George Best (22
May 1946 –
25
November 2005)
is widely acknowledged to have been one of the greatest
football
players of all time, mainly remembered for his halcyon days with
Manchester United FC. He played for the
Northern Ireland football team, but their lack of success during the peak of
Best's career meant that, regrettably, he never was able to display his unique
talent on the world stage. Best had a rare combination of pace, blistering
acceleration, balance, two-footedness, goalscoring prowess and the ineffable
ability to run through entire defences.
He played for United as a winger between
1963 and
1974, helping them
to win the
Football League Championship in
1965 and
1967, and the
European Cup in
1968. He was named
European Footballer of the Year and
Football Writers' Association Player of the Year in 1968. Indeed,
Pelé, the Brazilian
who is often said to be the greatest player of all time, called Best "the
greatest footballer in the world". The great Argentinian
Diego Maradona regarded Best equally highly. Best's brilliance is often
summed up in one sentence: Maradona good, Pele better, George Best. In speaking
to
Man Utd TV in late 2005,
Sir
Bobby Charlton described Best's impact on the 1960s as "sensational".
Best's lovable, cheeky image won him many fans, during his career and after.
News of Best's death led to tears on the streets of
Belfast,
before and during a funeral for which some 100,000 people turned out on a rainy
day. Best had developed a drinking problem while still a player, and it
contributed to his early retirement from top-level football. He was imprisoned
in 1984 for
drunk driving and assaulting a policeman and was unable to give up alcohol
for any length of time.
George Best
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The condition of his liver deteriorated to the point
where a transplant became necessary. The immuno-suppressive drugs given to
prevent rejection of his new liver caused him to develop a serious kidney
infection, which his doctors were unable to redress. In 2005, the infection
caused him to fall into a coma. His final days were watched over by his father
and other family members, and also by former football colleagues such as
United's
Denis Law. He died at the age of 59 and is buried in East Belfast.
Biography
Football career
At the age of 15, Best was discovered in
Belfast by
Manchester United scout
Bob Bishop,
whose telegram to United manager
Sir
Matt Busby read: "I have found a genius". His local club
Glentoran had previously rejected him for being "too small and light".
Best was subsequently given a trial and signed up by chief scout
Joe
Armstrong in 1961.
He turned professional and made his debut for Manchester United in 1963 against
West Bromwich Albion at
Old Trafford. He became world-famous at the age of eighteen when he scored
three goals in a European Cup match against
Benfica in
1966, and scored in United's European Cup final win against the same club in
1968.
He made 466 appearances for Manchester United in all competitions, scoring
178 goals (including six in one game against
Northampton Town). Best was United's top scorer for six consecutive seasons.
During this run he also topped the first division scoring charts in 1967-68 with
28 goals, remarkable for a player who was not an out-and-out striker. In 1974,
the 27-year-old Best was sacked by United for excessive drinking and persistent
failure to attend training sessions and matches. His last competitive game for
the club was on 1 January 1974 against
Queens Park Rangers at
Loftus
Road.
Over the next decade, Best drifted between several football clubs including
spells in America, Scotland and Australia. He played for three clubs in America:
Los Angeles Aztecs,
Fort Lauderdale Strikers and
San Jose Earthquakes; he also played for the
Detroit Express on an European tour. At San Jose Earthquakes, the club was
owned by
Milan Mandaric with whom George developed a close relationship over the
years. Throughout 2004 George was often seen with Milan at the club he runs,
Portsmouth FC. In 1983 George finally retired from the game, at the age of
37. His last games as a professional were with third division
A.F.C. Bournemouth.
He was
capped 37 times for Northern Ireland, scoring nine goals. He played mainly
as a
winger and was known for his
dribbling
skills and passing. On 15 May 1971, Best scored the cheekiest and arguably the
most famous 'goal' of his career at
Windsor
Park in
Belfast against
Gordon
Banks. The English goalkeeper was about to kick the ball downfield and
dropped the ball towards his left foot. However, Best had anticipated the move
and, with his right boot, knocked the ball up in the air behind Banks. The
famous duo both scrambled towards the net but Best outpaced Banks and headed the
ball into the empty goal, to the delight of the home supporters. His effort was
disallowed for ungentlemanly conduct by a referee whose back had been turned
away from the incident, but even this untimely and incorrect intervention did
not spare Banks the embarrassment of having been outwitted.
Best was considered briefly by manager
Billy
Bingham for the 1982
World Cup.
However, at 36 and with his footballing days largely behind him it was
understandable that he was not selected in the Northern Ireland squad, thereby
denying him the one chance of playing in front of a global audience. In view of
his home country's relative lack of success, he was an advocate of an
all-Ireland team.
Diego Maradona has frequently named Best as his all-time favourite player
and Pelé
once stated that Best was the best player he ever saw play. He also named him as
one of the 125 best living footballers in his
2004 FIFA 100
list.
In 1988, a
testimonial match was held for Best at
Windsor
Park, Belfast.
Amongst the crowd were
Sir
Matt Busby and
Bob Bishop,
the scout who discovered Best, while those playing included
Ossie
Ardiles,
Pat
Jennings and
Liam Brady.
Best scored twice, one goal from outside the box, the other from the penalty
spot.
In 1998, Best
became a football pundit on
Sky Sports.
In November 2004
Best agreed to join
FA Premier League club
Portsmouth F.C. as a youth coach, citing his desire to get involved in
football again.
|
Personal information |
| Full name |
George Best |
| Date of birth |
22 May 1946 |
| Place of birth |
Belfast,
Northern Ireland |
| Nickname |
The Belfast Boy, The
Fifth Beatle |
| Position |
Winger |
|
Club information |
| Current club |
Retired |
|
Youth clubs |
| 1963 |
Manchester United |
|
Professional clubs* |
| Years |
Club |
Apps (goals) |
1963-74
1975
1975-76
1976+1977+1978
1976-77
1979+1980
1979-80
1979-80+1981
1983
1983 |
Manchester United
Stockport County
Cork Celtic
Los Angeles Aztecs
Fulham FC
Fort Lauderdale Strikers
Hibernian FC
San Jose Earthquakes
A.F.C. Bournemouth
Brisbane Lions |
361 (138)
3 (2)
3 (0)
61 (29)
47 (10)
33 (7)
22 (3)
86 (34)
5 (0)
4 (0) |
|
National team |
| 1964
– 1978 |
Northern Ireland |
37 (9) |
* Professional club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only. |
Celebrity
Best was known to promote Cookstown Sausages in TV commercials.
While at Manchester United, Best's talent and showmanship made him a crowd
and media favourite. He was dubbed "the
fifth
Beatle" for his long hair and looks, but his celebrity lifestyle led to
problems with gambling, womanising and
alcoholism.
Best often told the story of a bellboy who entered his hotel room with breakfast
in the late 1970s.
Seeing Best in bed with
Mary
Stavin, the current
Miss World,
a magnum of champagne and several thousand pounds of cash won from a night's
gambling, the youth exclaimed, "George, where did it all go wrong?"
Best opened two nightclubs in Manchester, in the late 1960s, Oscar's
and the other called Slack Alice's (which later became
42nd Street Nightclub). He also owned fashion boutiques, in partnership with
Mike Summerbee of
Manchester City. He also opened "Bestie's Beach Club" (now called "The
Underground" after the London subway system) in Hermosa Beach, California U.S.A.
and lived in the city throughout the 1970's, 80'sand 90's. He was able to
achieve some "treasured anonymity" there.
British group
The Fall,
fronted by
Mark
E. Smith, mentioned Best in their
1983
football-themed single, "Kicker Conspiracy," with the line: "In the Blues Club/
George Best does rule," in reference to Best's popularity even amongst
Manchester City (the "Blues") fans. Smith has said that even though he is a City
fan, he often went with mates to watch United just so he could see Best play.
In 1984, Best
made a fitness video with
Mary
Stavin called Shape Up And Dance.
Indie
group
The Wedding Present's
1987 debut
album was titled
George Best and featured him on the cover (pictured, right).
The Belfast Oi
Punk band Runnin' Riot have a song titled "Alcoholic Heroes" written about
George Best.
George was the subject of many books and wrote his life story a number of
times. "The Good, The Bad and The Bubbly" co-written with Ross Benson was the
first to touch on his alcoholism but it was "Blessed"
and "Scoring
At Half Time" written with
Roy Collins and
Martin Knight respectively shortly before his death where he revealed most
about himself.
Family
The eldest child of Dickie and Anne, Best was brother to Carol, Barbara,
Julie, Grace and Ian.
Best was married twice:
- Angela Douglas-James (1978-1986),
with whom he had a son,
Calum
- Alex
Pursey (1995-2004)
According to the
Daily
Mirror, Best had two illegitimate daughters.
Convictions
In 1984, Best
received a three-month prison sentence for
drunk
driving, assaulting a police officer and failing to answer bail. He spent
Christmas
of 1984 behind bars and turned out as a player for
Ford Open Prison.
On 2
February 2004,
Best was convicted of another drunk driving offence and banned from driving for
20 months.
Alcoholism
In September 1990,
Best appeared on an edition of primetime
BBC chat show
Wogan in
which he swore and was clearly drunk. He later apologized and said this was one
of the worst episodes of his alcoholism.
In 2002, he had
a liver
transplant. In 2003
he was the focus of much criticism when, despite his transplant, he openly drank
white wine spritzers
and was accused of being selfish and having no regard for other people's
feelings. Also in 2003, his second wife
Alex Best
appeared as a contestant on the reality television programme
I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here! and made allegations about their
relationship.
Illness and death
Best continued to drink, and was sometimes seen at his local
pub
in
Petersfield, Hampshire. On
3 October 2005 Best was
admitted to
intensive care at the private
Cromwell Hospital in London, suffering from
kidney problems
caused by the side-effects of immuno-suppressive drugs used to prevent his body
from rejecting his transplanted
liver. On
27 October,
newspapers stated that Best was close to death and had sent farewell messages to
his loved ones. Best's condition improved at first, but deteriorated again in
November. On
20
November the British tabloid
News of the World published a picture of Best at his own request,
showing him in his hospital bed, along with what was reported to be his final
message: "Don't die like me". Of the many tributes left to George near his
hospital bed, one was a signed football which read: "From the second best player
in the world". It was signed by
Pele, the man many
people consider to be the greatest player ever to play the game.
In the early hours of
25
November 2005
Best's treatment was stopped; he eventually died, after a battle that lasted
longer than doctors had expected, at 13:06 GMT from a
lung infection and
multiple organ failure.
. His father, four sisters, brother, son and
agent
were all at his bedside, as was his former United team-mate
Denis Law.
The
FA Premier League announced that a minute's silence would be observed before
all Premiership games to be held over the weekend of his death, however, this
tradition was ignored at many grounds, in favour of a minute's applause in his
honour. Many football supporters travelled to pay tribute to Best outside
Manchester United's stadium
Old Trafford,
Windsor
Park in
Belfast and at
Belfast City Hall and outside his father's home where they left signed
shirts, scarves, flowers and messages. The city of Belfast subsequently
announced that those mementos left by fans are to be collected and given to
children's charities. George's father Dickie condemned the theft of some
football memorabilia left by fans at the Best home in the Cregagh estate.
Funeral
Best's funeral was one of the largest that Northern Ireland has ever seen.
Best's body left the family home at Cregagh Road,
East
Belfast, shortly after 10 a.m.
UTC on Saturday,
December 3.
The cortege then travelled the short distance to
Stormont. The route was lined with around 100,000 mourners. There was an 11
a.m. service in the Grand Hall relayed to around 25,000 mourners inside the
grounds of Stormont, and live on
BBC One,
UTV,
RTÉ,
ITV News,
BBC News
24, Sky
News,
Sky Sports News,
EuroNews
and MUTV.
Afterwards, Best was buried beside his mother Annie in a private ceremony at the
hill-top Roselawn Cemetery, overlooking east Belfast.
Bryan Appleyard's reporting of the funeral and remarks about the various
members of the Best family in
The Sunday Times
led to calls by the
Belfast Telegraph for his sacking.
Quotations
- "I spent a lot of money on booze, birds and fast cars - the rest I just
squandered."
- "I used to go missing a lot...Miss Canada, Miss United Kingdom, Miss
World..."
- (On
David
Beckham) "He cannot kick with his left foot, he cannot head a ball, he
cannot tackle and he doesn't score many goals. Apart from that he's alright."
- "If I had been born ugly, you would never have heard of
Pelé"
- "In 1969 I gave up women and alcohol. It was the worst 20 minutes of my
life."
- "Pelé called me the greatest footballer in the world. That is the ultimate
salute to my life."
- "I've stopped drinking, but only while I'm asleep."
- "I once said
Gazza's IQ was less than his shirt number and he asked me: "What's an IQ?""
- (On
Eric Cantona) "I'd give all the Champagne I've ever drunk to be playing
alongside him in a big European match at Old Trafford."
- (On the blood transfusion after his liver transplant) "I was in for 10 hours
and had 40 pints - beating my previous record by 20 minutes."
- "I went from El Beatle to El Vino in three short years."
Honours
-
Football League Championship winners medal,
1965 &
1967
- UEFA
European Cup winners medal,
1968
-
European Footballer of the Year, 1968
-
Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year, 1968
- Holds the record for the most goals by a Manchester United player in a
single match, six against
Northampton Town,
FA Cup fifth
round on
February 8, 1970.
United won the match 8-2.
- Freeman
of
Castlereagh, 2002
- Inaugural Inductee into the
English Football Hall of Fame, 2002
- Honorary Doctorate from the
Queen's University of Belfast, 2001
-
PFA Special Merit Award, for his services to football, 2006
Memorials
Belfast City Airport has been renamed
George Best Belfast City Airport
as a tribute to the
East
Belfast footballing legend. The official new name and signage was unveiled
to a gathering of the Best family and friends at the airport on
22 May 2006 which would
have been his 60th birthday. After Best's funeral, his family contacted the
airport, indicating that they felt that this would be the most appropriate
memorial. Their spokesperson commented:
"We are delighted that airport management have decided to rename the airport
in honour of George. Belfast City Airport is synonymous with East Belfast and
with thousands of people using the airport on a daily basis George's memory will
never be forgotten. This is a highly visible and lasting memorial to George that
we hope will please many people in Northern Ireland."
Not everyone in Northern Ireland considered the renaming of the airport to be
appropriate.
In March 2006,
Flybe, the airport's biggest operator, named a Dash-8 plane G-JECL The
George Best. The specially branded
Q400 aircraft was
used to carry Best's family across to the
Manchester
memorial service for Best.
On the 60th birthday anniversary, 22nd May 2006, at special gala dinner held
in George's honour at Belfast City Hall, an auction was held to raise funds for
the George Best Foundation. One of the items featured was the 'Genius' egg from
the world famous jewellers Fabergé
. The new piece designed by Sarah Fabergé, the great granddaughter of
Carl Fabergé, the world famous designer of the first Fabergé Eggs and Royal
Court Jeweller for the Russian Royal family, has been commissioned by George
Best Carryduff MUSC. All profits from the sale of the eggs will be donated to
the George Best Foundation
.
Goals
One of George's greatest goals (1981) as a member of the
US
team
San Jose Earthquakes, which is also considered one of the greatest goals in
NASL history, can
be viewed from here:
Appearances and goals for each club
- Pre -1963 -
Cregagh Boys Club
- 1963-1974 -
Manchester United: 466 games, 178 goals, (Lge
361/137, FA Cup
46/21, Lge
Cup 25/9,
Europe 34/11)
- 1974-1974 -
Jewish Guild of Johannesburg: 5 games
- 1975-1975 -
Dunstable Town (friendlies)
- 1975-1975 -
Stockport County: 3 games, 2 goals
- 1976-1976 -
Cork
Celtic: 3 games, 0 goals
- 1976-1976 -
Los Angeles Aztecs: 24 games, 15 goals (NASL
Season only)
- 1976-1977 -
Fulham:
47 games, 10 goals
- 1977-1978 -
Los Angeles Aztecs: 37 games, 14 goals (NASL
Season only)
- 1978-1979 -
Fort Lauderdale Strikers: 33 games, 7 goals (NASL
Season only)
- 1979-1980 -
Hibernian: 22 games, 3 goals
- 1980-1981 -
San Jose Earthquakes: 56 games, 21 goals (NASL
Season only)
- 1983-1983 -
Bournemouth: 5 games, 0 goals
- 1983-1983 -
Brisbane Lions: 4 games, 0 goals
- 1984-1984 -
Tobermore United: 1 game, 0 goals
International: 1964-1978 -
Northern Ireland: 37 games, 9 goals
Notes
-
↑
Best too small and light for local club
-
↑
Obituary on BBC News
Preceded by:
Florian Albert |
European Footballer of the Year
1968 |
Succeeded by:
Gianni Rivera |
Preceded by:
Jack Charlton |
Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year
1968 |
Succeeded by:
Tony Book
and Dave
Mackay |