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This article appeared in The Times Saturday newspaper in 2001 (sorry lost the actual date) ...


IT WAS. in the view of Sunday Telegraph TV critic, Sean Day-Lewis, one of the highlights of the weekend's viewing. Harry Catterick, the Everton manager, was less generous. "Like something out of a circus," he grumbled. The verdict that mattered, however, was that of the schoolboys of Britain, and they were in no doubt. By Monday lunchtime, every playground in the land was full of excited youngsters trying to emulate the Saturday night sorcery of Willie Carr and Ernie Hunt.
Any resume of the highlights of football in the 1970s has to include a rerun of the classic free-kick goal conjured up by the Coventry City pair against Everton at Highfield Road on October 3, 1970. It is as much a part of the decade as loon pants and ud Zep.

October 3, 1970

.............................................

There were ten minutes to go and the Sky Blues, who were leading the champions 2-1, were awarded a free kick in a central position on the edge of the penalty area. While the four-man defensive wall fidgeted nervously, Carr stood over the ball, pincered it between his heels, and flicked it up. As it fell Hunt, lurking behind him, executed a perfect right-foot dipping volley over the wall and into the top corner of Andy Rankin's goal.

The Everton defence stood open-mouthed; the crowd gasped, then went wild.

momentarily unsure whether the stunt contravened the laws,Tommy Dawes, the referee,
decided it did not and pointed to the centre spot. The Match of the Day cameras captured it all - and ensured its place in folklore - and the outrageous moment was voted goal of the month and goal of the season.

With his swarthy looks and droopy moustache, Hunt looked like a refugee from Zapata's Army, but for almost five seasons the West Country man with the bandy legs entertained the Coventry fans with his skills and personality, always seeing the funny side of the game. His memory of the moment that guaranteed him recognition to a whole generation of fans is vivid.

"At half-time the manager, Noel Cantwell, wanted to know why we hadn't attempted it in the first half when we got a free kick in a good position," he said. "I told him I wanted to wait until the kick was in the dead centre. When the chance came in the second half I was contemplating slipping it through Willie's legs for Dave Clements to blast it but decided to give the donkey kick a crack and gave the sign - the rest is history."

His partner, the red-headed Carr, was also a hugely popular figure at Highfield Road. A product of the club's youth system' his stock-in-trade was his non-stop running, allied to a superb passing ability. Now living in Shropshire, he says a week never passes without someone mentioning the goal.

The Everton match was not the first or last time that the manoeuvre was attempted.

Hunt's mistimed effort in a pre-season friendly away to Blackpool had almost hit the corner flag, but soon after the youth team emulated Hunt and Carr's effort and, later in the season, the Tottenham Hotspur crossbar was rattled by another Hunt effort.

There was an unhappy postscript, however. The next summer, while on holiday in Majorca, Hunt was approached by a a fan brandishing the News of the World. "Your free kick has been banned," he told him. The trick was outlawed because it was deemed that the ball had not travelled its full circumference either forwards or backwards.

Life did not get much better for Coventry fans than in the first weekend of October 1970.
Their victory over Everton, who had won their previous six games, came the day after they had been drawn against Bayern Munich in the Fairs Cup. The city was buzzing with the expectation of seeing a team that boasted Franz Beckenbauer, Gerd Muller and Sepp Maier. However , Coventry lost 6-1 in Munich and, despite winning the second leg, went out of Europe. They are still waiting for a second crack at Europe.

From Jim Brown's latest book, 'Coventry City - The Elite Erp' is published by Desert Islam Books next month (16.99 pounds) www.desertislandbooks.com

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Coventry City

Ernie Hunt

Willie Carr

Bob Dunning
8 November 2003

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