Peter West

Peter Anthony West (12 August 1920 – 2 September 2003)[1] was a BBC presenter and sports commentator best known for his work on the corporation's cricket, tennis and rugby coverage as well as occasionally commentating on hockey. Throughout his television career he remained freelance.[1]

Peter West

Early life

West was born in Cranbrook, Kent, an only child. His father, the son of a tobacconist, had made some money in the City after the First World War, and in 1924 set himself up as a poultry farmer in Cranbrook.[1]

Education

He was educated at Cranbrook School as were his fellow commentators Barry Davies and Brian Moore.

At school he was in the cricket XI for five years, and captain for the last three. He played rugby and hockey for the school for four years, captaining both games for his last two seasons, and, in rugby, leading an undefeated side. He ended his Cranbrook career as head of the school.[1]

War service

After school he went to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and was commissioned into the Duke of Wellington's (West Riding) Regiment, 33rd of Foot, which had the reputation of being the best rugby regiment in the Army.[1] At Sandhurst he became an instructor but after being diagnosed with spondylitis was invalided out of the Army in 1944.

Career

Facing a post war world with no qualifications, West secured a job as assistant to the Controller of SSAFA, a retired Air Vice-Marshal but was sacked after a run-in with his boss. By 1947 he was stuck in a dead-end job transmitting sports results via telegraph ticker tape. However, one day, when sitting next to the legendary test cricketer and journalist C B Fry in the press box at Taunton he was able to transmit Fry’s report after the telephonist failed to turn up. Fry recommended West to the head of the BBC outside broadcasting and West was signed up as a cricket commentator. He remained a cricket commentator, both on radio and television, until 1986. In addition, from 1955 to 1982 he played second fiddle to Dan Maskell in the BBC's television coverage of Wimbledon.

He reported the Olympics from 1948 to 1972, missing only 1952 and 1956.

West was the editor of Playfair Cricket Annual from its inception in 1948 until 1954. He joined the BBC in 1947 on the recommendation of C.B. Fry, following a chance meeting.[2] He worked for the BBC for nearly 40 years until retiring in 1986.

He presented many BBC programmes not connected with sport, including the original version of Come Dancing (1957–72), What's My Line?, and Get Ahead (1958–62), about business entrepreneurs. He was a cricket and rugby correspondent for both The Times and The Daily Telegraph.

During interviews with sportsmen, West was in the habit of using words that were unfamiliar to his interlocutors. On one occasion, speaking to Viv Richards, he said "Viv, your genius transcends parochialism." In 1984, after Jimmy White had won the Masters, he asked White to comment upon the "wonderful ethos which had permeated the final". When White said he was glad he won, West continued to press him about the ethos. Eventually, Terry Griffiths, White's opponent, stepped in and rescued him. When interviewing Arthur Ashe after his famously deft victory over the belligerent Jimmy Connors in the Wimbledon final of 1975, he congratulated Ashe on "manifesting a superb tactical acumen". "If you say so Peter!" rejoined a bemused Ashe.

Personal life

He married Pauline Pike in 1946, the woman he met in his first job, the one-time secretary to the irascible SSAFA Air Vice Marshal. They lived in Cheltenham and had a daughter, Jacqueline, and two sons, Simon and Stephen.

He died, aged 83, in Bath, Somerset.

gollark: As I said: code filtering is *possible*, but not really against someone who is actively attempting to circumvent it.
gollark: Poorly!
gollark: PotatOS does code filtering without terrible performance losses, but it only really works since the programs in question don't update to avoid it.
gollark: We already have string metatable access.
gollark: More to the point, *how* would you modify the BIOS for that?

See also

  • Flannelled Fool and Muddied Oaf, autobiography, 1986.

References

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