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David Jones is an English sports presenter working for Sky Sports and a non-executive director of Sunderland A.F.C.[1] He currently[when?] fronts the live coverage on Super Sunday and Monday Night Football.
Jones went to Stokesley Comprehensive School in North Yorkshire. He became a presenter on Sky Sports News in February 2003 after spending two seasons as a pitch-side reporter on Premiership Plus. Starting his journalistic career as a news reporter on the Derbyshire Times in Chesterfield, he joined Sky for the launch of Sky Sports News in 1998, presenting alongside Georgie Thompson for a number of years. Jones presented The Football League on Sky Sports from the 2007–08 season until 2011. Jones started presenting live Premier League matches in 2010.
Starting in 2012, Jones was announced as the host of The Footballers' Football Show, a programme which discusses the key football issues of the week.[2][unreliable source?] In June 2013, Sky Sports announced a brand new show for the 2013-14 season called Saturday Night Football, for their coverage of 5.30pm Saturday evening Premier League fixtures. The show was presented by Jones alongside Jamie Redknapp with an audience of football fans debating current football issues.[citation needed] The audience was later dropped but Jones and Redknapp continued to host the show until Sky lost the rights for the Saturday evening matches in 2016. After the departure of Ed Chamberlin to front ITV's coverage of horse racing, Jones became the main football presenter on Sky Sports in August 2016. Jones now presents the flagship Super Sunday and Monday Night Football programmes alongside pundits such as Jamie Carragher, Graeme Souness, Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink, Micah Richards, Roy Keane and Gary Neville.[citation needed] When Sky Sports launched their new week nightly football discussion programme The Debate in August 2017, Jones hosted the first show.[citation needed]
In addition to this, Jones was heavily involved with Sky Sports' live UEFA Champions League coverage and has fronted numerous live England international matches.[citation needed]
Jones became a non-executive director of Oxford United on 11 February 2015.[3] After manager Michael Appleton left to take up a role with Leicester City, he was part of the three-man panel to find the next Oxford United manager in June 2015.[4] The club ultimately appointed Pep Clotet, the former Swansea and Leeds assistant manager.[citation needed] On 18 December 2019, Jones was announced as a new non-executive director of Sunderland.[5]