Recently found a 1980s Leigh (not then Centurions) programme and it was nostalgic to see the lineups. It was however eyebrow-raising to see scantily clad dolly-birds (now probably grannies....) advertising big brand cigarettes (....or maybe not?). It's not just the internet that hits programmes' viability, rather that, without booze and cigs ads, "Pearl & Dean" local promos won't cover much of the production cost - price up - sales down.
Pre-digital programmes were generally printed on Wednesday in prep for a Saturday kick-off and so the published lineup was always unreliable and everyone generally had a pen to hand ready for the team changes announcement over the "tannoy".
However, even in those prehistoric times, there would be a mobile printing vendor beavering away outside grounds to roll off a results copy of
The Buff (Bolton),
The Pink (Manchester),
The Green 'Un (Norwich) and so on, to fans exiting the ground.
So yes, Big Time, in this day and age a single sheet of paper with the two (real time) seventeens on it shouldn't be much to ask for and people would pay more than cost. Seemples.