Talk 60's 70's Football at Yahoo! Clubs sixtiesandseventiessoccer  
Bob 70-71 logo Obituaries  
Bob 70-71

Home

Latest News

70-71 Teams

A-Z Players

Search the Site

FAQs

Quiz

Thirty Years Ago!

Articles

Where are they now?

Quizlet

Links

Guestbook

E-mail me

Chat

January 2002
Click to see the Obituaries Index

Jeff Astle (West Bromwich Albion)

Jeff Astle, one of the great legends of the 70-71 era has died, aged 59. Jeff was a part of the England 1970 World Cup squad that set my imagination alight as a child, placed Dunstable on the map, and gave me coutless belly laughs in his days as the singer that ended the 'Fantasy Football' show. But it as 'The King' of West Bromwich Albion that he will be best remembered.

Jeff had signed to West Brom in Setember 1964 from Notts County , where he had played 103 League games scoring 31 goals. He was a 22,500 pound bargain. His legendary status grew out of being an ever-present member of the West Brom teams that reached four domestic finals in the Sixties and early Seventies.

His was the only goal in the victory FA Cup in versus Everton in1968, and he scored in the first leg of the League Cup in 1966, which West Brom went on to win. In the two further League Cup Final appearences, West Brom lost a famous match to QPR in 1967 and Jeff was a scorer again in the 2-1 defeat to Man City in 1970. West Bromwich Albion have failed to win or reach a final of any competition since.

A few months after his second League Cup final goal and defeat, Jeff was a player in one of the most famous World Cup matches ever, though sadly his contribution is remembered for the goal he didn't get ! World Cup holders England played the Champions to be, Brazil. The score was 1-0 to Brazil and Astle was so unlucky not to get an equaliser with only 10 minutes or so to go. He crucially missed an open goal. He played the next game versus Czechoslovakia, too, but this was the last of his England five caps.

In the 70-71 season itself, Jeff played in all but one league match, but his 13 League goals was second placed to the 28 scored by the rising star, Tony Brown. His career was coming to a premature end. At West Brom he played 292 League games getting 137 goals - in all competitions he played 361 games with 174 goals for the club. He joined Barry Fry at Dunstable, long before he needed to bow out of League football, but he never returned to the top flight.

Jeff went on to become a window cleaner, but he was to return to the field of entertainment once again. The comedian and West Brom fan, Frank Skinner drafted Jeff into his regular football show with David Baddiel, called 'Fantasy Football'. Jeff would appear in the final sequence, dressed in a manner that suited a cheesy song, which he would then sing to astonished laughter and applause, whilst the closing titles scrolled up the screen.

I hate to think that this is the only way an under-thirty year old will know Jeff, but what the heck. He was a great entertainer. He was a top-class footballer, and a hero to a generation in the Milands and beyond. There is already talk of a permanent memorial at the Hawthorns, West Brom's ground, this tribute would be a fitting one for the last player to score an FA Cup winner for the club. Farewell to The 'King'.

There's more details from the following tributes:

BBC SPORT FOOTBALL  Baggies mourn The King

BBC Sport Online's Neil Hall reviews the career of former West Brom and England striker Jeff Astle, who has died aged 59.

It is one of football's sad ironies that Jeff Astle, widely regarded as a natural goalscorer, may end up being best remembered for a chance he missed.

With England trailing 1-0 against Brazil at the 1970 World Cup, Astle missed his country's best chance for an equaliser as they slipped to defeat.

But this miss was nothing if not uncharacteristic.

For his club side West Bromwich Albion, Astle will be remembered as "The King" due to his formidable goalscoring record.

Astle joined the Baggies from Notts County in 1964 for just £25,000.

He went on to score 174 goals in 361 senior appearances for the club.

The most memorable of which came in Albion's 1968 FA Cup final win over Everton.

With the game in extra-time, Astle unleashed a ferocious left foot shot from 20-yards to hand the underdogs a 1-0 victory.

The goal not only secured his status as a West Brom great, but also guaranteed him a place in FA Cup folklore as he became the first player to have scored in every round of the competition in one season.

Two years later, the striker bagged himself another milestone when he became the first player to have scored in both League and FA Cup finals.

Although this time the Baggies were defeated by Manchester City.

There was more to his game than just goalscoring though, as Astle is ranked as one of the greatest header's of a ball there has ever been.

The year 1970 was probably the pinnacle of his career, and it was a significant achievement to be in England's squad for the World Cup that year.

Although England were not able to retain their title, the squad for that tournament is considered by many pundits to be better than that which emerged victorious in 1966.

In total, Astle played five times for England without scoring a goal.

Unfortunately, after 1970 Astle's career was dogged by injury and problems with his knees meant he was forced to end his stint at the Hawthorns in 1974.

Coming from an era when a footballer's yearly income would not match the weekly wage of today's stars, Astle was forced to pursue an alternative career.

He successfully ran a window cleaning business, before coming back into the public eye in the 1990's with a tongue-in-cheek singing slot on the Fantasy Football television programme.

And just to set the record straight on that 1970 World Cup miss, it was to prove meaningless.

England went out in the quarter-finals after losing 3-2 to West Germany, while Brazil went on to win the title for a record third time.

Some tributes appear at BBC SPORT Baggies pay tribute to Astle includes ...

West Brom chief executive John Wile (Peterborough United), a former team-mate of Astle, said: "He was a fantastic player and a great guy. He will be sorely missed.
"It was a laugh a minute in the dressing room. He always made light of the situation and was always ready to join in any mickey-taking that was going around.

"The nice thing about Jeff was that he was a very humble fellow.

"After he finished playing, he didn't think football owed him a living. He got on with things and made a new life."

Wile said that Astle would go down in history as one of West Brom's greatest players.

"He was a master of his art. He was also pretty useful on the ground and had a superb strike rate.
"I have never seen anyone head the ball like it. He was magnificent.

"I don't think it is cheap to say he was a legend at West Brom.

Former England captain
Alan Mullery, who played alongside Astle at the 1970 World Cup, said: "Sir Alf Ramsey said the squad in 1970 was better than the team that won the World Cup in 1966, so it just shows you how good a player Jeff was.

"He was a legend at West Brom and they loved him."

Also see
BBC SPORT FOOTBALL  Former England star Astle dies
BBC SPORT FOOTBALL  Former England star Astle dies 2

An excellent profile by Bryn Jones, which includes a picture from the 1970-71 'World of Soccer Stars' Book is at
BOING The Unofficial West Bromwich Albion Web Site

Dave Bowler has another great tribute at
West Bromwich Albion Football Club - Profile

Brian Glenville write at
Guardian Unlimited Football News Obituary Jeff Astle
Whilst we're at it see
Guardian Unlimited Observer Sport Frank Skinner My team
David McVay writes at
The Times

See more January 2002 news at the following ...


 
Bob Dunning
3 November 2004

BobNet Logo

Click to see the latest Soccer headlines at www.bobdunning.net