Sir Bobby Charlton
Sir Robert "Bobby"
Charlton,
CBE (born
11 October
1937 in
Ashington,
Northumberland)
is a former
English
professional
football
player who won the
World Cup and
was named the
European Footballer of
the Year in 1966. He is arguably the greatest English footballer to
have lived.
He played almost all of his club football at
Manchester United,
where he became renowned for his attacking instincts from
midfield and
his ferocious long-range shot.
He began to play for United's
first team in 1956, and over the next two seasons gained a regular place in the
team, during which time he survived the
Munich air disaster
of 1958. After helping United to win the
football league
in 1965, he won a
World Cup
medal with
England in
1966 and another football league title with United the following year. In 1968,
he captained the Manchester United team that won the
European Cup,
scoring two goals in the final to help his team be the first English side to win
the competition. He has scored more goals for England and United than any other
player. He also made more appearances for Manchester United than any other
player, records which are still standing at the end of 2006. He is considered by
many to be one of the greatest players of all time.
He left Manchester United in
1973, becoming player-manager of
Preston North End,[1]
but decided management was not for him and left after one season.
After assuming the post of
the director at
Wigan Athletic F.C.
for some time, he became a member of Manchester United's board of directors in
1984[2]
and remains one as of April 2007.
Early life
One of his uncles, the
Newcastle United
centre forward
Jackie Milburn,
was a professional footballer, but it was Charlton's mother Cissie who coached
him at first. His elder brother,
Jack, went to
work as a miner and applied to join the
police before
also becoming a footballer with Leeds United.
On
9 February
1953, Grammar
School pupil Charlton was spotted playing for East Northumberland schools by
Manchester United
chief scout
Joe Armstrong.
Charlton went on to play for England schoolboys, and despite offers that
followed from several other clubs, the 15-year-old signed with United. Initially
his mother was reluctant to let him commit to an insecure football career, so he
began an
apprenticeship
as an engineer; however he went on to turn professional in October 1954.
Charlton became one of the
famed
Busby Babes,
the collection of precociously talented footballers who emerged through the
system at
Old Trafford
in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s as Busby set about a long-term plan of rebuilding
the club after the
Second World War.
He worked his way through the pecking order of teams, scoring regularly for the
youth and reserve sides before he was handed his first team debut against
Charlton Athletic
in October 1956. At the same time, he was doing his
National Service
in
Shrewsbury,
where Busby had advised him to apply as it meant he could still play for United
at the weekend. Also doing his
army service
in Shrewsbury at the same time was his United team-mate
Duncan Edwards.
Joining the first team
Charlton played 14 times for
United in that first season. They won the
League championship
but were denied the 20th century's first "double" when they controversially lost
the 1957
FA Cup final
to
Aston Villa.
Charlton, still only 19, was selected for the game which saw United goalkeeper
Ray Wood
carried off with a broken
cheekbone
after a clash with Villa centre forward
Peter McParland.
Though Charlton was a candidate to go in goal to replace Wood (in the days
before
substitutes,
and certainly before goalkeeping substitutes), it was team-mate
Jackie Blanchflower
who ended up between the posts.
Charlton was an established
player by the time the next season was fully underway, which saw United, as
current League champions, become the first English team to fully embrace the
European Cup,
reaching the semi finals where they lost to
Real Madrid.
Previously,
the Football Association
had scorned the competition but United's progress in the competition earned a
great deal of
continental
respect. Their reputation was further enhanced the next season as they reached
the quarter finals to play
Red Star Belgrade.
In the first leg at home, United won 2-1. The return in
Yugoslavia saw
Charlton score twice as United stormed 3-0 ahead although the hosts came back to
earn a 3-3 draw. However, United maintained their
aggregate lead
to reach the last four and were in jubilant mood as they left to catch their
flight home, thinking of an important League game against
Wolves at the
weekend.
Munich
The aeroplane which took the
United players and staff home from
Zemun Airport
needed to stop in
Munich to
refuel. This was carried out in worsening weather, and by the time the
refuelling was complete and the call was made for the passengers to re-board the
aircraft, the wintry showers had taken hold and snow had settled heavily on the
runway and around the airport. There were two aborted take-offs which led to
concern on board, and the passengers were advised by a
stewardess to
disembark again while a minor technical error was fixed.
Back in the
airport terminal
for barely ten minutes, the call to reconvene on the plane came and a number of
passengers began to feel nervous. Charlton and team-mate
Dennis Viollet
swapped places with
Tommy Taylor
and
David Pegg,
who had decided they would be safer at the back of the plane. This would prove a
fatal decision for Taylor and Pegg.
The plane clipped the fence
at the end of the runway on its next take-off attempt and a wing tore through a
nearby house, setting it alight. The wing and part of the tail came off and hit
a tree and a wooden hut spinning along the snow until coming to a halt. It had
been cut in half.
Charlton, strapped into his
seat, had fallen out of the cabin and when United goalkeeper
Harry Gregg
(who had somehow got through a hole in the plane unscathed and begun a one-man
rescue mission) found him, he thought he was dead. That said, he grabbed both
Charlton and Viollet by their
trouser
waistbands and dragged them away from the plane in constant fear that it would
explode. Gregg returned to the plane to try to help the appallingly injured
Busby and Blanchflower and when he turned around again, he was relieved to see
that Charlton and Viollet, both of whom he had presumed to be dead, had got out
of their detached seats and were looking into the wreckage.
Charlton suffered cuts to his
head and severe
shock and was
in hospital for a week. Seven of his team-mates had perished at the scene,
including Taylor and Pegg, with whom he and Viollet had swapped seats prior to
the fatal take-off attempt. Club captain
Roger Byrne
was also killed, along with
Mark Jones,
Billy Whelan,
Eddie Colman
and
Geoff Bent.
Duncan Edwards
died a fortnight later from the injuries he had sustained. In total, the crash
claimed 23 lives. Initially, ice on the wings was blamed, but another inquiry
later declared that
slush on the
runway had made the plane's facility to achieve a safe take-off almost
impossible.
Charlton was the first
survivor to leave hospital. He arrived back in
Manchester on
February 14,
1958, eight
days after the crash. As he convalesced, he spent some time kicking a ball
around with local youths and a famous photograph of him was taken. He was still
only 20 years old, yet now there was an expectation that he help with the
rebuilding of the club as Busby's aides tried to piece together what remained of
the season.
Not unexpectedly, United went
out of the European Cup to
AC Milan in
the semi finals to a 5-2 aggregate defeat and fell behind in the League. Yet
somehow they reached their second consecutive FA Cup final and the big day at
Wembley coincided with Busby's return to work. His words could not inspire a
side which was playing on a nation's goodwill and sentiment, and
Nat Lofthouse
scored twice to give a professional
Bolton Wanderers
side a 2-0 win.
Hero
of United & England
At the same time, Charlton's
emergence as the country's leading young football talent was completed when he
was called up to join the
England squad
for a
British Home Championship
game against
Scotland at
Hampden Park.
It would be the start of a long, prolific, record-breaking and globally
respected career for his country.
Charlton was handed his debut
as England romped home 4-0, with the new player gaining even more admirers after
scoring a magnificent thumping volley dispatched with authority after a cross by
the left winger
Tom Finney. He
scored both goals in his second game as England beat
Portugal 2-1
in a friendly at Wembley; and overcame obvious nerves on a return to
Belgrade to
play his third match against
Yugoslavia.
Unfortunately, England lost that game 5-0 and Charlton played poorly. He was
selected for the squad which competed at the
1958 World Cup
in
Sweden, but
didn't kick a ball, something at which critics expressed surprise and
bewilderment, even allowing for his lacklustre performance in Belgrade.
Charlton began to settle back
into his footballing life with Manchester United and England and enhanced his
reputation as a scorer of great goals as well as a great goalscorer - rarely is
a player regarded as both. In 1959 he scored a
hat-trick as
England demolished the
USA 8-1; and
his second England hat-trick came in 1961 in an 8-0 thrashing of
Mexico. He
also managed to score in every
British Home Championship
tournament he played in except
1963 in an
association with the tournament which lasted from 1958 to 1970 and included 16
goals and ten tournament victories (five shared).
He played in qualifiers for
the
1962 World Cup
in
Chile against
Luxembourg and
Portugal and was named in the squad for the finals themselves. His goal in the
3-1 group win over
Argentina was
his 25th for England in just 38 appearances, but his individual success could
not be replicated by that of the team, which was eliminated in the quarter final
by
Brazil, who
went on to win the tournament.
Further success with
Manchester United finally came when they beat
Leicester City
3-1 in the FA Cup final of 1963, with Charlton finally earning a winners' medal
in his third final. Busby's post-Munich rebuilding programme continued to
progress with two League championships within three seasons, with United taking
the title in 1965 and 1967. In between, there was the pressing matter for
Charlton of the
1966 World Cup
for which England, as hosts, had not needed to qualify. A successful (though
trophyless) season with Manchester United had seen him take the honours of
Football Writers'
Association Footballer of the Year and
European Footballer Of
The Year into the competition.
By now, England were coached
by
Alf Ramsey who
had managed to gain sole control of the recruitment and team selection procedure
from the
committee-based
call-up system which had lasted up to the previous World Cup. Ramsey had already
cleared out some of the older players who had been reliant on the loyalty of the
committee for their continued selection - it was well known that decorum on the
pitch at club level had been just as big a factor in playing for England as
ability and form. Luckily for Charlton, he had all three.
Charlton had remained the
attacking midfield player around whom Ramsey had intended to build his team. He
was still scoring and creating freely and as the tournament was about to start,
he was expected to become one of its stars and galvanise his established
reputation as one of the world's best footballers.
The
success of 1966
The opening game of the
tournament was Charlton's 69th for his country - a goalless draw with
Uruguay.
England swept aside this minor hiccup to dispose of Mexico in the next game,
with Charlton scoring one of the most famous goals of his career.
Picking up the ball in the
centre circle of the Wembley pitch, Charlton issued a Mexican challenger with a
body swerve which sent his opponent the wrong way and opened up a sizeable gap
ahead of him. His reputation for long-range finishes now the stuff of legend,
everyone braced themselves for a shot - and Charlton memorably obliged. It
arrowed straight into the top corner of the Mexico net, finally opening
England's goal account in the tournament and setting them up for a 2-0 win. This
was followed by an identical scoreline against
France and
England were in the last eight.
There they overcame a
thuggish Argentina side with a slender 1-0 win - the game was the only one in
which Charlton received a caution - and Portugal awaited in the semi finals.
This turned out to be one of Charlton's most important games, for both himself
and those for whom he played.
Charlton opened the scoring
with a crisp side-footed finish after a run by
Roger Hunt had
forced the Portuguese goalkeeper out of his net; the second was a sweetly struck
shot after a run and pull-back from
Geoff Hurst.
Charlton and Hunt were now England's equal-highest scorers in the tournament
with three each, and a final against
West Germany
was to come.
Though the game had drama,
great team performances and some breathtaking individual displays, it actually
turned out to be one of Charlton's quieter days. He had a young
Franz Beckenbauer
marking him and vice versa, and the two ultimately seemed to cancel each other
out. However, the team did what was required and won 4-2 (although controversy
still exists as to whether the 3rd goal ever crossed the line), with Hurst's
hat-trick entering football folklore (and overtaking Charlton and Hunt as
England's top marksman). Charlton was playing alongside his brother Jack and the
two openly embraced and wept as the greatness of their achievement sank in.
European glory
Charlton's next England game
was his 75th as England beat
Northern Ireland;
2
caps later and
he had become England's second most-capped player, behind the veteran
Billy Wright,
who was approaching his 100th appearance when Charlton was starting out and
ended with 105 caps.
In 1968, Manchester United
reached the
European Cup
final, ten seasons after Munich. Even though other clubs had taken part in the
competition in the intervening decade, the team which got to this final was
still the first English side to do so. On a highly emotional night at Wembley,
Charlton scored twice in a 4-1 win after extra time against
Benfica and,
as United captain, lifted the trophy. Weeks later he scored his 45th England
goal in a friendly against
Sweden,
breaking the record of 44 set the previous year by
Jimmy Greaves.
He was then in the England team which made it to the semi-finals of the
1968 European
Championships where they were knocked out by Yugoslavia in
Florence;
England defeated the
Soviet Union
2-0 in the third place match.
In 1969, Charlton was awarded
the
OBE for
services to football. More milestones followed as he won his 100th England cap
on
21 April
1970 against
Northern Ireland, and was made captain by Ramsey for the occasion. Inevitably,
he scored. This was his 48th goal for his country - his 49th and final goal
would follow a month later in a 4-0 win over
Colombia
during a warm-up tour for the
1970 World Cup,
designed to get the players adapted to
altitude
conditions. Charlton's inevitable selection by Ramsey for the tournament made
him the first - and still, to date, only - England player to feature in four
World Cup squads.
World Cup 1970 and retirement from playing football
England began the tournament
with two victories in the group stages, plus a memorable defeat against Brazil.
Charlton played in all three, though was substituted for
Alan Ball in
the final game of the group against
Czechoslovakia.
Ramsey, confident of victory and progress to the quarter final, wanted Charlton
to rest.
England duly reached the last
eight where they again faced West Germany. Charlton controlled the midfield and
suppressed
Beckenbauer's
runs from deep as England coasted to a 2-0 lead. Beckenbauer pulled a goal back
for the Germans and Ramsey replaced the ageing and tired Charlton with
Colin Bell who
further tested the German keeper
Maier and also
provided a great cross for
Geoff Hurst
who uncharacteristically squandered the chance. West Germany, who had a habit of
coming back from behind, eventually scored twice - a back header from
Uwe Seeler
made it 2-2 after which
Gerd Müller's
goal finished England off. England were out and, after a record 106 caps and 49
goals, Charlton decided to end his international career at the age of 32. On the
flight home from Mexico, he asked Ramsey not to consider him again. His brother
Jack, two years his senior but 71 caps his junior, did likewise.
Despite populist opinion the
substitution did not change the game as
Beckenbauer
had scored before Charlton left the field, hence Charlton had failed to cancel
out the German. Charlton himself conceded that the substitution did not affect
the game in a
BBC
documentary. His caps record lasted until 1973 when
Bobby Moore
overtook him, and Charlton currently lies third in the all-time England
appearances list behind Moore and
Peter Shilton,
whose own England career began in the first game after Charlton's had ended. The
goals record still stands, with
Gary Lineker
the only player subsequently to threaten it, with a total of 48 goals for
England.
Manchester United were in
real difficulties in the early 1970s, with the team often fighting relegation.
At times, Charlton was not on speaking terms with United's other superstars
George Best
and
Denis Law, and
Best refused to play in Charlton's testimonial match, saying that "to do so
would be hypocritical".[3]
Charlton left Manchester United at the end of the 1972-73 season, having scored
247 goals and set a club record of 752 appearances, a record which is likely to
be broken by
Ryan Giggs in
the near future. His last game was against
Chelsea at
Stamford Bridge,
and before the game the BBC cameras for
Match Of The Day
captured the Chelsea chairman handing Charlton a commemorative
cigarette
case.
After playing football
Charlton became the
player-manager of
Preston North End
in 1973, taking United and England team-mate
Nobby Stiles
with him as player-coach, but his first season was not a success and he left at
the end of it. However, he was awarded the
CBE that year
and began a casual association with the
BBC for
punditry on matches which continued for many years. In 1975 he scored 18 goals
in 31 appearances for
Waterford United.
He then joined
Wigan Athletic
as a director, and was briefly caretaker manager there. He then spent some time
playing in
South Africa.[4]
He also built up several businesses in areas such as travel, jewellery and
hampers, and ran soccer schools in the UK, the USA, Canada, Australia and China.
In 1984, he was invited to become member of the
board of directors
at Manchester United, partly because of his football knowledge and partly
because it was felt that the club needed a "name" on the board after the
resignation of
Sir Matt Busby.[5]
He remains a director of Manchester United as of 2007.
Charlton helped to promote
Manchester's bids for the 1996 and 2000
Olympic Games
and the
2002 Commonwealth Games,
England's bid for the
2006 FIFA World Cup
and
London's
successful bid for the
2012 Olympic Games.[6]
He received a
knighthood in
1994 and was an Inaugural Inductee to the
English Football Hall of
Fame in 2002. On accepting his award he commented “I’m really
proud to be included in the National Football Museum’s Hall of Fame. It’s a
great honour. If you look at the names included I have to say I couldn’t argue
with them. They are all great players and people I would love to have played
with." He is also the (honorary) president of the
National Football Museum,
an organisation about which he said “I can’t think of a better Museum
anywhere in the world.”.
Miscellaneous & family life
He met his wife,
Norma Ball, at
a
dry cleaners
in Manchester in 1959 and they married in 1961. They have two daughters -
Suzanne and
Andrea - the former of whom became a public figure herself as a
weather forecaster
for the
BBC.
Charlton began to lose his
hair in the early 1960s and for a while refused to go bald gracefully, sporting
a style of stranded, isolated hairs which would often flop around when he was
running before he would tug them back over his head. This style is today still
known as "the Bobby Charlton
Comb-Over". |