Honourable Mentions: Hilarious History
Join two brothers for a hilarious dive into the untold stories of history's most obscure figures. Honourable Mentions: Hilarious History unearths the hidden tales your teachers forgot to mention—If you love a good laugh with a bit of sibling rivalry, and learning about remarkable everyday people who did extraordinary things, subscribe for your weekly dose of banter and historical deep dives. It’s the history podcast where the underdogs finally get their due.
Honourable Mentions: Hilarious History
Who invented the penalty kick?
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Have you ever wondered who invented the football penalty kick? Meet William McCrum, the forgotten Irish goalkeeper from County Armagh who revolutionized soccer history in 1890 by proposing what critics furiously called the "death penalty" rule to stop dirty play.
In this episode, we dive deep into the fascinating sports history of how a wealthy linen manufacturer's son and amateur theatre lover changed the Laws of the Game forever. From a muddy pitch in Milford to the high stakes of a modern FIFA World Cup shootout, discover how McCrum's radical idea shocked Victorian England.
We break down:
Why the English Football Association originally called the rule an insult ("gentlemen don't cheat!")
The blatant, game-changing goal-line foul that forced the FA to change their minds in 1891
The tragic personal life of McCrum, who lost his fortune in the 1929 Wall Street Crash and died penniless, never seeing his invention achieve global glory
Whether you call it football or soccer, you'll never look at a twelve-yard shootout the same way again.
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Every single year, billions of people watch the most dramatic high stakes moment in all of world sports . The penalty shootout. It can win a World Cup, crown a champion, make a hero or break your heart. But what if I told you the concept of the penalty kick was invented by a terrible Irish goalkeeper who was just tired of seeing his opponents cheat? Today we are uncovering the story of William McCrum. In 1890, from a tiny rain soaked pitch in Northern Ireland McCrum proposed a radical idea that shook the Victorian football world. The English elite mocked it. They called it the death penalty or the Irishman's motion. Why? Because they believed a true gentleman would never intentionally foul an opponent. But William McCrum changed sporting history forever, yet while footballers can become heroes or villains from 12 yards, McCrum himself lost a fortune, gambled away hundreds and thousands in Monte Carlo and died completely penniless and forgotten. This is the history of the penalty kick and the man who fought to create it. Hit that follow button right now, because you will never look at a penalty shoot out the same way again. I'm Steve, he's Neil, and this is Honourable Mentions. Honourable Mentions. Hello listener. How are you? Ah the old football eh? Soccer, off -side, throw in, nutmeg and dribble. Speaking of dribble, shall we clean him up and see what he has to say for himself today? Hello, Neil.
Speaker 1Good morning, Stephen. How are you?
Speaker 3Oh yes, I'm fine, thank you. How are you, please, Neil?
Speaker 1Yes, I'm very good. Thank you very much indeed for asking.
Speaker 3Are you excited for the Football World Cup, please?
Speaker 1Uh I like the World Cup, yes. I'm not a massive football fan, really, but you know, I don't mind the World Cup. I quite enjoy tournament competitions.
Speaker 3It's funny you should say that because this podcast isn't just for people who like football. In fact, we are, as you know, Neil, a hilarious and inverted commas history podcast. So we've got that into the life of William McCrum. We're telling a story. It's not solely about football, it's about the man. We're playing the man, not the ball.
Speaker 1Like any sport our nation's playing in, I'm an England supporter.
unknownOh yeah.
Speaker 1Patriotic. Yeah.
Speaker 3What's your favourite part of the game of association Football, please Neil, say penalties.
Speaker 1Penalties.
Speaker 3Penalties? Yeah. Okay. Who came up with the idea of the pen alty kick, please Neil?
Speaker 1I don't know. I don't like penalty shootouts at the end. I don't like them. I can't watch them. I think I can't watch them. I have to go to the room.
Speaker 3That's rather ruined our entire podcast.
Speaker 1Why?
Speaker 3Well, we won't come to that.
Speaker 1Oh, okay. Oh yeah, but don't any anticipation of it. It's very, very it's a very dramatic part of the game, isn't it? Massively.
Speaker 3We will come to all this later on. But from now on, Neil, come with me on another journey back through time and space and we can find out.
Speaker 1Oh, cool then.
Speaker 3Are you ready to wibble wobble?
Speaker 1I always wibble wobble.
Speaker 3Ready? Wibble wobble wobble wobble wobble. Here we are, where industrial grit once met the Russian mortar. The village of Milford rests. A quiet whisper of red brick and radical ideas woven into the green fabric of County Armagh, Northern Ireland.
Speaker 1Green fabric?
Speaker 3Very poetic, isn't it?
Speaker 1Yeah. Very green fabric.
Speaker 3The green fabric. Milford is a village shaped by the rhythmic thrum of the loom, then a gentle flow of the river Callen, standing as a living monument to an age when smoke and ambition rose together from the valley floor. Check me out.
Speaker 1The thrum. I like the word thrum.
Speaker 3It's a good word, isn't it?
Speaker 1Hmm. Thrum.
Speaker 3The village was established around a mill built by William McCrum, Sr., grandfather to our William, who what is we're going to be talking about?
Speaker 1It's not very tall, is it?
Speaker 3What's that?
Speaker 1It's only a mill. It's not very big, is it? It's like a tenth of a centimetre.
Speaker 3I see what you're you're coming from, you're dressing your measurements confused with your Industrial Revolution early factories.
Speaker 1Oh, I always do that.
Speaker 3So, yeah, William McCrum Sr. built this mill. Later on, the Victorian red brick homes that still exist today were constructed for the mill workers by Robert Garnony McCrum.
Speaker 1Yeah, see, they built battle back then, didn't they? Everything was built to last.
Speaker 3Built to last, they were. They're still there now. People are people living in them. And Robert Garmany McCrum is father to our William, who was born in 1865, into a family who was now worth a few million in today's money.
Speaker 1A few million?
Speaker 3So they did all right for themselves, didn't they? In fact, in fact, right, get a load of this. When Robert died in 1915, so exactly quarter past seven, William inherited the equivalent of seven point three seven million pounds in today's money.
Speaker 1Wow. Did you kid him then?
Speaker 3Well, you should go and look at the police reports and see whether you can do some investigating on a cold case.
Speaker 1I might do that. I might do that.
Speaker 3I don't think you did.
Speaker 1Seven million.
Speaker 3What would you do with seven million?
Speaker 1What would I do with seven million? Oof. List is endless. I'd stock up with fig rolls.
Speaker 3Yes, of course.
Speaker 1Yeah. Um I'll get some more nougat or nugget. I'd take the family on a lovely holiday. I'm not going to go to where you've been several times and do the clang. But that is one of our places we'd like to go to, but we'd like to probably go to Italy, do a tour of Italy.
Speaker 3Well, I love Italy. Very nice. And I'm like, I'd go to my favourite country. I love Italy.
Speaker 1That's what we would do.
Speaker 3But I'm galloping ahead here, Neil. I'm galloping ahead. I need to ask you to come with me further back in time, but not to William's birth, a bit further forward than that. 1890, if you please.
Speaker 11890, yeah. Happy to do that? Yeah, I've heard of it. I've heard of it, yeah.
Speaker 3William McCrum, Jr., how will you are talking about, made a suggestion to the Irish Football Association.
Speaker 1IFA.
Speaker 3Are you happy to come back with me? That's wibble wobble back there. Wibble wobble, wibble wobble, wibble wobble, wibble wobble.
Speaker 1Back of the IFA. Sorry, who was sure? I've got a suggestion here for a game of football.
Speaker 3That's it. That's very good. What was that, please? Because that was obviously a Gaelic.
Speaker 1It was hi, I've got a suggestion for the game of football. Thank you.
Speaker 3Although his father and grandfather were both typical Victorian, prudent, and God fearing types.
Speaker 1Laid back, tracksuit trousers.
Speaker 3He loved a good laugh, told funny stories, sang songs and played sports. He set up Milford cricket and football clubs. Then, when his father opened a community hall, he got involved and encouraged the locals to take part in various activities. He also supported the local scout movement and was known for performing amateur theatre at the hall.
Speaker 1He's one of them, isn't he?
Speaker 3He gave him one to be done twanky outside the pound stretcher.
Speaker 1He cuts the grass in the parks for just for pleasure, not for any reason. Just because he thinks it's the helping out. He's one of them sort of nice people. Nice community spirited.
Speaker 3To this day, to the people of Melford, he's still known as Master Willie. As he somehow quite never grew up.
Speaker 1He obviously had other talents as well, then.
Speaker 3He even had a hand in founding the first Irish Football League, and in 1890, as a duck-haired, thin-faced, magnificently mustachioed 25-year-old, he played as goalkeeper for Milford FC.
Speaker 1Not surprised if he's got a master, Willie.
Speaker 3The league consisted of Milford along with seven teams from Belfast, and under the very early rules of the game, they took part in the very first Irish Championship.
Speaker 1Ooh. Was it a world championship like in America?
Speaker 3No, it's just the Irish. It was in Northern Irish League.
Speaker 1It's just like an America, it'd be just be the world champions, even if it's seven teams in America, isn't it?
Speaker 3Yeah, no, only Americans are out to play. So in his position in front of the goal posts at Milford's Soggy and Wedding football pitch, every week you'd see attacking players of both sides tricked, hacked down, barged even to from behind, or the shots punched away by a defender, anything to prevent them from scoring.
Speaker 1Is that why you like to play in football? Because you can get barred into from behind. Dirty boy.
Speaker 3It was two years before William's birth in 1863. We're wibble wobbling back again. And then a massive rift had opened up between football teams over deliberately kicking your opponent in the shins to strip them of the ball or bring them down, leading to lots of blood loss, countless crackbones, and permanent limps.
Speaker 1Permanent limps?
Speaker 3FW Campbell of the Black Heath Club argued that banning shin kicking would destroy the spirit of the game and warned that without it, football would lose its courage and grit.
Speaker 1Well, yes, that seems to have progressed over the years.
Speaker 3But he lost the vote, and deliberate shin kicking was banned, as was carrying the ball in your hands, which Campbell took well and flounced out of the meeting.
Speaker 1Hmm. Flounced out.
Speaker 3Flounced out, he did.
Speaker 1I mean that he did.
Speaker 3Yeah, exactly. This single incident, Neil. Permanently split English football into two entirely different sports. Association football or soccer. Mm-hmm. And rugby football or homoeroticism.
Speaker 1I'm sorry, but grown men don't roll about because they've broken their hair when they're playing rugby.
Speaker 3No, they just roll about with each other in very tight shorts and put their faces up with the bums.
Speaker 1That's just what you see in your head.
Speaker 3Blackheath, as you'll know, Neil, as a rugby enthusiast, that you Blackheath, where FW Campbell came from and had his little is fit. Blackheath are now the world's oldest rugby club in continuous existence.
Speaker 1Ooh.
Speaker 2I played against Black Rock, but not Black Heath. Thanks for that. Anyway, I digress.
Speaker 1What colour, please?
Speaker 3I am gallowing for Claritin Blue, the old villa, Burnley, West Ham. Victorian colours.
Speaker 1Any reason? Is that because they're one of the older clubs in the football league?
Speaker 3Yeah, it's sort of Victorian innit, Claritin Blue, Victorian colours there.
Speaker 1Victorian, yes.
Speaker 3Turns out our woolly wasn't much of a goalkeeper, and Milford weren't much of a team, Neil. During that first Irish championship season, Milford finished bottom of the table with zero points. Milpois.
Speaker 1Milpois.
Speaker 3The team conceded 62 goals in just nine games and threw in the towel before the season ended.
Speaker 1I think they did. They need the people on the side with the clackers out. But those things used to roll around crack clack clack clack clack clack clack clack clack them things.
unknownRight.
Speaker 3Yeah, I don't think the term they need people to stand around with their clackers out is quite what you were intending when you said that, is it?
Speaker 1Yes. It's just your filthy mind.
Speaker 3Okay. So even though they conceded 62 goals in just nine games, I reckon they'd still beat Northampton Town. Would you reckon they'd be?
Speaker 1I reckon so, yeah, I reckon my two dogs could beat Northampton Town.
Speaker 3And there wouldn't be penalties.
Speaker 1No, there wouldn't be penalties, no.
Speaker 3Back then, if an infringement of the rules had occurred near the goal to an attacking player, a referral or appeal would be made to the referee.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3You'd be the referrer going to the referee. See where that name comes from? Apply the early rules of the game. If he deemed foul play had occurred, a free kick would be awarded some distance back, allowing defending players the opportunity to block the ball. Hardly fair dues, is it?
Speaker 1No. Charles, Charlie, Charles passing the ball.
Speaker 3Unless you were playing in Milford when William McCrum had watched your shot trickle by, clapping his hands and shouting, Johnny good shows, sir. Because I think that was what he must have been doing, saying that in 62 goals.
unknownIn nine.
Speaker 1What is all this anyway? This ball keeps coming in this net. No idea.
Speaker 3Johnny could show, sir.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3But he did have an idea while he was picking the ball out in his own net. What if there was a special punishment for fouls near the goal, Neil?
Speaker 1Oh, no, that's a good idea.
Speaker 3What if instead of a distant free kick the attacking team got a free shot close to the goal instead? With only the goalkeeper to face them.
Speaker 1Ooh. That is a good idea.
Speaker 3In June 1890, William sent his idea to the Irish Football Association, who probably sent it on to the English Football Association, as they set the rules of the world game at the time.
Speaker 1Who did they? Wow, there you go. So it was a you know we are the kings of football.
Speaker 3We invented it. So there you go. Yeah. Yeah, we gave it to the world and then sat back and let the ball be better than us. But the English were none too happy at the suggestion of Willie's.
Speaker 1Why? Well, I mean, it depends what he's on about by the suggestion of Willie's.
Speaker 3Yeah, that's not quite the same when you read it out loud, is it? The English were none too happy at Willie's suggestion. Probably that's a better way of putting it, isn't it?
Speaker 2Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3Willis. The media, rather pleased with themselves, dubbed the idea, the death penalty. And dismissed it as the Irishman's motion. The very notion that a player would cheat to gain an advantage went against all Victorian thinking. Women was second place to fair play and gentlemanly conduct.
Speaker 1You can't do that, chaps.
Speaker 3You can't give me the free shot on ghoul. Besides, it was thought that penalties would slow down the game to an unbearable extent.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3So they set up a campaign group to keep football free flowing and fast-paced, called Victorian against new regulation. Or VAR for short. That's a football joke. Because what I've done though, you see, I've bought the old thing, but then say a penalty would slow the game down into the modern day, where we do have VAR, which does slow the game down and is painfully awful.
Speaker 1Steve, can I just say it's not a joke if you have to explain it?
Speaker 3Mum says it is.
Speaker 2Okay, that's right, I'm sorry.
Speaker 3The well-known sportsman, C.B. Frye, the David Beckham of his day, and captain of London Bangst Corinthian FC described the idea as well. Just do my acting bit here. A standing insult to sportsmen to have to play under a rule which assumes that players intend to trip hack, kick their appearance, and behave like cats of the most unscrupulous kidney. Unscrupulous kidney? I don't know what an unscrupulous kidney is, but this is what he said.
Speaker 1You're an unscrupulous kidney. I say, chaps, we can't play. This is terribly, terribly horrible.
Speaker 3You you can't. You inscrupulous kidney, huh?
Speaker 1You're inscrupulous cad. Am I supposed to carry on smoking my pipe?
Speaker 3William asked whether that was a no then, and they said yes. Then on Saturday the 14th of February 1891, everything changed.
Speaker 1Everything changes but you. What take that came out?
Speaker 3Well, everything changed. Not just everything but you.
Speaker 1Everything. Everything changed. Yeah. Everything in the whole world.
Speaker 3Yeah, until that point everything was in black and white.
Speaker 1Oh, see you. Oh yeah, that's right.
Speaker 3Everything changed. And although they didn't go to full colour, they had sepia. So everything went a slightly sort of muddy brown together. So Saturday, Neil, going back to Saturday, the 14th of February, 1891. Have you heard of Saturdays?
Speaker 1I've heard of the 14th of February.
Speaker 3Yes. It was the middle of the driest calendar month in English and Welsh history. Freezing cold and a lingering industrial smog hung over Trent Bridge in Nottingham in England for the quarter final of the famous FA Cup, the mother of all modern team sports competition.
Speaker 1The Football Association Cup. Challenge Cup. Oh, sorry.
Speaker 3That's the full title. The Football Association Challenge Cup. That's what it is. Yeah. Local favourites, not county. That's not as in short for Nottinghamshire, not as in Tanging Your Shoelace.
Speaker 1They were back there, were they? Of course they're one of the oldest football clubs, aren't they?
Speaker 3They're the oldest professional football club, I think. They're Sheffield Football Club, which is the oldest in the world, but not United or Wednesday, just Sheffield. But Notts County are the oldest professional football club in the world. So they were back then. Yes. Local fangits Notts County were playing at home to Stoke City. Stoke City were also still around. The game was a tense, nervous affair between two evenly matched teams, but with just seconds remaining, County were clinging on to a 1-0 lead. 1-0, if you're an American listener. So you can follow what was 0-1. In one last hurrah, Stokes surged forward and cracked a shot by the helpless knot keeper towards the empty net, but then, from nowhere, Go on. A defender managed to dive and punched the ball clear off the goal line.
Speaker 1Well, that's not sport. That's not cricket.
Speaker 3You scan on draw.
Speaker 1Yeah, that's not cricket, sir. He was a scrupulous kidna. The absolute cat. I can tell you they're an absolute shower. Positive shower.
Speaker 3There was no such thing as a sending off, and of course no such thing as a penalty kick. The referee did all he could do and awarded a free kick, which Knox County successfully charged down as the last action of the game. They won one nil, and Stoke were knocked out of the FA Cup in the most unjust way possible.
Speaker 1Yeah, I can imagine. I suppose they kicked off about it. See what I did there?
Speaker 3See what it did there. You made a football reference to that, didn't you?
Speaker 1Yeah, and I have to explain it. It wasn't really a joke.
Speaker 3No.
Speaker 1Didn't want to get pushed into a corner. Yeah.
Speaker 3The blatant unfairness of the Trent Bridge incident outraged the football incommunitar, the press, and the fans who widely condemned it as ungentlemanly cheating, shattering the Victorian illusion of fair play for ever.
Speaker 1Is that is it gentlemanly cheating as well, then?
Speaker 3Suppose if you've got plenty of money and some land and you cheated, that's gentlemanly cheating. You just get away with things, then.
Speaker 1I'm cheating, but I'll be a gentleman about it.
Speaker 3Terribly sorry. I did cheat rather. Here's Wiltshire. Take that as a as a payment. Suddenly the Irishman's motion did not seem so daft. A few months later, in June 1891, at the Alexandra Hotel in Glasgow, the motion was put forward by a delegate of the Irish FA and seconded by an English one. And after considerable discussion, Law 14, as it still remains today, was passed. Handling the ball and tripping or holding players within twelve yards of your own goal will result in a penalty kick.
Speaker 1Rule fourteen.
Speaker 3Rule fourteen.
Speaker 1But C B Fry to these days.
Speaker 3There's plenty of other rules now, but there's still CB Fry that isn't pretty much kidding her. C B Fry and the Corinthians continue their own private little hissy fit, and when the penalty was awarded to them, they sometimes missed on purpose, and when one was awarded against them, they sometimes left their goal unmanned in protest. Fry also tended to puff on his pipe on the pitch during any pauses in play caused by such penalties. He's piping, he's smoking a pipe. Despite their tantrums, penalty kicks were here to stay, and the first was awarded at a competitive game in Scotland just four days after the law was introduced. At the home ground of Broomfield Park, Airdrieonians FC were awarded the honour.
Speaker 1So that's the very, very first penalty shootout.
Speaker 3What a penalty shootout, but a penalty kick.
Speaker 1Penalty kick.
Speaker 3The problems did not know what to do. They'd never seen the new rule before, so they went and stood in front of the ball, just like before, when food kicks and things have been awarded. The referee had to push them back to allow the most fantastically named James McLuggage. James McLuggage. As in matching set of. James McLuggage to score history's very first penalty kick.
Speaker 1Did he score it?
Speaker 3Yes. Which at the time was known colloquially as a willy. Right up until 1900. When news broke of West Bromwich Albion's Albert Sphincter taking three willies in just under 20 minutes, and the whole meeting of the Women's Institute died of fainting. I suppose they did. And that's a true story. Is it? Well, the bit about luggage is true.
Speaker 1Yeah, but not being well, uh being awarded a Willie.
Speaker 3Yes, don't taking three willies in just under 20 minutes. That's nothing for you, is it?
Speaker 1It's just you being dirty.
Speaker 3Our Willie. He liked to drive around.
Speaker 1Well, do we share one?
Speaker 3No, the Willie, I think our Willie, I think the Willie, who's the subject of our podcast, Willie.
Speaker 1Oh, okay.
Speaker 3He liked to drive around his town in a Rolls-Royce and frequented the casinos in Monte Carlo when time allowed. But sadly, he was much better at losing money than making it, and lost more than a small fortune at the wreck wheels and card tables. As managing director of his father's company, Willie spent years in London, but business wasn't his strength, and he was eventually pushed to one side. Much as he treated his goalkeeping career, he was on one side. But he did excel in some areas. He is still renowned as being a fine scholar who graduated from Trinity College Dublin, and in 1909, so nearly 10 past seven, he was made the High Sheriff of Amargh, acting as the Crown's judicial representative for the area.
Speaker 1Yeah, but they put them on a hill, don't they? They're at the very top of everybody. That's where they've become the high sheriff.
Speaker 3I thought they just gave him a step ladder.
Speaker 1He was he used to be a charge of the FA, didn't he?
Speaker 3A step barter. Used to be in charge of FIFA.
Speaker 1I thought that was I know this.
Speaker 3I I had a step ladder. I never knew my real ladder. The stock market crash of nineteen twenty-nine and the Great Depression, Neil. What do you know about that, please?
Speaker 1What do I know about it? There was a big depression in nineteen twenty-nine.
Speaker 3Following the stock market crash.
Speaker 1Was it to do with some financial something happened with the financial stock markets or something?
Speaker 3After the stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression that followed, Woolley had no choice but to auction off all that remained of his inheritance from his father. Just a couple of years later, he died divorced, poor, and alone, without being recognized for his crowning achievement, whose real glory days were still to come.
Speaker 1Really?
Speaker 3Poor old Willie.
Speaker 1Are they going to turn it back to a Willy? Are they going to call it a Willie again? That'd be good.
Speaker 3It would be, wouldn't it?
Speaker 1Hmm. Willie! Willie! Megan's crowd shouting at Willie!
Speaker 3Come on, Rev, where's the willy? That's a Willie. Bad news from the World Cup. England miss their Willys. And as a consequence, and what else?
Speaker 1England beat where Germany old Willy's.
Speaker 3Not until 1968, Neil.
Speaker 1Yeah, that's not that. Yeah. Okay.
Speaker 3That's the actual year, if you care to go back and look.
Speaker 1Yeah, I've just had a look, yeah.
Speaker 3Up until 1968, cup matches ended in the draw, went to a replay. A later date, and the whole game played all over again and again and again, if necessary, until eventually a winner is found.
Speaker 1That's ridiculous, isn't it?
Speaker 3But in a tournament there isn't time for endless replays, so a solution.
Speaker 1Well, just in general life there's not time, is it, if it carries on going like that?
Speaker 3A solution was drawing lots. Two pieces of paper were folded and placed in a hat. Each paper had a team's name, and the match referee picked one out, meaning that that team won and the other went home.
Speaker 2That's not fair.
Speaker 3In 1968, at the Olympic Games in Mexico, Israel played Bulgaria. The score was 1-1 after extra time. The teams waited in their changing rooms for the referee. Who eventually appeared with a piece of paper to say that Bulgaria had won and Israel was out.
Speaker 1That's a bit dodgy.
Speaker 3A better method had to exist, surely. Something that maintained sporting integrity.
Speaker 1Hmm.
Speaker 3And wasn't so eloquent to allegations of corruption as you have pointed out. I was just about to say, yeah. And so FIFA introduced A willy. A penalty shootout. Yeah. I think the A willy shootout sounds wrong. I think we stick with penalties.
Speaker 1Yeah, Willie shootout sounds sticky.
Speaker 3It does, doesn't it? Fast forward in the wrong, please.
Speaker 1Fast forward?
Speaker 3Yeah. To the 17th of July 1994.
Speaker 1Yep.
Speaker 3Do you need to fast forward do you need to fast forward a bit further or me there now?
Speaker 1Yeah, there.
Speaker 3Thank you very much. 17th of July 1994, and we're at the Rose Bowl Stadium in California.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3The temperature is sizzling around 38 degrees Celsius.
Speaker 1That's sizzling.
Speaker 3I look for a hundred Fahrenheit for the Americans.
Speaker 1Yeah, they're weird, don't they? What have to change things?
Speaker 3Because they're Americans and they like to complicate, even though they don't understand it themselves. Far too complicated. Sidewalk? Mind you, you can't say path in this country. Some people take ten minutes over it and say paaaath is true.
Speaker 1Gros.
Speaker 3Yes. I'm sure you'll agree on 38 degrees Celsius or over 100 degrees Fahrenheit is far too hot for professional football to be played any sort of pace. Trifly. Let alone the showpiece final of the FIFA World Cup. The song's relentless as 94,000 people filled the stadium and billions watched at home. It was Italy in blue shirts and white shorts against Brazil in their famous Sunshine Yellow and the blue shorts. After a pretty dull 90 minutes, the score was nil-nil or zero zero for you Americans.
Speaker 1Zip zip.
Speaker 3And there was no change in extra time. So for the first time ever, the World Cup itself was going to be won or lost on penalty kicks. The rules of the penalty shootout are that teams take alternate penalties with a different player each time on the basis of the best of five kicks. If no one team is victorious after five each, then the shootout continues with players who hadn't volunteered or been selected to take the initial five until a clear winner is found.
Speaker 1Yes, it does make sense, yes. It does.
Speaker 3That's the penalty shootout that you railed against at the very beginning of the podcast.
Speaker 1I did rail against it, yes, because uh well, just because I wanted to.
Speaker 3You got it off your chest now, have you?
Speaker 1I'm going to be on my chest now.
Speaker 3No, you don't see that. You want to put some tongues on when we do this.
Speaker 1Oh yeah, probably.
Speaker 3On the 17th of July 1994, in the Rose Bowl under a wicked son, Brazil had scored three of their four penalties. Italy had two from three. Yes, by done, Neil. That meant they had to score their fourth to stay alive. The man who walked at the spot was Roberto Baggio.
Speaker 1The black curly hair one, correct?
Speaker 3Yes. Because of his hairstyle, the Italians called him the divine ponytail, because he had that little rat tail thing, didn't he, well yeah, it's really annoying thing. Baggio was the Italians' star of the tournament. Probably the star of the tournament. He scored five goals to bring Italy almost single-handedly to the final. In many people's eyes, he was at that moment the best footballer on the planet, bar none. If he scored, Italy could still win the World Cup. But if he missed, it was all over and Brazil were world champions. Baggio placed the ball. He stepped four steps back, twelve yards or eleven metres from goal with only the keeper to beat Neil. Just one swim left the boot from a world superstar. The goalkeeper bounced on his toes and the whistle blew. Bagian ran forward and struck the ball hard. The goalkeeper went the wrong way. Baggio's shot to the top left corner of the goal rose and kept rising until it flew over the crossbar. No. The Brazilian goalkeeper fell to his knees and screamed as if his dive in the wrong direction contributed more than the enormous pressure on Baggio's shoulders.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 3The Brazilian players and staff swarmed onto the field. They jumped, they skipped, they hugged, they cried, and they thanked their god. And in the middle of it all, Roberto Baggio did not move from the penalty spot, as if he was in another dimension altogether. His head drooped, his hands rested on his hips. He just stood there alone.
Speaker 1That is probably the worst thing ever to happen in the world when in the world of sport.
Speaker 3The photograph of the blue shirted Roberto Baggio standing still amongst the yellow chaos has become one of the most iconic images in all sport and remains burned in the memory of everyone who saw it. What do you think, Neil Paines, if Roberto Baggio there is head bowed, is one of the most iconic moments in all World Cup history? What else would you say are iconic moments in World Cup history?
Speaker 1In football World Cup history.
Speaker 3Yes.
Speaker 1Oh, okay. Um I would say probably that goal from Brazil when they kept passing it around everywhere and then that guy sort of coming from.
Speaker 3That's a hell of a goal. That's a hell of a goal, yeah. One of my favourites. Golden Banks save from Pele in the same tournament.
Speaker 1That's a hell of a save as well.
Speaker 3Jeff Hurst in 1966, they think it's all over. Brian Brian Robson's scoring in in front in 1982 with the first goal in the England game. Oh, against France. Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3Maradona's hand of goals and that triple E goal that he scored. And the celebrations from USA in 1994. When Maradona scored and he came running into the camera with his eyes massively wide. Like he wasn't pumped up on cocaine at the time.
Speaker 1Of course he wasn't. No, I'm sure he wasn't, no.
Speaker 3Which of course just a few hours later we found out he was.
Speaker 1Oh, and Vivu Zaylas as well. That's a that's a highlight of the World Cup.
Speaker 3Yeah, of course, in Siddhivar.
Speaker 1Siddhivar.
Speaker 3Well, there's many, isn't there? There's many. But I would argue with it. The invention of the shootout has added to the drama, a self-contained moment, a bit of the old wild west. Two gun Fighters facing off against each other, winner takes all. And William McCrum from County Armagh brought us that now.
Speaker 1So it's just a simple man come up with an idea. And then now it's in association football around the world.
Speaker 3Yeah, so he just saw cheating and thought, well, I'm not having this.
Speaker 1Yeah, simple idea, but it's done the trick, I suppose. But a lot of people do say, oh, there must be something different than having penalty shootouts and stuff. But what is it? Come up with an alternative.
Speaker 3To on management's pod at gmail.com.
Speaker 1Because I can't see that there could be. You have a normal time, you have extra time. That's not work, so you've got to have a shootout, haven't you?
Speaker 3You have the golden goal at one point, where the first team to score in extra time automatically won the match stopped. But then what happened was teams decide to play excessively negatively, trying not to continue rather than score. So yes, what do you do? What does one do? As Roberto Taribaggio himself set me all.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3Is that Italian?
Speaker 1Yeah. For this is what I want to say.
Speaker 3Okay. He said penalties. That's Italian for penalties.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3He said, penalties are only missed by those who have the courage to take them.
Speaker 1That is very true.
Speaker 3That is very true, Roberto. Isn't it? Somewhere amongst all this, CP Fry is rolling in his grave, smoking a bit of rough shag.
Speaker 2Mm-hmm.
Speaker 3Because he's the man who said that he didn't like penalties, and yet here they are, and they're a fundamental part of the game.
Speaker 1I would say the most dramatic part of the game, especially in tournament football.
Speaker 3Yes. We're having a shootout. I wanted a shootout. That one's legend was it the Cronnies.
Speaker 1Legend, yeah.
Speaker 3I came here for a shootout. So w for joining us for yet another episode of Honourable Mentions! All about William McCrum. And his invention of the Willie. Which we now call the penalty kick. If you would like to message us at any point, tell us what you think, or even pay us to stop. We're quite happy. And they do that, Leo, please.
Speaker 1All the social medias on YouTube and Instagram and Facebook and Spotify, TikTok, and Discord. We're on Discord as well. And you can also get us at honorable mentionspod at gmail.com.
Speaker 3Or if you're listening on Spotify, you can message through Spotify.
Speaker 1Yeah. Steve has put out a request for anyone to send him pictures of their willies, but he really means their penalties.
Speaker 3Yeah. Well, I actually for the purposes of the tape, no, I haven't sent that out because of the court injunction that I received. So nobody's not bullied. Something I've actually done. So on tune from this thing, we will be back again next week for another exciting episode of Du Honorable Mentions. Bye. Some people are on the pitch, they think it's all over.
Speaker 1Yeah. No, it's a Willie.
SpeakerHola, my name is Lionel Messi. I am the god, and I am here to give you a warning. Please do not do what I have done after listening to that episode of Honorable Mentions. Apparently, penalty kicks never were referred to as anything else. And I now have to record this outro as community service after I challenged the bald boy to see if he could stop my wheelie. If you would like to listen to more episodes of Honorable Mentions, Hilarious History, please subscribe so you don't miss out. And you can even listen to episodes you may have missed.
unknownShhh.
SpeakerMiss like an Englishman in a penalty should have. Honorable Mentions is researched by Stephen Webb. Although they make it up as they go along, no tactics, nothing changed. It is an unconscious brothers production. And if you like that team tune, they have and let's face it, who doesn't? You can stream further music from the composer and performer, a big favorite with all Argentinians, paper and the bandits. So that's me, has told you. Can I go now?
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