Baverstock worked on
Tonight until 1961, when he was promoted to be the BBC's Assistant Controller of Programmes across the whole television service and suggested a programme of hymn-singing that led to the creation of
Songs of Praise. In early 1963 he succeeded his superior
Stuart Hood to become the Controller of Programmes for
BBC1, in anticipation of the launch of the station's companion
BBC2 the following year. In the same year he requested
Sydney Newman to develop a new Saturday evening show for BBC1 which would become
Doctor Who. Soon after the launch of BBC2 in 1964, Controller
Michael Peacock quickly began to run into difficulties, and BBC
Director-General Hugh Greene decided in 1965 that the two men would be better suited to running each other's channels, and took the decision to swap them over. However, Baverstock felt insulted that he was being asked to take what he saw as a demotion to the lesser channel, and refused to take up his new post, instead resigning from the BBC altogether. He subsequently became involved in the establishment of the
ITV northern franchise holder
Yorkshire Television, becoming the company's first Director of Programmes and overseeing the creation of popular hits such as the soap opera
Emmerdale Farm (from 1972). Also in 1972, as ITV commissioned the broadcast of the first nationally televised darts tournament with the 1972
News of the World Darts Championship, Baverstock asked
Sid Waddell to accompany presenter
Peter Jones and commentator
Dave Lanning at the 1972 News of the World Championship, to observe the action and to look into creating a programme based on indoor pub sports. The result of this was Waddell creating
The Indoor League, which ran from 1972 to 1977, with the first season shown only in the Yorkshire Television region and the following seasons shown across Britain on the ITV network. The Indoor League was a crucial series in the early years of televised darts. He left Yorkshire Television in June 1973, and briefly joined
Granada plc in February 1974 as head of Granada Video Limited. In January 1975 it was announced that Baverstock had moved back to the BBC, as an executive producer within
BBC Manchester, a position which he held until 1977. In 1978 Baverstock was part of a bid by Northumbria Television for the ITV franchise covering the
Tyne Tees area, which was ultimately unsuccessful. In 1980 he was part of a similar franchise bid for the
ITV Yorkshire franchise, part of a company called Television Yorkshire, which was also unsuccessful. == Death and legacy ==