The exodus from the BBC's Formula One coverage continues, with Sky Sports confirming on Tuesday that their presenting team will include BBC radio duo David Croft and Anthony Davidson, along with BBC TV reporter Ted Kravitz.
The news will be seen as a further blow for the BBC, which has now lost the majority of its award-winning line up from the last few seasons to their pay TV rival.
Sky confirmed on Monday that Croft and Davidson would switch from BBC Radio 5 Live to their new pay TV coverage in 2012.
The company confirmed that Croft and Brundle would be the lead commentary pairing during each race next season, with Davidson filling in instead of Brundle for practice sessions.
They confirmed that Brundle would occasionally be absent from the commentary box itself, saying that he would be "dividing his time between paddock, pitlane and commentary box".
"In Martin Brundle we have the outstanding F1 broadcaster - on the track and in broadcasting, he's proved it time and again," gushed Sky Sports executive producer Martin Turner.
"Working alongside him, David Croft is a passionate, experienced commentator and Anthony Davidson can bring great technical knowledge to live practice sessions."
Sky also confirmed that BBC pit lane reporters Natalie Pinkham and Ted Kravitz would move to the new Sky Sports F1 channel to join the presenting team.
Hilariously, Kravitz is set to present one of the new F1 channel's 'magazine shows', designed to fill up the 7,000,000 hours of broadcast time not featuring an actual GP weekend.
The F1 weekends themselves will be presented by Sky's smug rugby presenter Simon Lazenby, while the massively-handed Steve Rider will present a series of interviews with "racing legends of the past".
Also featuring in the presenting line-up will be Sky Sports News ladyperson Georgie Thompson, who previously presented the channel's A1GP coverage.
From the start of 2012, all twenty Formula One races will be broadcast live on Sky Sports, on a new standalone F1 channel.
The move to Sky TV sees F1 leave free-to-air broadcasting in the UK for the first time in the sport's history.
The BBC have retained live rights to ten races, with highlights shows of the rest of the season.
But the Beeb now faces a scramble to assemble a presenting team of their own, with only current presenter Jake Humphrey, co-commentator David Coulthard and pit lane reporter Lee McKenzine confirmed for 2012.
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