A WARTIME RAF logbook reveals how football commentating icon Kenneth Wolstenholme cheated death after the plane he piloted came under heavy fire.
He is known for the line, ‘They think it’s all over . . . it is now,’ at Geoff Hurst’s third goal sealing England’s 1966 World Cup win.
But he had earlier been an exceptional RAF pilot who flew 89 raids for Bomber Command in World War Two.
He was nearly killed in a sortie on the German archipelago of Heligoland in 1941.
An entry in the logbook tells of his Blenheim bomber being badly damaged and observer Sgt John “Polly” Wilson killed.
Wolstenholme wrote: “Very shaky do. Three shells in nose — one got Polly.
READ MORE ON BEAUTIFUL GAME
“P (port) Wing smashed; tail and elevator riddled. Big shell hole in fin; bomb doors shot away; electric system shot away; cockpit, belly, both engines riddled with holes.
“Hell of a lot of flak. Glad to see West Raynham (RAF base in Norfolk) and land. Drunk that night — thank God!”
Wolstenholme also flew on Operation Varsity — history’s largest airborne operation on a single day and in one location.
He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and Bar.
Most read in The Sun
The Lancashire-born hero returned to journalism after the war and began working in TV at the BBC in 1948.
He died in March 2002, aged 81.
Read More on The Sun
His logbook, medals and wartime photo album may fetch £15,000 at auction.
Adam Gascoigne, of Graham Budd Auctions of London, said: “A modest man, Wolstenholme rarely spoke of his courage as a bomber pilot.”
Source: Soccer - thesun.co.uk