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Michael Calvin's Football People
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Michael Calvin's Football People

Author: BT Sport

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BT Sport brings you closer to the heart of the game with Michael Calvin's Football People, The weekly podcast features the best writers, addressing the biggest issues, and an in depth interview, conducted by the host, an award winning author and journalist.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

465 Episodes
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Joe Cole joins Michael Calvin, Jonathan Northcroft and Miguel Delaney to discuss the Conference League and Champions League finals. They pay tribute to the tactical diversity of modern Italian teams, but foresee redemption for West Ham's David Moyes, and a milestone achievement by Pep Guardiola at Manchester City,  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Manchester United's Christian Eriksen joins Michael Calvin to look forward to the FA Cup final, and to give an insight into his instinctive approach to the game. Seb Stafford Bloor and Tony Hodson dwell on the implications of Manchester City's dominance, assess their natural challengers, and discuss the bouncebackability of this season's relegated clubs. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On the eve of perhaps the last game in a 47 year career, Roy Hodgson, at 75, offers Michael Calvin a masterclass in management and coaching. His impact on club and country is assessed by Paul Hayward and Dominic Fifield, who also discuss relegation, elite football's lack of romanticism, and the need for a militant approach to racial abuse. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Marco Silva, shortlisted for the Premier League Manager of the year award joins Michael Calvin to discuss his influences, achievements, and trademark intensity. John Cross and Miguel Delaney praise his maturity at Fulham, and take an all-encompassing look at the challenges facing modern football, in the light of Manchester City's domination. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
West Ham striker highlights the importance of winning a European trophy, and looks to the past and the future with Michael Calvin.. Paul Hayward and David Preece dwell on the lessons of his career, the significance of Manchester City's Champions League return leg against Real Madrid, and a rapidly developing race to avoid relegation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Nottingham Forest manager Steve Cooper gives Michael Calvin an insight into the principles and pressures involved in the attempt to stay in the Premier League. Jonathan Northcroft and Tony Hodson praise his approach, and assess Forest's relegation rivals before dwelling on the problems faced by Frank Lampard and Jurgen Klopp. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Leeds striker Patrick Bamford gives Michael Calvin a timely insight into the strains of the scramble to avoid relegation. Lucy Ward and Adrian Clarke assess their chances of survival, and reach an identical conclusion : Manchester City will be Premier League champions for the third successive season. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Aston Villa defender Tyrone Mings joins Michael Calvin to discuss the impact of Unai Emery's coaching, and his rise from Academy reject to England international. John Cross and Richard Amofa assess Villa's chances of European qualification, look forward to the FA Cup semi finals, and suggest Arsenal will fail to prevent Manchester City winning a treble. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
With a treble still possible, Erik Ten Hag gives Michael Calvin an insight into the influences and philosophy shaping a successful first season as Manchester United manager. Jonathan Northcroft and David Preece assess his impact in the context of the unique threat represented by Manchester City, who will never have a better chance to win the Champions League. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Everton manager Sean Dyche joins Michael Calvin to discuss the specifics of Premier League survival. Miguel Delaney and Dominic Fifield endorse his qualities, as they examine the nine team struggle to avoid relegation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Michael Calvin discusses the principles of football leadership, and Brighton's elevation from near-extinction with the club's chief executive, Paul Barber. They are joined by Paul Hayward and Tony Hodson, who examine the race for a top four place in the light of Tottenham's implosion.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Chris Wilder joins Michael Calvin to discuss the role of Firemen managers, a role undertaken by him at Watford and by Roy Hodgson at Crystal Palace. Adrian Clarke and David Preece discuss the pressures and practicalities of the job, which reflects the increasing financial importance of promotion to, and survival in, the Premier League. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
James Milner discusses the pros and cons of a coaching career with Michael Calvin, as Liverpool face a summer of change. They're joined by Miguel Delaney and Dominic Fifield, who look forward to the quarter final draw in the Champions League, assess the last eight in the FA Cup, and criticise a bloated 2026 World Cup.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
With pressure on managers and players reaching unprecedented levels, campaigner Marvin Sordell joins Michael Calvin to discuss football's approach to mental health. Anne Marie Batson and Adrian Clarke offer their views, and also consider the fallout from the Champions League for Chelsea, Spurs and PSG. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
World Cup winner Emi Martinez gives Michael Calvin a unique insight into the mentality that has made him, in the eyes of FIFA, the world's best goalkeeper. Goalkeeping coach David Preece and Richard Amofa assess his impact, and address a range of domestic issues, including the rise and rise of Manchester United under Erik Ten Hag. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Aston Villa manager Unai Emery gives Michael Calvin a fascinating insight into why the Basque region is producing so many influential coaches. John Cross and Tony Hodson assess his impact, and look at the background to Sunday's League Cup final between Newcastle and Manchester United.   Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
No current manager has been in charge of more Premier League games than David Moyes. He shares his unrivalled experience with Michael Calvin, Paul Hayward and Jonathan Northcroft in an episode that touches on Manchester City's title challenge, Liverpool's chance for renewal in the Champions League, and the need to address the increasingly obvious flaws of the VAR system. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Michael Calvin, Miguel Delaney and Dominic Fifield discuss football's future, in the light of the charges laid against Manchester City. The return of the Champions League highlights the achievements of this week's guest Martin O'Neill, who won the European Cup with Nottingham Forest in successive seasons under Brian Clough before embarking on a stellar managerial career.   Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Arsenal goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale joins Michael Calvin to discuss Mikel Arteta's empathetic management, his rivalry with Jordan Pickford, and daring to dream of a Premier League title. Goalkeeping coach David Preece and former Arsenal player Adrian Clarke add their expert opinion on a range of current issues. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Jurgen Klopp gives Michael Calvin an insight into the demands of modern football, and discusses the next phase of his management of Liverpool. Miguel Delaney and Tony Hodson offer their views on a potential rebuild, and compare Klopp with another recent guest on the Football People Podcast, Pep Guardiola. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Comments (21)

Forward To The Past

what happened to the podcast?

Feb 16th
Reply

Ben Howard

Dammit.. Its rubbish now the format has changed.. Oh well.. What do you do..

Sep 5th
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damian edwards

Football pompous would be nearer the mark.

Aug 9th
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Kristian Matthews

I'm sure David Moorcroft is on tonights show! I know it's not but goodness they sound the same

Apr 25th
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damian edwards

Another deep dive into Calvin's dark, drab world of sanctimony. His relevance to joyful discussion of the wonderful game of football is on a par with the significance of a single house-brick beside the Great Wall of China.

Apr 1st
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damian edwards

As usual the question in the title could, indeed should, have been answered with a straightforward no. However, Calvin and his drab cohort waffle on interminably and to no good purpose, in a lame pretence of knowledge and insight.

Jan 26th
Reply

damian edwards

Fat hypocrite Calvin and his band of know-nowts continue to put the boot in on their current managerial target, as they explore just how low a podcast can sink when it lacks any measure of class or morality.

Dec 2nd
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damian edwards

More shite from so-called deep thinker Calvin and his array of incompetent stooges. How quickly they move on to campaigning for the sacking of the next manager in line. Tabloid podcasting at its most pathetically dire.

Nov 30th
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damian edwards

Calvin is a moron and attracts similar to appear on his show.

Nov 22nd
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damian edwards

Calvin and his self-righteous panel of leeches persist in demanding the sack for other people whilst continuing to perform their own jobs in the most pathetically inept manner. Calvin pretends to offer some sort of intellectual superiority over run-of-the-mill football podcasts, however this is a total sham and he is nothing more than a prime example of the gutter press he would have us believe his show transcends.

Nov 8th
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damian edwards

After last week considering the unseemly clamouring in the media for the blood of whichever manager has had a bad week, Calvin and his crew this week clamour for the blood of the manager who has endured the worst week. However, they remain in apparently blissful ignorance of how pitifully poorly they do their own job each week.

Oct 31st
Reply

damian edwards

The usual lack of self-awareness from Calvin and his holier than thou troop.

Oct 23rd
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damian edwards

Is there no end to the hubris of these idiots? They have utterly failed to learn from their misplaced certainty prior to England's defeat against Italy.

Jul 13th
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Tien Ha

my fav team 😍

May 25th
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Mark O'Connell

Quite a lot of shite spouted in this episode.. Various contributors insist that the ESL will absolutely go ahead. For reference 24 hours later it is dead. Fans would apparently come to accept it. They didn't. Total doom merchants who's confidence in the power of people to come together & fight for a common goal is severely lacking.

Apr 21st
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MARK O'CONNELL

Sorry but it has to be said, sometimes Mike Calvin doesn't half talk a load of shite. Less than 10 seconds in he proclaims that Marcus Rashford is bigger than Man Utd. He isn't obviously however admirable his political activism has been. He is not bigger than Man Utd. It seems ridiculous to have to even argue this point. PS. I'm not even a Man Utd fan.

Dec 30th
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MARK O'CONNELL

Yet another episode where every contributor is utterly negative when it comes to the suggestion of football starting again. Every reason under the sun (out-with the obvious one the Coronavirus of course) is given as to why it can't nay mustn't happen. Even neutral venues are given short shrift along with training schedules ect. Can we not appreciate that these are exceptional times so clearly not every box can & will be ticked when attempting to play football again. A bit more positivity wouldn't go amiss on this podcast. Marko119

Apr 29th
Reply

Trevor M

Your anti-Spurs bias ruins this discussion.

May 28th
Reply (1)

Bassem Taboubi

Tunisia will be the Dark horse through with Belguim

Jun 11th
Reply

Dominic Bramble

Cut short at 43:52

May 8th
Reply
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