The
Chile Chicks
Under 23 Tour Party - Pre-Poland
May
1960 |
Player |
Birthdate |
Age |
Pos |
Club |
starts |
subs |
App |
|
Capt |
Allen, Anthony |
27 November 1939 |
20 |
LB |
Stoke City FC |
4 |
0 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
Allen withdrew from the party on 10 May because of a groin injury |
Angus, John |
2 September 1938 |
21 |
RB |
Burnley FC |
2 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
Brabrook, Peter |
8 November 1937 |
22 |
OR |
Chelsea FC |
6 |
0 |
6 |
1 |
0 |
Brabrook was drafted into the senior party on 28 April |
Cohen, George R. |
22 October 1939 |
20 |
RB |
Fulham FC |
4 |
0 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
Dobing, Peter A. |
1 December 1938 |
21 |
IF |
Blackburn Rovers FC |
3 |
0 |
3 |
1 |
0 |
Eastham, George E. |
23 September 1936 |
23 |
IR |
Newcastle United FC |
4 |
0 |
4 |
2 |
0 |
Fantham, John |
6 February 1939 |
21 |
IF |
Sheffield Wednesday FC |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Gaskell, J. David |
5 October 1940 |
19 |
GK |
Manchester United FC |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0ᵍᵃ |
0 |
Hill, Fred |
17 January 1940 |
20 |
IR |
Bolton Wanderers FC |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Holliday, Edwin |
7 June 1939 |
20 |
OL |
Middlesbrough FC |
3 |
0 |
3 |
2 |
0 |
Kay, Anthony H. |
13 May 1937 |
23 |
LHB |
Sheffield Wednesday FC |
5 |
0 |
5 |
1 |
0 |
Labone, Brian L. |
23 January 1940 |
20 |
CHB |
Everton FC |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Macedo,
Eliot |
22 February 1938
in Gibraltar |
22 |
GK |
Fulham FC |
6 |
0 |
6 |
6ᵍᵃ |
0 |
Mannion, Gerald P. |
21 December 1939 |
20 |
OR |
Wolverhampton
Wanderers FC |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Mannion was drafted into the under 23 party on 28 April as a
replacement for Brabrook |
McNeil, Michael |
7 February 1940 |
20 |
LB |
Middlesbrough FC |
3 |
0 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
McNeil was drafted into the under 23 party on 10 May as a
replacement for Allen |
Miller, G. Brian |
19 January 1937 |
23 |
LHB |
Burnley FC |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
Paine, Terence L. |
23 March 1939 |
21 |
OR |
Southampton FC |
2 |
0 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
Pointer, Raymond |
10 October 1936 |
23 |
CF |
Burnley FC |
3 |
0 |
3 |
3 |
0 |
Setters, Maurice E. |
16 December 1936 |
23 |
RHB |
Manchester United FC |
14 |
0 |
14 |
0 |
1 |
6 |
All information is complete to and including England's 22nd
intermediate match against the German Democratic Republic on 15
May
1960.
Diary
Tuesday, 12 April 1960 -
Both the International Selection and Intermediate Selection
Committees meet at Lancaster Gate, the headquarters of the
Football Association to pick the England tour party and a side to meet
Young England on Cup Final eve .
However, after spending two hours and forty minutes, they refused
to name the players they had chosen. An FA official said: "An
announcement will be made after Easter." He added that the
selectors would be seeing further matches before any announcement.
Wednesday, 20 April 1960 - The 'secret' teams which the
selectors picked last Tuesday are finally announced today. Many
club managers speak out over the 'silliness' of the selectors, as
the England tour clashes with many club tours and these clubs are
losing their star players. The team and the reserves that face
Yugoslavia will be the party that tours Spain and Hungary. The
Intermediate Selectors have brought in newcomers, goalkeeper David
Gaskell from Manchester United, Sheffield Wednesday's inside left
John Fantham and Bolton Wanderer's Fred Hill. The party includes
three players have have played for the senior side, Tony Allen,
Peter Brabrook and Eddie Holliday. The 34 players that have
been called up have been dubbed the 'Chile Chicks' with Bobby
Robson, 27, the oldest in the party. The team that will face
the England Senior side at Highbury on 6th May, Cup Final eve, is
also chosen: Macedo; Angus & Allen; Setters, Labone & Miller;
Brabrook, Eastham, Pointer, Fantham & Holliday; Hill is the
reserve.
Thursday, 28 April 1960 -
Peter Brabrook, Chelsea's outside-right, gets a surprise tour with
the full England team to Spain and Hungary next month in place of
John Connelly, who is to have a cartilage operation this weekend.
In his place, comes Gerry Mannion. Five weeks ago, Mannion was
unknown outside Wolverhampton. Then we was plunged into the Cup
semi-final against Aston Villa at outside right and has featured
in their League Championship chasing team ever since. Brabrook
will take Connelly's place in the Senior side against Young
England, as Terry Paine comes in to take Brabrook's spot in the
Young side.
Friday, 6 May 1960 -
England 2 Young England 1 -
"CONFIDENTLY and competently England strolled to victory in front
of 34,671 satisfied customers at Highbury tonight. Joe Baker, that
thrusting, livewire import from Scotland, provided the slick goals
after 90 seconds and 34 minutes. That other colourful character
Bobby Charlton provided the headache for the watching England
selectors. The Manchester United crackshot contributed just four
whizz-bang cracks at goal for his 90 minutes work. The first two
flashed hopelessly over the bar. The third finished safely in the
midrift of Tony Macedo, and the fourth, in the closing minutes,
produced a wonder save by Macedo. But it was Charlton's lack of
fire that provided the chief worry. Admittedly, the outside-left
suffered from the poor service of his partner, Jimmy Greaves, but
the one-time Bobby-dazzler didn't help himself either. Young
England were handicapped midway through the first-half by a knock
to left-back Tony Allen. A loudspeaker appeal called for Fulham's
George Cohen to report to the dressing room and he replaced Allen
in the second-half. But Allen was clearly struggling when Brabrook
laid on Baker's second goal in the 34th minute. The Chelsea flier
gave him a yard start and a beating before squaring back for Baker
to flick in. The goal of the night was a magnificent header by
Pointer, from Eddie Holliday's cross six minutes from the end."
- Peter Lorenzo, Daily Herald.
Tuesday, 10 May 1960 -
The groin injury that forced Tony
Allen from the pitch against the England side at Highbury last
Friday, has forced him to withdraw from the Under-23 tour party.
Middlesbrough FC's Mick McNeil has been called up to take his
place.
Thursday,
12 May 1960 -
Young
England's party left London Airport after the Yugoslav party did
so and flew into Berlin today and found that they were second in
terms of sporting attractions. A crowd is expected to watch the
East Germans take on England in the intermediate international on
Sunday. However, 24 hours later, a crowd in the region of 80,000
is expected to see the final stages of the Communist equivalent of
the Tour de France cycling race. Ron Greenwood has named his team
and they will begin training tomorrow, having been given the
freedom of the Walter Ulbricht Stadium.
Friday, 13 May 1960 - Mick McNeil flew in from Bonn
today to join his under-23 team-mates and was met by Frank Adams.
McNeil was suffering with fatigue and a bruised right ankle
following the summons from Middlesbrough's tour to join the
Intermediate party. To give his ankle every chance, Middlesbrough
kept him out of their last match. Ron Greenwood said: "McNeil's
ankle is strapped up, but we are sure he will play against East
Germany. In any case, we will give him a good work-out with the
rest of the boys on Saturday morning." There were timing
issues with his visa and transit card that will allow McNeil to
travel onto Warsaw. The rest of the Young England team trained
in the stadium with the thermometer reaching the 80s. The team
were stripped to their waist, as they were joined in a practice
match by Greenwood and trainer Fred Boddy, using overcoats and
goalposts.
Saturday, 14 May 1960 -
Sam Bolton, a Young England selector, took his first look at the
hard, bumpy pitch at Walter-Ulbricht Stadium and demanded it be
watered. Immediately, the German groundstaff were out with hoses
and sprinklers to soak the pitch. After an hour's training
session, the players were given 'take it easy' instructions by
team manager, Ron Greenwood.
Sunday, 15 May 1960 -
East Germany 1 England 4 -
"FIVE HUNDRED British troops drove,
singing and cheering, in lorries and buses through Berlin's
Eastern sector tonight. They had every reason for joy. They had
just seen Sergeant Major Maurice Setters drill Young England into
a fighting Soccer unit that warmed our hearts—and fairly smashed
those East German lads. It was a classic example of the old
one-two. Two goals in the last two minutes turned Germany's man in
black goalkeeper, Jurgen Heinsch, into a man of mourning, and
stunned the 12,000 East German fans." -
Frank
Taylor, Daily News
Monday,
16 May 1960 -
Young England headed east from a sweating sun-soaked Berlin, on
the second, and toughest lap of their 6,000-mile round trip around
Europe. Them arrived at Warsaw this evening. Maurice Setters, Tony
Kay, Tony Macedo and Eddie Holliday have all received treatment
for a slight injury. But Ron Greenwood confirmed that they will be
fit for the match against Poland and no changes are likely.
Tuesday, 17 May 1960 -
Gerry Mannion, Wolverhampton Wanderers' 20-year-old-winger, who
was dropped from their Cup-winning side, will wear an England
shirt for the first time tomorrow. In twelve matches, he has
rocketed from the Central League to the Young England side. He
earns his debut on the strength of this morning's practice match. His flashing
runs along the wing at Warsaw's Army Stadium has earned him
a promotion over Southampton's Terry Paine in what is the only
change to the side that beat East Germany. Mannion will make his
debut on an atrocious pitch. 'It looks like a relief map of the
Alps.' The Poles explain that they have a £100,000 stadium, but
the Army ground is more compact and more suitable for this match.
In the evening, the party went to see the film 'Broken Arrow.'
Thursday, 19 May 1960 -
Dr. Kaslinski, a leading Polish surgeon, and Football Federation
boss performed a delicate operation at Warsaw airport today. He
apologised to the FA officials for the flagrant misuse of a
substitute in yesterdays game. It followed a touchline barney when
the Poles pulled off Willi Gasz and replaced him with a 'mystery'
substitute, later revealed to be right winger Sykta. The Poles'
excuse for Gasz' disappearance from the game is that he was
suffering from 'mental fatigue.' The matter will be reported to FA
headquarters when the tour party return. The apology came as the
ENgland party waited to begin their 2300 mile flight to Tel Aviv.
England Form: last six
games |
D
L W D W W f 17 :a
10
success: 67% |
17 |
10 May 1959 -
West Germany 2
England 2
[1-1]
Stadion Bochum, Bochum
(25,000) |
Backhaus,
Setters OG
Kay,
Robson |
Fr |
AD |
18 |
23 September 1959 -
England 0 Hungary 1
[0-0]
Goodison Park, Liverpool (54,587) |
Rakosi |
HL |
19 |
11 November 1959 -
England 2 France 0
[0-0]
Roker Park Ground, Sunderland (26,495) |
Baker,
Crowe |
HW |
20 |
2 March 1960 -
Scotland 4 England 4
[3-1]
Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow
(25,000) |
St John
(2), Cousin, Mackay (pen)
Greaves (3),
Eastham |
AD |
21 |
16 March 1960 -
England 5 Netherlands 2
[1-1]
Hillsborough, Sheffield
(21,163) |
Eastham
(pen), Greaves, Baker
(2), Paine
Prins
(2) |
HW |
22 |
15 May 1960 -
GDR 1 England 4 [1-1]
Walter-Ulbricht-Stadion, Berlin
(12,000) |
Riese
Pointer, Holliday (2),
Dobing |
AW |
|