It was 59 years ago today.
It happened 59 years ago today but it almost feels as though it happened yesterday which is clearly not the case but it is a date now firmly buried in the past, drifting hauntingly into the mists of time. There is a sense here that, for one day only, time literally stood still, that the entire population of England had joined together in one mass celebration of one event that has yet to be emulated at any time since. Maybe we will get it right one day and quite, cynically, pigs will fly and the Loch Ness monster will be spotted at some completely unexpected moment.
Sadly, the truth is we are still here, patiently waiting, overcome with disillusionment at the Beautiful Game, beating ourselves up over something that had nothing to do with us and yet consumed with frustration and humiliation. Football has always played havoc with our innermost emotions, toyed with our delicate sensitivities, taken us on the most difficult and uncomfortable journey into nowhere. But, 59 years ago England achieved its most definitive of all achievements. The England men's football team won the World Cup in dear old Blighty. Yes, 1966 was the year and, of course, you were there to witness it.
Some of us though were probably running around our loving parents garden or jumping into rain puddles or just making the most formative of all discoveries as a two year old child. The fact is we were totally unaware of the magnitude of the day, its iconic importance, its cultural meaning, its mind blowing profundity, its powerful resonance, the sense that something epic had taken place without any knowledge about its far reaching repercussions.
Of course we are now only a year away from the 60th anniversary of England's only ever World Cup victory and that's really painful and deeply embarrassing. It probably wasn't intentional and maybe we had no control over the speed of events that just raced past our childish sensibilities and got lost in the translation. Maybe, bizarrely, we had no idea what was going on at the time. But for those who have now been suitably enlightened since that wonderful day in July 1966, this is a time for rose tinted nostalgia and reminiscence.
There are times during our lives when we look back with fondness at the days when things worked out for us like a dream, ambitions were fulfilled and we would never forget where we were when they happened. And so it was Sir Alf Ramsey, that most repressed and phlegmatic of all football mangers who suddenly realised what all the fuss and commotion was about. For it was the late England manager who just sat there on a Wembley bench after the final whistle had gone for the end of the 1966 World Cup Final and just stared morosely into the middle distance, stunned and dumbfounded.
While Harold Shepherdson, England's likeable and personable trainer, simply exploded off the bench like a Guy Fawkes firework, Ramsey just sat there as if somebody had just told him that he'd been sacked as England manager. The truth is that, while towels were being flown into the air and players were sinking to their knees in both fatigue and disbelief, Ramsey was slowly wrestling with a reaction that should have been so easy to express at the time.
Perhaps Ramsey could never rationalise with how the day unfolded since everybody else was convinced that England would win the World Cup because we were fated to win it. So England had won the World Cup and, in isolation, it was the most exhilarating day in England's well documented sporting history. Besides, we had won the rugby union World Cup at the beginning of the 21st century so why was a football World Cup so beyond us. We'd won the cricket Ashes, the men had hitherto never won the men's singles title at Wimbledon but that could be rectified.
So where were you on that spectacular day on the penultimate day of July 59 years ago. Were you discussing the possibility that one day the Beatles would record that celebrated and most innovative of all albums Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. We were probably wondering if anything could get any better after Hey Jude, Yesterday, Sergeant Pepper's, Please, Please Me, I am the Walrus, Love Love Me Do, Get Back, Back in the USSR, Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds and a whole art gallery of the great and good in popular music at the time.
Maybe you were simply washing the car or dusting down your World Cup rosettes or banners, flags of patriotism and finding out much more about your identity and your place in the greater scheme of things. You might have just allowed the whole day to just go over your head, ignore the occasion because you couldn't stand football. But that day we established a relationship with the global game of football that none of us could really understand.
There was Bobby Moore, the emperor surveying his defensive empire and gloriously inspiring to the rest of his colleagues. There was Jack Charlton, tall and imposing as a lighthouse at sea and just as visible. Bobby Charlton, Jack's brother, was just magnificent, here, there and everywhere, ubiquitous, battling for the ball, gliding across that vital central midfield area like the most graceful of ice skaters. There was Martin Peters, ghosting into positions like a man who we thought we'd seen and then just turned up like the most welcome of visitors at our party.
Meanwhile, Nobby Stiles was at the back of the English defence, scampering, scurrying, gallivanting, gritting his teeth and tackling as if his life depended on it. Stiles was tough, tenacious, combative, abrasive, no nonsense, energetic and just concentrating on the task at hand. Stiles epitomised Englishness, whole hearted, committed, driven, no holds barred, in your face and ready to spill blood for the cause. Stiles jigged around the Wembley pitch when victory was England's to have and hold and then skipped around the national stadium as if somebody had guaranteed him a place at a university.
Then there was Roger Hunt, an infuriating pest of a striker who kept running and dragging his persistent German markers all over the divots and green acres of Wembley's slowly deteriorating pitch. Hunt was the man who was convinced that Geoff Hurst- now Sir Geoff Hurst's sharp turn from Alan Ball's nicely floated ball into Hurst's path did result in a legitimate goal.
As we all know now, Hurst's shot rapped the bar and came down over the goal line. Or did it? The so called corridor of uncertainty rendered most of us confused and completely baffled. Hunt threw his arms into the air to acknowledge England's third goal but then, after a frantic session of West German arm waving, our friendly referee pointed to the centre circle. It was, officially, England's third goal but only after much remonstrating and objecting from West Germany.
And then there were those last minutes of the the 1966 World Cup Final, almost a sub plot in itself. As the last minutes ticked down inexorably, two England players seemed to be pleading for the game to finish. When Bobby Moore calmly almost nonchalantly trapped the ball on his chest in his own penalty area, Jack Charlton, launched a cannonade of salty but good natured obscenities and ferocious invective. Charlton was not best pleased with Moore's deliberate attempt to slow down the game.
Moore promptly lofted a juicy peach of a ball over a now static West German defence straight into the path of his West Ham team mate Hurst. Hurst, shepherding the ball towards his feet, began to run like the clappers, puffing out his now drained cheeks and hurtling towards goal. With only the goalkeeper Hans Tilkowski to beat, Hurst pulled back the trigger and fired the fiercest of shots that could have ended up at Wembley Park Tube station.
But, joyfully, the ball bulged the back of the net and England were football World Champions for the only time in their history. And yet if Alan Ball had had his way, Moore's perfectly threaded pass would have been directed at Ball, whose desperate cries for the ball were rapidly ignored. Hurst wanted his hat-trick and nothing would get in his way. The hat-trick was in his possession and nobody would begrudge Hurst of his crowning moment of glory.
Finally, England were declared World Cup winners of 1966 and the after match joshing and hilarious stories would proliferate by the many. Jack Charlton sunk to his knees as if barely believing the evidence of his own eyes and then ventured onto the Central Line Tube station. Worse for drink by now, Charlton would confidently head for a random house in Leytonstone, East London and kindly ask the family whether he could spend the night sleeping on their settee. Oh to have been a fly on the wall.
Then the players, wives and girlfriends would gather at the Royal Kensington Gardens Hotel for a joyous dinner and dance celebration. Now a dilemma made its presence felt. All the wives and girlfriends were immediately separated from each other albeit temporarily. It must have felt like the ultimate insult to the delighted girls but then it was a different era and this was just the accepted norm.
The following day, everybody came down for a bleary eyed breakfast and both Bobby Moore and Geoff Hurst were photographed reading the Sunday papers. Nobby Stiles, by now back out on the road home to Manchester United, decided to stop off at a motorway service station for a hearty plate of egg and chips. You could hardly have blamed the rest of the England players for just a brief period of intoxication because downing a brewery of beer was the least the players deserved.
Meanwhile in the Geoff Hurst garden all was normal service. That Sunday morning, the West Ham and now victorious World Cup winning England striker, just took everything in his stride and proceeded to mow his lawn with his trusty lawnmower before whitewashing the family fence. It was as if nothing had taken place the day before and the old First Division season had started a couple of weeks before it was due to begin. But you couldn't tell that to Moore, Hurst and Peters.
And now 59 years later, the painstaking wait continues. On Sunday, England's women won their second consecutive Euros tournament with a teeth clenching victory after a nerve jangling penalty shoot out. The men, of course, must have reflected very deeply on their obligations and responsibilities. Next year, they will be expected to bring home their trophy. It'll be World Cup year in the USA, Mexico and Canada and the boys have been ordered to win what would be their second World Cup. So be ready and waiting. If you could only just eliminate those terrifying nerves and conquer stage fright on the big occasion, then it should be plain sailing. No problem what so ever.
But we are talking about England and, for all their woes and travails during the 1970s, 80s and 90s, England still have that invitation to rock and roll on World Cup Final day. It's another day and yet another opportunity to erase the misery of disappointment after yet another helping of the same old story of defeat and setbacks. Forget the near misses of Euro 96 in England, the World Cup semi final defeats in Italia 90 and Croatia in Russia 2018. This is a clean slate and fresh start and the whole of England will be privately hoping that, 60 years after that momentous day at the end of July, jolly England can do what the girls did with such wondrous aplomb and almost without blinking their eyes. Come on England, you can do it.