Thanks.
It's been quite interesting re the development and expansion of football coverage in England.
Prior to the advent of Match Of The Day in 1964, coverage was extremely sparse. Basically in the 1950s you had Pathe providing newsreel short highlights, mostly of FA Cup ties, league games were almost never covered.
Even with MOTD you only had 1-2 games a week and then ITV got into the game in the mid-60s.
ITV was originally a network of separate companies which provided regional television services and also shared programmes between each other to be shown on the entire network eg London Weekend TV (LWT), Anglia, Granada TV, Yorkshire TV, Thames TV, ATV Midlands etc.
Total games covered (BBC + ITV) numbered approximately 10-12 per week, which generally was the limit way into the 1980s.
So for the 50s and 60s I've got around half-a-dozen games per season and the 70s and 80s around 10-12 games per season.
I should also add both the BBC and ITV had a tendency to wipe their video files (60s and 70s) so they'd be many games/TV series now erased from ever being viewed again.
An example of a game that was wiped was the only game I ever went to at The Hawthorns in Feb 28th 1970 when Wolves and WBA played a classic 3-3 draw and I still recall watching the game again on Star Soccer on the Sunday afternoon.