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Colourised montage print of all four of England39s goals in the 1966 World Cup final personally signed by heroes Sir Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters. Sir Geoff Hurst enjoyed a 17 year professional career with West Ham, Stoke City and West Bromwich Albion but the England striker will forever be remembered for his iconic hat trick against West Germany in the 1966 World Cup final at Wembley. The West Ham striker went on to play in the 1970 World Cup finals but it is his part in England39s 1966 triumph for which he is lionised. He was knighted in 1998 and six years later inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame. Martin Peters made his England debut a mere two months before the 1966 World Cup finals but his relative international inexperience was quickly forgotten as he forced his way into Sir Alf Ramsey39s starting line up and played a pivotal role in the side39s famous victory over West Germany in the final. The West Ham midfielder did not feature in the opening game of the tournament against Uruguay but he was selected for the second match Mexico and remained in the team for the rest of the competition. It was Peters39 cross in the notoriously violent quarter final against Argentina that set up Hurst39s headed winner but it was in the final at Wembley that the dynamic Hammer was to earn his place in World Cup folklore. With the matched locked at 1 1 and 12 minutes left on the clock, England won a corner. Alan Ball took it, Hurst could only get a partial contact and the ball fell to Peters, who unleashed an unstoppable half volley that almost broke the net. West Germany equalised in the dying seconds of normal time but Hurst39s two goals in extra time ensured Peters39 effort was not in vain and the West Ham midfielder remains only the second Englishman to score in a World Cup final. He went on to play 67 times for his country, scoring 20 goals from midfield, and in 2006 he was inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame.
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