Full name Sir Bobby Charlton CBE
Date of birth 11/10/1937
Introduction
Bobby Charlton was perhaps the most famous
Englishman of his age. He survived the Munich Air Disaster of 1958 to
become the most recognizable face of legendary Manchester United and
England squads, including the England team that won the World Cup in
1966. Now knighted, Sir Bobby Charlton remains known today as a
technically superb player and a true gentleman.
Biography
Robert
Charlton was born in Ashington, Northumberland in 1937. His four uncles
Stan, Jack, George and Jimmy, his mother’s cousin, Jackie Milburn, and
his brother Jack were all professional football players, so it was
little surprise that Bobby became a footballer himself. He was scouted
and played for England schoolboys and Manchester United’s youth team at
the age of 15, and played his first match for the senior team in 1956,
after spells training as an engineer and doing National Service in
nearby Shrewsbury.
Charlton joined a rolling squad known as
the Busby Babes, on account of their being an unusually youthful and
prodigiously talented squad under legendary manager Matt Busby. However,
in 1958, after two seasons securing his position in the team,
Charlton’s life was to be dramatically affected by the events succeeding
a European Cup match against Red Star Belgrade. On February 6, the team
was due to fly back from Munich in order to reach England in time to
fulfill their league games. The weather was horrendous and the plane had
difficulty taking off, but after a number of checks were carried out,
the team got back on board. The plane had barely taken off when the wing
and tail caught fire after hitting some obstacles on the ascent, and it
crash-landed. 23 of the 44 footballers, journalists and crew members on
board were killed, including Tommy Taylor and David Pegg, with whom
Charlton and his team mate Dennis Viollet had swapped seats.
Charlton
suffered cuts to his head and severe shock. He was the first to leave
hospital and became, at the age of 20, something of a veteran of
United’s decimated team. Unsurprisingly, United failed to do very well
that season, but Busby built up another team with new players including
George Best, with Charlton a stalwart. The psychological repercussions
were harder to gauge and repair, and the crash remains one of the
defining events of Charlton’s life according to the man himself.
However,
his career continued to flourish and Bobby would eventually join his
brother Jack in England's squad for the 1966 World Cup, reaching and
competing in the final against West Germany. Although neither Charlton
scored, England won 4-2 in the tense, uneven match, and Bobby had taken
part in English football’s greatest triumph to date.
The
culmination of his club career came in 1968, when Charlton and United
went on to win the European Cup that had destroyed the Busby Babes. In
1969 he was awarded the OBE and in 1970, after earning his 100th cap for
England, he was selected for the World Cup squad, where he played his
last game for the national side. Sadly, Charlton’s later years at club
level were marred by long-running feuds with his United teammates.
Finally, he retired in 1973.
Charlton met his wife Norma at a
dry cleaners in Manchester and they married in 1961. They have two
daughters, Suzanne and Andrea. He has avoided the controversial love
life that dogged many footballers of his generation, but tabloids
speculated instead on cracks in his relationship with his brother Jack.
Bobby has admitted that their relationship is strained, citing the
conflict between his loyalties to his wife and his mother as key.
Retirement
Like
many footballers, Charlton has become something of a polymath in his
retirement. Initially taking semi-retirement as a player-manager at
Preston, he went on to manage Wigan Athletic. However, today’s football
fans recognize him largely as a sometime BBC pundit and as a member of
Manchester United’s board of directors. He has also made money from
advertising, from international footballing schools and DVDs and other
enterprises.
Bobby Charlton was awarded the CBE in 1973 and
was knighted in 1994. He continues to be an active member of the
footballing community on a number of boards, helping promote sport at
home and abroad, and as a commentator figure in the media.
Statistics
- England Caps:106
- Goals Scored for England: 49
- Appearances for Manchester United: 754 (239 goals)
- Appearances for Preston North End: 38 (12 goals)
Clubs
- Manchester United (Youth) - 1953 - 1954
- Manchester United - 1954 - 1973
- Preston North End - 1973 - 1974
- Waterford United - 1975
- England - 1958 - 1970
As a manager
- Preston North End - 1973-74 (player manager)
- Wigan Athletic - 1976
They said
‘His story is the best in English football’ - John Giles, former team-mate
‘The
greatest thing for a manager is to trust the talent. Bobby Charlton
never betrayed that trust. It was a privilege to have him play for you.’
- Sir Matt Busby, former manager
‘Bobby Charlton’s career was miraculous’ - Sir Alex Ferguson
He said
‘Some people tell me that we professional players are soccer slaves. Well, if this is slavery, give me a life sentence.’
‘It
would be possible to list a thousand good things that have happened to
me before I deal with the moment I regained consciousness and faced that
scene at the airfield. But I know I couldn't begin to define my life
before going back there.’
‘Now, when I look back on my life
and remember all that I wanted from it as a young boy in the North East,
I see more clearly than ever it is a miracle. I see one privilege
heaped upon another. I wonder all over again how so much could come to
one man simply because he was able to do something which for him was so
natural and easy, and which he knew from the start he loved to do more
than anything else.’
Years | Club | Appearances | Goals |
---|---|---|---|
1954-1973 | Manchester United | 606 | 199 |
1973-1974 | Preston North End | 38 | 8 |
1975 | Waterford United | 31 | 18 |
Years | Club | Appearances | Goals |
---|---|---|---|
1958-1970 | England | 106 | 49 |
Individual Awards and Honours
- 1966 European Player of the Year
- 1966 Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year
- 1974 Professional Footballers' Association Merit Award
- 1974 Awarded CBE
- 1984 Appointed director, Manchester United
- 1994 Awarded knighthood
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