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・ Jeff Bornstein
・ Jeff Borowiak
・ Jeff Borris
・ Jeff Boschee
・ Jeff Boss
・ Jeff Bostic
・ Jeff Bottema
・ Jeff Bourman
・ Jeff Bourne
・ Jeff Bova
・ Jeff Bowden
・ Jeff Bowen
・ Jeff Bower
・ Jeff Bower (American football)
・ Jeff Bower (basketball)
Jeff Astle
・ Jeff Atkinson
・ Jeff Atkinson (athlete)
・ Jeff Atmajian
・ Jeff Attinella
・ Jeff Atwater
・ Jeff Atwood
・ Jeff Austin
・ Jeff Austin (baseball)
・ Jeff Austin (disambiguation)
・ Jeff Austin (tennis)
・ Jeff Avery
・ Jeff Ayres
・ Jeff B. Davis
・ Jeff B. Harmon


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Jeff Astle : ウィキペディア英語版
Jeff Astle

Jeffrey "Jeff" Astle (13 May 1942 – 19 January 2002) was an English footballer. Nicknamed "the King" by fans, he played 361 games for West Bromwich Albion and scored 174 goals. He also won five caps for England, but without scoring.
== Football career ==
Born in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire (in the same street, he claimed, as D. H. Lawrence), Astle turned professional with Notts County F.C. when he was 17. His style was that of a classic centre forward; he was a protégé of Tommy Lawton. In 1964 he signed for West Brom for a fee of £25,000. He scored 174 goals in 361 games for the Baggies, including the only goal in the 1968 FA Cup Final, with which he completed the feat of scoring in every round of the competition.
Two years later, Astle scored in Albion's 2–1 defeat by Manchester City in the League Cup final, becoming the first player to score in the finals of both of the major English cup competitions at Wembley. He had already scored in the first leg of the 1966 League Cup Final four years previously, but that was at West Ham United's Boleyn Ground.
At the height of Astle's Albion career, the words "ASTLE IS THE KING" appeared in large white letters on the brickwork of Primrose Bridge, which carries Cradley Road over a canal in Netherton, in the heart of the Black Country. The bridge quickly became known locally as "the Astle Bridge". When the council removed the letters, they re-appeared a few days later. Following Astle's death in 2002, a campaign was launched to have the bridge officially named in his honour, but this has so far been rejected over fears of vandal attacks by supporters of rival teams, as the area also has a high percentage of Aston Villa and Wolverhampton Wanderers fans.
In 1969–1970 Astle was the leading scorer in Division One with 25 goals. In 1970, he was called up to the England squad for the World Cup finals tournament in Mexico. He won the first of his five caps, as a substitute, when England were a goal down against eventual champions Brazil. He missed a relatively easy scoring chance during this debut appearance.
In subsequent years his fitness deteriorated through repeated injuries, and in 1974 he left Albion to join the South African club Hellenic. His final bow came with a brief spell at the English non-league side Dunstable Town F.C., where he teamed up with former Manchester United star George Best.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Jeff Astle」の詳細全文を読む



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