Book description
Bobby Moore lifting the World Cup at Wembley on a July afternoon in
1966. England had triumphed against West Germany thanks to a hat-trick
by Geoff Hurst and a goal by Martin Peters. All three heroic players
were from West Ham, the most famous club of London's East End. This is
an area synonymous with football success worldwide, largely because of
the legendary Sunday football Mecca of Hackney Marshes. There are more
football pitches on this one expanse of grass than in any other part
of Europe, and it is a training ground which, over the last 35 years,
has developed star after star for English football.
The majority of clubs in the country today have at least one player
on their books who has links with the east of the capital. The famous
names from the past include Jimmy Greaves, Terry Venables and Harry
Redknapp, and the tradition has been carried on by Paul Ince, Ashley
Cole and the finest modern-day footballing hero of them all, David Beckham.
With profiles of famous players past and present and engrossing
details of the life and characters of the East End, England's
Eastenders celebrates a tradition of excellence that began in the
swinging Sixties and moves through the decades to show how the
precedent set by Moore when he walked up those 39 steps at Wembley was
just a stop-off point in the history of this breeding ground of brilliance.
Richard Lewis is a well-respected sportswriter and journalist. He was
a senior sports correspondent for the
Daily Express
for 11 years and now edits a sports magazine. He lives in Essex.