England's Last Glory: Pursuing memories of '66 onward to Brazil

By David Miller

In a wonderfully nostalgic book, David Miller recaptures the heady days of summer 1966 when England won the World Cup in front of their own euphoric fans. Nearly fifty years on, he evokes the eager anticipation with which Britain awaited the arrival of the world’s best footballers.

In a wonderfully nostalgic book, David Miller recaptures the heady days of summer 1966 when England won the World Cup in front of their own euphoric fans. Nearly fifty years on, he evokes the eager anticipation with which Britain awaited the arrival of the world’s best footballers; how the England team and its tactics took shape in the run up to the competition; the new ‘wingless’ formation and the widespread criticism from the press and the public. This general pessimism gave way to mass adulation as England vindicated the revolutionary tactics of manager Alf Ramsey. 

The book includes profiles of the England players and their manager and assesses the major competition from Europe and South America. It details the progress of the team, their injuries and controversies, through to the sensational final against West Germany. Enriched with archive photographs and personal recollections from the players themselves, Miller reveals how Ramsey’s triumph changed the world game.

Format: Paperback
Release Date: 22 May 2014
Pages: 144
ISBN: 978-1-909815-44-5
David Miller, former Chief Sports Correspondent of The Times, holder of FIFA’s Jules Rimet Centenary Award, expects to be attending his fifteenth World Cup Finals in Brazil. Member of the British XI’s training squad for Melbourne Olympics ’56, he is author of biographies of Matt Busby, Trevor Francis, Stanley Matthews, Sebastian Coe, Juan Antonio Samaranch, and official historian of the Olympic Games and IOC, 1894-2012.

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