For many of us who have grown up following football with varying degrees of obsession, in the '90s and early noughties, Match of The Day was a go-to spot to catch up on all the action in the Premiership - as it was known then.
I still make a point of catching it or Match of The Day 2 but that does not necessarily hold true for everyone in the digital age where vines and clips of goals have already been seen countless times on social media and rivals like Sky Sports' Monday Night Football provide a different form of analysis carried by the popularity of Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher.
So gone are the days of keeping up to date with scores on Teletext or Ceefax and catching matches on MOTD later that night.
The BBC's Match of the Day programme plays for the last time on a saturday night back in 2001 ahead of the switch to ultimately temporary switch to ITV (Neal Simpson / EMPICS Sport)
Nostalgic as we often are on Team 33, this week we kicked off the show by looking at one of football's great institutions and its place on the modern football landscape, from the running order and conspiracy theories about which teams often appear first or last, to the punditry challenges in a more time-constricted format and the evolution of presenters, pundits and increasingly pointless post-match interviews.
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