Worst ever errorAgree.
It’s almost they have a list of sound bites/quotes in front of them. I find the commentators these days quite irritating.
I did like it after we went 2-0 up against Liverpool when Brian Moore said
“Well, rub your eyes and look at that”…..
I kind of agree. I don’t think it’s awful, but the moment deserved better. I’ve never particularly rated Martin Tyler. Nowhere near as good as Barry Davies and Brian Moore were.Gary Neville’s “Where d’you want your statue, Vincent Kompany!?” Was a fantastic line, delivered with great timing, at a big moment.
Not keen on the ‘Agueroooooooooo’ thing, which is just irritating noise, in the space that should have been filled with the raw crowd reaction, to a title changing hands in a single moment. Even less keen on all the current crop, trying to capture their own similar moment.
I think the problem is with modern commentators, and particularly the female ones (who face obvious prejudice for what they do) is that they try so hard to show how knowledgeable they are about the game with stats and facts and stories about the players, that they kind of miss the point of what they are supposed to be doing. They try and be the main man (woman) in the production, where as the really good old ones just poetically described what was happening with fewer words, and knew when to shut up. There is just something about a smooth, deep, bassy well-spoken man's voice that sits perfectly over the top of football on TV. I expect a lot of the female commentators are probably far more knowledgeable about the game than people like Barry Davies actually were, but they just don't have the pitch of voice to make it sound right. It's not what they say, it's the way they say it.In today’s modern world originality is all but impossible. Even more so when as someone else has said this current crop are always looking for the next viral snippet.
We don’t have any old skool wordsmiths like Barry Davies anymore:
Gazza’s free kick in the FA cup semi final v Arsenal:
“Is Gascoigne going to have a crack? He is you know. OH I SAY. That is brilliant. School boy’s own stuff.”
Off the cuff not contrived and just thoroughly summed up the moment perfectly.
Barry Davies was an excellent commentator.In today’s modern world originality is all but impossible. Even more so when as someone else has said this current crop are always looking for the next viral snippet.
We don’t have any old skool wordsmiths like Barry Davies anymore:
Gazza’s free kick in the FA cup semi final v Arsenal:
“Is Gascoigne going to have a crack? He is you know. OH I SAY. That is brilliant. School boy’s own stuff.”
Off the cuff not contrived and just thoroughly summed up the moment perfectly.
"Botham just couldn't get his leg over."The bowler's holding the batsman's willy.
Oops, sorry, wrong messageboard