Craig Doyle

Television

Birthday December 17, 1970

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Dublin, Ireland

Age 53 years old

Nationality Ireland

#50591 Most Popular

1970

Craig Doyle (born 17 December 1970) is an Irish television and radio presenter.

To British viewers he is recognisable as working for the BBC and ITV and more recently BT Sport.

Irish viewers also know him as the host of RTÉ One chat show Tonight with Craig Doyle and RTÉ2's Craig Doyle Live.

He is the main anchor on BT Sport Premiership, European Champions Cup rugby coverage and MotoGP motorcycle racing.

Craig has also been a presenter on ITV's Rugby World Cup coverage.

Since 2022, Doyle has been a regular relief presenter on ITV daytime series This Morning alongside Josie Gibson and Holly Willoughby.

In September 2023, he replaced Laura Woods as host of The NFL Show on ITV.

Doyle was born on 17 December 1970, and was raised in the Dublin suburb of Stillorgan.

Educated in Blackrock College.

He studied sociology and history at Maynooth, followed by the London College of Printing, where he earned a diploma in broadcast journalism.

1995

After graduation, Doyle worked on local radio with BBC Radio Suffolk based in Ipswich, before moving on to ITV to present the children's show Disney Club in 1995, having been head hunted following a chance meeting with a producer from the show at a visit to Alton Towers.

Moving to London, he presented Tomorrow's World, Fasten Your Seatbelt and Innovation Nation, and spent six years hosting BBC One's Holiday.

He also had a live music show on London's Capital Radio every Saturday 8am – 11am.

2002

In January 2002, Doyle married his longtime girlfriend Doon.

The couple have four children and live in County Wicklow.

They also have a home in Kew, West London.

2004

Doyle was a key member of the BBC Sport team from 2004, anchoring international rugby, including the Six Nations Championship, and triathlon.

He supports London Irish.

In 2004, he formed his own production company Boxer.

Its first production was The Craig Doyle Show, an Irish travel/celebrity program running on RTÉ, and Doyle produced and presented Ireland's Richest.

2005

Doyle presented the ESAT Young Scientist Exhibition in Dublin, sponsored by BT Ireland in 2005.

He is prominent in the UK fronting the adverts of double-glazing company Everest Windows.

In Ireland he serves as the face of the UPC cable service adverts.

He was a face of Littlewoods Ireland.

2008

Released early from his BBC contract, Doyle joined ITV Sport in February 2008, replacing Jim Rosenthal by hosting the UEFA Champions League highlights on ITV.

He also presents ITV4's coverage of the Isle of Man TT.

Doyle left Capital Radio at the end of 2008.

Doyle presented Ireland's Top Earners in 2008, later recalled by John Boland in the Irish Independent as a programme that came about "just when the country was sliding inexorably into economic ruin and in which Doyle swooned over the wealth that had been amassed by Seán Quinn" [since bankrupt].

2010

In April 2010, Doyle returned to Irish TV once again to host his own chat show Tonight with Craig Doyle on RTÉ One.

In September 2010 he joined the team on ITV's Lorraine as an investigative reporter.

2011

Doyle presented Irish satirical program The Panel up to 2011.

After that he became the presenter for a new live chat show called The Social from November 2011, which returned to screens in 2012 as Craig Doyle Live.

He presented Now That's What You Called News for RTÉ over the Christmas at the end of 2011.

2013

Doyle currently works with BT Sport presenting coverage of Rugby Union since mid 2013.

2015

Doyle also presented BT Sport's coverage of MotoGP between 2015 and 2018.

Since November 2021, Doyle has been appearing on ITV show This Morning usually presenting the competitions.

In May 2022 he appeared twice as a guest presenter on the show alongside Alison Hammond.

He presented alongside Josie Gibson, Mollie King and Rochelle Humes during the school summer holidays on This Morning in 2022 and has since become a regular relief presenter on the show.

In the week beginning 22 January 2024, Doyle appeared as a contestant on the BBC Two game show Richard Osman‘s House of Games.

He finished third, behind comedian Leo Reich and scientist and entrepreneur Anne-Marie Imafidon, but ahead of former Paralympian Tanni Grey-Thompson.