1961 FA Charity Shield

1961 FA Charity Shield
EventFA Charity Shield
Date12 August 1961
VenueWhite Hart Lane, London
RefereeDick Windle
Attendance36,593
1960
1962

The 1961 FA Charity Shield was the 39th FA Charity Shield. The match was contested on 12 August 1961 between double winners Tottenham Hotspur and a Football Association (F.A.) representative eleven. Tottenham won the match 3–2.

In the 1960–61 season, Tottenham had become the first club since Aston Villa in 1897 to complete the Double, that is, to win the FA Cup and Division One in the same season. The Charity Shield, which was first contested in 1908, is conventionally held between the previous season's league champions and the FA Cup winners. Thus Tottenham's double victory in 1960–1961 presented a new problem for the FA in organising the 1961 Charity Shield. By way of resolution, Tottenham competed against a representative side who played under the banner of the FA. This team was, in practice, the contemporary England national team, without the Tottenham players who might usually have played.

Tottenham started the match poorly when Johnny Haynes scored the opening goal after ten minutes. Tottenham equalised five minutes before half time through Bobby Smith, and Les Allen scored two second half goals for Spurs to put them 3–1 ahead. Johnny Byrne scored the second goal for the F.A., resulting in a 3–2 victory for Tottenham.

The 1961 Charity Shield was the last time, to date, that the match has featured a team that was not a club side. The 1971 Double winning Arsenal team were unable to compete, so FA Cup runners-up Liverpool played against Division Two champions Leicester City. In the 1986 Charity Shield, following Liverpool's Double-winning 1985–1986 season, league runners-up Everton were chosen as opponents. This practice has been followed in all subsequent years where a team has won the Double.

Match details

Tottenham Hotspur3–2F.A. XI
Smith Goal
Allen Goal, Goal
Haynes Goal
Byrne Goal
Attendance: 36,493
Tottenham Hotspur
F.A. XI
1 Scotland Bill Brown
2 England Peter Baker
3 England Ron Henry
4 Northern Ireland Danny Blanchflower (c)
5 England Maurice Norman
6 Scotland Dave Mackay
7 Wales Cliff Jones
8 Scotland John White
9 England Bobby Smith
10 England Les Allen
11 England Terry Dyson
Manager:
England Bill Nicholson
1 England Ron Springett
2 England Jimmy Armfield
3 England Michael McNeil
4 England Bobby Robson
5 England Peter Swan
6 England Ron Flowers
7 England Bryan Douglas
8 England Jimmy Robson
9 England Johnny Byrne
10 England Johnny Haynes (c)
11 England Bobby Charlton
Manager:
England Walter Winterbottom

This page was last updated at 2021-10-30 19:52 UTC. Update now. View original page.

All our content comes from Wikipedia and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.


Top

If mathematical, chemical, physical and other formulas are not displayed correctly on this page, please useFirefox or Safari