Christmas Knockout 1984

Festive Jeux Sans Frontières Special

Entrants 1984: West Germany (D) • France (F) • Great Britain (GB)

Presenter:
Stuart Hall (GB)

National Referees:
Tony Scott (GB)
Michael Scharfenort (D)
Jean-Pierre Collado (F)

Scoregirls:
Debbie Dobson
Ursula Grosse-Allermann
Andye Seccachi

Featuring:
The Blackpool Ice Minstrels

Production Credits:

Ice Dance Arranger: Angela Francis; Stage Managers: Bryan Chapman and Christopher Miles; Graphic Designer: Ian Bate; Properties Buyer: Mike Fallow; Visual Effects Designer: Stuart Brisdon; Production Assistant: Alison Thornber; Film Cameraman: David Jackson; Film Recordist: Malcolm Hill; Film Editor: Gerry Nyland; Videotape Editor: Rob McKie; Camera Supervisor: John Chester; Costume Designer: Rosie Cheshire; Sound: John Drake; Engineering Managers: John Hadfield and Geoff Lomas; Designer and Games Deviser: Stuart Furber; Producer: Geoff Wilson; Director: Paul Walker

Produced by A2F (F), ARD-WDR (D), BBC Manchester (GB)
 

Key:
International Christmas Special
= Winner of Christmas Special
 

  ▲ = Promoted to Position / ▼ = Demoted to Position

 

GB

Christmas Knockout 1984

Christmas Special

Event Staged: Sunday 9th December 1984
Venue: The Ice Drome, Blackpool Pleasure Beach, Blackpool, Lancashire, Great Britain

Transmission:
BBC1 (GB):
Friday 28th December 1984, 6.20-7.10pm

Theme: Festive Fun

Teams: Bottrop (D) v. Tourcoing (F) v. Blackpool (GB)

Game Results and Standings

 

Games

Team / Colour

1 2 3 4 5 FR 6
Points Scored
D 2 1 1 1 2 2 1
F 2 3 2 3 1 1 2

GB

3 2 3 2 3 3 3
Running Totals
(Leading teams shown in red)
D 2 3 4 5 7 9 10
F 2 5 7 10 11 12 14

GB

3 5 8 10 13 16 19

Result

 Team

Points

Final Scoreboard

1st
2nd
3rd

 GB • Blackpool
 F • Tourcoing
 D • Bottrop

19
14
10

The Host Town

Blackpool, Lancashire

Blackpool is a seaside town with 7 miles (11km) of sandy beach and a population of around 144,000 inhabitants in the county of Lancashire. It is located on the Irish Sea coast between the Ribble and Wyre river estuaries, 12 miles (19km) north of Southport, 14 miles (22km) north-west of Preston, 20 miles (32km) south-west of Morecambe and 61 miles (98km) west of Leeds.

In medieval times Blackpool emerged as a few farmsteads on the coast, the name coming from "le pull", a stream that drained Marton Mere and Marton Moss into the sea close to what is now Manchester Square. The stream ran through peat bogs that discoloured the water, so the name for the area became "Black Poole". The first house of any substance, Foxhall, was built toward the end of the 17th century by Edward Tyldesley (1635-1685), the Squire of Myerscough and son of royalist Sir Thomas Tyldesley (1612-1651).

Until the middle of the 18th century, Blackpool was simply a coastal hamlet, but the practice of sea bathing to cure diseases was becoming fashionable among the wealthier classes, and visitors began making the arduous trek to Blackpool for that purpose. In 1781, Thomas Clifton (1727-1783) and Sir Henry Hoghton (1728-1795) built a private road to Blackpool and a regular stagecoach service from Manchester and Halifax was established. A few amenities, including four hotels, an archery stall and bowling greens, were developed, and the town grew slowly. The 1801 census records the town's population at 473 inhabitants.

The most significant event in the early growth of the town occurred in 1846, with the completion of a branch line to Blackpool from Poulton on the main Preston and Wyre Joint Railway line from Preston to Fleetwood. Around this time, Fleetwood declined as a resort, as its founder and principal financial backer, Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood (1801-1866), went bankrupt. In contrast, Blackpool boomed. A sudden influx of visitors, arriving by rail, provided the motivation for entrepreneurs to build accommodation and create new attractions, leading to more visitors and a rapid cycle of growth throughout the 1850s and 1860s. By 1851, the town's population had risen to over 2,500.

The growth was intensified by the practice among the Lancashire cotton mill owners of closing the factories for a week every year to service and repair machinery. These became known as ‘wakes weeks’. Each town's mills would close for a different week, allowing Blackpool to manage a steady and reliable stream of visitors over a prolonged period in the summer.

In 1863, the North Pier was completed, rapidly becoming a centre of attraction for elite visitors. Central Pier was completed in 1868, with a theatre and a large open-air dance floor. The town expanded southward beyond what is today known as the Golden Mile, towards South Shore, and South Pier was completed in 1893, making Blackpool the only town in the United Kingdom with three piers. In 1878, the Winter Gardens complex opened, incorporating ten years later the Opera House, said to be the largest in Britain outside London.

Much of Blackpool's growth and character from the 1870s was due to the town's pioneering use of electrical power. In 1879, it became the first municipality in the world to have electric street lighting, as large parts of the promenade were wired. The lighting and its accompanying pageants reinforced Blackpool's status as the North of England's most prominent holiday resort, and its specifically working class character. It was the forerunner of the present-day Blackpool Illuminations. In 1885, one of the world's first electric tramways was laid down as a conduit line running from Cocker Street to Dean Street on the Promenade. The line was operated by the Blackpool Electric Tramway Company until 1892 when their lease expired and Blackpool Corporation took over running the line. A further line was added in 1895, from Manchester Square along Lytham Road to South Shore, and the line was extended north to Fleetwood. In 1899, the conduit system was replaced by overhead wires. The tramway has remained in continuous service to this day and is the United Kingdom’s only surviving first generation tramway stretching 11 miles (18km) from the airport at Squires Gate all the way to Fleetwood.

By the 1890s, the town had a permanent population of 35,000 but could accommodate 250,000 holidaymakers. The number of annual visitors, many staying for a week, was estimated at three million. The decade also saw the opening of two of the town's most prominent buildings, the Grand Theatre on Church Street, and Blackpool Tower on the Promenade.

Documents have been found to suggest that the reason Blackpool escaped heavy damage in World War II (1939-1945) was that Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) had earmarked the town to remain a place of leisure after his planned invasion. Despite this, on 11th September 1940, German bombs fell near Blackpool North railway station and eight people were killed in nearby houses in Seed Street. This site today is occupied by the new Town Hall offices and a Sainsbury's supermarket. No plaque has ever been erected to remember the injured or dead.

The rise of package holidays in the late 1960s and 1970s took many of Blackpool's traditional visitors abroad, where the weather was more reliably warm and dry, and improved road communications, epitomised by the construction of the M55 motorway in 1975, made Blackpool more feasible as a day trip rather than an overnight stay. Despite this, the town’s economy, however, flourishes relatively undiversified and firmly rooted in the tourism sector and remains the most popular seaside resort in the country. However, the town has suffered a serious drop in numbers of visitors which have fallen from 17 million in 1992 to 10 million today.

The three main tourist hotspots in Blackpool originally appeared as part of the flourishing tourist industry. The first is Blackpool Tower which opened in 1894 and has been a dominant landmark of the Blackpool skyline since that time. Inspired by the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, it is 518ft 4in (158m) in height (roughly half the size of its more famous original) and houses a complex of leisure facilities, entertainment venues and restaurants, including the world-famous Tower Ballroom and Tower Circus, at its base.
 

Every October, Blackpool’s Golden Mile is ablaze
with its famous colourful illuminations

 

The second, Pleasure Beach Blackpool, originates back to around 1910 and boasts rides including the Pepsi Max Big One which, between 1994 and 1996, was the world's fastest and tallest complete circuit rollercoaster. It was the country's most popular free attraction with 6 million visitors a year but has lost over a million visitors since 1998 and has recently introduced a £5 entrance fee.

The third is the North Pier, the northern-most of Blackpool's three piers, which includes a small shopping arcade, a small tramway and the North Pier Theatre. The pier end also used to have a helicopter pad, but this was damaged in a Christmas storm in 1997 and collapsed into the sea.

Additional Information

For the first and only time, a Fil Rouge appeared in It's A Christmas Knockout. Another one-off witnessed in this event was a welcome brief return to JSF for West Germany after an absence of four years.

Great Britain’s team from Blackpool outclassed both the West German and French teams. Blackpool dropped just two points in the whole competition, and had won the event before the last game was played.

Teams played in colours (France - Green; Great Britain - Red; West Germany - Yellow), but did not have any tabards with letters (i.e. 'GB'). The results window above includes national abbreviations purely for convenience.

Made in Colour • This programme exists in the BBC Archives

 

JSFnetGB Series Guide pages researched by
Neil Storer and Alan Hayes
with Ischa Bijl, Julien Dessy, Sébastien Dias, David Hamilton, Denis Kirsanov, Paul Leaver, Philippe Minet,
Christos Moustakas, David Laich Ruiz, Marko Voštan and JSFnet Websites