Class of 92: Out of Their League (BBC One, 9pm)

THERE are just two problems with this knockabout series: It's yet another football-related foray and features completely the wrong club from the Vanarama National League North. Once again we're watching the well-heeled owners of Salford City FC when most Darlington football fans are aware that theIR Bishop Auckland-based club haS consistently outshone the exploits of a team put together by former Manchester United stars Ryan Giggs, Phil and Gary Neville, Paul Scholes and Nicky Butt. Between them the five have a 50 per cent share, the rest belongs to businessman Peter Lim.

Previous runs of the programme have introduced us to the likes of managers Anthony Johnson and Bernard Morley, chairman Karen Baird and last, but by no means least, Babs the tea lady.

The last time we saw the team, they were heading for the Evo-Stick Northern Premier League Premier Division, with Darlington clambering to the same heady heights last season when the cameras started rolling.

The former Red Devils are hungry for more and have set their sights on winning back-to-back promotions – which pours extra pressure on their management duo.

They're now three steps below league football, and as we're about to discover, life in a higher division proves to be far from easy, although the team does enjoy a thrilling run in the FA Cup which earns a prime TV slot.

As the Quakers outpace Salford for the title, Phil Neville and Co are left sweating over a play-off final to follow the North-East club into the Vanarama Division One North (well, at least is sounds better than Evo-Stick). "When we won the play-off final last season, it was the same feeling of elation that I had after winning the league title, FA Cup and Champions League for the first time. Whatever the level, that feeling of winning doesn't change," Phil Neville tells Radio Times.

He must surely have felt like pulling on his boots at times. "We used to join in the occasional training session, but we quickly found our fitness had gone. The legs, the body, it's all packed in. We plan oN having our own academy. We want to be a league side and that means producing our own players. It's all part of a 20 or 30 year plan. The dream is, in ten years time, to be in the directors' box at Old Trafford watching Salford play Manchester United in the Premier League."

Didn't someone in Darlington also have that dream?

Horizon: My Amazing Twin (BBC2, 9pm)

BROADCASTER Adam Pearson and his twin brother Neil are genetically identical and both have the same disease, Neurofibromatosis – and yet on the surface they appear to be completely different. For Adam, the condition has resulted in disfiguring tumours on his face that could result in him losing his sight, while Neil looks "normal". For years it was thought that Neil had escaped the symptoms all together, but since his teens his life has been governed by epilepsy and mysterious memory loss, which have not been problems for his sibling. In this documentary, Adam tries to find out why the disease has affected them so differently, and also asks if there's anything he can do to prevent it from controlling the rest of their lives.

CCTV: Neighbourhood Watching (ITV, 9pm)

THIS documentary suggests that whether you realise it or not, there's a good chance you're currently starring in your own reality TV series. Britain has become the CCTV capital of the world with an estimated six million cameras monitoring our every move. It's not just the police and business owners who are keeping watch, as the falling cost of camera systems means that homeowners are increasingly monitoring their own streets. This documentary asks just why Brits have taken to filming each other, and also brings us some of the most remarkable footage, ranging from an outrageous garden robbery and mysterious acts of car vandalism to a decade-long neighbourhood dispute.

Viv Hardwick