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1-43 of 43
- Brian O'Driscoll goes on a personal journey to learn how the Ireland national rugby union team has brought together people from both sides of the sectarian divide throughout The Troubles.
- Former Leinster, Ireland and Lions rugby captain Brian O'Driscoll goes on a discovery to better understand the mental health struggles elite sportsmen face following retirement.
- A centenary ago, Corinthian FC of London were to many the world's greatest side - sporting geniuses credited with popularising football around the world while championing fair play. Having first toured Brazil in 1910, they were returning in 1914 when news reached them of the outbreak of World War One. They returned home without kicking a ball - dodging torpedo fire en route - and to fight on the battlefields of France, losing more men than any club in history. A hundred years later, the Corinthian name lives on in two very different corners of the world: Corinthian-Casuals FC play beside the Surbiton dual-carriageway as amateurs in the semi-professional eighth tier of English football; while SC Corinthians Paulista - a club inspired by the legendary Corinthian FC visit in 1910 - are Brazil's richest and most successful professional club. Brothers in Football tells the extraordinary true story of how South London amateurs Corinthian-Casuals, set-out on a pilgrimage to finally play the historic match that was abandoned on the eve of the Great War. Little do they know that their pilgrimage will take them 6,000km across the world, from playing in front of 30 fans one week to 30 million the next.
- The story of trainer and mentor, Phil Martin, and how he shaped boxing in Manchester through his Champs Camp gym and Moss Side ABC.
- After a week where the very fabric of football was under threat, Ours asks searching questions about identity and belonging, and finds hope in clubs that are run by, or heavily influenced by, their fans.
- The Crazy Gang spills the beans on the notorious Wimbledon football team who climbed from non-league status to the pinnacle of the British game in less than a decade. In this revealing documentary, Crazy Gang members disclose for the first time the extent of the brutality between the players themselves and how being part of that process was the making of them all.
- Shot entirely in black and white, an insight into the trial and torment required in order to succeed as a speedway rider
- Based on his book of the same name, Michael Calvin examines football's academy system, talking to players who have and have not found success as well as the children starting out in the system.[
- John Cooper Clarke narrates the story of Manchester United's relegation from the First Division during the 1973-74 season. Based on the book of the same name by Wayne Barton.
- A man who transcended the sport to become a global phenomenon, Valentino Rossi. The 9-time MotoGP World Champion retired from the sport he dominated in November 2021, and now we celebrate the career of the greatest to ever do it.
- BT Sport Films tells the story of Molly McCann, from troubled beginnings on Merseyside, to becoming the first English female fighter to win in the UFC.
- The story and the people who experienced the catastrophic football ground fire when 56 people died during the match when Bradford City was celebrating their promotion with the last game of the season May 11th 1985.
- This portrait of legendary motorcycle rider Mike Hailwood is a deeply moving journey through the daredevil world of motorsport in the 70s and 80s to Mike's tragic, ironic death in a car accident at the age of 40. His young daughter Michelle also lost her life on that fateful day and the film reveals the emotional trauma suffered by the Hailwood family ever since.
- Access-all-areas with National League football managers at five clubs, The Gaffer shows their lives in and out of the dugout. The man behind the manager makes The Gaffer.
- James Richardson looks back at the creation of Channel 4's Football Italia programme and the impact of free access to Italian football on British viewers in the 1990s.
- How the 1980s success of Liverpool's two biggest football clubs, Liverpool and Everton, contrasted with the post-industrial decline of the city itself under the Thatcher government.
- The story of how sport changed South Africa and why that change was needed.
- How childhood friends David Rocastle and Ian Wright, one a teenage prodigy and the other a late bloomer, went on to become Arsenal legends.
- The Boot Room Boys examines how unique club culture underpinned its success, and includes rarely-seen archive and interviews, exploring the Boot Room's influence on the club.
- BT Sport Films present the life of Glenn Hoddle as told by the man himself. Glenn takes the viewer on a personal journey, interweaving the story of his career, image and playing style.
- This BT Sport Film looks at the strengths and flaws of the modern game from the perspective of players, managers, clubs and society. Featuring Gareth Bale, Jadon Sancho and more.
- BT Sport Films goes behind the scenes to document the unconventional journey of Harrogate Town from non-league to Football League amid the Covid-19 pandemic.
- Narrated by Bill Nighy. How Malcolm Allison and Terry Venables transformed the image and fortunes of Crystal Palace, leading to the prediction in 1979 that they would dominate English football in the new decade
- Presented by Richie Driss, The Special 1 will explore the many faces of goalkeepers, from game-changer to weak-link. Featuring Jordan Pickford, Aaron Ramsdale, Rob Green and more.
- Journeyman boxer Johnny Greaves is followed as he works towards 100 professional fights, accepting fights at short notice and for little money to provide for his young family.
- Tom Watt travels to European football outposts, from the Faroe Islands to Kazakhstan.
- 'Barnes: Poetry in Motion' tells the story of one of football's most iconic figures. John Barnes' story is a unique one, starting from his arrival in England from Jamaica and then being recommended to Elton John's Watford by a cab driver who had seen him play for non-league Sudbury Court. Barnes would play only one reserve game before establishing himself as key figure in Graham Taylor's beloved side, who won promotion to the top tier of English football before finishing runners-up to Liverpool in their first full season. It was while at Watford that Barnes launched his international career with one of England's greatest goals - a mazy run and cool finish against Brazil in the Maracana. He would go on to be capped 79 times for a country that, as John reveals, he was not initially eligible to represent. At Liverpool, John would establish himself as one the greatest player in the club's history, winning the league championship and the Football Writers' Player of Year award in two of his first three seasons at the club. Off the field John found a home in Liverpool, forming an ever-stronger bond with the city - where he still lives and has raised seven children - in the aftermath of the Hillsborough.
- Benjamin Zephaniah celebrates the legacy of the Windrush generation and examines the impact Caribbean migration to Britain has had on British football.
- A profile of triathletes Alistair and Jonny Brownlee, looking into the unique dynamics of sporting rivals who are also brothers.
- An in-depth look at the world of the football referee, from the global scrutiny of the Premier League to the often rowdy and intimidating Sunday morning park games.
- Tom Watt embarks on a journey to various British football outposts, from Arbroath to Accrington Stanley.
- The remarkable story of the growth of the UFC to become the biggest sporting franchise on the planet.
- BT Sport Films charts the rise and fall of one of England's greatest ever sporting icons, Jimmy Greaves.
- How cricket united one of the most dangerous, disparate and poverty stricken countries on earth and gave the people of Papua New Guinea purpose and identity.
- In the third of the Football Outposts series, Tom Watt travels to clubs that were once giants of European football including Nottingham Forest, Aberdeen and Steaua Bucharest.
- Former England rugby union hooker Brian Moore looks back to the hard playing, hard drinking, win-at-all-costs mentality of sport in the 1970s and '80s and comparing it to what some would term the more sanitised world of modern sport.
- A portrait of two British judokas in the 2012 Summer Olympics, Gemma Gibbons and Euan Burton, and the contrast in their fortunes and emotions.
- A sports documentary on the man who changed Cricket forever. From a game that was played for five days to a game which is played in three formats globally in the present day.
- The extraordinary story of Sean Fallon, arguably the greatest talent spotter in football history and the assistant manager to Jock Stein's Celtic side that lifted the 1967 European Cup.