John Anderson (TV personality)

John Anderson (born 28 November 1931)[1] is a Scottish television personality best known as referee and official trainer on the UK television show Gladiators.[2] Anderson has previously worked as a teacher and coach for Commonwealth Games and Olympic Games athletes.

John Anderson
Born (1931-11-28) 28 November 1931
Glasgow, Scotland
NationalityScottish
OccupationSports Coach (partially retired)
TV Personality (partially retired)
TV Referee (retired)
Teacher (retired)
Known forReferee on Gladiators and Gladiators (new series)
Spouse(s)Dorothy Anderson (m. 1962–present)

Career

Anderson had a successful career long before his athletics and TV fame. Plaudits included representing Scotland as a schoolboy footballer, becoming the first home Scot to gain the prestigious Full FA Coaching Certificate (then only four were awarded per year), being one of only two confirmed recipients (along with Wilf Paish) of every British Senior Coaching award available, and founding Maryhill Ladies AC in Glasgow.[3]

Anderson coached Commonwealth Games champion and former World Record Holder David Moorcroft,[4] The partnership started in 1966. It was a coach-athlete relationship which would lead to a world record for 5000m in 1982 and even a vets world record for the Mile of 4:02 a decade later, in 1993.[5] Anderson also coached three-time Olympic heptathlete Judy Simpson (known as Nightshade on Gladiators); double Olympian Sheila Carey; marathoner John Graham; 1988 Olympic 10,000m silver medallist Liz McColgan; middle-distance runner Lynne MacDougall; 1972 Olympic 4×400m silver medallist David Jenkins, and sprint hurdler David Wilson.[3]

Anderson was National Coach for the Amateur Athletics Association of England and subsequently the first full-time National Coach in Scotland (1965-1970). He was coach to an Olympian at every Olympics from 1964 to 2000 and has coached five world record holders and an estimated 170 GB Internationals in every Track and Field event.[6]

Anderson was the head official on sports game show Gladiators from 1992–2000. Before every event he called: "Contender ready! Gladiator ready!" followed by "Three! Two! One!" before starting the game. In 2008, Anderson briefly reprised his role as referee on the newly revived Gladiators before leaving and being replaced by John Coyle after just one series.[7] The series was subsequently not renewed any further. Anderson occasionally appears in cameo roles as a referee, including guest appearances on two episodes of 2016's Top Gear with Chris Evans and Matt LeBlanc, and as an ident-voiceover for Sky's Challenge TV.

After his television career in the 1990s, Anderson went on to become a mentor and coach for a number of recent international athletes, including Great British athlete William Sharman, whom he helped transform from a decathlete to a world class sprint hurdler,[8] and continues to coach on a small scale.[9]

gollark: Because YAML tries to look "simple", it's actually wildly complex, problem-prone, and has weird quirks. Like Go, sort of.
gollark: TOML is, in my opinion, nicer for configs. It's basically standardized INI.
gollark: Also, possibly partly due to point 3, many (dynamic) languages actually implement YAML parsing in a way which allows arbitrary code execution by default. I think Python's yaml library does it unsafely by default (EDIT: see here: https://www.arp242.net/yaml-config.html though PyYaml at least appears to be changing this now).
gollark: It's not simple. The standard is extremely complex and there are something like nine ways to do multiline strings.
gollark: You might need to enable WAL mode.

References

  1. "John Anderson". Anent Scottish Running. Scotland. December 2013. Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  2. "Gladiators Cast - UK Gladiators -". Gladiators.
  3. "John Anderson – Anent Scottish Running". www.anentscottishrunning.com.
  4. British Athletics. "British Athletics Official Website - Dave Moorcroft".
  5. http://www.britishmilersclub.com/bmcnews/1999spring.pdf
  6. "False Start".
  7. Holmwood, Leigh (26 November 2008). "Six new Gladiators unveiled - as Wolf returns and ref Anderson bows out". The Guardian. London: Guardian News and Media. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  8. Turnbull, Simon (30 August 2009). "Meet Britain's bolt from the blue". The Independent. London.
  9. http://www.thepowerof10.info/athletes/profile.aspx?athleteid=201273; Anderson currently mentors and coaches William Sharman and Charlie Eastaugh.
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