal for radio or did we let the first one in?
according to the stats we had 53 percent possesion and passed more accurately

we scored first first half Arsenal equalised second half
remember reading about it on an Arsenal blog on twitter
 
Did Marc Overmars score the equaliser from a throw in after we sportingly put the ball out for an injury to their player?
 
And I bet he called us Sheffield :mad:

Which would have been correct as The Pigs were called The Wednesday until 1929 when they stole the prefix 'Sheffield'.

Anyone started a thread on Pork Talk yet about how well Swansea are doing with their new manager :D
 
On This Day: 1927 -

Exactly 91 years ago today, Sheffield United secured a unique place in football history.

The Blades' 1927 game against Arsenal was the very first football match to be given a running commentary.

It was on January 22, 1927 that from a wooden hut that largely resembled a garden shed, the first ever commentary of a league football match was broadcast.

Listeners of the BBC's radio service witnessed the unique experience of hearing football commentary from the comfort of their own homes.

The Division One clash between Arsenal and the Blades provided the entertainment for many families, who had eagerly tuned to their radio sets to hear the action.

The match, played at the Gunners' previous ground Highbury, ended 1-1.

Indeed, this activity would have occurred much earlier if not for strict sporting authorities and Fleet Street - convinced that the new medium would draw away paying customers and newspaper readers alike.

On January 1 1927, the sound, of radio changed forever.

The BBC received its Royal Charter and became a public Corporation, and with it, was granted the right to broadcast coverage of major sporting events.

The honour of being the first commentator of a game fell to Henry Blythe Thornhill Wakelam, a former rugby player with Harlequins.

The broadcast was arranged at very short notice, too late for proper billing in the Radio Times.

The producer at the time, Lance Sieveking, devised a plan of the pitch divided into eight numbered squares, which was published in the Radio Times.

The idea was that the listener at home could follow the play from his armchair using the grid on his lap.

Many believe this is the origin of the phrase "Back to Square One".

In his autobiography, Wakelam describes how he was approached by the BBC: "One January afternoon, I was working out some details of a tender, when my telephone rang.

"An unknown voice at the other end asked me if I was the same Wakelam who had played rugger for the Harlequins, and, upon my saying "yes", went on to inform me that the owner of it was an official of the BBC, who would much like to see me at once on an urgent matter."

Producer Lance Sieveking, organised a test commentary for Wakelam on a schools match, just days before making his commentary debut.

Fortunately, Sieveking's faith proved to be well-founded: no less a judge than John Arlott described Wakelam as "a natural talker with a reasonable vocabulary, a good rugby mind and a conscious determination to avoid journalese".

Unfortunately, Wakelam's earliest commentaries have long since been lost, though some commentaries from the early 1930s with references to "squares" have survived.

The correspondent of The Times commended Wakelam's description of play as "notably vivid and impressive", while the Spectator concluded, "That type of broadcasting has come to stay".

Henry Blythe Thornhill Wakelam !

Now, that's a proper fucking name for a football commentator.
 
Charles Buchan scored first. Billy Gillespie equalised

Ah, Charles Buchan, he of ' Charles Buchan's Football Monthly ' fame which was every schoolkid's football bible when I was growing up.

I got it every month from the age of 7 and read it cover to cover without missing a line.

Proper.
 

All advertisments are hidden for logged in members, why not log in/register?

All advertisments are hidden for logged in members, why not log in/register?

Back
Top Bottom