Synopsis
The inside and personal story of the key moments from sporting history
Episodes
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Kip Keino
22/12/2011 Duration: 08minIn 1968, Kip Keino became an inspiration to Kenyan athletes when he won gold in the 1500m at the Mexico City Olympics.Mary Harper visits Keino at his home in Kenya to hear about his struggle to win that medal, and about his incredible life story.(Image: Kip Keino winning Olympic gold. Credit: Tony Duffy/Getty Images Sport)
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Ron Clarke's Heart Stops at the Mexico Olympics
16/12/2011 Duration: 09minAt the 1968 Mexico Olympics, the world looked on in horror as the Australian runner, Ron Clarke the race favourite, collapsed at the finishing line of the 10,000 metres. His heart had stopped. The Australian team doctor, Brian Corrigan, ran to him and managed to get his heart started again. Clarke had run out of oxygen because of the high altitude in Mexico City.Sporting Witness speaks to Ron Clarke and Brian Corrigan.This programme broadcast in December 2011. Picture: Ron Clarke, in second place, shortly before his collapse. (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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Lady Swimmers of the 1920s
10/12/2011 Duration: 09minHow three British women swimmers took the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics by storm.Their names were Joyce Cooper, Jean McDowell and Cissie Stewart. Photo: The British women's team in Holland.
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Summit Series Ice Hockey - Canada vs USSR 1972
03/12/2011 Duration: 09minAt the height of the Cold War, the Soviet Union challenged Canada - the best country in the world for ice hockey - to a special series of matches.The eight-game series was closely fought and went right up to the final seconds in Moscow.Sporting Witness speaks to Paul Henderson, one of the stars of the Canadian team.Audio courtesy of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and Team Canada 72.PHOTO: Paul Henderson (centre, in the dark jersey) playing the USSR in 1972. (HULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES).
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Princess Anne at the 1976 Olympics
26/11/2011 Duration: 09minIn 1976 Princess Anne became the first member of the British Royal Family to compete in the Olympic Games. The Princess was part of the three-day eventing team in Montreal. She suffered concussion after a bad fall from her horse Goodwill.She shares her Olympic memories with Fred Dove.This programme was first broadcast in November 2011. Picture: HRH Princess Anne, The Princess Royal aboard Goodwill during the Mixed Three-Day Event Team Cross-Country at the XXI Olympic Summer Games on 24 July 1976 at the Olympic Equestrian Centre, Bromont, Québec, Canada., Credit: Getty Images.
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Precious McKenzie - South African Weight-lifter
19/11/2011 Duration: 09minThe diminutive weight-lifter, Precious McKenzie, was a prodigious talent, but apartheid prevented him from competing for South Africa.Precious had to move to Britain and work in a factory in Northampton. While doing so, he finally achieved international success at the 1966 Commonwealth Games.Precious went on to become a familiar figure on British TV in the 1970s.Emily Williams talks to him for Sporting Witness.PHOTO: Precious McKenzie shows off his medal collection (Hulton Archive/Getty Images).
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Ping Pong Diplomacy
12/11/2011 Duration: 09minAt the start of the 1970s, the United States and Maoist China were cold war enemies.Then the world table tennis championships of 1971 helped improve relations between the two countries.Sporting Witness hears from the American ping-pong players invited on a pioneering visit to China.
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Duncan Goodhew and the Moscow Olympic boycott
04/11/2011 Duration: 08minIn 1980, the British swimmer, Duncan Goodhew, faced a moral dilemma over whether to compete in the Moscow Olympics, which were being boycotted by the USA.In the end, he decided to compete and won Gold in the 100m breastroke.For Witness, David Prest hears from Duncan Goodhew and other British athletes at the 1980 games.PHOTO: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
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Rumble in the Jungle
29/10/2011 Duration: 09minIn October 1974 one of the greatest boxing matches of all time took place in Zaire.Muhammad Ali and George Foreman fought for the World Heavyweight title.The President of Zaire, Mobutu Sese Seko had paid them millions of dollars to travel to Africa.Hear from Jerry Eisenberg who covered the game as a reporter for The New Jersey Star Ledger. (Fight archive courtesy of ESPN)Photo: AFP/Getty Images
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Rugby World Cup Unites South Africa
22/10/2011 Duration: 09minIn 1995, there were wild celebrations across the racial divide in South Africa when the Springboks won the Rugby World Cup on home soil.Victory on the pitch followed a concerted campaign by Nelson Mandela - then the new president - to get white and black South Africans behind the team.Rob Bonnett hears from the South African captain Francois Pienaar and from John Carlin, the author of the book about the World Cup which became the Hollywood film, Invictus.Photo: Nelson Mandela presents the Rugby World Cup to Francois Pienaar. Getty Images Sport.
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Boston Red Sox win World Series at last
15/10/2011 Duration: 08minIn 2004, the Boston Red Sox - one of the most popular sports teams in America - won the baseball World Series for the first time in 86 years.On the way to victory, they had to defeat their deadly rivals, the New York Yankees, and end the so-called 'Curse of the Bambino.Tim Mansel talks to Red Sox fan, John McSheffrey.PHOTO: The Red Sox celebrate their win. (GETTY IMAGES SPORT)
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Frankie Fredericks
08/10/2011 Duration: 08minThe story of Africa's greatest Olympic sprinter.We hear from the man himself about his four silver medals for Namibia - and why he never made it to gold.
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The First Paralympic Games
01/10/2011 Duration: 08minThe first Paralympics were held in Rome in 1960.Margaret Maughan was a member of the British team - and won the UK's first Paralympic gold medal for archery.Photo: Margaret competing at a later date. (This programme was first broadcast last year - 2010)
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America's Cup Goes To Australia
24/09/2011 Duration: 09minIn 1983, the Australian yachting team made history by winning the America's Cup - the biggest prize in the sport.They defeated the Americans for the first time in 132 years.Witness speaks to the Australian skipper, John Bertrand.Photo: John Bertrand at the helm of Australia II (Getty Images Sport).
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Shootings at the Munich Olympics
17/09/2011 Duration: 09minLouise Hidalgo hears from Israeli athletes who lived through the darkest day in Olympic History - the shootings at the 1972 Munich Olympics.Photo: A German policeman on patrol after the shootings (Hutton Archive/Getty Images).
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Jim Thorpe: Native American legend
10/09/2011 Duration: 09minIn 1912, the Native American athlete, Jim Thorpe, stunned the world by winning both the decathlon and pentathlon at the Stockholm Olympics.Less than a year later, Thorpe was stripped of the medals in controversial circumstances. After struggling to make a living as a Hollywood extra, he ended up dying in poverty in a trailer park.Richard Fleming tells Jim Thorpe's incredible story, with contributions from his biographer, Kate Buford.PHOTO: Jim Thorpe, the track athelete. Courtesy of Cumberland County Historical Society.
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The Fosbury flop
03/09/2011 Duration: 09minIn the 1960s, American athlete Dick Fosbury revolutionised high-jumping by inventing the 'Fosbury flop'. Instead of diving or scissor-kicking over the high-jump bar, Fosbury floated across on his back. He went on to win a gold medal at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City.In 2011, Alan Johnston spoke to Dick Fosbury for Sporting Witness.Image: Dick Fosbury's winning leap at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics (Credit: Bettmann/Getty Images)
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Sir Clyde Walcott on the West Indies' First Win at Lord's
28/08/2011 Duration: 08minIn 1950, victory in a test match at Lord's made the West Indies a force in international cricket for the first time.The win sparked wild celebrations among the newly-arrived West Indian immigrant community in England.Tim Mansel talks to the late Sir Clyde Walcott, who scored a century in the game, and to West Indian cricket fans.PHOTO: Sir Clyde Walcott (centre) and his West Indies team-mates. Getty Images
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Blood in the Water - the 1956 Olympics
20/08/2011 Duration: 09minAt the 1956 Olympics, political tension between Hungary and the Soviet Union boiled over during the water polo semi-final.The confrontation became known as the 'Blood in the Water' match.Witness speaks to Ervin Zador, the star player on the Hungarian side.This programme first broadcast in August 2011. Picture: Ervin Zador, Credit: AFP/Getty Images
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Alex Ferguson - the early years in management
13/08/2011 Duration: 09minAs Manchester United prepare to defend their Premier League title, Sporting Witness looks back to Sir Alex Ferguson's early years in management at Scottish club, Aberdeen.Former Aberdeen assistant manager Archie Knox, and former midfielder Neale Cooper, remember how Ferguson's unique style turned perennial under-achievers into European champions in 1983.The success made Sir Alex Ferguson's reputation and put him on the road to Manchester United.PHOTO: Alex Ferguson and Archie Knox with the European Cup Winner's Cup (Courtesy Aberdeen F.C.)