Leicester Mercury

World Cup hero reveals his own dementia fears

- Www.crowdfunde­r.co.uk/fullcolour­66

WORLD Cup winner Sir Geoff Hurst admits the alarming number of former England team-mates afflicted by dementia has fuelled his own fears of suffering with the illness.

1966 heroes Ray Wilson, Martin Peters, Jack Charlton and Nobby Stiles have died with the neurologic­al disease during the past three years, while Sir Bobby Charlton has recently been diagnosed.

Sir Geoff is bidding to raise funds for the Alzheimer’s Society by leading a campaign to have the entire 1966 World Cup final - in which he scored a hat-trick - transforme­d into colour for the first time.

The 78-year-old previously has become deeply concerned by growing links between football and dementia.

“Prior to all of this happening, I’ve always felt that when you get to this sort of age life is always a bit of a

lottery,” Sir Geoff told the PA news agency.

“But more recently, when there has been a lot more focus on it and so many players in my team, it does cross your mind to an extent that it could happen. It’s not something that, up until more recently, I focused on at all. I just felt life’s a lottery and you get what comes, it could be anything.

“More research is needed, quite frankly, between the links between heading footballs and dementia.

“But I’ve also felt - without any science knowledge - that it seemed to be a high proportion of people in my immediate team, compared with the guy in the street.”

Wilson’s demise in May 2018 was followed by the deaths of Sir Geoff’s close friend Peters last December, Jack Charlton in July and Stiles in October.

The FIELD study published last year found footballer­s were threeand-a half times more likely to die of neurodegen­erative disease than members of the population of a similar age.

Sir Geoff, who remains fit and well, has said he would be willing to donate his brain to science to aid research into the issue.

He is troubled by football’s current treatment of head injuries, citing Sunday evening’s collision between Arsenal defender David Luiz and Wolves striker Raul Jimenez as an example.

“We saw David Luiz, a nasty clash, bandages his head and goes back on the field and I read he drives himself home,” Hurst said.

“It’s up to clubs within the sport industry to get together and start looking very closely at these issues.

“If a tough player wants to get back on the field after a head injury, then the medical people need to say, ‘No, you’re coming off, that’s it’.”

Former West Ham and Stoke striker Sir Geoff hopes his latest project - a crowdfundi­ng venture titled £fullcolour­66 - will aid investigat­ion into dementia by contributi­ng £35,000 to the Alzheimer’s Society.

Football fans can pay to watch a colour version of England’s 4-2 extra-time win over West Germany at Wembley, which will be released on the 55th anniversar­y of the game on July 30 next year.

In addition to generating valuable charity funds, Sir Geoff believes the project will be a fitting tribute to the players who contribute­d to the success.

“It’s one of the greatest sporting moments we’ve had in this country ever,” he said.

“It’s the world’s number one sport, it’s our country’s number one sport, it’s the only time we have achieved it and it’s disappoint­ing that the actual match is in black and white.”

 ??  ?? AWARENESS: Sir Geoff Hurst
AWARENESS: Sir Geoff Hurst

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