BBC Wilson had already appeared as a pundit for the
BBC during the
1970 World Cup. He became a television presenter after retiring from football, working for the
BBC from 1974 to 1994 as host of
Football Focus. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, he also presented
Grandstand on a fairly regular basis (he was the presenter on
Grandstand during the afternoon of the
Hillsborough Disaster in 1989), and also occasionally presented
Sportsnight. During the 1980s, he co-presented
Match of the Day alongside
Jimmy Hill, and also worked extensively on the BBC's World Cup coverage into the 1990s. During
Des Lynam's time as the main BBC anchorman, Wilson often covered much of the World Cup while Lynam was concentrating on the
Wimbledon Tennis Championships. Wilson also read the sports bulletins on
Breakfast News during the late 1980s and early-mid 1990s, and was one of the hosts of the BBC Olympics coverage from Seoul in 1988.
ITV In late 1994, he moved to
ITV, where he presented the station's
UEFA Champions League,
League Cup and
FA Cup coverage. In addition, he presented
Carlton Television's midweek highlights programme
Carlton Sport. He also fronted ITV's coverage of
Euro 96 and the
1998 World Cup, including England's loss to Argentina on penalties in the last 16 stage, which was watched by more than 23 million viewers. Following the arrival of Des Lynam at ITV in 1999, Wilson's role was diminished and he was mostly seen presenting late night highlights programmes on ITV. He also hosted coverage of matches being shown on
On Digital's sports channels and he remained with them as it evolved into the ill-fated
ITV Sport Channel, presenting the service's coverage of the pay-per-view
Premier League matches. By the early 2000s,
Gabby Logan had assumed some of Wilson's work, especially on the main ITV channel, and Wilson had a much smaller role with the station at the
2002 World Cup, which was to be his last work for ITV. He still makes occasional appearances on television, on the BBC's
Football Focus and
Match of the Day 2, as well as occasional work on documentary programmes for
Sky Sports.
Half Man Half Biscuit made reference to Wilson as a broadcaster in the song "
Bob Wilson – Anchorman". He was the subject of
This Is Your Life in 1998, when he was surprised by
Michael Aspel during a training session with Arsenal at their training ground near St Albans.
Roy of the Rovers In the mid-1980s he featured in a comic strip when he spent a season playing for the fictional
Melchester Rovers team in
Roy of the Rovers, in a team containing another former professional player turned TV presenter,
Emlyn Hughes, and
Spandau Ballet members
Martin Kemp and
Steve Norman. The quartet helped lead Rovers to
League Cup glory and a record-breaking successive number of clean sheets – a somewhat unrealistic achievement considering Wilson's age and the fact he had not played for more than 10 years. ==Personal life==