In the UK , a Saturday sports paper was a local newspaper published on a Saturday evening containing information about sports matches played on that day. Throughout most of the twentieth century they were very popular, representing one of the few up to date sources of information available to sports fans. Gradually, circulations fell and all had ceased publication by December 2017, with the exception of Portsmouth's Sports Mail , which moved to publishing on a Sunday, finally ending publication in July 2022.
9-604: The Sports Argus was a Saturday sports paper printed on distinctive pink paper and published in Birmingham , England between 1897 and 2006. Its great appeal was that it was available very shortly after all the Saturday 3pm football games had been completed. The first edition was published on 6 February 1897. The earliest copy viewable on the British Newspaper Archive is issue number 22, dated Saturday, July 3, 1897;
18-568: A Saturday evening publication. Another issue was the rise of alternative sources of information: the internet , mobile phones and teletext services allowed sports fans to follow their team's progress without the need to purchase a paper. The Sheffield Star Green 'Un closed in the summer of 2013 and the Sunderland Echo Pink followed at the end of the same year. This left only two Saturday sports papers in existence - Portsmouth's Sports Mail , which had only just been resurrected for
27-522: A four-page, eight-column broadsheet. For many years the Argus was the largest-selling sports newspaper in Britain and had between 32 and 40 pages. Its final edition as a standalone newspaper was published on 13 May 2006. Although its circulation in 2005 averaged 10,000, it was losing nearly £100,000 a year, in part due to the move away from football matches being played at 3pm on Saturdays. The title survives as
36-415: A full listing of final scores. Many also covered other traditional sports such as rugby or cricket and some expanded into covering less familiar sports such as ice hockey . Saturday sports papers were published as soon after full-time as possible. Cardiff's South Wales Sports Echo was available to buy within twenty minutes of the end of the game, featuring half-time reports and full-time scores, with
45-419: A fuller edition later in the evening. Many sports fans have fond memories of going out to buy a Saturday sports paper as soon as it was printed to find out how their team had done. Before the advent of radio, Saturday sports papers were the only way most fans had of finding out sporting results, and consequently they were very popular, some with circulations of more than 50,000. In the 21st century, however,
54-532: The 2013-14 season (having originally run from 1903 until 2012), and the Southern Daily Echo ' s Sports Pink . The Sports Mail moved its publication date to a Sunday in October 2016. The Sports Pink therefore remained the final Saturday sports paper until it too closed on 9 December 2017. In July 2022, Portsmouth's Sports Mail published its final edition, marking the end of weekend sports papers in
63-633: The main local newspaper in the area. In Cardiff , for example, the Western Mail and Echo published the South Wales Sport Echo (previously the Football Echo ). The papers were commonly nicknamed according to the colour of the paper upon they were printed, which usually was not white. The "sports pink" or "green 'un" were common names. Most Saturday sports papers focussed on football , providing match reports of games involving local teams and
72-455: The name of the 16 page pull out sport sections in the Saturday and Monday editions of the Birmingham Mail . This English newspaper–related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Saturday sports paper Saturday sports papers were published locally, with a different paper produced in each area covering local teams in depth. They were often connected to
81-549: The papers declined dramatically in sales. Birmingham 's Sports Argus , which used to be the biggest selling Saturday sports paper in the country, was one of many to be forced to close, publishing its last issue on 13 May 2006. Those that remained saw declining sales, or switched to providing websites . A number of factors adversely affected the popularity of Saturday sports papers. Televised sport meant that matches (particularly football) increasingly did not take place on Saturday afternoons so could not be adequately covered by
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