Premier League TV on Welcome to the Weekend: Andrew Mensah, Johnathan Joseph and Olivia Buzaglo lead world feed coverage
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Premier League TV on Welcome to the Weekend: Andrew Mensah, Johnathan Joseph and Olivia Buzaglo lead world feed coverage
Premier League TV is back with another edition of Welcome to the Weekend on Friday 22 May 2026 at 12:00 UK time, giving British football fans a prime build-up to the latest round of top-flight action. The programme will be carried via the competition’s own broadcast platform, with coverage built around the world feed commentary team and a familiar presenting line-up that has become increasingly recognisable to viewers around the world.
For British audiences, the appeal of Premier League TV is straightforward: it offers a polished, neutral window into the league’s biggest talking points, alongside analysis and live reaction ahead of the weekend fixtures. Unlike the domestic rights holders such as Sky Sports, TNT Sports, BBC or ITV, Premier League TV is the league’s in-house channel, designed for global distribution rather than UK-exclusive match coverage. That makes Welcome to the Weekend a useful companion piece for fans tracking the title race, European places and the relegation battle as the campaign reaches its closing stages.
The presenting duties will be handled by Andrew Mensah, Johnathan Joseph and Olivia Buzaglo, with Ayo Akinwolere on reporting duties. Mensah has developed a growing profile across football broadcasting for his energetic, conversational style, while Buzaglo has established herself as one of the more recognisable contemporary presenters in sports media, having fronted football coverage across digital and live television environments. Akinwolere, meanwhile, has built a reputation as a sharp reporter and host, best known for his work across major football and sports programming in Britain. Johnathan Joseph adds further depth to the team, helping shape the panel discussion and providing the sort of football-informed balance that has become central to modern world-feed production.
The use of a world-feed style commentary setup is increasingly important in the modern game. It ensures the same broadcast can be adapted for numerous international markets, with the presenters and commentators offering a consistent narrative for viewers around the globe. That approach also allows Premier League TV to spotlight the competition itself rather than any one domestic broadcaster. For a clearer look at how the Premier League structures its media and fixture ecosystem, fans can also refer to the official league website here: Premier League.
This weekend’s broadcast lands at a significant point in the season. The 2025-26 Premier League campaign is entering its decisive phase, with the final round of fixtures scheduled for Sunday 24 May 2026. With points still at a premium across the table, pre-match coverage has taken on added importance for supporters trying to gauge momentum, injuries and tactical changes. Programs such as Welcome to the Weekend are often where those storylines are first framed, setting the tone before the broadcast turns to the action itself.
British fans are also well accustomed to the television rhythms of top-flight football. Saturday lunchtime and evening kick-offs, Sunday afternoon slots and Monday night fixtures have all become part of the modern viewing landscape, with rights split across major broadcasters. Premier League TV sits slightly apart from that domestic battle, but it remains an important part of the wider football media picture because it provides the sort of direct access to league content that complements the major UK channels’ match-day output.
What makes this edition of Welcome to the Weekend particularly watchable is the combination of familiar talent and useful context. Andrew Mensah and Olivia Buzaglo bring pace and personality, Ayo Akinwolere offers credibility from the touchline and Johnathan Joseph helps anchor the discussion with a broadcaster’s sense of structure. Together, they represent the increasingly hybrid style of football presenting, where television polish, digital familiarity and strong live-event pacing all matter just as much as traditional punditry.
As the Premier League heads towards its conclusion, Friday’s programme should offer supporters a concise but informative start to the weekend. For those following the league from Britain, it is another reminder that even when the big domestic broadcasters are not directly involved, there is still plenty of high-quality football coverage available before the first whistle of the round is blown.
Article generated: 22 May 2026, 12:01 GMT
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