The Three Lions
Squad for
the match against Northern Ireland
May 1969 |
Player |
Birthdate |
Age |
Pos |
Club |
St |
Sub |
App |
G |
Capt |
|
Astle, Jeffrey |
13 May 1942 |
26 |
CF |
West Bromwich Albion |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
none |
Ball, Alan J. |
12 May 1945 |
23 |
F |
Everton FC |
29 |
0 |
29 |
4 |
0 |
none |
Banks, Gordon |
30 December 1937 |
31 |
G |
Stoke City FC |
48 |
0 |
48 |
|
0 |
none |
Bell, Colin |
26 February 1946 |
23 |
IR |
Manchester City FC |
4 |
0 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
none |
Charlton, Robert |
11 October 1937 |
31 |
F |
Manchester United FC |
90 |
0 |
90 |
46 |
1 |
none |
Cooper, Terence |
12 July 1944 |
24 |
LB |
Leeds United AFC |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
none |
Hunter, Norman |
29 October 1943 |
24 |
HB |
Leeds United AFC |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hunter was drafted into the squad earlier than intended as a
replacemnet for Stiles |
Hurst, Geoffrey C. |
8 December 1941 |
27 |
F |
West Ham United FC |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Labone, Brian |
23 January 1940 |
29 |
CHB |
Everton FC |
13 |
0 |
13 |
0 |
0 |
none |
Lee, Francis H. |
29 April 1944 |
24 |
IR |
Manchester City FC |
2 |
0 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
none |
McNab, Robert
|
20 July 1943 |
25 |
LB |
Arsenal FC |
2 |
1 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
none |
Moore, Robert F.C. |
12 April 1941 |
28 |
LHB |
West Ham United FC |
66 |
0 |
66 |
2 |
49 |
none |
Mullery, Alan P. |
23 November 1941 |
27 |
RHB |
Tottenham Hotspur FC |
14 |
0 |
14 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
Newton, Keith R. |
23 June 1941 |
27 |
FB |
Blackburn Rovers FC |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Peters, Martin S. |
8 November 1943 |
25 |
F |
West Ham United FC |
24 |
0 |
24 |
8 |
0 |
none |
Stiles, Norbert P. |
18 May 1942 |
26 |
HB |
Manchester United FC |
26 |
0 |
26 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
An injury has forced Stiles to withdraw from the team against
Ireland |
West, Gordon |
24 April 1943 |
26 |
G |
Everton FC |
1 |
0 |
1 |
1 GA |
0 |
none |
All information is complete to
and including England's last match, the fourth of the 1968-69
season, against France on 12 March 1969
Diary
Friday, 1 March 1968 -
Football League clubs at their
extraordinary meeting in London passed, with a substantial majority,
proposals by their management committee which bring revolutionary
changes in the 1968-69 season. The meeting lasted only seventeen
minutes and there were few dissenting voices. It means that from the
1968-69, the season will start in the second week in August, that is
August 10 this year, and end with the FA Cup final on 26 April. In
1970, the season will end on 18 April. The British home international
championship, which is normally played throughout the season, will now
follow the cup final in both seasons in a compact competition.
Wednesday, 3 April 1968 - Next
season's British International tournament will take place from 3 - 10
May, it has officially been confirmed by the four home countries at a
meeting in London. After the meeteing, Denis Follows, the FA scretary,
said "These arrangements preserve the two traditional Saturday fixture
dates for home Internationals."
Wednesday, 23 April 1969 -
All six matches in the International Championship are to be shown live
and in full on B.B.C.-1. "It will be the most concentrated television
coverage of International football since the World Cup in 1966." said
Mr Bryan Cowell, head of B.B.C. Television sport. WIth special
programmes of recorded highlights and news, there will be more than
thirteen hours' coverage of the Championship. David Coleman, who
will introduce the first match in the series, Wales v. Scotland from
Wrexham, will travel by helicopter to Belfast as soon as the programme
ends at 5.15pm, arriving with minutes to spare to introduce the
Ireland v. England match coverage at Windsor Park, Belfast, at 7.15pm.
The England matches against Wales and Scotland at Wembley will include
bird's eye slow-motion shots, which, iunlike the normal slow-motion
pictures, will show the complete build-up to a goal. Viewers will see
the pitch as "a chess board" and get a analytical view of the action.
This new technique, using a high-sited camera, will also be seen in
the B.B.C.-1 and 2 coverage of the FA Cup Final at Wembley on
Saturday.
Thursday, 24 April
1969 - Allan Clarke, Britain's
costliest footballer, has been picked for England's close-season tour
of South America. Clarke is one of two uncapped players in the
twenty-man squad, the other being Jeff Astle. The same squad has been
named by Sir Alf Ramsey for the home championship matches against
Wales and Scotland. For the match against Northern Ireland on 3
May, Sir Alf has decided only to take sixteen players. Allan Clarke,
Norman Hunter, Tommy Wright and Jack Charlton are the players not
included in the Belfast trip.
Wednesday, 30 April 1969 -
A leg injury received in the European Cup semi-final in Milan last
week has forced Nobby Stiles to withdraw from England's party for the
International against Ireland. His place in the pool of sixteen will
be taken by Norman Hunter, who last played for England against Romania
at Wembley in January.
Saturday, 3 May 1969 - Ireland 1 England 3:
England will have to give immediate attention to their midfield
players if Sir Alf Ramsey is to achieve his ambition if winning all
three matches in the Home International tournament before leaving on
their tour of Mexico and South AMerica.
England
Form: last six
games |
L W
W W W
D f 12:a
5
success: 75% |
413 |
15 April 1967 -
England 2
Scotland
3
[0-1]
Empire Stadium, Wembley (98,283/99,063) |
J.Charlton, Hurst
Law, Lennox, McCalliog |
BC |
HL |
414 |
24 May 1967 -
England 2
Spain
0
[0-0]
Empire Stadium, Wembley (97,500) |
Greaves, Hunt |
Fr |
HW |
415 |
27 May 1967 -
Austria
0 England 1
[0-1]
Praterstadion, Wien (50,000) |
Ball |
|
AW |
416 |
21 October 1967 -
Wales 0 England
3
[0-1]
Ninian Park, Cardiff (44,096/45,056) |
Peters, R.Charlton,
Ball (pen) |
BC |
AW |
417 |
22 November 1967 -
England 2
Northern
Ireland 0
[1-0]
Empire Stadium, Wembley (83,969) |
Hurst, R.Charlton |
|
HW |
418 |
6 December 1967 -
England 2
USSR
2
[1-2]
Empire Stadium, Wembley (93,000) |
Ball, Peters
Chislenko (2) |
Fr |
HD |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
____________________
CG
|