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Thomas Sutcliffe: Chiles leads Team BBC to a respectable showing

What I Watched This Week

Saturday, 23 August 2008

Big occasions call for a willing spirit and if the BBC can do precisely that – enlisting Eddie Butler to apply his knowledge of loose rucks to the Zen niceties of Olympic archery – then who am I to hang back? Eddie, it has to be said, hadn't entirely adjusted. The word "steamrollered" is probably indispensable when analysing an All Black attack, but it can sound a little out of place applied to three tiny Korean women with Hello Kitty stickers on their track-suits.

Quite why Eddie ended up on the archery was never explained, but it would have been even crueller to leave him behind. The BBC's army of commentators, anchors, interviewers and statistics wonks put a serious dent in China's population control programme. And this is where the discomfort creeps in. Adrian Chiles I recognise and Clare Balding too. And I'm proud to say that I identified Gabby Logan. But accurately crediting the more cherishable moments outside of the BBC's set-plays wasn't easy. It would have been helpful, I think, to have had someone commenting on the commenting.

It's easy to imagine the kind of things they might say. "Steve Cram here, loosening up for the women's 400m by reading out the names you can see on the screen... standard warm-up technique this... calms the nerves... AND HE'S GONE OFF WELL!... nicely paced here, keeping something in reserve for the last 200... can he pull something out for the British... Oooh dear, that's not good!... We'll have to wait for the replay but it sounds as if he tried a bit of litotes there. Very unusual from Cram... a rookie error. At this level of competition it's dangerous to tangle with any form of understatement. Still, a lot of positives to take away from his eighth-placed finish."

The overall Games summary would be more complicated. Chiles did pretty well in the jolly bloke in the pub role. "Imagine being pipped right on the line like that!", he exclaimed after two British swimmers were beaten in the final yards of the open water event. Hazel Irvine, the girl next door, kept her end up too, always ready with a soft "heck!" or "wow!" to maintain the atmosphere of sustained incredulity.

To be fair, incredulity was sometimes justified – when Usain Bolt made it look as if his rivals were running through treacle in the 200m or when Rebecca Adlington left the green line of the world record trailing. In the velodrome Hugh Porter's remarkable ability to accelerate from conversational free-wheeling to delirious sprint seemed a fair match for the British team. But at other times the instinct to be flabbergasted, staggered, astonished and confounded left an odd impression of naivety. "What can you say about this young lady", gasped Cram about Christine Ohuruogu. "What a startling performance!" Startlingly, she had done exactly what the pundits had predicted she would – not always the case with British athletes, it's true. "I just can't believe they swim that close to one another," gasped Steve Parry during the open water race, a remark probably echoed in quite a few households, but seemed odd from the BBC's expert.

Cram was something of a serial offender in this regard – always ready to imply that people running fast was the very last thing you might expect at the Olympics. "There is stunned silence around stadium," he said after Jeremy Wariner failed to win the 400m, his remark barely audible over the roar of the crowd. Cram also proved adept at the rhetorical question. Rarely has expertise been deployed with quite so many question marks attached – most veiling the fact that the person being paid to know more than we did, actually didn't. And, when John Inverdale or Nicky Campbell were behind the microphone, the questions occasionally acquired an Alan Partridge quality. Campbell, anchoring Radio Five Live's coverage and competing with cutaways for reports on conditions on the Hanger Lane Gyratory, had a fine moment in the last race of Men's Laser class: "Why do sailors shout 'Ahoy there?'", he asked, apropos of absolutely nothing.

It's easy from the armchair, of course. And given the extreme challenges of the Games (care to have a crack at explaining the points system for the Madison? Or talking without repetition, deviation, or outright inanity for the entire course of a two-hour swimming race?) the BBC's vast commentariat acquitted themselves pretty well. Half the numbers could have done just as well but, although they scarcely broke with precedent in the way the British team did, they return without disgrace.

And the best pundit is...

Most of the expert witnesses were good, injecting a ground-level knowledge of just how much a medal can cost an athlete. But the top podium position went to Michael Johnson, a man to stir admiration in even the most sports-adverse viewer. Not only did he call races accurately before they had taken place – rather than confidently assert that he had known all along how it would go two seconds after the result was in, like some other pundits. He also showed that he understood life after sport. Invited by Hazel Irvine to lament the loss of his 12-year-old 200 metres record to Usain Bolt, he declined with winning simplicity, explaining that he could hardly complain about the loss of an honour he had expended no effort to retain. That moment – far more than the air-punching and tears on the podium – made the case for sport as a moral endeavour.

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Nice site.
Thanks, webmaster.

Posted by Order Cialis | 28.08.08, 13:57 GMT

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Gold : Rob Walker for Sailing live reports

Silver : Michael Johnson - knowledge and honesty in athletics

Bronze : Hazel Irvine - sheer enthusiasm.

Posted by Geoff Cowen | 23.08.08, 21:01 GMT

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Adrian Chiles was passible on Working Lunch; he wasn't an expert but it seemed to suit him. Then we saw his sycophantic fawning in 'What do you do all day.' Where he would meet people who got out of bed at noon, made a phone call, went to the gym, and rant organisations that were monopolies to little real benefit for anyone. He'd tell than they were marvellous, and well worth £2 million a year plus bonuses.

The BBC loves dishonesty along with an obsequious edge, so it loves the arrogant Chiles, and he thinks the rest of us are morons, because dishonesty has been of benefit to him.

The only presenters worth watching have been Michael Johnson, for his knowledge, and Claire Baldwin, for her horsey knowledge, and because she makes the effort to learn about other sports before she presents them.

Posted by Robert Price | 23.08.08, 18:46 GMT

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I don't know how much they pay Michael Johnson, Hugh Porter, Steve Cram, Gillian Clark or Adrian Moorhouse, but we need more like them. They have been there and done it, at the highest level. We need more relevant comment and less inane chat (a symptom of all television nowadays). One last request, please stop constantly seeking praise for our athletes from Michael Johnson. Mr Johnson is one of the most intelligent pundits, so please don't insult his intelligence with these questions.

Posted by AndyUK | 23.08.08, 14:59 GMT

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People talk about footballers being overpaid, but 2-3 million of taxpayers money on the gormless Adrian Chiles, whose phony blokiness fails to disguise a massive ego. A small talent spread incredibly thin.
Yet again the only pundit worth tuppence is a foreigner, Michael Johnson.
The rest are a hideous waste of money.

Posted by tracey | 23.08.08, 13:59 GMT

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adrian chiles is RUBBISH!

he should go back to working lunch..

..and hazel irving is annoying. she should be on antiques roadshow or something.

Posted by bill | 23.08.08, 12:59 GMT

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I cannot stand Adrian Chiles.That gawping stare of his, as he looks forwards like a rabbit caught in the headlights of an oncoming truck. If only just. The sooner that brummie toad disappears up his own lack of talent the better.

Posted by Ray W | 23.08.08, 12:22 GMT

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Adrian Chiles seemed confused.....why did he make the remark..
"Germany may yet beat US in a penalty shoot-out" ???

Who is the US in this scenario....maybe I'll leave it to Chiles to tell Chris Hoy that he is now an Englishman.

Oh and why all the Aussie baiting....Gabby Logan to the fore here.
The remark made by the Australian team regarding all of the Team GB medals being won from a seated position was, I thought, quite funny....but this elicited a video response from the BBC, with Logan at anchor, of lots of different seats????

Bizarre.

Eddie Butler should be hidden in a darkened room for his pathetic, simpering over the Paula Radcliffe scenario. As should Steve Cram.

Clare Balding, for me, was the star act along with Hugh Porter who just gets better with age.

Posted by Kevin | 23.08.08, 11:30 GMT

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I am afraid that Michael Johnson aside, I have been unable to watch the olympics, because as ausual, the BBC feel it is their role to adopt a slavering oveer the top, hyper-patriotic approach that takes little notice of what other nations and their competitors are doing, whilst accentuating the brilliance of British athletes. I think it very unwise to keep harping on about this being the best performance since 1908 or whenever, since it reminds us of how useless we have been ever since, and ratchets up the expectation level for 2012 still further. Chiles, Butler et al are typical examples of the modern BBC: lumpen, graceless and ungentlemenly.

Posted by John Bull | 23.08.08, 09:31 GMT

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