Dougie Donnelly

Douglas Donnelly (born 7 June 1953) is a Scottish television broadcaster best known for presenting sports coverage.

Dougie Donnelly
Born
Douglas Donnelly

(1953-06-07) 7 June 1953
Glasgow, Scotland, UK
NationalityBritish
OccupationTelevision sports broadcaster

Career

Donnelly was born in Glasgow, where he began his career with Radio Clyde in the 1970s, presenting the top-rated Mid Morning Show from 1979[1] until 1992. He also presented a Dougie Donnelly File show on Sunday evenings in 1987 through to 7 August 1988 which reviewed a famous musician/band each week. He was twice voted Scottish Radio Personality of the Year. Towards the end of his time, he mostly presented on Clyde 1 and occasionally presented on Clyde 2.

He joined BBC Scotland's Sports Department in 1980,[1] presenting programmes such as Sportscene Live (which includes events such as the Scottish Cup Final and Scotland internationals), Grandstand from Scotland, Afternoon Sportscene, the network's rugby union coverage, and football World Cups in 1990 and 1998. He presented two series of a TV chat show, Friday Night with Dougie Donnelly directed by Martin Cairns, and was TV Personality of the Year in Scotland in 1982. He left the BBC after the 2010 Scottish Cup Final, his 33rd in a row, and is currently lead commentator on European Tour Productions' worldwide live TV coverage of golf's European Tour, travelling to around 20 tournaments a year around the world.

Donnelly was known outside Scotland by his involvement in the BBC's networked output of golf, darts, snooker and bowls.[1] He was the first Scot to present the Grandstand programme on the network, which he did on a regular basis between 1992 and 2002. International exposure also saw Donnelly serve as commentator/presenter for the World's Strongest Man during the 1980s on ITV.

He covered four Commonwealth Games, four Summer Olympic Games and three Winter Olympic Games, where, in the 2002 event at Salt Lake City, he commentated on the British women curlers' Gold victory. He has also hosted quiz shows on radio and TV and has appeared on The Weakest Link, Ready Steady Cook, Banzai and The Games. In addition, he provided a voice over on the Sky One science entertainment show Brainiac: Science Abuse; solely for the "Brainiac Golf" sketch when a caravan is blown up; detonated by a fuse triggered by a professional golfer's putting stroke.

In February 2016, it was announced that Donnelly would become a columnist for bunkered golf magazine, writing a column in every edition.[2]

He is also an after-dinner speaker and awards host.

Personal life

Donnelly was raised in Rutherglen,[3][4] educated at the former Hamilton Academy and is a graduate of the University of Strathclyde Law School. He was chairman of the Scottish Institute of Sport from 2005-2008, and currently chairs the Scottish Commonwealth Games Endowment Fund. He is a fan of Clyde F.C.[3][4]

For several years he appeared in television adverts for the furniture store Sterling, based in Tillicoultry, near Stirling. He returned to advertising for I&K Motors, and provided voiceovers for their spring 2008 advertising campaign.[3]

gollark: I rotate, so that the apiopyroforms will undergo rotation (relative to me), thus producing an apiomagnetic field.
gollark: I see. Maybe I should have gotten a meta-negative bee to produce unenergy.
gollark: I throw the lack of bee at the apiopyroforms.
gollark: ++roll d20
gollark: I summon negative bee, then.

See also

References

  1. "US Masters coverage - biography". BBC Sport. 2 April 2001. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  2. McEwan, Michael (10 February 2016). "Dougie Donnelly joins bunkered!". bunkered.
  3. "Dougie Donnelly slams Scottish Government over sacking", scotsman.com; accessed 5 April 2014.
  4. "My Team: Clyde (Dougie Donnelly interview)". official website. The Sun via Clyde FC. 17 August 2015. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.