Sir Geoff Hurst palla FIRMATA PROVA CoA 1966 Coppa del Mondo Inghilterra 66 Autenticità

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Geoff hurst ) Sir Geoff Hurst MBE
Hurst signing autographs outside Upton Park  in 2008
Personal information
Full nameGeoffrey Charles Hurst[1]
Date of birth8 December 1941 (age 82) [2]
Place of birthAshton-under-Lyne , England
Height5 ft 11.5 in (1.82 m)[3]
Position(s)Striker
Youth career
1957–1959 West Ham United
Senior career*
YearsTeam Apps (Gls)
1958–1972 West Ham United 411 (180)
1972–1975 Stoke City 108 (30)
1973 → Cape Town City  (loan) 6 (5)
1975–1976 West Bromwich Albion 10 (2)
1976 Cork Celtic 3 (3)
1976 Seattle Sounders 23 (8)
1976–1979 Telford United
Total 561 (228)
International career
1959 England youth 6 (0)
1963–1964 England U23 4 (1)
1966–1972[4] England 49 (24)
1966–1972 The Football League XI 7 (4)
Managerial career
1976–1979 Telford United
1979–1981 Chelsea
1982–1984 Kuwait SC
show Medal record
Cricket information
BattingRight-handed
RoleWicket-keeper
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1962Essex
Only First-class 30 May 1962 Essex v Lancashire
Career statistics
CompetitionFirst-class
Matches1
Runs scored0
Batting average 0.00
100s/50s0/0
Top score0*
Catches/stumpings 1/–
Source: CricInfo , 21 October 2016
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Sir Geoffrey Charles Hurst  MBE  (born 8 December 1941)[2]  is an English former professional footballer . A striker , he became the first and one of only two men to ever score a hat-trick  in a World Cup  final, when England  recorded a 4–2 victory  over West Germany  at Wembley Stadium  in 1966 . With the death of Sir Bobby Charlton  in October 2023, Hurst became the last living player from the team that won the 1966 final.

Hurst began his career with West Ham United , where he scored 242 goals in 500 first team appearances. There he won the FA Cup  in 1964  and the European Cup Winners' Cup  in 1965 . He was sold to Stoke City  in 1972 for £80,000. After three seasons with Stoke, where he won the Watney Cup  in 1973,[5]  he finished his Football League  career with West Bromwich Albion  in 1976. Hurst went to play football in Ireland (Cork Celtic ) and the USA (Seattle Sounders ), before returning to England to manage non-league Telford United . He also coached in the England set-up before a two-year stint as Chelsea  manager from 1979 to 1981. He later coached Kuwait SC , before leaving the game to concentrate on his business commitments.

In total, Hurst scored 24 goals in 49 England appearances, and as well as success in the 1966 World Cup he also appeared at UEFA Euro 1968  and the 1970 FIFA World Cup . He also had a brief cricket  career, making one first-class  appearance for Essex  in 1962, before concentrating on football.

Early life [ edit ]

Hurst was born in Ashton-under-Lyne , Lancashire , England, on 8 December 1941.[6]  He had two younger siblings: Diane and Robert.[6]  His family moved to Chelmsford , Essex when he was six years old.[6]  His father, Charlie Hurst , was a professional footballer who played at centre-half for Bristol Rovers , Oldham Athletic  and Rochdale .[7]  His mother, Evelyn Hopkins, was from a Gloucestershire  family, with her mother's side originally from Germany.[8]  As a teenager he was obsessed with football, and was once fined £1 for disturbing the peace after consistently kicking a football into his neighbour's garden.[9]

Hurst played one first-class cricket  match for Essex ,[10]  against Lancashire  at Aigburth  in 1962, although it was not a successful outing: he made 0 not out  in the first innings , and was bowled  by Colin Hilton , again for 0, in the second.[11]  However, he appeared 23 times in the Essex Second XI between 1962 and 1964, usually as a wicket-keeper , before concentrating entirely on football.[12]

Under his father's management of the club, Hurst played once for Halstead Town  reserves at the age of "about 14".[13]

Club career [ edit ]

West Ham United [ edit ]

Hurst's football career began when he was apprenticed  to West Ham United  at the age of 15.[14]  He played alongside Bobby Moore  in the 1959 FA Youth Cup  final team that lost to Blackburn Rovers  (1–2 on aggregate), but both were also in the team that won the Southern Junior Floodlit Cup (1–0 v Chelsea ) later that year.[15]  Manager Ted Fenton  first selected him for a senior game in a Southern Floodlit Cup  tie with Fulham  in December 1958.[16]  He turned professional at the club four months later, and was paid £7 a week with a £20 signing-on fee.[16]  His first competitive appearance came in February 1960 when injuries forced Fenton's hand; Hurst put in an indifferent performance and the team lost 3–1.[16]  He made only two further appearances in the 1959–60  season, and realised that Bobby Moore  was making better progress in the same position than he was.[17]  He played six times in the 1960–61  campaign and seriously considered turning his main focus to cricket.[17]  In April 1961 Ron Greenwood  took over as manager, and drastically changed team training by putting a focus on footballing skill rather than physical fitness.[18]

Hurst missed the start of 1961–62  pre-season training due to his cricketing commitments, but went on to make 24 appearances at left-half, and scored his first goal for the club in a 4–2 victory over Wolverhampton Wanderers  in December 1961.[19]  However, he again missed pre-season training the following summer and was dropped after proving to be unfit during the opening game of the 1962–63  season.[20]  In September of that season Greenwood tried playing Hurst as a striker, after deciding that the defensive side of his game was a weakness for the young midfielder.[21]  He formed a successful partnership with Johnny Byrne  and went on to score 13 goals in 27 First Division  games whilst Byrne scored nine in 30 games in the 1962–63  season.[22]  In the summer of 1963  he joined the club on their pre-season tour of New York , and greatly benefited from playing against top-quality players from clubs across the world in the International Soccer League , a friendly tournament.[23]

Hurst and West Ham had a poor start to the 1963–64  season, and went on to finish in 14th place. However, it was in the FA Cup  where the team impressed. A comfortable 3–0 home win over Second Division  Charlton Athletic  was followed by another 3–0 home win over East End rivals Leyton Orient  – though only following a tough 1–1 draw at Brisbane Road .[24]  Greenwood named the same 11 players, including Hurst, in all the club's seven FA Cup fixtures as West Ham progressed to the final. Hurst scored one against Charlton and two against Orient, and claimed another goal in the fifth round as West Ham beat Second Division Swindon Town  3–1 at the County Ground .[25]  Burnley  provided a stern test in the quarter-finals, but a 3–2 home win took West Ham into the semi-finals, where they faced Manchester United  at Hillsborough .[26]  West Ham won 3–1, with Hurst scoring the final goal of the game after being set up by Bobby Moore.[27]  West Ham faced Second Division Preston North End  at Wembley  in the 1964 FA Cup Final , and had to come from behind twice to win the match 3–2. Hurst scored his side's second equaliser with a header that bounced under the crossbar and ended up just over the goal line.[28]

The club's success won them a place in the European Cup Winners Cup  for the 1964–65  season. They defeated Belgian side K.A.A. Gent  in the First Round after an unconvincing 2–1 aggregate victory.[29]  Czechoslovakian side AC Sparta Prague  awaited in the second round, and West Ham progressed with a 3–2 aggregate victory despite the absence of Moore.[30]  Despite beating Swiss team FC Lausanne-Sport  6–4 on aggregate in the quarter-finals, Hurst had still not registered a goal in the competition as he was played in a withdrawn role behind Johnny Byrne  so as to strengthen the midfield.[30]  In the semi-finals, West Ham defended a 2–1 home win over Spanish club Real Zaragoza  with a 1–1 draw at La Romareda  to claim a place in the 1965 European Cup Winners' Cup Final  against TSV 1860 München  at Wembley.[31]  West Ham won 2–0, Alan Sealey  scoring both goals, to give the club their first European trophy.[32]

Having scored 40 goals in 59 competitive games in the 1965–66  season and then gone on to make himself a household name by winning the World Cup with England, Hurst was the subject of a £200,000 transfer offer by Manchester United  manager Matt Busby  – the offer was rejected by Greenwood.[33]  He was in the West Ham side which lost the League Cup  final , 5–3 on aggregate  to West Bromwich Albion .[34]

In the 1966–67  season, West Ham demonstrated the inconsistency that would deny them a realistic prospect of winning a league championship under Greenwood. Hurst scored a hat-trick as they defeated full-strength title challengers Leeds United  7–0 in the League Cup, but they exited the FA Cup with a 3–1 defeat to Third Division  side Swindon Town .[35]

"When you're playing for a team that can score seven one day and four the next it's really quite good fun. When job satisfaction is that high, why would you want to play for anyone else?"

— Like his manager, Ron Greenwood, Hurst valued entertaining attacking football played in a fair manner and was not prepared to sacrifice these values for silverware.[36]

Hurst scored six goals in a First Division match against Sunderland  at Upton Park on 19 October 1968, which West Ham won 8–0.[37]  However, he regretted admitting that he handled the ball in his first goal which led to the back page headlines focusing on the illegitimate goal rather than the rare feat of one player scoring six goals in one game.[38]

In 1972, West Ham reached the semi-finals of the League Cup when they played Stoke City  over two legs. In the home leg at Upton Park , they were awarded a penalty after Harry Redknapp  was fouled in the box.[39]  Hurst took the penalty and struck a powerful shot into the top corner which was saved by Gordon Banks , who succeeded in deflecting the ball over the bar.[39]  Stoke won the tie in the subsequent replay and denied Hurst one more final appearance at Wembley.[40]

Stoke City [ edit ]

Hurst was sold to Stoke City  for a £80,000 fee in August 1972.[41] [42]  He was struck down with pneumonia  early in 1973 and went to South Africa to recover, playing on loan for Roy Bailey 's Cape Town City .[43]  He missed just four games for Stoke and upon his return he helped the side to maintain their First Division  status.[44]

In January 1974, "Potters" manager Tony Waddington  asked Hurst to take in new signing Alan Hudson  as a lodger so as to provide the talented but troubled midfielder with a stable home during his Stoke career.[45]  Hudson adapted well to life in the Hurst household and Stoke recorded a fifth place in the 1973–74  season – a career high for Hurst.[46]

Hurst scored 11 goals in 41 games in the 1974–75  season and helped Stoke to finish in fifth place, just four points behind champions Derby County .[47]

West Bromwich Albion [ edit ]

Hurst was sold to Johnny Giles 's West Bromwich Albion  in the summer of 1975 for a fee of £20,000.[42]  He played 12 times for the Baggies at the start of the 1975–76  season, scoring twice, before deciding to leave for America.[42]  Hurst later acknowledged that at the age of 34 he was too old to lead the line in the "Baggies" push for promotion out of the Second Division .[48]

Later career [ edit ]

Hurst signed for Cork Celtic  in January 1976, and remained in Ireland for one month.[49] [50]

He signed for the Seattle Sounders  of the NASL  in 1976. Hurst rapidly proved his worth, and became a valuable member of the Sounders team. He was the team's second-leading scorer, helping the Sounders make it to the play-offs for the first time in their brief history, with eight goals and four assists in 23 regular season games, and one goal in the play-offs.[51] [52]

International career [ edit ] Hurst's trading card  from the Mexico 70  series issued by Panini .

1966 World Cup [ edit ]

Hurst made his senior England  debut against West Germany  on 23 February 1966.[53]  He played well, and further performances against Scotland  and Yugoslavia  secured him a place in the squad for the 1966 FIFA World Cup .[54]  However, he put in mediocre performances in warm-up games against Finland  and Denmark , and so Jimmy Greaves  and Roger Hunt  were instead picked for the final friendly game against Poland .[55]  Greaves and Hunt were indeed picked for the three group games against Uruguay , Mexico  and France, but in the latter game, Greaves suffered a deep gash to his leg which required stitches, and Hurst was called up to take his place in the quarter-final against Argentina .[55]

Argentina were talented but preferred a tougher approach to the game, which saw them reduced to ten men.[56]  The game was still tightly contested as it entered its final 15 minutes, but then Martin Peters  swung over a curling cross from the left flank and Hurst, anticipating his clubmate's action, got in front of his marker to glance a near post header past the Argentine keeper.[57]  England won 1–0 and were in the semi-finals.[58]

Greaves was not fit for the game against Portugal  so Hurst and Hunt continued up front, and England won 2–1 thanks to two goals by Bobby Charlton , the second of which was set up by Hurst.[59]  As the final against the Germans approached, the media learnt of Greaves' return to fitness and, while appreciating Hurst's contribution, started to call for the return of England's most prolific centre forward . Ramsey, however, would not be swayed and selected Hurst for the final .[60]

World Cup Final [ edit ]

West Germany took the lead through Helmut Haller  early on, but six minutes later Bobby Moore  was fouled just inside the German half of the field. He quickly picked himself up and delivered the free kick to Hurst, who eluded his marker Horst-Dieter Höttges  and headed the ball past goalkeeper Hans Tilkowski  to level the scores at 1–1.[61]

With 12 minutes left to play of normal time, an Alan Ball  corner left Hurst with a shooting opportunity on the edge of the penalty area; his shot deflected off Wolfgang Weber  and fell kindly to Martin Peters , who put the ball into the net to give England the lead.[62]  However the Germans scored a very late goal through Weber to level the match at 2–2 at full-time.[63]

In the first period of extra-time, Ball crossed from the right to Hurst, who struck a strong shot towards goal with his right foot, falling backwards as he did so.[64]  The ball beat the goalkeeper, hit the crossbar and bounced down before Weber headed it out for a corner. England's players claimed a goal while the Germans were adamant that the ball had not fully crossed the line.[64]  Referee Gottfried Dienst  consulted his linesman on the right flank, Tofiq Bahramov , who signalled that the ball had crossed the line, and the goal was given.[64]  The so-called Wembley Goal  remained a subject for controversy and discussions.

The Germans pushed forward in search of an equaliser as the full-time whistle approached, and Bobby Moore  exploited their advanced position to send Hurst a long ball in the German half of the pitch.[65]  Hurst reached the German penalty box and scored to end the game at 4–2 to England.[66]  As Hurst collected the pass, BBC  commentator Kenneth Wolstenholme  delivered with one of the most famous pieces of football commentary:

And here comes Hurst, he's got ... [notices invaders] ... some people are on the pitch, they think it's all over ! [Hurst shoots and scores] ... It is now! It's four![67]

Hurst thus became the first player to score a hat-trick in the Men's World Cup final, a feat that remained unmatched until 2022 , when Kylian Mbappé  scored a hat-trick for France  against Argentina . Geoff Hurst, however, remains the only man to score a hattrick in a World Cup Final and end up on the winning team. This accomplishment was matched by Carli Lloyd  in the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup final  for the USA  against Japan ; unlike Hurst or Mbappé, her hat-trick was completed in regular time.

Later international career [ edit ]

Hurst was selected for UEFA Euro 1968 , but did not play as England lost 1–0 to Yugoslavia  in the semi-final. He did play, and score, in the 2–0 third-place play-off victory over the Soviet Union  at the Stadio Olimpico .[68]

Hurst scored his second international hat-trick on 12 March 1969, in a 5–0 victory over France , and was named in the Ramsey squad which played in Mexico  to defend the World Cup in 1970 .[69]  He scored the only goal of England's opening game against Romania  after being sent through by a pass from Francis Lee .[70]  England progressed to the quarter-finals, where once again they faced West Germany. Hurst played a part in the Martin Peters  goal that put England 2–0 up. With England up 2–1, Hurst's contested header trickled inches past the post. Later, at 2–2, Hurst had what many thought was a legitimate goal ruled out for offside.[71]  The West Germans scored in extra time and won 3–2.[72]

Hurst scored against Greece  and Switzerland  in qualification for UEFA Euro 1972 , but played his last international match on 29 April 1972 as England were beaten 3–1 by West Germany – he was replaced by Rodney Marsh  with 20 minutes left to play and did not take to the field in an England shirt again.[73]  He was named in the squad for the second leg against West Germany after Allan Clarke  and Francis Lee picked up injuries, but had to pull out of the squad after picking up an injury himself.[74]

Managerial career [ edit ]

Upon his retirement from playing, Hurst moved into management and coaching. He spent three years as player-manager of Telford United  in the Southern League  before being recruited by Ron Greenwood  in the England  coaching set up in 1977.[75]  He travelled with England to help Greenwood at UEFA Euro 1980  and the 1982 FIFA World Cup , where England failed to make it past the group stages on both occasions.[76] [77]

Chelsea [ edit ]

Hurst joined Chelsea , then in the Second Division , before the 1979–80  season, initially as assistant manager to Danny Blanchflower .[78]  When Blanchflower was sacked, Hurst was appointed manager.[79]  He hired Bobby Gould  as his assistant.[80]  Things initially went well, and for much of the season Chelsea were on course for promotion, but two wins from their final seven league games ensured the club finished fourth; missing out on third place and promotion on goal difference. He raised £250,000 through the sales of Eamonn Bannon , David Stride  and Trevor Aylott .[81]  He then spent £300,000 on Colin Lee , Dennis Rofe  and Colin Viljoen ; he later acknowledged Viljoen as a mistake whilst bemoaning Lee's bad luck with injury.[82]

The following season again began well, with the "Blues" among the early promotion pace-setters before a dismal run set in, with Chelsea winning just three of their final 23 league matches, culminating in Hurst being sacked and Chelsea finished 12th in the league.[83]

Kuwait SC [ edit ]

After being sacked from Chelsea on 23 April 1981, Hurst worked as an insurance salesman for Abbey Life .[84]  The next year he was tempted back into management after being offered a generous salary by Kuwait SC .[85]  He controversially disciplined and dropped club captain Saad Al-Houti , but was unable to challenge Dave Mackay 's Al-Arabi  for dominance of the Kuwaiti Premier League .[86]  After leaving Kuwait in April 1984 he returned to the insurance trade.[87]

Legacy [ edit ] World Cup Sculpture  – Hurst second from left A model shirt bearing Hurst's name at the London Stadium

In 2003 Hurst was included in The Champions , a statue of 1966 World Cup winning footballers, by sculptor Philip Jackson . It sits at the junctions of Barking Road  and Central Park Road, Newham , London, near to the site of West Ham United's former home stadium, the Boleyn Ground  and features Martin Peters , Hurst, Bobby Moore  and Ray Wilson .[88]

Hurst's contribution to the English game was recognised in 2004 when he was inducted in the English Football Hall of Fame . Hurst is also one of the few footballers who have been knighted.[89] [90]

A statue of Hurst was unveiled outside Curzon Ashton F.C. 's ground in 2010. He is shown alongside two other World Cup winners born in the area, fellow 1966 squad member Jimmy Armfield , and Simone Perrotta , who won it with Italy in 2006.[91]

In 2021, West Ham unveiled a statue outside their home ground, the London Stadium  depicting Hurst with Bobby Moore and Martin Peters in tribute to the three and West Ham’s 1965 European Cup Winners’ Cup final  victory.[92]

Following the death of Sir Bobby Charlton  in October 2023, Hurst was left as the last surviving English player who played in the 1966 World Cup Final.[93]

Personal life [ edit ]

As of 2021, Hurst lived in Cheltenham , Gloucestershire,[94]  with his wife Judith. They have been married since 13 October 1964, having met three years previously at a youth centre; Eddie Presland  was best man.[95]  They had three daughters but the eldest Claire died in 2010 after a ten-year long battle against a brain tumour .[96] [97] [98] [99]  Hurst had one brother, Robert, who died by suicide in 1974.[100]

In November 2020, Hurst offered to donate his brain after his death for research into dementia . This followed the deaths of several of his 1966 World Cup winning colleagues, Jack Charlton , Martin Peters , Ray Wilson , Nobby Stiles  after suffering with the disease (also Bobby Charlton  who died later).[101] [102]

While playing for Stoke City F.C.  he owned the Royal Oak Inn, Eccleshall .[103]

Career statistics [ edit ]

Club [ edit ] Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[104]
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
West Ham United 1959–60 First Division 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 0
1960–61 First Division 6 0 0 0 0 0 6 0
1961–62 First Division 24 1 1 0 2 0 27 1
1962–63 First Division 27 13 0 0 2 2 29 15
1963–64 First Division 37 14 7 7 6 5 50 25
1964–65 First Division 42 17 1 2 1 0 10[a] 1 54 20
1965–66 First Division 39 23 4 4 10 11 6[b] 2 59 40
1966–67 First Division 41 29 2 3 6 9 49 35
1967–68 First Division 38 19 3 1 3 5 44 25
1968–69 First Division 42 25 3 2 3 4 48 31
1969–70 First Division 39 16 1 0 2 2 42 18
1970–71 First Division 39 15 0 0 2 0 41 15
1971–72 First Division 34 8 4 4 10 4 48 16
Total41118026234742163500242
Stoke City 1971–72 First Division 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
1972–73 First Division 38 10 0 0 3 2 2[c] 1 43 13
1973–74 First Division 35 12 1 0 4 1 5[d] 2 45 15
1974–75 First Division 35 8 1 0 4 3 1[c] 0 38 8
Total10830301168313039
Cape Town City  (loan) 1972–73 NFL 6 5 0 0 0 0 6 5
West Bromwich Albion 1975–76 Second Division 10 2 0 0 2 0 12 2
Cork Celtic 1975–76 League of Ireland 3 3 0 0 3 3
Seattle Sounders 1976 NASL 23 8 23 8
Career total56122829236048246674299
  1. ^  Nine appearances and goal in European Cup Winner's Cup  and one appearance in Charity Shield
  2. ^  Appearances in European Cup Winner's Cup
  3. ^ Jump up to: a  b  Appearances in UEFA Cup
  4. ^  Two appearances in the Texaco Cup  and three appearances and two goals in Watney Cup

International [ edit ] Appearances and goals by national team and year[105]
National teamYearAppsGoals
England 1966 11 7
1967 6 2
1968 6 2
1969 8 7
1970 11 3
1971 6 3
1972 1 0
Total4924
Scores and results list England's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Hurst goal. List of international goals scored by Geoff Hurst[106] [107] [108]
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1 2 April 1966 Hampden Park , Glasgow , Scotland   Scotland 1–0 4–3 1965–66 British Home Championship
2 23 July 1966 Wembley Stadium , London, England   Argentina 1–0 1–0 1966 FIFA World Cup
3 30 July 1966 Wembley Stadium, London, England   West Germany 1–1 4–2  (a.e.t ) 1966 FIFA World Cup Final
4 3–2
5 4–2
6 16 November 1966 Wembley Stadium, London, England   Wales 1–0 5–1 1966–67 British Home Championship
7 2–0
8 15 April 1967 Wembley Stadium, London, England   Scotland 2–3 2–3 1966–67 British Home Championship
9 22 November 1967 Wembley Stadium, London, England   Northern Ireland 1–0 2–0 1967–68 British Home Championship
10 8 June 1968 Stadio Olimpico , Rome , Italy   Soviet Union 2–0 2–0 UEFA Euro 1968
11 11 December 1968 Wembley Stadium, London, England   Bulgaria 1–1 1–1 Friendly
12 12 March 1969 Wembley Stadium, London, England   France 2–0 5–0 Friendly
13 3–0
14 5–0
15 3 May 1969 Windsor Park , Belfast , Northern Ireland   Northern Ireland 3–1 3–1 1968–69 British Home Championship
16 10 May 1969 Wembley Stadium, London, England   Scotland 2–0 4–1 1968–69 British Home Championship
17 3–1
18 8 June 1969 Estadio Centenario , Montevideo , Uruguay   Uruguay 2–1 2–1 Friendly
19 25 February 1970 Constant Vanden Stock Stadium , Brussels , Belgium   Belgium 2–0 3–1 Friendly
20 21 April 1970 Wembley Stadium, London, England   Northern Ireland 2–1 3–1 1969–70 British Home Championship
21 2 June 1970 Estadio Jalisco , Guadalajara , Mexico   Romania 1–0 1–0 1970 FIFA World Cup
22 21 April 1971 Wembley Stadium, London, England   Greece 2–0 3–0 UEFA Euro 1972 qualification
23 13 October 1971 St. Jakob-Park , Basel , Switzerland    Switzerland 1–0 3–2 UEFA Euro 1972 qualification
24 1 December 1971 Karaiskakis Stadium , Athens , Greece   Greece 1–0 2–0 UEFA Euro 1972 qualification

Managerial statistics [ edit ] Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
PWDLWin %
Chelsea [109] 13 September 1979 23 April 1981 84 35 20 29 41.7
Total84 35 20 29 41.7

Honours [ edit ]

West Ham

  • FA Cup : 1963–64 [110]
  • FA Charity Shield : 1964  (shared)[111]
  • European Cup Winners' Cup : 1964–65 [112]
  • Football League Cup  runner-up: 1965–66

England

  • FIFA World Cup : 1966
  • UEFA European Championship  Bronze medal: 1968

Individual

  • West Ham United Hammer of the Year : 1965–66 , 1966–67 , 1968–69
  • World Soccer  World XI: 1967, 1968, 1969[113]
  • UEFA Euro Team of the Tournament : 1968 [114]
  • Football League 100 Legends : 1998
  • FWA Tribute Award : 1998
  • English Football Hall of Fame : 2004

Orders

  • Member of the Order of the British Empire : 1979 [115]
  • Knight Bachelor : 1998 [116]
  • Sub-Type: Football
  • Options: Retired Players
  • Sport: Football
  • Type: Sport
  • Surname Initial: H
  • Signed: Yes
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Object: Signed Ball
  • Certification: Certified: Private Signings

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