Eleanor Oldroyd

Eleanor Oldroyd (born in Bury, Lancashire, 2 June 1962) is a British sports broadcaster with BBC Radio.

Eleanor Oldroyd
Born (1962-06-02) 2 June 1962
Bury, Lancashire, England
NationalityEnglish
Alma materOxford High School
Cambridge University
OccupationSports broadcaster
Spouse(s)Nick Mullins (divorced)
Children2

Early life

Oldroyd was educated at Oxford High School and Cambridge University.

Broadcasting career

Beginning her career in commercial radio, Oldroyd joined BBC Radio Shropshire as a Sports Producer in 1986 before moving to London in 1988.

She worked at Newsbeat and then at BBC Sport, reporting and presenting on both Radio 5 and 5 Live.

She first hosted the Sunday afternoon sports show in 1993. In 1995, she became the first female presenter of Sports Report (since it started in 1948) when she stood in for Ian Payne.

She is a regular on 5 Live's Fighting Talk – known as the "First Lady of Fighting Talk" – and hosts several weekly 5 Live shows including Saturday Breakfast (with Chris Warburton),[1] the evening 5 Live Sport programme and the Friday Sports Panel.[2]

She covers the Wimbledon tennis championships and was part of the Test Match Special team from 2000 to 2005.

She led the station's coverage of the 2014 Winter Olympics from Sochi.

She was named the Sports Journalists' Association Broadcast Presenter of the Year for 2014 [3] and 2016 [4]

Personal life

She was formerly married to fellow BBC sports presenter Nick Mullins and has two children.[5]

She supports Arsenal despite coming from a family of Birmingham City fans.[6]

gollark: No you don't.
gollark: Although you would need a way for users to back it up, hm.
gollark: What I would do is just have a license key or something it checks which is in a mildly non-obvious location.
gollark: The best you can do is at least make it mildly annoying to pirate without annoying legitimate customers much.
gollark: Well, there are lots of old unsolved mathematical problems. I assume they mean "problems for 18-year-olds" which isn't a high bar.

References

  1. BBC Website. "Saturday Breakfast". BBC.
  2. Radio 5 live unveils exciting new line-up, BBC Media Release, 1 July 2014
  3. Oldroyd’s broadcast award has audience on its feet, SJA 25 March 2015
  4. Oldroyd leads way as BBC scoop four broadcast awards, SJA 27 February 2017
  5. "Rest of the radio team". BBC Sport. 14 June 2002. Retrieved 23 March 2007.
  6. Oliver Irish (4 November 2001). "Women in a man's game". Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved 23 March 2007.


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