Sir Bobby Charlton’s best games for England: Mexico, Portugal and Germany 1966 | OneFootball

Sir Bobby Charlton’s best games for England: Mexico, Portugal and Germany 1966 | OneFootball

Icon: The Independent

The Independent

·21 October 2023

Sir Bobby Charlton’s best games for England: Mexico, Portugal and Germany 1966

Article image:Sir Bobby Charlton’s best games for England: Mexico, Portugal and Germany 1966

Sir Bobby Charlton was the star of England’s 1966 World Cup-winning side.

The Manchester United great, who has died at the age of 86, scored 49 goals in 106 appearances for his country.


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Here, we look at five of the key games in Charlton’s England career:

Scotland 0 England 4 – April 19, 1958

Just two months after surviving the Munich air disaster, the shaken 20-year-old was handed his England debut.

The former England schoolboys international capped his bow with a goal at Hampden Park in a comprehensive Home Championship triumph and felt guilty to be enjoying such moments, having emerged from the wreckage when others had not.

England 2 Mexico 0 – July 16, 1966

Charlton scored a goal as impressive as it was important to get England’s World Cup campaign up and running in 1966.

Having been held to a goalless draw by Uruguay in their Group One opener, Charlton broke the deadlock in style against Mexico.

He burst forward, jinked to the right and fired home a thumping 25-yard strike to set his side on their way to glory.

Team-mate Terry Paine said Charlton’s effort “was the best England goal I ever saw”.

England 2 Portugal 1 – July 26, 1966

The attacking midfielder put in a stunning, match-winning performance to earn England their only World Cup final appearance to date.

Up against Eusebio-inspired Portugal in the semi-finals, the midfielder opened the scoring in the 30th minute after the ball fell kindly for him and struck home an emphatic second goal as the clock wound down.

England 4 West Germany 2 – July 30, 1966

The 1966 World Cup final at Wembley earned Charlton and his team-mates their place in history.

He impressed as a playmaker against the West Germans and hit a post with the scoreline at 2-2 in extra-time.

The likes of hat-trick hero Sir Geoff Hurst grabbed the headlines, but Charlton still called the victory the “diamond of my days”.

England 3 Northern Ireland 1 – April 21, 1970

Bobby Moore gave Charlton the captain’s armband as he celebrated becoming the second player in history to reach a century of England caps.

It was a special moment made all the better by the fact he wrapped up the scoring in a 3-1 Home Championship victory at Wembley.

Charlton called time on his England career following that summer’s World Cup in Mexico.

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