Review – Brian Moore Saved Our Sundays – The Golden Age of Televised Football by Matt Eastley

Matt Eastley’s book is a joyously nostalgic journey through the golden days of regional televised football in the 1970s.

The iconic commentators of the period, Brian Moore, Hugh Johns, Gerald Sinstadt, Gerry Harrison, Martyn Tyler, Keith Macklin, and Roger Malone brought great drama to our TV screens when there were only three channels.

The independent TV football programmes of the day were called the Big Match, Shoot or Kick Off Match and each region had their own version.

Television was relatively limited in those days and many boring Sundays were enlivened by family Sunday Roasts and football on the box.

The 70s had many football entertainers and mavericks such as Malcolm Allison, Tommy Docherty, Stan Bowles, George Best, Kevin Keegan, Tony Currie, Charlie George, Rodney Marsh, Mick Channon, Frank Worthington, and Brian Clough.

Brian Moore was the consummate commentator and presenter of the period. Eastley states,

“There was always something so effortlessly comforting and reassuring about Brian Moore. Like a kindly uncle or your favourite teacher at school. His relaxed smiling face radiated warmth and cordiality, exuding trust and respect.”

Eastley provides important interviews with many of the commentators, presenters, producers, and cameramen of the time. Plus, some brilliant photographs of the main protagonists.

There are many illuminating anecdotes such as when the rivalry between BBC and ITV resulted in a fist fight between floor managers at the 1969 FA Cup final between Manchester City and Leicester.

The skills of the ITV broadcasters was well demonstrated at the end of the 1973 FA Cup final when the Bob Stokoe gallop was captured by the cameras.

“With his trilby and flapping fawn mac over a red tracksuit, Bob Stokoe’s famous canter on to the Wembley pitch to embrace goalkeeping hero Jim Montgomery is one of the most famous scenes in FA Cup history.”

It is a shot that director Bob Gardam and Moore both loved and is often cited independently as one of the finest examples of director and commentator working together.

Gardam said, “We were lucky the BBC never got the shot.”

Producer Jeff Foulser said, “It was television journalism at its best. It’s a director listening to his commentator and a commentator working with his director’s pictures.”

Eastley’s book provides a fitting tribute to all the key characters in these regional TV programmes, but special praise is given to Moore who was universally regarded as a great commentator and a gentleman.

A volume two is planned to take the story into the 1980’s and it will no doubt be lapped up by those who have enjoyed this book.

‘Brian Moore Saved Our Sundays’ is a recommended read for those who remember the football of the 1970s but also for those who want to know more about the heyday of regional football TV coverage.

Brian Moore Saved Our Sundays: The Golden Age of Televised Football by Matt Eastley. Published by Pitch Publishing. Price £14.99.

This review first appeared in the September/October 2024 edition of Late Tackle magazine.

Unknown's avatar

About ianhaspinall

Communications specialist, Wigan Athletic fan & blogger, interested in music, arts & culture.
This entry was posted in 1970s, 1980s', Brian Moore, Football Book Reviews, Late Tackle magazine, Matt Eastley, Wigan Athletic and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

6 Responses to Review – Brian Moore Saved Our Sundays – The Golden Age of Televised Football by Matt Eastley

  1. Excellent. I remember Keith Macklin from Red Rose 999, and the “it’s a goal” and “oh no” goal jingles. Also, Steve McIlwham, who I think covered Wigan.

  2. Pingback: Summer Reading 2025 – The Best Football Books | Let's Hang On

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.