The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Football’s Jack Charlton: World Cup hero with England and Ireland, 85

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Jack Charlton, who has died at the age of 85, was one of football’s great characters. Not the most naturally gifted of players, he neverthele­ss collected a World Cup winners’ medal alongside his younger and more celebrated brother Bobby as England triumphed in 1966, and was a key member of the Leeds side which threatened to take both the domestic and European game by storm during the late 1960s and early 1970s. But if Bobby enjoyed the greater share of the limelight – they fell out later in life before reconcilin­g – it was Jack who proved more suited to management. Revered in Middlesbro­ugh after guiding the club into the old first division as champions, it was on the internatio­nal stage that he rose to prominence with the Republic of Ireland. Charlton’s love affair with his adopted country and its football fans proved a marriage made in heaven as a nation which came to know him simply as “Big Jack” revelled in the success he brought, the Republic establishi­ng themselves as a force in world football and their manager as a household name all over again. Born in the Northumber­land colliery village of Ashington on May 8 1935, the eldest child of miner Bob and his wife Cissie, a cousin of north-east football royalty Jackie Milburn, he learned his football with Ashington YMCA and Ashington Welfare before joining the ground staff at Leeds in 1950. It was an associatio­n which was to prove hugely successful as he went on to make a record 629 league appearance­s for the Elland Road club before eventually hanging up his boots just weeks before his 38th birthday. During more than two decades at Leeds, punctuated by a spell on national service with the Horse Guards, he won the First and Second Division titles, the FA Cup, the League Cup and the Inter Cities Fairs Cup twice and was named the Football Writers’ Associatio­n Footballer of the Year in 1967. However, it was with England, for whom he earned 35 full caps, that he wrote himself into the history books. He was approachin­g 30 when he made his full debut in a 2-2 Home Championsh­ip draw with Scotland in April 1965 and, a little more than a year later, played his part in what remains perhaps the most famous day in the nation’s sporting history. One of the abiding images of the 4-2 World Cup final victory over West Germany on July 30 1966 is that of the defender sinking to his knees at the final whistle before embracing his brother. Following his retirement as a player, he was appointed manager at Division Two club Middlesbro­ugh in May 1973 and won promotion at the first attempt before ending his four-year spell on Teesside and then taking up the reins at Sheffield Wednesday. He spent almost six seasons at Hillsborou­gh and later had brief spells back at Boro and with Newcastle before Ireland came calling in February 1986. Awarded the OBE in 1974, he was made a freeman of the city of Dublin 20 years later. He is survived by wife Pat, whom he married in 1958, and their three children, John, Deborah and Peter.

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck. ?? Jack Charlton at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin, Ireland, in June 2015.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck. Jack Charlton at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin, Ireland, in June 2015.

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