Podcasts

Sunday Paper Review+

Subscribe to OTB's Sunday Paper Review where Joe Molloy and guests dissect the Sunday sports pages from the UK and Ireland as they get stuck into the biggest stories of the week! Live on Off The Ball from 1pm every Sunday, or subscribe to get the podcast!

Off The Ball

Click below to join the obsession and pick-up your OTB on-demand, ad free content! Be sure to choose your preferred platform, subscriptions are not transferrable from one platform to another.

€ 9.99 monthly or € 99.99 yearly

Latest episodes

OTB Sunday Paper Review: Liverpool's title | Marc Canham exit | Pausing live sport on TV

4 days ago - 70 mins

Sunday Paper Review+

OTB Sunday Paper Review: Rory's redemption | Old Trafford craziness | Brittany Hogan interview

11 days ago - 75 mins

Sunday Paper Review+

OTB Sunday Paper Review: Is today Rory's day? | Augusta phone ban | Sport saturation

18 days ago - 68 mins

Sunday Paper Review+

OTB Sunday Paper Review: Mick O'Dwyer RIP | Augusta quirks | Mullins' Grand National

25 days ago - 80 mins

Sunday Paper Review+

THE SUNDAY PAPER REVIEW | OFF THE BALL

a month ago - 54 mins

Sunday Paper Review+

THE SUNDAY PAPER REVIEW | Looking ahead to Ireland v Bulgaria | Sports role models | Orla McElroy and Declan Lynch

a month ago - 73 mins

Sunday Paper Review+

SUNDAY PAPER REVIEW | Patrick Reed bares his soul... and namechecks McIlroy | Why Chelsea wanted new wave Graham Potter | URC comes under fire

Joe Molloy was joined by 2010 All-Ireland winner Clíodhna O'Connor and journalist Conor McKeon on this weekend's edition of the Sunday Paper Review. The curious case of professional golf's 'black hat' Patrick Reed sparked the first talking-point on today's papers after the 2018 Masters winner conducted his first major interview since joining the Saudi-backed LIV tour. As the United Rugby Championship announced a sponsorship deal with state-owned Qatar Airways, the guys examined what has been a fairly negative reaction to the news among a selection of today's rugby writers. Has sport and its superstars become too homogenized? We explored the recent proliferation of behind-the-scenes sports documentaries and the service they provide.