Derby Telegraph

Is this the Rams’ cup-winning ball

- By MATT GALLONE

A FOOTBALL which may have been used in the 1946 FA Cup final won by Derby County is come up for auction – after languishin­g in a wardrobe for more than 70 years.

The circa 1940s Webber, London, Premier football, was won in a raffle after the 1946 FA Cup final, which saw the Rams lift the winners’ trophy at Wembley.

Originally signed by the Derby County team, the signatures have worn off as the ball has been played with.

However, one autograph just visible n near the lace of the ball has been identif tified as ‘L Leuty’.

Leon Leuty played in central defence for the Rams in that final.

The ball, which is due to be sold by Hansons Auctioneer­s on December 7 with a guide price of £500-£800, belongs to Dave and Noreen Tristram, from Littleover.

Noreen, 54, who is semi-retired after 40 years in the pub trade, said: “The ball belonged to my father-in-law Brian Tristram, whose family ran a coal merchants in Corporatio­n Street, Derby.

“It was inherited by my husband, Dave. It’s been in our wardrobe for donkey’s years and was in Brian’s wardrobe until he died.

“Brian always said the ball was used in Derby County’s 1946 FA Cup final win. Apparently, the first ball burst 10 minutes into the match and we were told this was the replacemen­t.

“The story goes that Brian played truant to get tickets for the FA Cup final match – and got into trouble at school.

“A photograph­er – I guess from the Derby Telegraph – took a picture of the queue and Brian was on it. When it went into the paper his headmaster at Dale School in Normanton saw it and he got caned.

“One of the cup final tickets was for h his brother, Arthur, who went on to win th the football in a raffle after Derby won th the trophy in 1946. He gave the ball to B Brian to soothe the pain of being caned, an and for getting the tickets.

“The ball was kept safe but, one day, a young relative found it, took it out and played with it in the streets.

“That’s why some of the signatures have rubbed off.

“Perhaps Derby County will be interested in buying it for their display cabinet because they haven’t got too many

AUTOGRAPHS ARE BARELY VISIBLE AFTER IT HAD BEEN PLAYED WITH BUT IT COULD FETCH £800 AT AUCTION

trophies to put in it. And I’m saying that as a big Rams fan!”

Charles Hanson, owner of Hanson Auctioneer­s and a huge Derby County fan, said: “Could this be the missing 1946 FA Cup final ball?

“As a Rams romantic, I’d love to think so, especially as Derby are a little in the doldrums just now. Their 1946 FA Cup win was one of the club’s proudest moments. It would be wonderful to think we’d uncovered a very special piece of history from that game.”

The 1946 FA Cup final was the 65th in the competitio­n’s history and the first after the Second World War. It took place on April 27, 1946, at Wembley

where a crowd of 98,000 watched Derby County beat Charlton Athletic 4-1 after extra time.

Charlton’s Bert Turner scored an own goal and then bagged one for his own team, thereby becoming the first player to score for both sides in an FA Cup final. Goals from Peter Doherty and two from Jackie Stamps in extratime gave Derby their first and, so far, only FA Cup triumph.

The leather football, lot 254, is due to be sold on December 7 in Hansons’ two-day Fine Art Auction.

View the catalogue at www.hansonsive.co.uk. To find out more, email charles@hansonsauc­tioneers.co.uk

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 ??  ?? Reg Harrison, who was in that glorious Rams side... with what may have been the ball now going up for auction
Reg Harrison, who was in that glorious Rams side... with what may have been the ball now going up for auction
 ??  ?? The Rams with the FA Cup and, main picture, the ball that is being auctioned
The Rams with the FA Cup and, main picture, the ball that is being auctioned
 ?? VI ?? JackNichol­as collects the trophy fromKing George
VI JackNichol­as collects the trophy fromKing George

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