Sally Jones is a British journalist, television news and sports presenter. She is three-times a world champion at real tennis; once in the singles and twice in the doubles.[1]
Education
editSally Jones was born in Coventry, Warwickshire, and educated at King Edward VI High School for Girls, Birmingham.[2] She read English at St Hugh's College, Oxford, where she won five blues and half blues for different sports including tennis, squash, netball, cricket and modern pentathlon.[citation needed] In 1976, she was Oxford University rock n'roll champion (Oxford Rock Soc) and began tap-dancing with the Oxcentrics jazz band as well as gaining notoriety via a student prank, successfully dressing up as a man to stand for membership of the all-male Gridiron Club.[citation needed]
Sport
editShe was Warwickshire county and British schoolgirls tennis champion (Lawn Tennis Association)[3] and a finalist in the British Under 21 doubles championship (LTA).[citation needed] She played county tennis, squash (Warwickshire, Devon and South Wales squash associations), and netball (Birmingham Schools and Midlands First teams), captaining the Warwickshire senior tennis team for ten years, leading them to the County Championship in July 1997.[citation needed] She won the Sunday Telegraph Travel Writing Prize for an account of a tennis tour of Ireland and two Catherine Pakenham awards for women journalists.[citation needed]
Broadcasting and writing career
editDuring her career, she has been a BBC news trainee, a TV reporter at Westward TV, and a TV presenter/reporter for HTV (Wales) where she also made several documentaries, and Central TV in Birmingham where she co-presented Central News and reported on the politics show Central Lobby.[4] She has also reported for ITN and Channel 4 News and has written columns for the Daily Telegraph, Daily Mirror and Today newspapers. In 1986, she became the BBC's first woman sports presenter on BBC Breakfast News and presented for BBC Sport during the Seoul summer Olympic Games in 1988 and for BBC World during the 1992 Summer Olympics.[citation needed]
She has presented other TV and radio programmes, including several series of On the Line, the daytime show The Garden Party, real tennis documentaries for Channel 4, coverage of women's British Open golf, international tennis, women's rugby and NBA basketball (BBC TV), Transworld Sport (Channel 4) and international gymnastics (ITV). She regularly presented Woman's Hour from Birmingham (BBC Radio 4) and was a member of the BBC Radio 5 Live Wimbledon tennis commentary team during the 1990s. In 2010, she set up Sally Jones Features Ltd, a media consultancy.
Real tennis
editIn 1986, she took up real tennis and won the 1993 World Championship at Bordeaux, as well as two British Open and two US Open championships.[1] She won the world doubles championships[5] with Alex Garside in 1989 and 1991[3] and was British Open doubles finalist with Jo Iddles in 2008.
Personal life
editShe married civil engineer John Grant in 1989 and has two children,[6] management consultant Roland Grant and Daily Telegraph columnist Madeline Grant. She has written four books on West-country legends and several on sport, including the Ladybird Book of Riding. In 2006, she co-wrote and edited a prize-winning local history book on Georgian Warwickshire. She works for several charities including Birmingham Children's Hospital and Twycross Zoo She is a board member of Modern Pentathlon GB and a trustee of the Oxford and Cambridge Rowing Foundation.
A quiz enthusiast, she won Sale of the Century aged 18 and has since appeared on celebrity editions of Fifteen to One and The Krypton Factor. She has appeared five times on Mastermind and reached the semi-finals in 2008.
References
edit- ^ a b Jones, Sally (2 October 2008). "Integrating Real Tennis is unnatural: Former world real tennis champion Sally Jones storms one of the last male bastions". The Daily Telegraph.
- ^ Lockley, Mike (13 August 2014). "Former headmistress of King Edward's VI High for Girls dies aged 97". Business Live. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
- ^ a b "Past Champions". Ladies Real Tennis Association. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
- ^ Jason Cowley, The loss of good sports broadcasters, New Statesman, 19 August 2002.
- ^ Live, Coventry (27 July 2012). "Squash-Tennis: Warwickshire duo win inaugural national championships". CoventryLive. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
- ^ Bradley, Steve (29 October 2012). "Jimmy Savile groped me in a BBC lift, says ex-Central News TV presenter". BirminghamLive. Retrieved 4 October 2021.