Eddie Waring

Edward Marsden Waring, MBE (21 February 1910 28 October 1986) was a British rugby league football coach, commentator and television presenter.

Early life

Waring was born on 21 February 1910 in Dewsbury, West Riding of Yorkshire to Arthur Waring, an agent of the Refuge Assurance Company, and Florence Harriet Marsden.[1]

Early career

Waring was never a noted rugby league player; he was more proficient at football, and had trials with Nottingham Forest and Barnsley.[2] He began work as a typewriter salesman in his home town of Dewsbury, but he gave up that career to join a local newspaper and report on rugby league matches.

Alongside his fledgling journalism career he ran the local Dewsbury Boys Rugby League Club, renaming them the Black Knights (this foreshadowed how Super League clubs were branded some 60 years later). During the Second World War Waring managed Dewsbury RLFC as he was exempted from armed service with an ear condition. Recruiting men from a nearby military camp, he led the club to its second Challenge Cup victory in 1943 - the club's last ever success in the competition.

Waring travelled on HMS Indomitable with the Great Britain national rugby league team on the first post-war tour of Australia. Returning home via the United States, he met Bob Hope, who alerted him to the success of televised sport. This is believed to have convinced him that television would be crucial for rugby league's long-term success. In the UK, he pushed this case harder with the BBC, having written to them as far back as 1931. After several rejections, he was given a chance as a broadcaster when the BBC began to cover the sport.

Broadcasting style

Waring's commentary polarised opinion over the next decades. For some viewers he would be "Uncle Eddie," the warm and friendly voice of the north, but others believed that his voice simply reinforced stereotypes.[3] During the 1960s, his eccentric mode of speech (rugby league was pronounced /rəɡˈb ˈlɡɑː/), Hull Kingston Rovers as "Hulking Stan Rovers") and his northern accent began to be widely impersonated, largely due to impersonations by Mike Yarwood. Students formed the Eddie Waring Society in his honour.

In the badly rain-affected 1968 Challenge Cup Final at Wembley, Waring described Wakefield Trinity player Don Fox with the line "He's a poor lad!" after Fox missed a last minute kick from in front of the posts against Leeds. The miss handed the cup to his opponents. His commentary on the game was widely praised; The Guardian said in 2007 that the game was "seared into the public consciousness" in part because of it.[4]

Many of his lines became catchphrases in the game, including, "It's an up and under"[5] (a rugby tactic consisting of kicking the ball in a high arc, while the rest of the team rushes toward the landing point, hoping to gain possession and field position) and "He's goin' for an early bath"[3] (when a player was sent off the field for a serious foul). The Times in March 2006 published a list of 25 favourite sporting quotes and one of Waring's appeared there.

Celebrity appearances

Waring branched out, appearing as a presenter on the television series It's a Knockout, and as the UK's representative on the international umpiring team for the European version of the show, Jeux Sans Frontieres, where his striped blazer made him easy to spot.

He also made guest appearances in the popular TV comedy programmes The Morecambe and Wise Show and The Goodies.

Decline and retirement

The split in opinion regarding his contribution to the game, plus illness, led to a decline in Waring's popularity. A petition was organised by some hardcore supporters asking the BBC to remove him from commentary as he was perceived to be portraying a poor image of the game and its northern roots.[6] The BBC stuck with him as their main commentator, though in the late 1970s they also brought in former Great Britain halfback Alex Murphy to work alongside him.

Illness affected him over the next few years, and he commentated on his last Challenge Cup Final in 1981. After his retirement, former dual rugby international Ray French became the BBC's chief rugby league commentator.

Death

Waring's overall health declined very quickly after his retirement from the commentary box. He was diagnosed with dementia and died at High Royds Hospital in Menston, West Yorkshire in 1986.

Notes

  1. 1911 Census
  2. Discovering the real Eddie Waring The Independent, 5 February 2008
  3. Dave Russell: Looking North: Northern England and the National Imagination p. 260 Manchester University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-7190-5178-9, ISBN 978-0-7190-5178-4 Google Books
  4. https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2007/jan/07/rugbyleague.features
  5. Eric Partridge, Tom Dalzell, Terry Victor: The concise new Partridge dictionary of slang and unconventional , Routledge, 2007, ISBN 0-415-21259-6, ISBN 978-0-415-21259-5 p. 677 Google Books
  6. Rugby league's TV 'visionary' Eddie Waring remembered BBC Bradford & West Yorkshire, 7 September 2010
gollark: ++remind 1y2d <@!341618941317349376> state robbed?
gollark: ++about
gollark: ++help
gollark: ++magic sql select * from marriages
gollark: Only AutoBotRobot has marriage permissions.

References

Bibliography

  • Eddie Waring on Rugby League by Eddie Waring (ISBN 0584103581)
  • Rugby League: The Great Ones by Eddie Waring (ISBN 072070300X)

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.