|  | 
    
          | flg.jpg)  "WEMBLEY 
		  ROAR IS STILLED BY SECOND PENALTY" 
		  Daily Mirror | 
	
    | 
  
    |   Officials 
	  from Scotland | England Party | FIFA ruling on substitutes | Austria |  
    | Referee (black) John  
	Alexander Mowat MBE
 44/45 (1906), Rutherglen
 | The 
	continental ruling of allowing a substitute to replace an injured player 
	prior to the 44th minute, and a goalkeeper at any time, is in place. 
 Teams are presented to the Guest of Honour, Jules 
	Rimet, President of FIFA
 |  
    | red flag             
	
    
    Linesmen           
	yellow flag |  
    | C. Gibson England
 | Paulo de Oliveira Portugal
 |  
    | original linesmen were named as Peter.Fitzpatrick and Douglas Gerrard 
	(Scotland) |  | 
	
    |  | 
  
          | flg.jpg) England 
    Team | 
    
    |  | 
  
    | Rank | No official ranking system established; ELO rating 4th
 | Colours | The 1949 home 
	uniform -
    White collared jerseys, blue shorts, black socks with white 
	tops. 
 |  
    | P 22nd of 43, W 13 - D 4 - L 5 - F 
	60 - A 33. |  
    | Captain | Billy Wright 
 | Manager | Walter Winterbottom, 38 (31 March 1913),  appointed as FA national director of coaching/team manager on 8 July 1946; |  
    | record 24th of 90, W 15 - D 3 - L 6 - F 59 - A 30.  ³ | Trainer: Jimmy Trotter (Charlton Athletic FC) | P 42nd of 139, W 28 - D 7 - L 7 - F 128 - A 49. |  
    |  | Team chosen by Selection Committee headed by Arthur Drewry, 
	on Monday, 19 November, in London, revised on Monday, 26 November. |  
    | flg.jpg) England
    
      Lineup |  
    |  | five changes 
		 to the previous match 
		 (Smith, Barrass, Finney, Sewell & Phillips out) | league position 
		  (19 November) |  |  
    |  | Merrick, Gilbert H. | 29 306 days
 | 26 January 1922 | G | Birmingham City FC 
		  (FL2 11th) | 2 | 2ᵍᵃ |  
    |  | 15th keeper to face a penalty kick |  
    | 2  | Ramsey, Alfred E. | 31 310 days
 | 22 January 1920 | RB | Tottenham Hotspur FC 
		  (FL 4th) | 18 | 1 
  ¹ |  
    |  | 14th 
	successful penalty kick (25th overall) | oldest to take & score a penalty |  
    |  |  |  | 16 July 1925 |  
    | 3 | Eckersley, William | 26 135 days
 | LB | Blackburn Rovers FC 
		  (FL2 22nd bottom) | 6 | 0 |  
    | 4 | Wright, William A. | 27 295 days
 | 6 February 1924 | RHB | Wolverhampton
      Wanderers FC (FL 
	15th) | 39 | 3 |  
    | 5 
  | Froggatt, Jack | 29 11 days
 | 17 November 1922 | CHB | Portsmouth FC 
		  (FL TOP) | 4 | 1 |  
    | 6 | Dickinson, James W. | 26 218 days
 | 24 April 1925 | LHB | Portsmouth
      FC (FL TOP) | 16 | 0 |  
    | 713 | 7 | Milton, C. Arthur | 23 263 days
 | 10 March 1928 | OR | Arsenal FC 
		  (FL 2nd) | 1 | 0 |  
          | the 23rd Arsenal player to represent 
		  England | only app 
	1951 |  
    | 714 | 8 | Broadis, Ivan A. | 28 345 days
 | 18 December 1922 | IR | Manchester City FC (FL 10th) | 1 | 0 |  
          | the sixteenth City player to represent 
		  England |  
    | 9 
  | Lofthouse, Nathaniel | 26 93 days
 | 27 August 1925 | CF | Bolton Wanderers FC 
		  (FL 3rd) | 4 | 5 |  
    | 10 | Baily, Edward F. | 26 114 days
 | 6 August 1925 | IL | Tottenham Hotspur FC 
		  (FL 4th) | 6 | 5 |  
    | 11 | Medley, Leslie D. | 31 86 days
 | 3 September 1920 | OL | Tottenham Hotspur FC 
		  (FL 4th) | 6 | 1 |  
    | final app 
	1950-51 |  
    | unused substitutes: | Ted Burgin (Sheffield United FC 
		  (FL2 2nd)),
		  
		  Jackie Milburn (Newcastle United FC 
		  (FL 4th)) and
		  
		  Ray Barlow  (West Bromwich Albion FC 
		  (FL 13th)). Milburn replaced original 
		  reserve,
		  
		  Wilf Mannion (Middlesbrough FC 
		  (FL 16th)) and Burgin replaced
		  
		  Bert Williams (Wolverhampton Wanderers FC 
		  (FL 15th)) as reserve goalkeeper. |  
    | team changes: | There were numerous changes to the 
		  starting XI, 
		  Lionel Smith (Arsenal FC 
		  (FL 2nd)), 
		  Bill Nicholson (Tottenham Hotspur FC 
		  (FL 4th)), 
		  Tom Finney (Preston North End 
		  (FL 5th)) and 
		  Stan 
		  Mortensen (Blackpool FC (FL 14th)) 
		  all picked up injuries and had to be replaced. |  
    | records: | For the first time, England 
		  have recorded three draws in a single season. But for the second time, 
		  have recorded three draws in a single calendar year. |  
    | goalscoring 
    
	records: | Two players ended 1951 as top goalscorer with just three goals, a new 
		  post-war record low. Jackie Milburn and Nat Lofthouse both played in 
		  three matches. |  
    | The team and original reserves met in 
		  Manchester on 20 November and practiced over two days on the Maine 
		  Road ground. |  
    |  |  
    | 2-3-5 | Merrick - Ramsey, Eckersley -
 Wright, Froggatt, 
		  Dickinson -
 Milton, Broadis, Lofthouse, Baily, Medley.
 |  
    | Averages: | Age | 28 years 0
		  days | Appearances/Goals | 9.4 | 1.3 |  | 
	
          |  | 
	
          |  Austria 
    Team | 
	
    |  | 
  
    | Rank | No official ranking system established; ELO rating 11th
 | Colours | 'flame red' collared jerseys with white collars/cuffs,
    white shorts, red socks with two white thin hoops. |  
    | Captain | Leopold Gernhardt | Manager | Walter Nausch, 44 (5 February 1907), appointed September 
	1948. Team chosen on Monday, 19 November 1951. |  
    |  Austria
    
      Lineup |  
    | 1 | Zeman, Walter | 24 211 days
 | 1 May 1927 | G | SK Rapid Wien | 30 | 58ᵍᵃ |  
    | 4 | Hanappi, Gerhard | 22 285 days
 | 16 February 1929 | RB | SK Rapid Wien | 21 | 3 |  
    | 2 | Röckl, Rudolf | 24 320 days
 | 12 January 1927 | RCB | Wiener SC | 11 | 0 |  
    | 3 
  | Happel, Ernst F.H. | 25 364 days
 | 29 November 1925 | LCB | SK Rapid Wien | 28 | 0 |  
    | 6 | Brinek, Theodor | 30 203 days
 | 9 May 1921 | LB | SC
          Wacker Wien | 10 | 2 |  
    | 9 | Huber, Adolf | 28 268 days
 | 5 March 1923 | RHB | FK Austria Wien | 7 | 6 |  
    | 5 
  | Ocwirk, Ernst | 25 266 days
 | 7 March 1926 | LHB | FK Austria Wien | 31 | 2 |  
    | 7 
  | Melchior, Ernst | 31 155 days
 | 26 June 1920 | OR | FK Austria Wien | 30 | 16 |  
    | 8 
  | Gernhardt, Leopold | 31 257 days
 | 16 March 1920 | IR | SK Rapid Wien | 26 | 0 |  
    | 10 | Stojaspal, Ernst | 26 318 days
 | 14 January 1925 | IL | FK Austria Wien | 23 | 9 |  
    |  | tenth 
	penalty against scored 
		  (20th overall) |  
    |  |  |  |  
    | 11 | Körner, Alfred | 25 287 days
 | 14 February 1926 | OL | SK Rapid Wien | 17 | 6 |  
    | reserves: | Goalkeeper Franz Pelikan, full-back Karl Kowanz, half-back Walter Schleger and forward, 
		  Theodor Wagner. |  
    | Selector and trainer, Walter Nausch, played for Austria against 
		  England on three occasions, in 1930, 1932 and 1936. He was also the 
		  captain in their 1936 victory. |  
    | Prior to the match, the Austrians trained in Paris, and then made full 
		  use of Griffin Park, Brentford FC's home ground. |  
    |  |  
    | 4-2-4 'Ocwirck' formation
 | Zeman - Hanappi, Röckl, Happel, Brinek -
 Huber, Ocwirk -
 Melchior, Gernhardt, Stojaspal, Körner
 |  
    | Averages: | Age | 27 years 54 
		  days | Appearances/Goals | 21.3 | 3.8 |  
    | most experienced opposition post-war 
	team so far |  | 
  
    |  | 
    
          | Match Report  by 
		  Mike Payne | 
	
    | 
  
	  
	  
	   At 
	  last England produced a much better performance than of late against a 
	  very good Austrian side. It made for an excellent international match and 
	  notable for two different styles. England, quick and incisive, did 
	  everything at top speed. Austria, meanwhile, remained slow, precise and 
	  deliberate in their build up before producing some dangerous through 
	  balls. 
 But this was undoubtedly England's best display for some time and they 
	  could and should have won. Unfortunately they failed to punish some bad 
	  defensive errors by the Austrian defence although it must be said that the 
	  ball did not run too kindly at times for the England players.
 
 Shining brightest amongst all the talent on show was a remarkable 
	  performance by the Austrian goalkeeper Zemen. His agility and handling was 
	  superb and he continually thwarted the eager home forwards. As early as 
	  the fourth minute he made a brilliant save from Ivor Broadis after Arthur 
	  Milton had put the Manchester City man through. The fact that England did 
	  not get that early goal, so vital against the Continental sides, probably 
	  had a large bearing on the final result as Austria improved as the game 
	  went on.
 
 England certainly had the better chances in the first 
	  half. Billy Wright, Jack Froggatt and Jimmy Dickinson worked tirelessly 
	  for them and the impressive Stojaspal and Ocwirk did the same for the 
	  visitors. Broadis had that early chance quickly followed by another, and 
	  then Milton and Nat Lofthouse, twice, saw good efforts saved. At the other 
	  end Huber forced Gil Merrick into an excellent save before Bill Eckersley 
	  did well to block another Huber effort.
  Despite this good football 
	  producing umpteen goal attempts the scoreline was still blank at the 
	  interval. 
 Only two minutes into the second half England suffered a 
	  shock when the Austrians took the lead. Ocwirk placed a deep free-kick 
	  into the penalty area and caught the home defence flat-footed. In a flash 
	  Melchior cut in from the left to leave Merrick helpless with a fine shot.
 
 Now it really was a test for England but they rose to the challenge 
	  splendidly. Wave after wave of relentless attacks swept forward and after 
	  70 minutes they gained their reward. Eddie Baily was sent sprawling in the 
	  area by Ocwirk's tackle and the referee awarded a penalty which the 
	  ice-cool Alf Ramsey calmly slotted past Zeman. The Wembley crowd really 
	  got behind England at this stage and they went wild with excitement when 
	  their team took the lead with 14 minutes to go. This time Ramsey took a 
	  free-kick and placed the ball perfectly for Lofthouse to run in and head 
	  home.
 
 The action never let up and in the 88th minute Huber fired in 
	  a header which beat Merrick but was pushed away by Eckersley's hand. 
	  Another penalty! Stojaspal capped a fine personal display by showing 
	  Ramsey's coolness by tucking away the spot-kick. It was no less than 
	  Austria deserved for a thrilling display.
 
 It was iconic that 
	  despite such a fine football match all the goals had come from set 
	  situations.
 
 | 
	
          | Match Report  by 
		  Norman Giller | 
	
    | 
  	
	  
	  An injury to Tom 
	  Finney forced yet another
  permutation by the selectors, with Gloucester cricketer and Arsenal forward
  Arthur Milton partnering Ivor Broadis on the right wing. Austria, under the
  baton of the remarkable Ernst 'Clockwork' Ocwirk, took the lead in the
  forty-seventh minute after a first half of cut-and-thrust football of the
  highest quality. Ocwirk sent a precision free-kick into the penalty area where
  Melchior forced it wide of goalkeeper Gil Merrick. England equalised in the
  seventieth minute when the ice-cool Alf Ramsey scored from the penalty spot
  after his Spurs team-mate Eddie Baily had been sent sprawling. Six minutes
  later Ramsey made a goal for Nat Lofthouse with a pin-pointed free-kick which
  the Bolton centre-forward steered high into the net with a powerful header.
  Austria, rated one of the best sides in Europe and fresh from becoming the
  first overseas team to beat Scotland at home, saved the match two minutes from
  the end with a penalty by Stojaspal. There was some breath-taking attacking
  movements by both teams, yet all the goals came from set-piece play. Milton
  was the last player capped by England at cricket and football. When Eddie Baily was fouled for the penalty, he picked himself up and
  said to his Spurs team-mate Alf Ramsey, "I've done all the hard work
  winning the blankety blank penalty, now make sure you score." Alf tucked the
  penalty away as coolly as if in a training session.
 | 
	
          | Match Report  by 
		  Glen Isherwood | 
	
    | 
  	  
	  England were 
	  battling with Wales to regain the British Championship. Austria had not 
	  competed in the previous year's World Cup and had beaten England only once 
	  in six meetings, 2-1 n Vienna in 1936. They had lost 4-3 on their only 
	  previous visit to England at Stamford Bridge in 1932.All the goals came 
	  in the second half. First an Ocwirk free kick cleared the England defence 
	  for Ernst Melchior to run in and beat Merrick.
 England equalised 
	  with a quarter of the game remaining. Ocwirk brought down Baily in the 
	  area and Alf Ramsey stepped up to score from the penalty. Seven minutes 
	  later a Ramsey free kick was headed in by Nat Lofthouse on his first 
	  Wembley appearance, but three minutes from the end Austria levelled from 
	  an Ernst Stojaspol penalty after Eckersley had handled a goal-bound header 
	  from Huber.
 England went on to share the British Championship with 
	  Wales and then went to Vienna the following year and beat Austria 3-2. Nat 
	  Lofthouse earned the nickname 'Lion of Vienna' after being knocked 
	  unconscious when scoring the winner and then returning for the last five 
	  minutes. Lofthouse was Footballer of the Year in 1953 and scored 30 goals 
	  for England.
 
 | 
	
          | The 
		  Penalty Kick Alf Ramsey | 
	
    | 
  	  "THE RAMSEY PENALTY..."In newspaper reports of the game they said I appeared the most cool and 
	  collected person on the field, but I can assure you that my heart was 
	  beating madly, and as I bent down to place the ball on the spot the goal 
	  seemed to have shrunk to about half its normal size. Maybe I appeared to 
	  take a long time to place the ball on the spot, but during practise I 
	  discovered that if you kick a football with the lacing facing the sky it 
	  invariably rises. After making some experiments, I came to the conclusion 
	  that the best way to place the ball for a spot-kick is to have the lace 
	  facing the goalkeeper. I did this against the Austrians, got it to my 
	  liking, stepped back a few paces and then walked once more towards the 
	  ball as the referee indicated his permission for the kick to be taken. My 
	  legs felt like rubber, and just before my right foot made contact I 
	  noticed Zemen move slightly to his right. At once, like a boxer going in 
	  for the 'kill', I side-footed the ball to the other side of the goal. Now 
	  I'll make a confession. I did not hit the ball quite so hard as I 
	  intended, but the Wembley turf is so accurate the ball slid gracefully 
	  into the goal with Zeman realising his error too late to make amends. Take 
	  it from me, I was the happiest man in the world as the crowd roared. Then I 
	  had a sudden reaction and began wondering what would have happened if I 
	  had missed that all-important penalty-kick!"
 
 | 
	
          | Match Report  
		  
		  as appears in the F.A. Yearbook 1952-53, page 26 | 
	
    | 
  	  
  	  
	  The selectors were faced with a difficult task to field the right team not 
	  only to withstand the much-heralded Austrians but also defeat them at 
	  Wembley on November 28th. The most menacing weapon in the Austrian armoury 
	  was Ocwirk, the roving centre-half, and thus arose the controversy over 
	  the decision to combat him by playing Wright as a defensive inside-left. 
	  But injuries settled the matter, the plan had to be dropped, and five 
	  changes were made from the team which played Ireland. Broadis and Milton, 
	  new caps, formed the right-wing, Eckersley returned to left-back and Baily 
	  to inside-left, whilst Froggatt was preferred to Barass at centre-half.The match afforded an intriguing contrast between two quite different 
	  styles. England were in fine fettle and played their best match of the 
	  season to date, the agile Zemen having a far busier afternoon than 
	  Merrick.
 The Austrians approach was highly scientific and gave rise to 
	  many long passages of precise, calculated interpassing, yet it seemed to 
	  lack the penetrative power of the more orthodox English attack. The 
	  English retreating defence was also an effective answer to most of the 
	  Austrian forward moves.
 The first half was rich in entertainment, if 
	  barren of goals, though there were several lost opportunities. Then, two 
	  minutes after the changeover, a free-kick from Ocwirk was seized on by 
	  Melchior to put the visitors one up. England rose magnificently to the 
	  challenge, but it was only as the outcome of a penalty that Ramsey shot 
	  the equaliser.
 The struggle was now intense, and within seven minutes 
	  two more goals followed. First, Ramsey placed a free-kick perfectly near 
	  the far post for Lofthouse to head home. Then, two minutes later, the 
	  Austrians were given a penalty, and Stojaspal made the score 2-2. 
	  England's unbeaten home record remained.
 
 | 
	
	
    | In 
	Other News.... 
				
					| It was on 28 
					  November 1951 that the body of Mabel Martin was found in a 
					ditch at the side of a road in Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire. 
					She had died from an attempted abortion and her body was 
					then dumped, but no one was ever charged over her death and 
					it remains a mystery as to who was involved. |  | 
	
          |  | 
	
          | 
    			  
    | Domestic 
	  Football Results 
	  
	  
	  (28 November 1951) |  
      	  
		  
		   
      	
	  	
	  	 
	  	
	  	
	  	
	  	
	  	Football Association 
		  Challenge 
		  Cup First Round Replays:  
		  
		  
			  | Aldershot 3 
			  Tonbridge 2ᴭᵀ Recreation Ground, 
			  Aldershot 
    (8,236)
 Raine, Billington, Flint  ~
		  
			  Jordan, Suttle
 |  
			  |  |  
		  
			  | Bradford 1 York City 1ᴭᵀ Park Avenue, Bradford (8,659)
 Lyons
			  ~ A.Patrick
 |  
			  | 
 |  
			  | Folkestone Town 5 Barnstaple 
			  Town 2 Cheriton Road, Folkestone 
			  (4,500)
 Wiltshire, Day
			  (3), Himsworth
			  ~
 Hayward, Granville
 |  
			  | 
 |  |  | 
		  
			  | 
 |  
			  | Gateshead 1 Stockport County 1ᴭᵀ Redheugh Park, Gateshead (7,769)
 Campbell
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  ~ Weigh
 |  
			  | 
 |  
			  | Mansfield Town 0 Stockton 2 Field Mill, Mansfield 
			  (5,229)
 Chadwick, Clarke
 |  
			  | 
 |  
		  
			  | Stockton, from the North 
			  Eastern League, caused a big shock by winning away against the 
			  Division Three (North) leaders, Mansfield, after only drawing with 
			  them at home. They went on to reach the third round for the only 
			  time in their history and never reached the first round again. |  |  | 
	
          |  | 
	
          | Source Notes | 
	
          | 
			
				| TheFA.com ÖFB.at
 Original newspaper reports
 Glen Isherwood's Wembley: The Complete Record
 
 |  | Rothman's Yearbooks Mike Payne's England: The Complete Post-War Record
 Norman Giller, Football Author
 Billy Wright's The World is My Football Pitch
 British Pathé
 |  | 
	
    | cg |