Commentary

It was the most annoying commentary I've ever heard, l switched the sound of on a few occasions.

She talked like she was a player who could share the field with these players and was saying things like "Vardy should have done this" as is she was a better more all round player than Vardy. Why on earth do they think they can get away with women talking garbage after reading a Ladybird book called "Become a Football Expert in 5 Minutes".
 
Lets be right it's obvious from her comments that she'd hit plenty of identical goals to Millwall's winner. Dunno why Skys promos for WSL never seem to show that class of goal, seems a bit odd really.
 
Sound was awful on Sky.

On Sky's score programme they had such luminaries as Lee Hendrie, Jamie Mackie and Clinton Morrison. They really are woeful and worse than any female commentating on the men's game.
 
Sound was awful on Sky.

On Sky's score programme they had such luminaries as Lee Hendrie, Jamie Mackie and Clinton Morrison. They really are woeful and worse than any female commentating on the men's game.
I've never heard anything as bad as last nights commentary ...

Clinton Morrison annoys me to fuck, brought up in South London but pretends hes a yardy from Trenchtown.
 

He's bang on about football focus.
When years ago Bob Wilson was the presenter it was purely about football. There were clips of goals from previous games and interviews with players and managers.
In those days you didn't have hardly any live football so this was a programme that was worth tuning into for your footy fix.
When the F.A.Cup came around there were profiles of small non league teams with their gas fitters, teachers, delivery men etc.
It set the tone for an exciting afternoon of a F.A. Cup football.
Every so often Leicester City would feature with player interviews, it was like an honour and you cherished it.
Recently I flicked it on and it was a complete box ticking woke fest.
The first story was about some park team comprising of only gay men. I don't object to them playing football but I didn't need a lecture on ' inclusion ' in football.
The next bit featured the Women's Super League.
A lengthy period of the programme was dedicated to it.
After going back to the studio where Dion Dublin was the only male present, I was wondering when they were actually going to talk about the focus of the vast majority of football fans, the Premier League title race.
Instead of that they then pulled in a football club from Northern Ireland and what they were doing for the community. At that point I grabbed the remote and flicked over to James Martins culinary adventure in France.
Even that was more satisfying than the BBC offering of a once much loved programme.
I won't be tuning back in any day soon.
 
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