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    Who is Giorgio Chiellini’s wife Carolina Bonistalli and how many children does the Italy captain have?

    ITALY head to Wembley looking to silence the home crowd and win the European Championship for the first time since 1968.And leading the charge will be one of the game’s elder statesmen, 36-year-old centre-back and captain Giorgio Chiellini.
    Chiellini (right) celebrates as Italy reach the Euro 2020 finalCredit: Reuters
    But what do we know about his family life?
    Who is Giorgio Chiellini’s wife?
    Giorgio Chiellini is married to long term girlfriend Carolina Bonistalli who, at 38, is two years his senior.
    The couple eloped in a private ceremony at the Sanctuary of Montinello in Livorno, Italy in July 2014, after being engaged for four years.
    Bonistalli tends to shun the limelight and mainly uses here Instagram account, which has over 47 thousand followers, to share pictures of her children.
    She has a BA in Science from Sapienza University in Rome.

    How many children does Giorgio Chiellini have?
    Giorgio Chiellini has and his wife have two daughters.
    Nina was born in July 2015, a year after Chiellini’s wedding, and Olivia was born in June 2019.

    Who is Giorgio Chiellini?
    Chiellini is known as one of the last “old school” defenders in football, along with his defensive partner for Italy and Juventus – Leonardo Bonucci.
    He has called on defenders in Italy to focus on man-marking and preventing the opposition scoring rather than following the “Pep Guardiola approach” of focusing on distribution.
    Chiellini said in 2017: “Guardiolismo has ruined many Italian defenders a bit – now defenders know how to set the tone of play and they can spread the ball, but they don’t know how to mark.
    “Unfortunately, that’s the way it is.
    “When I was young, we used to do drills to get a feel for the man you were making.
    “Nowadays, from crosses, Italian defenders – and I can only really talk for Italian defenders, I am only relatively interested about foreign players – don’t mark their man.
    “It’s a great pity because we’re losing our DNA a bit and some of those characteristics which had made us excel in the world.”
    In 2019, he wrote a book dedicated to late Juventus defender Gaetano Scirea.
    It was called ‘There’s a Black and White Angel, My Teacher is called Scirea’.
    He would then go on to write an autobiography in which he strongly criticised former Italy team-mate Mario Balotelli and former Juventus team-mate Felipe Melo. More

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    Office worker SACKED from her job for pulling sickie at England game says she ‘would do it all over again’

    AN ENGLAND fan who was sacked for pulling a sickie to go to the Euro 2020 semi-final against Denmark has insisted that she would “do it again”.Nina Farooqi found herself in hot water after cameras caught her and her friend jumping and screaming after the ball hit the back of the net.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    The office worker (right) had the time of her life at the game at WembleyCredit: NINA FAROOQI
    Nina pulled a sickie with her work in order to go to the gameCredit: NINA FAROOQI/ITV
    The 37-year-old had wrapped an England flag around her and was seated right behind the goal at Wembley for the magical moment on Wednesday night as the Three Lions defeated Denmark 2-1 after extra time. 
    But she was brought back down to earth with a bump when her boss called her the morning after to fire her for pulling a sickie and going to the historic game. 
    The football fanatic has declared that “football is her life” and that if the opportunity came up a second time she would still repeat her actions.
    Speaking to The Telegraph, Nina said: “We were all over the news, my face was on every television screen across the world – I had friends from Australia and America telling me they’d seen me. 
    “I was even on Stacey Dooley’s Instagram story. My phone blew up. The whole world had seen me celebrating. The rational part of me thought, ‘oh no, is this going to come back to haunt me?’
    “There is a bit of regret, no one wants to get fired, but then also I would have hated the regret of missing out. I’d do it all over again.”
    The football mad fan has said that she would do it all over again despite being sackedCredit: NINA FAROOQI
    But she realised the game was up after she ended up on TV and all over social mediaCredit: Stacey Dooley/Instagram
    Nina, from Ilkley, Bradford, had pulled a sickie to go to the game with her pal who had won a last minute ticket in a ballot. 
    The huge footie fan thought that it was unlikely that her work would approve her last-minute day off as they were short staffed. 
    She was nervous after realising that their seats were right behind the goal, but thought that in a crowd of 66,000 people she might get away with it. 
    But after checking her phone at half time, when England scored their equaliser, she realised that her cover had been completely blown. 
    Nina said: “It’s mixed emotions: we’re through to the final, I’m still on that high, but I’ve also lost my job.
    “My friend won the ticket in her work ballot, and knew I’d do anything to get to the game – there was no way I was going to turn it down.
    “This hasn’t come around since 1996, I vividly remember crying on my mum’s sofa when Gareth Southgate missed his penalty, and the football fan in me just couldn’t do it. Football is my life.” 

    Despite rushing back to Yorkshire on the 6am train, Nina was told not to bother coming in as the bosses at her office had spotted her. 
    She added: “They said they’d seen I’d been at the game, and I was honest about why I did it.
    “But I didn’t get any sympathy at all and they said that’s it. That’s their call and the consequence of what I did.”
    Charles Taylor, director at Composite Prime where Nina worked, said she had “breached her contract”.
    He said: “It’s an exciting time for everyone in England and given the opportunity, we would have encouraged attendance to such an important football match.
    “Unfortunately on this occasion our employee lied, taking one day off sick to attend the football match on Wednesday.

    “This was in breach of her employment contract and so we had no choice but to take the appropriate action. 
    “As a business we value honesty and integrity, and we don’t tolerate any employee taking advantage of our policies.
    “Like many businesses will be doing across the county, our staff will be having Monday morning off to hopefully recover from celebrating an England win.”
    Farooqi also undertakes work as a freelance photographer and video producer in men’s football and across the Women’s Super League. 
    She said that her friends within the footballing community have been fully supporting her since she lost her job. 
    Nina said: “They have all been incredible, and it will be incredible to watch the final with them on Sunday at home.”
    Schools and firms to open late on Monday as fans nurse hangovers after Sunday’s Euro 2020 final amid Bank Holiday calls More

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    Gareth Southgate set for knighthood if England beat Italy… and will get CBE regardless after Euro 2020 heroics

    GARETH SOUTHGATE is set for knighthood if England beat Italy in the European Championship final, reports say.The Three Lions boss has led his squad to a World Cup last four in 2018 and now a Euros final in his first two tournaments as manager.
    Gareth Southgate is set for knighthood if England beat Italy in the Euros finalCredit: The Sun
    England play Italy in the final tomorrow at Wembley having beaten Denmark 2-1 after extra-time on Wednesday.
    Southgate was awarded an OBE in 2019 after guiding the nation to a first semi-finals since his infamous penalty miss in 1996 against Germany.
    And according to the Daily Mail, he has been informed that it is likely to be upgraded to a CBE no matter what the result.
    But a knighthood is seen as inevitable if England beat Italy to lift their first major trophy since the 1966 World Cup, now 55 years ago.
    England’s manager at the time Alf Ramsey was knighted in 1967 following the triumph and Southgate would be in line to achieve the same status.
    It is unclear if all England’s players would be similarly honoured, as the Cabinet Office have shied away from rewarding entire teams in recent years.
    That came following criticism over the MBEs given to all the 2005 Ashes winners, including Paul Collingwood, who played just one Test in that series.
    After England won the Cricket World Cup win in 2019, captain Eoin Morgan received a CBE, Ben Stokes an OBE and Joe Root and Jos Buttler MBEs.
    Coach Trevor Bayliss was also given an OBE, but the rest of the squad missed out.
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    Harry Kane received an MBE after winning the Golden Boot as top scorer at the 2018 World Cup, with six goals.
    Marcus Rashford and Raheem Sterling were given MBEs in the Queen’s Birthday Honours for their charity work and promotion of racial equality.
    All three could have their honours upgraded with other key members of the England squad also set to be recognised.
    Sir Geoff Hurst says Gareth Southgate is key to England success at Euro 2020 More

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    Watch Grealish and Saka hilarious Maguire impressions as they chat to friends after England reach Euro 2020 final

    ENGLAND stars Bukayo Saka and Jack Grealish were spotted doing their best Harry Maguire impressions after England reached the Euro 2020 final on Wednesday.The pair were spotted chatting to family and friends at Wembley after the extra-time win over Denmark and the footage immediately drew comparisons with shots of Maguire from the World Cup in 2018.
    This shot of Harry Maguire has become a viral sensation meme since it was taken after the 2018 World Cup quarter-finalCredit: Getty – Contributor
    And fans laughed at Bukayo Saka and Jack Grealish who were spotted in similar situations after England beat Denmark
    Three Lions centre-back Maguire was caught in a now timeless shot after he nodded England’s opener in their 2-0 World Cup quarter-final win over Sweden in 2018.
    It’s a meme that has taken a life of its own since with millions of fans sharing the picture alongside their own versions of what Maguire might have been saying to the group of girls he was chatting to.
    One of them was actually his fiancee Fern Hawkins but that didn’t stop most fans from chiming in with their own funny versions.
    And such is the notoriety of the shot, when images of Grealish and Saka nonchalantly draped over the Wembley seats after Wednesday’s famous win emerged, fans were quick to hark back.
    ITV football – who broadcast the historic match – were among the first to chime in.
    They shared a video and wrote: “Yeah, it’s no biggie really – we’ve just helped @England reach a first major tournament final in 55 years.”
    Nino was one of more than 530 fans to like the tweet and wrote: “Love to see it. This is the new Maguire meme.”
    And after several accounts joked about the pair heading ‘straight for the girls’ after their country’s win, Sid Vinicius quipped: “Brother Saka is actually quoting Bible verses to help Grealish focus on the final…”
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    England were deserved winners against Denmark

    Many have questioned Southgate’s decision to ‘sub the sub’ when he took Grealish off only 36 minutes after putting him on.
    The Aston Villa midfielder replaced Saka in the 69th minute of normal time with the scores at 1-1.
    He looked lively but could not have as much of a drastic impact from the bench as he has had earlier in the tournament.
    Harry Kane sent England fans into dreamland with one minute to go in the first-half of extra-time – scoring the rebound from his own missed penalty to become the Three Lions’ joint top scorer of all time in major tournaments.
    And just a minute later – at half-time of extra-time – Grealish was subbed off and replaced by Kieran Trippier as Southgate changed the system to shore up the win.
    The tactic worked and England reached their first ever Euros final and Grealish seemed fine with it after the game as he tweeted: “I love this team. What a night at Wembley.”
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds

    Yeah so a good header doesn’t hurt. I mean the moment you head it proper, you feel it’s a good one. Know what I mean love? pic.twitter.com/a5b8UqDjv2— Kyle Walker (@kylewalker2) July 7, 2018

    “Can you ask the neighbours to put the bins out on Monday? We’re not going home just yet” 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 pic.twitter.com/s1g3P3jj34— Harry Maguire (@HarryMaguire93) July 8, 2018

    Southgate reacts to England’s history victory over Denmark in Euro 2020 Semi-final More

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    Gareth Southgate ‘to be KNIGHTED’ regardless of Euro 2020 result as he takes England to first final in 55 years

    GARETH Southgate will be knighted even if England loses Sunday’s Euro 2020 final, it has been claimed.Regardless of the result, Southgate, 50, will reportedly see the OBE he was awarded in 2019 upgraded to a CBE honour.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    Gareth Southgate is widely expected to be knighted if England beat ItalyCredit: The Mega Agency
    England beat Denmark 2-1 on Wednesday night in a historic victory as skipper Harry Kane scored the winner in extra time.
    The Three Lions will now face Italy on Sunday night – with millions expected to watch.
    And the Daily Mail reports a source confirming even if England fails to beat Italy to lift their first major trophy for 55 years Southgate will be honoured. 
    Alf Ramsey was knighted in 1967 after England’s World Cup win.
    Some believe that Harry Kane, the captain, is also in line for a knighthood.
    Harry Kane, 27, is also tipped to add to his MBE should England defeat Italy on Sunday The same goes for Raheem Sterling, 26, who is also an MBE. 
    Other squad members with MBEs are Marcus Rashford, 23, and Jordan Henderson, 31, who are MBEs.
    Boris Johnson has praised Southgate’s leadership.
    He said: “Clearly Gareth Southgate has done an absolutely outstanding job.
    “What seems so amazing to me is how he varies it, he mixes it up, he plays a different series of options depending on the match in question.”
    Harry Kane could see his MBE upgradedCredit: AFP
    England fans have called for Gareth Southgate to be knighted after he guided the Three Lions to their first final in 55 years.
    One user suggested: “The Right Honourable Sir Gareth Southgate, Prime Minister, please!”
    A second said: “It’ll be Sir Gareth Southgate if we win it!”
    While a third concluded: “Arise Sir Gareth Southgate. Not just a great manager, but an inclusive and inspirational leader. Well done England.”
    Another fan said: “Actually love the bloke. Sir Gareth Southgate – make it happen.”
    One fan gushed: “One win from Sir Gareth Southgate.”
    Former England rugby manager Clive Woodward received a knighthood after his team won the World Cup in 2003 — though the squad was given lesser honours. 

    Other England football legends have had to wait years for a knighthood, including the World Cup-winning 1966 team. 
    Bobby Moore, the captain, was appointed OBE but never received a knighthood before his death in 1993.
    Meanwhile only two of the ’66 starting line-up received knighthoods. Sir Bobby Charlton received his in 1994, while Geoff Hurst, who bagged a hat-trick in the final against West Germany, was not knighted until 1998.
    England Manager Alf Ramsey (left) celebrates his team’s 1966 4-2 victory in extra time over West Germany in the World Cup Final at Wembley StadiumCredit: Getty
    Gareth Southgate celebrates with England background staff after Euro 2020 victory over Denmark More

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    He’s braved piranhas, riots, a sumo wrestler and 369 England games. It’s Brian from Coventry and he’s… Superfan

    FROM the jungles of Brazil to the steppes of Kazakhstan, England superfan Brian Wright has lavished £140,000 on his dream of seeing ­football coming home.The dad of three has dodged brutal riot police and rampaging Russian ultras since he began following England in 1988.
    Brian Wright, second left, basks in England’s victory over Denmark and now dreams of the Three Lions going one better on Sunday against Italy
    Superfan Brian Wright has gone through the lot following England around the worldCredit: Darren Fletcher – The Sun
    Now, as he approaches his 370th — and greatest — England game, Brian says it was all worth it.
    Speaking exclusively to The Sun, Brian, 51, said: “I think  I’ve earned the right to be at ­Wembley on Sunday.
    “For all those terrible trips when it’s been raining or cold, being kept in a ground for three hours after a game, or treated like animals by local police.
    I’ve watched a lot of dross over the years. You can count on two hands the amount of games that were memorable — and we usually lost those.
    “So no amount of money will prise that ticket for the final from my hands.”
    Over the years his England adventures have seen him wrestling a sumo in Japan, fishing for piranhas in Brazil, kipping in £6-a-night Russian hostels and being clobbered with a police baton in Poland.
    He has been to more  England games  than Sir Bobby Charlton, Gary Lineker, Wayne Rooney and Harry Kane have in ­combined caps.
    The Coventry City fan added: “It’s not just about getting together in a pub and singing ‘England’ — I like to see a bit of the country I’m in and experience the  culture.
    “Football’s taken me to some places I’d never have visited otherwise, like Lichtenstein, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Moldova, North Macedonia, Albania and Montenegro.

    “People I’ve met at games have become lifelong friends who I regard pretty much as family.”
    Brian, who runs a football league and works as a courier, caught the Three Lions bug at his first international game — Holland’s 3-1 win over England in Dusseldorf at Euro 88.
    “There were 5,000 English fans in a sea of orange Dutch fans,” he remembered.
    “The place was bouncing. I fell in love with the camaraderie and, despite not winning a  game in that tournament, I was hooked.
    “I followed England from that day on — only missing games for two funerals, a wedding and when Covid restrictions applied.”
    His early days supporting England  were plagued by hooliganism. Brian, from Chesterfield and married to wife Lisa, 47, explained: “There was fan trouble at games back then. I never got involved, I just wanted to watch the football.
    “In 1991 I was in Poznan to watch a Euro ’92 qualifying game and it was scary.
    “I got hit over the head with a police baton. I was just queueing to get into the ground.
    “Inside, the Polish fans — some from Poznan and some from Warsaw — were fighting each other.
    “We asked a steward, ‘Why are they fighting?’ He replied, ‘To see who will fight you’. It was a terrifying journey back to the station.
    “The Japan World Cup in 2002 was the first time we’d gone somewhere and been welcomed as fans.

    ⚽ ENGLAND vs ITALY EURO 2020 FINAL BETTING SPECIAL ⚽

    “It may have been too far and too expensive for the troublemakers.
    “It was a brilliant experience. We were treated with respect and we showed the Japanese respect as well.
    “After England beat Argentina in Sapporo I stayed up celebrating for two days.
    “Some of us fans met a giant sumo wrestler in a park. We took turns  wrestling him, but one by one, he picked us up and threw us in a fountain. It was all good-natured.
    “I’m left with so many beautiful memories.”
    Not so rose-tinted was the game Brian described as his worst ever — England’s 2-1 loss to footballing ­minnows Iceland at Euro 2016.
    He said: “It was dreadful but I didn’t think about giving up following England.
    “Sometimes the actual 90 minutes are the worst part of the trip.”
    On Sunday Brian will arrive at Wembley in a St George flag- festooned limo.
    He said: “Money can’t buy all the memories I’ve got and the people I have met following England.
    “Now we’re finally in a final again and it’s like a dream come true. It feels like my lifetime following England has been worth it.”

    MEET THE OTHER SUPERFANS
    SUPERFANS Denis Gristwood and Neil Wallace were at Wembley in ’66 when England won the World Cup.
    Here, they tell MIKE RIDLEY how they will be back in the new home of English football tomorrow – hoping history will repeat itself, this time against Italy.
    DENIS GRISTWOOD, 90
    DENIS  will pull on a lucky team shirt given to him by singer Olly Murs when he goes to Wembley tomorrow.
    The retired plumber, who turns 91 on Tuesday, will have the best ­birthday present ever after waiting 55 years to see England in another final.
    Denis and Bill Gristwood could be the oldest brothers regularly watching EnglandCredit: Collect
    Denis Gristwood, 90, was in his lucky shirt at the semi final with son Danny, 56
    Denis – who has been to more than 250 England games – says: “After all that time, I have got used to accepting defeat  but it would be brilliant to see them win a final again. I was beginning to doubt it would ­happen in my ­lifetime.”
    Denis and his brother Bill,  93 – who will be watching the match on TV at his care home in Northampton – have ­supported England through thick and an awful lot of thin since they sold horse manure to pay for tickets to their first England game, at the time of  the Blitz.
    Since watching their first game – England v Scotland in 1941 – they have spent a small fortune following the national side in 12 tournaments all over the globe.
    Father-of-four Denis, from Greenford, West London, says: “We’re so well known at  Wembley that when we once missed a match everybody thought we’d died.”
    In 1966, Denis was at Wembley. He remembers: “There was no segregation at the stadium in those days, so I had a German guy standing  right behind me.
    Bill and Denis have been watching England around the world since 1941Credit: Collect
    “When Jack ­Charlton fouled and Germany scored from the free kick, the guy behind thumped me in the back, so I turned round and chinned him.“The police turned up and booted the German out as he’d hit me first.
    “I was elated when we won. I walked home carrying my programme, a stuffed lion like the mascot World Cup Willie and a model of the Jules Rimet cup for my kids (inset ).
    “When I got home they thought  I was on the team and had won the trophy myself.
    “Watching England win the World Cup was the best moment of my life. You forget a lot as you get older but I’ll never forget that.” 
    NEIL WALLACE, 76
    RETIRED engineer Neil  was in the 96,924 crowd at the old Wembley ­Stadium when England won the  World Cup.
    And he hopes to be the Three Lions’ lucky charm once again, this time against the Italians in our first major final since that never-to-be-forgotten 4-2 win against West Germany in 1966.
    West Ham supporter Neil’s ticket to roar on the team in the big game comes courtesy of his son Matt, who paid £5,000 for two seats. It’s  a far cry from 1966, when Neil shelled out just £5 to watch every England game.
    Neil Wallace, pictured with son Matt, was at Wembley for England’s 1966 World Cup final and will be at Sunday’s Euro 2020 finaleCredit: ©2021 Darren Cool
    Neil, of Coulsdon, Surrey, says: “They are the two best teams in the tournament. It is going to be a cracker but with home advantage I think there can only be one winner: England.
    “In 1966, I was just 21 and coming to the end of my apprenticeship with a take-home wage of £15 a week.
    “I was a massive football fan along with three of my friends. We used to play for a local Sunday league team and we were all regulars at Upton Park to watch the Hammers.
    “West Ham’s three best players, Bobby Moore, Martin Peters and Geoff Hurst, were all in the England squad.
    “So when we saw that World Cup tickets were being advertised for a fiver to get into all the matches, we realised it was an amazing deal and jumped at the chance to buy them.
    “The tickets arrived in a little wallet and we couldn’t have been more excited.  Obviously, in the beginning  we didn’t have any expectations that England could get to the final, let alone win it.
    Neil is just as excited as ever to follow England – and has now been rewarded with another finalCredit: ©2021 Darren Cool
    “But it was fantastic when we got out of the group stages and then beat Argentina in the quarter-finals.
    “Everyone expected England to be beaten by Portugal in the semis because of their star man Eusebio.
    “But in the end he just didn’t show up. The next thing we knew we were in the final.”
    Matt bought his dad the tickets to try to recreate that 1966 magic, even though England still had to beat ­Germany when he got them.
    He says: “I wanted to do something really special for Dad, and I had a lightbulb moment to buy tickets for the final.
    “They were expensive at £2,500 each, but to see the excitement on his face was brilliant.”
    Sir Geoff Hurst says Gareth Southgate is key to England success at Euro 2020 More

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    England’s 1966 World Cup stars as rich as Kane and Co? No, their lives were much Moore modest

    WHEN, God-willing, England lift the Euro trophy tomorrow, the heroes who ended 55 years of hurt are assured fame and fortune.Five decades may have passed, but the players who won the World Cup in 1966 seem to have been living on another planet.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    Following the victory, the team were whisked to a banquet at the Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington, their wives and girlfriends were not allowed in and were given burgers insteadCredit: Mirrorpix
    Agents for Harry Kane and his team will long ago have negotiated eye-watering bonuses from bosses at the English FA for taking the ­honours at ­Wembley tomorrow night.
    But in 1966, in the bowels of the famous London stadium while the rest of the team were recovering after their 4-2 extra-time win over ­Germany, team captain Bobby Moore slipped out of the dressing room.
    He went to meet FA chiefs who told him — with no negotiations back then — that the players would share a total bonus of £22,000.
    Moore decided each man would get £1,000, whether they had played in the tournament or not. He told his teammates: “We were all in this together and that’s how it will stay.”
    Goal hero Martin Peters  with wife KathleenCredit: Mirrorpix
    While our present-day England stars earn millions, have lucrative sponsorship deals and live in gated mansions, things were very different back in 1966.
    ‘Players of the people’
    Then, they were on around 80 quid a week — and felt LUCKY. Because only four years earlier the £20-a-week cap on players’ wages had been lifted — and they were now earning five times the average worker’s pay.
    The team’s youngest member, winger Alan Ball, was one of the few players with a kit deal.
    Bobby Moore vs Harry Kane
    MOORE: Aged 22 (died 1993). Pay:  £80 a week. Home: £3,000  semi in Chingford, Essex. Car: Jaguar. Family: Divorced wife Tina in 1986 after 22 years, two kids. Honours: OBE.
    KANE: Aged 27. Pay: £180k a week – likely to rise to £300k.  Home: Rented London apartment for £15,000 a week. Car: Range Rover, Jaguar, Bentley. Family:  Married to childhood sweetheart Kate Goodland, three kids. Honours:  MBE  – but knighthood if we win. 

    At 9.30 on the morning of the ’66 game, he went to see an Adidas rep staying at the team hotel.
    Ball, who only 45 minutes earlier had learned he was playing, ­collected £1,000 —  enough for a new car —  for wearing Adidas boots in the game. 
    Centre back Jack Charlton, on the other hand, got just £100 from his bootmaker. The FA had done a  deal with Marks & Spencer and the team ­travelled to the game in St Michael suits.
    In ’66 Arthur Edwards was a young photographer on the local East ­London paper and took pictures of Moore and World Cup final goal scorers Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters. Arthur, now The Sun’s royal photographer recalls: “They’d invite me to their homes to take pictures and never asked for a penny and there was no agents making demands. 
    “It was a different world back then. They were players of the people.” 
     Hurst was living in a £3,000 semi in Chigwell and returned home to wife Judith after England’s victory — and mowed the lawn.
     Moore’s wife Tina recalled: “After the match, we went back to our semi in Essex and held a party for some of our close friends. It wasn’t anything fancy, just a few drinks and a bit of music for a couple of hours.
    Gordon Banks vs Jordan Pickford
    BANKS: Aged 28 (died 2019). Pay: £60 a week with Leicester, plus gate money. Home: £3,000 1930s  semi. Car: Ford Consul. Family: Wife Ursula, a West German who supported England, three kids. Honours: OBE.
    PICKFORD: Aged 27. Pay: £150,000 a week at Everton. Home: £2.1million  mansion in Cheshire. Car: £160,000 Lamborghini Urus 4×4. Family: Wife Megan Davison, one son. Honours: None.

    “After everyone left, it all felt a bit flat. Bobby poured himself a lager while I cleared away the glasses.
    “I suppose Bobby and I did start to experience some things similar to footballers and their wives nowadays. 
    “After the World Cup, people wanted to take photos of us, and we had offers coming in from every direction.
    “We got a telegram from composer Lionel Bart, inviting us to a party with Tom Jones and Joan Collins.
    “Bobby got a contract modelling for Hornes Brothers, a men’s outfitters. He bought us a Jaguar — a car he had always longed for — and we had the house of our dreams built on a plot of land on the best street in Chigwell.”
    Hurst, who was later knighted, also bought a bigger house — for £12,750. Liverpool striker Roger Hunt returned to his home in Culcheth, near Warrington, to find his lawn had been trampled by 600 fans chanting ‘Eey aye adio, we won the Cup!’
    Geoff Hurst vs Declan Rice
    HURST: Aged 24 (now 79). Pay: £80 a week at West Ham. Home: £3,000 three-bed semi in Chingford. Car: Ford Anglia. Family: Married Judith in 1964, three daughters. Honours: Knighted in 1998.
    RICE: Aged 22. Pay: £60,000 a week at West Ham. Expected to double after Euros. House: Mansion in Surrey. Car: Range Rover. Family: Girlfriend Lauren Fryer, no kids. Honours: None.

    In 1966, Bobby Charlton also lived in Cheshire, in a modest detached home in Knutsford.
    Today’s team are staying at England’s posh St George’s training facilities at Burton on Trent with its pools, gyms and even an oxygen chamber. A huge staff including chefs and nutritionists tend to their needs.
    In July 1966, England’s squad plus two coaches and manager Alf Ramsey, stayed at the ­Hendon Hall Hotel, where the team ate the same menu as the other guests. For lunch before the final, the players had chicken, apart from Moore who had beans on toast.
    To relax, they went shopping and played cards and cricket or sunbathed in the grounds. 
    There was no ring of steel around the players, like today.
    Wags ate burgers
    Back then fans could stop and chat to them in the grounds, or hail them in the streets nearby while they went shopping. 
    The players’ wives had to stay at home and wait for their ­husbands or boyfriends to phone after training.
    Fulham full-back George Cohen’s wife Daphne was left at home with their baby  Andrew for eight weeks while England trained for the tournament. She recalled: “I couldn’t call George at the team hotel — I didn’t even know the number. 
    “I had to write letters and wait for him to call. Alf Ramsey made it clear wives should keep away.” 
    The night before the big match, Ramsey took his team to the local cinema in Hendon to see the film Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines.
    Alf Ramsay vs Gareth Southgate
    RAMSEY: Aged 46 (died 1999). Pay: £4,500 a year. Home: Mock Tudor semi in Ipswich. Car: Austin 1100. Family: Married to Rita Norris, one dachshund. Honours: Knighthood, statues at Ipswich and Wembley.
     SOUTHGATE: Aged 50. Pay: £3million a year. Home: £3.5m haunted 16th Century mansion near Harrogate. Cars: Bentley and Aston Martin. Family: Married to ­Alison, two girls. Honours: OBE – but Sir Gareth if we win.

    On the day of the match the wives, who were given two ­tickets each, had to make their own way to Wembley.
    Pat Wilson, wife of left-back Ray, left their two children with her mum in Liverpool to drive to London for the final. 
    She said: “I picked up Bobby Charlton’s wife Norma on the way, but halfway down the motorway the exhaust went on our Ford Zephyr.”
    Following the victory, the team were whisked to a banquet at the Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington. Their wives and girlfriends made their own way there to discover they were not allowed in — although Pickles, the dog that found the stolen World Cup trophy four months earlier, was.

     Instead, they ate burgers in a restaurant downstairs.
    Daphne Cohen, who had hitched a lift to Wembley said: “I remember passing the banqueting suites and feeling a little fed up that we didn’t even get a ticket for the tearoom.”
    But the FA did thank the Wags for their sacrifice during the tournament —  presenting each with a pair of scissors in a box.
    Iconic moment late Nobby Stiles danced with trophy after England won 1966 World Cup More

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    Former Irish PM Leo Varadkar slammed for ‘sly dig’ at England team ahead of Euro 2020 final with Italy

    LEO Varadkar has been blasted for his “sly dig” at the England team ahead of their Euro 2020 final against Italy. The former Irish PM faced huge backlash for his “pro Italy” tweet – with hundreds slamming him for “revealing where his loyalties lie”.
    ⚽ Follow ALL of the latest news and updates from Euro 2020 with our live blog
    Leo Varadkar posted a ‘sly dig’ at the England football team ahead of their Euro 2020 final against ItalyCredit: Twitter
    Varadkar posted a snap of him holding a cup of coffee in a cafe in Dublin.
    He captioned the picture: “Enjoying a delicious cup of Italian coffee at the Il Fornaio Italian cafe on Dawson Street. It’s like Little Italy here.”
    And his followers were furious at the not-so-subtle jibe.
    Several argued he should be showing support to his neighbours, while one said he should get back to business and “do some work”.
    Another user wrote: “This is clearly sly tacit support for the Italy football team against England.
    “I suppose you have Irish sparkling wine at the ready for an Italian win.”
    While one said: “Have you a sick note or are you skiving off work? Hope you won’t be claiming any expenses for today.”
    One Twitter user moved Ireland to be next to Italy on the mapCredit: Twitter
    Another called Varadkar’s post a ‘sly tactic’Credit: Twitter
    Another joked the photo was ‘subtle’Credit: Twitter
    One man asked on Twitter if he was trying to say who he is supporting on SundayCredit: TWITTER
    One creative follower even edited a map of Ireland next to Italy, writing: “No doubt about where Ireland has positioned itself this week.”
    But a few Varadkar fans jumped to defend him, saying he was “only drinking a cup of coffee”.
    One tweeted: “It’s just a bit of bants, ffs, calm down everyone frothing at this.”
    Another asked: “Is he not allowed a cup of coffee?”
    Meanwhile, Irish premier Micheál Martin, who replaced Varadkar last year, diplomatically declared his support for England, saying: “I wish our neighbours the very best of success.”
    And Foreign Minister Simon Coveney described England as “the best team in the tournament” alongside a photo of manager Gareth Southgate.

    There is just one more game to win before England can finally confirm ‘it’s coming home’.
    The Three Lions face Italy on Sunday night – the team’s first major football final in 55 years.
    Kick off is at 8pm, with both the BBC and ITV having live coverage.
    Boris Johnson decks out No10 with England flags for Euro 2020 final – as Brits push for Bank Holiday if we win More