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Alex Scott to stay with BBC for World Cups and continue WSL coverage after Football Focus ends

Alex Scott expresses gratitude after Football Focus ended and signals fresh professional and personal chapters

The end of a long-running programme can feel like the close of a chapter for everyone involved, and for Alex Scott that has proved true. When the BBC announced the cancellation of Football Focus after a 52-year run, Scott made clear on social media that she had already intended this season to be her last on the programme.

In a short note she thanked colleagues and viewers, reflecting on the years she spent as a presenter and contributor. She framed the change as a personal transition into an unfolding next chapter, acknowledging both the emotional weight of leaving something familiar and the practical reality that viewing patterns have shifted toward digital and on-demand viewing.

What’s next on screen: tournaments and new projects

The broadcaster has been explicit that Scott will remain a visible face for major events, confirming she will be central to coverage of the men’s World Cup and the women’s World Cup in the future, while also continuing to front the Women’s Super League.

BBC Sport leadership described Scott as one of their most gifted hosts, someone who resonates across both the men’s and women’s games. Alongside those established responsibilities she will continue to play a lead role for the network’s end-of-year awards such as the BBC Sport Personality of the Year. The corporation also hinted at an ambitious new project involving Scott, though exact details remain under wraps and will be revealed at a later date.

Continuity and editorial role

Even as a flagship show disappears, Scott’s presence across editorial formats seems set to persist: matchday coverage, studio analysis, and feature-led storytelling are all areas where she has built authority. The network’s plan appears to lean on her versatility, from in-studio presentation to pitchside interviews and feature pieces that blend sports reporting with cultural context. Her experience as a former professional with a high public profile gives her a dual credibility that broadcasters value; it allows her to move fluidly between presenting major tournaments and anchoring league coverage, keeping her identity tied to both performance and presentation in a media environment that increasingly favours multi-platform talent.

Changing viewing habits and the media landscape

Scott herself acknowledged a broader shift in how audiences consume sport: traditional live television figures have been under pressure as digital and on-demand viewing expands. Her comments underline a simple industry truth—distribution evolves faster than institutions—so roles adapt or disappear. The cancellation of a long-standing programme is part of that recalibration. For Scott, the experience has been framed not as an abrupt loss but as a transition that aligns with evolving audience behaviour, one that permits her to focus on high-profile events where global interest still commands significant attention across platforms.

Private life in public view: relationships and proposals

Off screen, Alex Scott’s personal life has attracted public fascination, particularly her relationship with singer Jess Glynne. The pair, who have been together since 2026, have openly discussed marriage and proposals. During a television exchange Scott playfully suggested she expected to marry Glynne and was waiting for a proposal, while Glynne has both joked about and acknowledged the pressure surrounding who asks whom. Scott’s brief stint on a reality show—she left early from an Australian camp to support her partner after a family health scare—illustrates how personal commitments and public duties sometimes collide, reinforcing that modern media figures navigate both spheres simultaneously.

Past relationships and personal history

Scott has also written candidly about a previous long-term relationship with former Arsenal and England teammate Kelly Smith, which lasted for several years but only became public after it ended. In her memoir she describes that relationship as formative—a first love that taught her about passion and heartbreak. Her book also confronts difficult themes from childhood, describing emotional and physical hardships linked to her upbringing. Scott has explained how that past influenced her ability to show affection publicly, describing a practical, sometimes awkward approach to intimacy shaped by a family environment that discouraged displays of feeling. Those reflections offer readers an intimate view of how professional success and personal vulnerability can coexist.

Looking forward: gratitude, announcements and a small consumer note

Throughout her statements, Scott emphasized gratitude for the colleagues and audiences she met along the way and expressed excitement about forthcoming announcements in both her work and private life. The trajectory sketched by the BBC suggests she will continue to be a prominent voice in sports broadcasting while exploring new formats. A final note: the original article included an affiliate mention about electronics—specifically that Sky Glass devices had a promotional reduction, and that the link used was an affiliate link which generates a commission on purchases. That commercial detail sits apart from Scott’s story, but it was preserved in the source as part of the original coverage. For now, viewers and readers will watch for formal updates on Scott’s next broadcasting projects and any personal milestones she chooses to share.


Contacts:
Emanuele Galli

Emanuele Galli, from Naples, recalls a meeting at Capodichino with health volunteers that prompted him to explain complex procedures simply. In the newsroom he uses a creative, direct tone, brings clinical reports and a notebook of explanatory drawings for patients.