A look back on the career of Blackpool and England great Alan Ball on what would have been his 75th birthday

After the 10th anniversary of Blackpool’s play-off win over Nottingham Forest, today marks the birthday of one of the club’s most famous players.
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Alan Ball never grew taller than 5ft 6in but he became a giant of the game and would have been 75 years of age.

Born in Farnworth, Ball was rejected by Bolton and Wolves due to his small stature before Blackpool signed him as an apprentice in 1961.

Alan Ball pictured at Bloomfield RoadAlan Ball pictured at Bloomfield Road
Alan Ball pictured at Bloomfield Road
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Five years later, the Seasiders would cash in when they sold the youngest member of England’s World Cup-winning squad to Everton for £112,000 – a record fee paid to an English club at the time.

What Ball lacked in stature he made up in character – driven, combative and tireless, he was able to impose himself on the game as an inside-forward or winger.

He made his Blackpool debut aged 17 and was a regular in the side by the 1963-64 season when still a teenager.

His performances caught the eye of Alf Ramsey, who gave Ball his England debut in a 1-1 draw away to Yugoslavia in Belgrade in May 1965, three days before his 20th birthday; the first of his 72 caps.

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A year later, Ball was the youngest member of England’s squad for the 1966 World Cup on home soil.

After playing in the opening 0-0 draw with Uruguay, Ball was made to sit out the following games against Mexico and France, but returned to the side for the quarter-final against Argentina and kept his place for the rest of the tournament.

Come the final, Ramsey wanted to exploit the one weakness in West Germany’s formidable left-back Karl-Heinz Schnellinger – his lack of pace.

Ball played a key role in England’s second goal, scored by Martin Peters, before starring in extra-time when it was from a Ball cross that Geoff Hurst fired in the famous shot which struck the underside of the bar and bounced down.

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At Everton, he joined up with Howard Kendall and Colin Harvey to form a midfield unit that would help them to the league title in 1969-70.

Ball had later spells with Arsenal, Southampton, Philadelpha Fury and Vancouver Whitecaps, before ending his playing career with Bristol Rovers in 1983.

By then he had already begun management, firstly with the Fury in 1978, and then as player-manager with Blackpool in 1980-81.

His first full-time role saw him guide Portsmouth to promotion to the top-flight in 1987 while he enjoyed success with a later spell at Southampton – though it was not the same story everywhere.

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His Stoke City side struggled, he suffered relegation with Exeter City and Manchester City, while he dealt with major financial woes on his return to Portsmouth.

Ball died at the age of 61 after suffering a heart attack on April 25, 2007.