Test Match Special
Test Match Special is a British sports radio programme, originally, as its name implies, dealing exclusively with Test cricket matches, but currently covering any professional cricket. It broadcasts on BBC Radio 4 LW, BBC Radio Five Live Sports Extra and via the internet to the United Kingdom and the rest of the world. TMS provides ball-by-ball coverage of most Test cricket, One Day International, and Twenty20 matches and tournaments involving the England cricket team.
History
was the first broadcaster to cover every ball of a Test match. Live cricket had been broadcast since 1927, but originally it was thought that Test match cricket was too slow for ball-by-ball commentary to work. However, Seymour de Lotbiniere, who was responsible for live sports coverage and who went on to become an outstanding head of outside broadcasts at the BBC, realised that ball-by-ball commentary could make compelling radio. In the mid-1930s he got Howard Marshall to begin commentating on cricket, rather than only giving reports. From the mid-1930s to the 1950s the amount of ball-by-ball commentary gradually increased, but it was not until TMS was launched in 1957 that every ball was covered for their British audience.Robert Hudson was responsible for the launch of TMS, writing to his Outside Broadcasts boss Charles Max-Muller in 1956, proposing broadcasting full ball-by-ball coverage of Tests rather than only covering fixed periods, and suggesting using the Third Programme frequency, since at that time the Third Programme only broadcast in the evening.
TMS became a fixture on BBC Radio 3 on AM medium wave until Radio 3 lost its MW frequency in February 1992. The programme moved to Radio 3 FM that summer and the following summer the morning play was on Radio 5, switching to Radio 3 for the afternoon session. The start of Radio 5 Live meant that TMS moved to its present home on Radio 4 long wave. At times of cricket matches, the normal BBC Radio 4 schedule continues on its FM frequencies, whilst longwave is taken over by the cricket.
Digital Radio was seen as the solution for "where to put" TMS and a way for cricket fans to avoid broadcasts of the Shipping Forecast, The Daily Service and Yesterday in Parliament which would otherwise interrupt the cricket. Since 2002 it has been broadcast on Five Live Sports Extra, which is the network the BBC primarily cross-promotes on air. Five Live Sports Extra is also streamed via the Internet. Full commentaries are now available for 30 days on the BBC iPlayer and since late-2015 a "live-rewind" feature is available.
Many spectators who are present at Test matches listen to TMS via headphones attached to portable radios. Fixed frequency radios with radio and/or TV commentary are sometimes available for purchase at grounds.
From 1973 to 2007, Test Match Special was produced by Peter Baxter. Halfway through 2007, Baxter retired and was replaced by Adam Mountford, previously the Five Live cricket producer. Mountford was aged just one when Peter Baxter became involved with TMS.
Format changes include the addition of daily live weather forecasts and reports on the domestic county championship for home series, plus an end of day summary with Jonathan Agnew and Geoffrey Boycott.
Calypso-tinged theme music from the track "Soul Limbo" by the American soul band Booker T. & the M.G.s is played at the beginning and end of TMS coverage each day.
In December 2008 the BBC won the UK radio rights up to 2013. On 26 January 2012 the ECB announced a further six-year deal covering home Tests until 2019. In 2017 the ECB agreed a new deal with the BBC to cover England Cricket on Radio from 2020–2024 alongside the new rights for BBC TV coverage of Live Twenty20 Cricket and Test Match & ODI International Highlights.
The BBC currently covers all winter series too, but did at one stage lose certain rights to TalkSport – broadcasting rights for tours are controlled by the host country and it is not uncommon for there to be disputes. In 2001, Agnew was forced to broadcast by mobile phone from Galle Forte, overlooking the Sri Lankan ground, when the BBC were locked out.
''TMS'' commentators
In a Test match three or four commentators and three or four summarisers are used in rotation; each commentator "sits in" before the microphone for 20 minutes, and each summariser for 30 minutes, at a time. Some of the commentators have nicknames. They have included:- E. W. Swanton
- Rex Alston
- John Arlott
- Ken Ablack
- Robert Hudson
- Peter West
- Alan Gibson
- Peter Cranmer
- Brian Johnston
- Neil Durden-Smith
- Christopher Martin-Jenkins
- Don Mosey
- Tony Lewis
- Jack Bannister
- Jon Champion
- Arlo White
- Henry Blofeld
- Ed Smith
- Jonathan Agnew
- Simon Mann
- Alison Mitchell
- Simon Hughes
- Charles Dagnall
- Daniel Norcross
- Kevin Howells
- Isa Guha
- Henry Moeran
- Scott Read
Regular summarisers
Past summarisers have included:
Current summarisers include:
- Vic Marks
- Phil Tufnell
- Alec Stewart
- Michael Vaughan
- Graeme Swann
- Ebony Rainford-Brent
- Sir Alastair Cook
Guest commentators and summarisers
Australia
- Ian Chappell
- Jack Fingleton
- Adam Gilchrist
- Jason Gillespie
- Matthew Hayden
- Dean Jones
- Mel Jones
- Tim Lane
- Justin Langer
- Stuart Law
- Geoff Lawson
- Geoff Lemon
- Alan McGilvray
- Glenn McGrath
- Damien Martyn
- Jim Maxwell
- Dirk Nannes
- Neville Oliver, nicknamed "The Doctor" in reference to his initials and the film Dr. No
- Michael Slater
- Jeff Thomson
- Mitchell Johnson
Bangladesh
- Athar Ali Khan
India
- Maharajah of Baroda
- Harsha Bhogle
- Aakash Chopra
- Rahul Dravid
- Farokh Engineer
- Sunil Gavaskar
- Ravi Shastri
- Prakash Wakankar
Ireland
- John Kenny
- Alan Lewis
- Michael McNamee
- Niall O'Brien
New Zealand
- Jeremy Coney
- Iain O'Brien
- Ian Smith
- Bryan Waddle
Pakistan
- Imran Khan
- Omar Kureishi
- Mushtaq Mohammad
- Rameez Raja
South Africa
- Daryll Cullinan
- Gerald de Kock
- Natalie Germanos
- Neil Manthorp
- Shaun Pollock
- Barry Richards
- Graeme Smith
Sri Lanka
- Gamini Goonesena
- Roshan Abeysinghe
- Russel Arnold
West Indies
- Fazeer Mohammed
- Colin Croft
- Tony Cozier
- Roy Lawrence
- Sir Curtly Ambrose
- Sir Viv Richards
- Donna Symmonds
- Carlos Brathwaite
Zimbabwe
- Duncan Fletcher
- Pommie Mbangwa
- Henry Olonga
Scorers
- Arthur Wrigley
- Bill Frindall
- Jo King
- Michael Robinson
- Malcolm Ashton
- Andrew Samson
- Andy Zaltzman
- Phil Long
Producers and reporters
Light-hearted style
TMS has always had a distinctively irreverent style. While it takes seriously its role of describing and commenting on the action, there is also much light relief. Brian Johnston, who was as happy on the stage and working in light entertainment presentation as he was in the commentary box, was the master of this style. This could on occasion lead to hilarity in the box, for instance on one occasion in August 1991 at The Oval when Ian Botham was dismissed "hit wicket" and Agnew said Botham "just couldn't quite get his leg over." This remark led both Agnew and Johnston to collapse in a fit of giggles, which was quickly followed by Johnston's giggly chastening, "Aggers, do stop it!" This clip has become a broadcasting classic and is frequently replayed. In 2005, Radio 5 Live listeners voted it the greatest sporting commentary of all time, with ten times as many votes as "they think it's all over".Other Johnners classics include, "There's Neil Harvey standing at leg-slip with his legs wide apart, waiting for a tickle", and "...and Ward bowls to Glenn Turner, short, ooh! and it catches him high up on the, er, thigh. That really must have hurt as he's doubled over in pain. I remember when..." and after 2 minutes of typical Johnners fill, he continued, "Well, he's bravely going to carry on... but he doesn't look too good. One ball left."
Listeners' letters and emails are often read out on air. Brian Johnston was once taken to task by a schoolmistress correspondent, pretending indignation, for saying during a West Indies Test commentary: "The bowler's Holding, the batsman's Willey." However, on this occasion he was innocent.
Concern about BBC Sport's commitment to maintaining the tone and style of the programme after its 50th anniversary led to an Early Day Motion being tabled in Parliament by Andrew George MP in June 2007.
In 2012 Test Match Special's light-hearted style was commented upon by the FARS News Agency, highlighting the "leg over" incident.
Cakes
Brian Johnston started the fad of the public sending cakes to the commentary box. In Johnston's day they were chocolate cakes, whereas now fruit cakes seem to be more popular. Indeed, in 2001 the Queen herself had a fruit cake baked for the TMS team. She said that it was baked "under close supervision" by her following Jonathan Agnew's light hearted questioning of her as to whether she might have baked it herself.In 2019, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall commissioned a cake featuring the helmets and captains from the England vs. New Zealand teams, delivered and consumed during the World Cup Final.