Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay

Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay
Signed by: Dave Mackay
Limited Edition: 500
Size: 420mm x 594mm

Price £35.00
Save £15.00
30% Off
Big Image
Large Image
[opens in new window]

         
 
Qty:

 

Description [BBT218]

Limited edition print personally signed by Spurs captain Dave Mackay. The cigarette card style presentation features all the players from the winning team, the manager Bill Nicholson and all the results from Spurs 1967 FA Cup win.

Read more about  -  Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay

Framing Options





 
Big Blue Tube
You might also like ...
Big Blue Tube

Spurs Legend - signed by Jimmy Greaves
Limited edition Tottenham Hotspur print, personally signed by Jimmy Greaves and featuring a great shot of him on the ball....
Signed by: Jimmy Greaves
Limited Edition: 500
Size: 420mm x 594mm

Sold Out
More Information

 

Gascoigne's Glory - Signed by Paul Gascoigne
Limited edition print signed by Paul Gascoigne. After scoring one of the greatest ever Wembley goals, a thirty yard...
Signed by: Paul Gascoigne
Limited Edition: 250
Size: 420mm x 594mm
Price £65.00
More Information

 

Wembley Wonder-Goal - Signed by Paul Gascoigne
Limited edition print signed by Paul Gasciogne. The print features a stunning image of Paul Gascoigne's incredible free-kick...
Signed by: Paul Gascoigne
Limited Edition: 500
Size: 420mm x 594mm
Price £65.00
More Information

 
Big Blue Tube
Product Plus Frame
Big Blue Tube

Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay
Big Blue Tube
Light Frame with Blue Mount
Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay (With LIght Frame and Blue Mount)
Price £85.00
Save £15.00
Qty:


 

Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay
Big Blue Tube
Gold Frame with Blue Mount
Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay (With Gold Frame and Blue Mount)
Price £85.00
Save £15.00
Qty:


 

Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay
Big Blue Tube
Black Frame with Blue Mount
Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay (With Black Frame and Blue Mount)
Price £85.00
Save £15.00
Qty:


 

Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay
Big Blue Tube
Dark Wood Frame with Blue Mount
Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay (Dark Wood Frame with Blue Mount)
Price £85.00
Save £15.00
Qty:


 
Big Blue Tube
More about this release
Big Blue Tube

Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup Kings 1967 - Signed by Dave Mackay



Own a piece of sporting history

The first ever all-London Cup Final was a little too easy for Tottenham, having come into the game brimful of confidence - undefeated since January of that year and the young Chelsea side being a bit over-awed by the occasion.


The first action of the game saw Mike England clearing away a low ball into the six yard box as Tommy Baldwin closed in. It was an attacking Spurs team that Bill Nicholson had put out, with Joe Kinnear pushing forward very readily, while the midfield and defence worked hard to shut out Chelsea's danger man Charlie Cooke. Alan Gilzean lead the line well and it was his back header from Mullery's cross that created the first chance of the match for Tottenham. Saul hit the shot goalwards from 12 yards out, but it was blocked by the body of Allan Harris (later to be assistant manager at White Hart Lane under Terry Venables). Bonetti was called into action when a long free-kick was headed out and Jimmy Robertson hit a low shot that brought a good diving save, but the referee had whistled for a foul.

After 15 minutes, Robertson raced away down the right wing and put in a cross to the near post, where Frank Saul met it with his head, but the ball sailed over the bar. Shortly after, a Chelsea attack saw John Hollins strike a low shot from outside the box, which Pat Jennings dived at full-length to turn wide. With the atmosphere quiet subdues and the player's shouts clearly audible, Jimmy Greaves took a long pass and with a doubt about whether he was offside, he raced away, but fired his effort over the top. Greaves also hit a 20 yard free-kick just over the top, with Bonetti left stranded.Spurs were pressing forward onto the Chelsea defence more and more, leading to a half-cleared high ball dropping to Robertson, who hooked his shot over the goal from the edge of the penalty area. Then it was the Pensioners turn, with Cooke going on a mazy 20 yard run before hitting a shot from 20 yards out that forced Jennings into a fine save to tip it over the bar. But following that attack, the West London side lost their control and started flying into tackles, conceding free-kicks as they did so. One of these on the right wing for a foul on Mullery, saw the ball floated into the area. A shot was blocked and the ball landed at the feet of Jimmy Robertson on the 18 yard line, from where he hit a low volley past Bonetti's dive to give Tottenham the lead just before half-time. There was just time for Kinnear to hit a 25 yard shot over the bar before the referee blew for the break.


The second half was more of the same really. With 68 minutes past, a long Dave Mackay throw was headed out to Robertson on the edge of the area and he headed it on to Frank Saul near the penalty spot. Saul swivelled to shoot into the bottom right hand corner of the net to double the Spurs lead. It was an instinctive finish and seemed to have put the game out of Chelsea's reach. Cooke did start to run at the Tottenham side and drew a foul, earning a free-kick from which Spurs had to clear hurriedly. The tension must have been getting to both sides, as they committed foul throws and the passing was a bit more off-target as the rain started to fall.

A great move along the right wing saw Terry Venables pass to Greaves, who then played the ball onto Joe Kinnear as he entered the area. The full back's low ball into the area was inviting, but was missed at the near post by Saul. A long range Chelsea shot went wide, then Hateley had a hopeful shot from a narrow angle that ended up in the side-netting punctuated only by Greaves' low shot that made Bonetti dive to save. Cramp was starting to hit the Tottenham players who had run so far and this made them sit a little deeper, inviting Chelsea onto them. Boyle played the ball down the line to Baldwin, who crossed to Hateley and even though the ball was just behind him, his header went just too high. But in their next attack, Chelsea did get a goal back five minutes from the end, as a result of a slight mis-judgment by Pat Jennings, but it was nothing more than a consolation. The ball went out to the left, where Boyle crossed and Tambling got in front of Jennings hesitant approach and headed home to pull it back to 2-1.

As Chelsea strove for an equaliser in the last five minutes, they lacked the quality of pass that Tottenham had exhibited earlier and the Spurs players were happy enough to play keep-ball to run out time and were happy to hear the final whistle that meant they were the FA Cup winners for the fifth time.
Spurs had won all the vital battles. Mike England mastered the "head" master Tony Hateley and Joe Kinnear was free to rampage up the right wing after dealing with Charlie Cooke. Perhaps the most important player was Frank Saul on the day. He had scored the winning goal in the semi-final and was having his best spell in the Tottenham team.

Most of all, Bill Nicholson had a perfect match plan with the denial of space for Cooke to run into and the quashing of the aerial threat from Hateley by England's dominance. The team made best use of the ball and without Bonetti in goal, Chelsea could well have suffered a heavier defeat.

Personally signed

Each copy of Tottenham FA Cup Winners 1967 was personally signed by 1967 Tottenham Captain Dave Mackay at a signing session completed on Monday 23rd October 2006.

mackay signs for bigbluetube


Strictly Limited Edition

Only 500 hand-numbered copies of this print will ever be produced. Once they have sold, no more will ever be produced.


Authenticity Guaranteed

This print will be independently authenticated by Grant Thornton using the Authenticate process. This means you can be 100% certain that the print is a strictly limited edition of 500 copies and that each one has been personally signed by Dave Mackay.

Company Logos

 

 
 

Member login

Email Address
Password
  

Join | Forgot password?
 
 
Basket
Basket Empty
 
Total:£0.00
 

 
 
change currency:
(Explanation)
 
 

Latest News

Stars out in force at Collectormania!
(01 October 2008)
Don't miss the Collectormania...
Personalised Signed Pele shirts available!
(10 September 2008)
Fancy owning a signed Pele shirt...
Meet Pele in Person!
(10 September 2008)
Fulfil a lifetime's ambition by...
Meet Greavsie & Ricky Villa
(10 September 2008)
Be a VIP at 'An Evening with Jimmy...
More Hatton & Bruno shows in January!
(22 July 2008)
The highly acclaimed Ricky Hatton...
List All Current News
View News Archive
 
Privacy Policy   |   Terms and Conditions   |   Site Map