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       JACK&BOBBY

      Leo McKinstry

      

      

      

       To James Perry,

       whose devotion to Torquay United should have

       resulted in a long spell in Broadmoor

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       CHAPTER EIGHT: The Winger

       CHAPTER NINE: The Husbands

       CHAPTER TEN: The Internationals

       CHAPTER ELEVEN: The Winners

       CHAPTER TWELVE: The Players

       CHAPTER THIRTEEN: The Rivals

       CHAPTER FOURTEEN: The Losers

       CHAPTER FIFTEEN: The Outcast

       CHAPTER SIXTEEN: The Seniors

       CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: The Managers

       CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: The Eccentric

       CHAPTER NINETEEN: The Failure

       CHAPTER TWENTY: The Director

       CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: The Irishman

       CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO: The Saint

       CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE: The Sons

       CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR: The Millionaires

       Epilogue

       Career Appendix

       Bibliography

       Acknowledgements

       Index

       About the Author

       Praise

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

      The images of that Saturday afternoon in July 1966 have become forever ingrained on our national consciousness: Jack Charlton falling to his knees at the final whistle, his face buried in his hands as if in grateful, exhausted prayer; his brother Bobby crying freely as he climbs up to the Royal Box to collect his World Cup winner’s medal. It was a display of emotion that perfectly captured the mood of triumph and relief that swept across the country.

      ‘Nobody can ever take this moment away from us,’ said Bobby to his brother as they hugged each other at the end of the match. He was absolutely correct. Whatever else they have achieved in life, the two Charlton brothers will always be best remembered for their part in England’s glory of 1966. Indeed, their contrasting roles on the field symbolized the virtues of England’s performance during that unique campaign: Jack, the rock of the defence, ungainly but uncompromising, lacking sophistication but never valour, as tough and honest as the mining stock into which he was born; Bobby, the fulcrum of the attack, gliding across the turf like a thoroughbred, destroying opponents with his explosive goals, long-range passes and incisive runs. Never, it seemed, were there two more patriotic footballers, willing, in Churchill’s phrase, to give ‘blood, toil, tears and sweat’ in the national cause.

      The bond between the brothers, forged at birth and reinforced by their mutual choice of a career in football, must have seemed unbreakable that day at Wembley. Any belief that they were close to each other can only have been strengthened by a host of other striking parallels about their lives. Both played the game obsessively in their youth and turned out for the same local YMCA side. Both joined major city clubs, Leeds and Manchester United, at exactly the same age, 15, and each won a cabinet-full of domestic honours. In 1965, they became the first brothers this century to play together for England. The links continued after the triumph of 1966. Both retired from First Division football in the same year, after careers of outstanding loyalty – each holds the League appearance record for their club, Jack with 629 for Leeds, Bobby with 606 for Manchester United. Both started in League management in the same 1973/74 season in the Second Division. Later, they both became major figures on the international stage, Jack as a brilliantly successful manager of the Republic of Ireland, Bobby as a roving ambassador for top-class sports bids, such as the campaign to bring the 2006 World Cup to England.

      Brought up in a close-knit working-class mining community where the values of respectability were paramount, both have led lives of restraint and dignity. Given their celebrity status

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