Len Cantello Testimonial Match

The Len Cantello Testimonial Match, (West Bromwich Albion XI v Cyrille Regis & Laurie Cunningham XI), was a testimonial football match that took place in May 1979 to celebrate West Bromwich Albion player Len Cantello, who played for the club over 300 times between 1968 and 1979. The teams were selected based on the colour of the players' skin. The West Bromwich Albion XI was composed of white players while the Cyrille Regis & Laurie Cunningham XI was composed of black players.[1]

Len Cantello Testimonial Match
  • West Bromwich Albion XI v Cyrille Regis & Laurie Cunningham XI
  • Whites vs. Blacks
Date15 May 1979 (1979-05-15)
VenueThe Hawthorns, West Bromwich, Sandwell, England
RefereeJohn D. Hough
Attendance7,023

The West Brom XI team featured Tony Godden, Paddy Mulligan, Derek Statham, Tony Brown, John Wile, Bryan Robson, Johnny Giles, John Trewick, Alistair Brown, Len Cantello, David Mills, David Stewart, Martyn Bennett and Kevin Summerfield.

The Cyrille Regis & Laurie Cunningham XI featured Ian Benjamin (Sheffield United), Vernon Hodgson (West Bromwich Albion – a trialist[2]), Brendon Batson (West Bromwich Albion), Derek Richardson (QPR), Stewart Phillips (Hereford United), George Berry (Wolverhampton Wanderers), Bob Hazell (Wolverhampton Wanderers), Garth Crooks (Stoke City), Winston White (Hereford Utd), Cyrille Regis (West Bromwich Albion), Laurie Cunningham (West Bromwich Albion), Remi Moses (West Bromwich Albion), Valmore Thomas (Hereford United). Benjamin, Phillips, Crooks and White would go on to sign for West Bromwich Albion later during their playing career. Roger Palmer was expected to play but was not available.

Match details

Line up according to the match programme.

West Bromwich XI2–3Cyrille Regis & Laurie Cunningham XI
Robson
Al. Brown
Cunningham
Crooks
Phillips
The Hawthorns
Attendance: 7,023[3]
Referee: John D. Hough (Macclesfield)
GK Tony Godden
RB Paddy Mulligan
CB John Wile
LB Derek Statham
RM Tony Brown
MF Len Cantello (c)
MF Bryan Robson
MF Johnny Giles
LM John Trewick
CF Alistair Brown
CF David Mills
Substitute:
GK David Stewart
CB Martyn Bennett
CF Kevin Summerfield
GK Derek Richardson
RB Brendon Batson
CB George Berry
CB Larry May
LB Bob Hazell
RM Winston White
CM Remi Moses
CM Vernon Hodgson[4]
LM Laurie Cunningham
CF Garth Crooks
CF Cyrille Regis (c)
Substitute:
DF Valmore Thomas[4]
CF Ian Benjamin[4]
CF Stewart Phillips[1]

Documentary

The match was the basis of a BBC documentary entitled Whites Vs Blacks: How Football Changed A Nation.[5] The documentary was aired on BBC Two on 27 November 2016.[1]

gollark: The whole thing came from a convoluted joke...
gollark: There's actually a wiki, though it documents some Emu War games which may not technically actually exist yet.
gollark: > Welcome to Aidan's RPG thing!> You are an intrepid explorer who got lost in a cavernous cavern, infested with all sorts of dangerous critters, from rats to mighty ogres.> You cannot survive, but how many foes will you take with you?> Use WASD or buttons to move and attack, and 'r' to restart.> Press W, A, S or D to begin.
gollark: https://osmarks.tk/emu-war/
gollark: Apparently it's going to be Turing-complete.

References

  1. "The match that pitted white players against black players". BBC News. 17 November 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  2. "The story behind the Blacks vs Whites West Brom game « Express & Star". www.expressandstar.com. 19 November 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  3. Burnton, Simon (November 24, 2016). "The West Brom testimonial when black players took on a team of white players | Simon Burnton" via www.theguardian.com.
  4. Paul Rees. The Three Degrees: The Men Who Changed British Football Forever. pp. 188–89.
  5. "Premiere documentary screening of 'Whites Vs Blacks' – featured as part of BBC Black and British Season". Mac Birmingham. 7 November 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
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