Amid the memorial services to mark today's 50th anniversary of the Munich air disaster, for survivor Sir Bobby Charlton the memories of that fateful day are never far from his thoughts.
At 3:04pm today, exactly 50 years since BEA Elizabethan airliner G-ALZU crashed in heavy snow trying to take off from Munich airport, the 23 people in the disaster who lost their lives will be remembered.
Among the eight first-team players, plus 15 backroom staff and journalists who perished in Munich, was England international Duncan Edwards, hailed as one of the greatest players of his generation.
While the media focus will be on Manchester United's Old Trafford ground where a day of memorial is planned, the survivors' thoughts will be at the scene of the crash in southern Bavaria.
At 2:30pm today there will be a memorial service at the crash site in Trudering, Munich, where an English-speaking Catholic priest will conduct a religious ceremony.
The names of the dead will be read out, along with the moving lyrics to The Flowers of Manchester, a song penned after the disaster as a tribute to the dead.
For Sir Bobby, who was just 20-years-old and was returning with the team after beating Red Star Belgrade to reach the European Cup semi-finals, his thoughts are sure to be in Munich where his life changed forever.
"When we landed in Munich the weather was as bad as I had ever seen it," Charlton wrote in his autobiography My Manchester United Years. "By the third attempt at take-off, I was suddenly conscious of the silence inside the plane. Outside, the snowy field flew by, but not quickly enough it seemed. There was an awful noise, the grind of metal on metal. Then there was the void."
"When I came to, I was on the ground, outside the wrecked plane, but still strapped into my seat. I saw the bodies in the snow, though one small and passing mercy was that I didn't recognize among the dead one of my closest friends, Eddie Colman," he wrote. "I woke the next morning in a hospital ward and in a nearby bed was a young German, looking at a newspaper. He was reading about the crash and read out the names and then, after a short pause, said, `Dead'. It was as though my life was being taken away, piece by piece."
Charlton would recover to win the World Cup with England at Wembley in 1966 and the European Cup with United in 1968, having been named European Footballer of the Year in 1966.
But having suffered a punctured lung in the Munich disaster, Edwards died of his injuries 15 days later and was described by Charlton, who eventually won 106 caps for England and scored 49 goals, as "the only player that made me feel inferior."
Charlton visited Edwards, who was 22 when he died and had been capped by England as a teenager, in the hospital and the experience has never left him.
"Duncan was in obvious pain when I visited him, but his spirit was still as strong as ever," Charlton said. "I felt my eyes smart while wondering all over again how it could be that this young giant of the game was so stricken while I could prepare to walk down the stairs before packing for home. There was never an instinct to try to put Munich out of mind. Munich was just too big, too overpowering, to permit that kind of reaction. It was something that you knew, right from the start, you had to learn to live with."
Charlton will join the last survivors of the squad -- Albert Scanlon, Harry Gregg, Bill Foulkes and Kenny Morgans -- at a ceremony at Old Trafford which coincides with the service in Munich.
Badminton world No. 3 Anders Antonsen clinched his first Indonesia Open title yesterday after beating Taiwan’s Chou Tien-chen, while South Korea’s An Se-young won her second championship in Jakarta. The 28-year-old Dane sank world No. 7 Chou at the Indonesian capital’s Istora Senayan arena, winning 22-20, 21-14 in a 60-minute match to secure the prestigious Super 1000 event. Antonsen came out on top in a tightly contested first game before cruising to victory in the second. In a more closely fought women’s singles final, South Korean ace and world No. 1 An fought back from one game down to beat China’s
Italy crashed to a 3-0 loss away to Norway, as the four-time FIFA World Cup champions made a disastrous start to their 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign on Friday, while Belgium had to settle for a draw in North Macedonia. Alexander Sorloth, Antonio Nusa and Erling Haaland all scored in the first half in pouring rain in Oslo as Norway made it a night to forget for Italy, who missed out on the past two World Cups. “I have no explanation. Our supporters don’t deserve this kind of match. We need to do some soul-searching. It’s unacceptable,” Italy captain and goalkeeper Gianluigi
‘STILL’: In front of a packed New Jersey arena attended by Donald Trump and Mike Tyson, UFC 316 delivered high drama as Merab Dvalishvili retained his title Georgia’s Merab Dvalishvili scored a second-round submission win over Sean O’Malley to retain his bantamweight title at Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) 316 on Saturday, with Kayla Harrison also winning by submission in the co-main event, tapping out Juliana Pena to claim the women’s bantamweight crown. In front of a packed crowd at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, which included US President Donald Trump and retired heavyweight great Mike Tyson, Dvalishvili, a 34-year-old from the country of Georgia, won the belt in a convincing, although not aesthetically pleasing, unanimous decision. Dvalishvili (19-4) sat on top of the cage and shouted
Manchester City on Monday completed the signing of left-back Rayan Ait-Nouri from Wolverhampton Wanderers for a reported £31 million (US$41.8 million). The 24-year-old Algeria international has signed a five-year contract and will be available for the FIFA Club World Cup, which begins later this week. Ait-Nouri is expected to be just one of a trio of new City faces for that tournament with deals close to completion for AC Milan midfielder Tijjani Reijnders and Olympique Lyonnais playmaker Rayan Cherki. After missing out on a major trophy in the recently completed season for the first time since 2016-2017, City are hoping