Raymond J. Stubbs (born 24 May 1956) is an English broadcaster and former footballer. He worked as a presenter for the BBC, ESPN and BT Sport, and now works for Talksport radio. His most recent television role was presenting the coverage of the 2024 World Seniors Snooker Championship, which was broadcast on Channel 5 (British TV channel) in May 2024.

Ray Stubbs
Stubbs in Poison Arrows 2022
Personal information
Date of birth (1956-05-24) 24 May 1956 (age 68)
Place of birth Wallasey, Cheshire, England
Position(s) Left-back
Youth career
1973–1975 Tranmere Rovers
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1975–1978 Tranmere Rovers 0 (0)
1978–1979 Bangor City
1979–1980 Oswestry Town
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Football career

edit

Stubbs began his career as a professional footballer, leaving Calday Grange Grammar School to join Tranmere Rovers for five years, although he never made an appearance for the club.[1] He also played for Bangor City between 1978 and 1980. After ending his playing career with Tranmere, he stayed with the club in an administrative capacity although he continued to play part time with Oswestry Town.

As Commercial Director of the club, he agreed a deal with club's first ever shirt sponsor; Storeton Motor Company. The deal was announced in October 1979. Two years he agreed a new shirt sponsorship with Cathedral Tours – a Liverpool-based excursion company.[2]

He later spent three years with BBC Radio Merseyside as a reporter and presenter.[3]

BBC career

edit

In 1986, Stubbs moved to BBC Manchester as an assistant producer, working on sports including snooker, darts and bowls, and on the quiz show A Question of Sport. He also worked as a producer, reporter and presenter on BBC Two's investigative sports series On The Line, which took him to Italy in 1990 to report on England football fans at the World Cup.[3]

Later that year, Stubbs began working as a reporter on Grandstand, Match of the Day and Sportsnight. He reported from the Irish camp during the 1994 FIFA World Cup in America, and was the BBC's reporter-in-residence in the England camp during Euro 96 and the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France. Stubbs was a co-presenter at all the subsequent major international tournaments between 2000 and 2008 as well as the 1998 Winter Olympics and the 1998 Commonwealth Games.

Other programmes he hosted included two editions of Match of the Day Extra at the start of the 1998–99 season, a round-up of the latest sports news at the beginning of Grandstand, coverage of the live FA Cup draws and 6-0-6, the football phone-in on BBC Radio 5 Live. He also reported for BBC One's On Side as well as occasionally reporting for both Football Focus, after leaving the programme as presenter in 2004, and Match of the Day Live.[3]

Stubbs worked for the BBC for 26 years, presenting and reporting on a number of sports, including football, darts and snooker. He fronted Football Focus from 1999 until 2004, leaving to become the presenter of Score on the BBC Red Button (formerly BBCi) as well as Final Score on BBC One. He also presented live matches for the BBC and either worked as a presenter or reporter at all 10 of the major international tournaments from 1990 until 2008.

He was a stand-in presenter on both Match of the Day (since the start of the Premier League in 1992) and Match of the Day 2 (since the show started in 2004) and became the BBC's England reporter in 2007. As well as covering football, Stubbs also fronted the BBC's darts coverage, co-hosted the BBC's snooker coverage with Hazel Irvine and presented and reported for other BBC sports programmes, such as Grandstand and Sportsnight.

ESPN

edit

In 2009, Stubbs left the BBC after more than 26 years to join ESPN. Stubbs said, "The opportunity of joining one of the world's leading sports broadcasters on day one of the new ESPN channel in the UK was just too good to turn down."[4] During the game between Liverpool and Wolverhampton Wanderers on Boxing Day 2009, he was taken ill at half time and taken to hospital as a precaution.[5] He presented ESPN's live coverage of the 2011, 2012, and 2013 FA Cup finals with pitchside build-up and post-match coverage.

After ESPN

edit

Following the rebranding of ESPN UK, Stubbs joined newly created BT Sport as its lead reporter. Stubbs left BT in 2016 and joined Talksport, though he is no longer working for the station and instead working for their digital only offshoot Talksport 2.

In February 2023, and again in 2024, Stubbs worked as presenter on the World Seniors Darts Championship.

Charity work

edit

Stubbs has been a big supporter of Sport Relief and often took part in physical stunts for the project. In 2002, he was dropped 100 feet from the roof of the Millennium Dome (now The O2 Arena) into a pile of boxes; in 2004, he was suspended from a crane, and swung into a giant ball of dung; and, in 2006, he was tied to a post and bombarded by 15,000 bouncy balls.

In 2007, Stubbs took part in Comic Relief does Fame Academy, and made it to the last five, before being struck down by an upper respiratory tract infection. Despite his illness, he still performed twice on the night, before being voted out by three of his fellow students so he could go home and recover. Stubbs also takes part in the Great North Run each year for charity, and is an honorary member of Gateshead Harriers.

References

edit
  1. ^ Hilton, Nick (11 May 2013). "Ray Stubbs on his rise to TV fame from being a Tranmere Rovers' reserve". Liverpool Echo.
  2. ^ Upton, Gilbert; Wilson, Steve; Bishop, Peter (2009). Tranmere Rovers : the complete record. Derby: Breedon. p. 378. ISBN 978-1859837115.
  3. ^ a b c "Football Focus: Ray Stubbs (August 2001)". BBC Sport. 10 August 2001. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  4. ^ Sweney, Mark (17 July 2009). "Ray Stubbs leaves BBC to present Premier League football on ESPN". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  5. ^ "Ray Stubbs taken ill during ESPN's Liverpool match coverage". The Guardian. London. 26 December 2009. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
edit
  NODES
admin 1
INTERN 2
Note 1
Project 1