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Born 1946 in East Belfast, Northern Ireland, he made his Football League debut for
United and won the first of 31 international caps before he was 18. He made 446
League
appearances for United between 1963 and 1973, scoring 178 goals. He was a perhaps
the
most important member of the great United team which won the League Championship
twice in the 1960s as well as the European Cup in 1968.
After five years of playing breathtaking football, in 1968 he finally and deservedly
won both the English and European Footballer of the Year awards. In 1970 he scored
six goals in an 8-2 win over Northampton in the FA Cup, the most goals scored in
a single match by any United player.
Sometimes nicknamed "the fifth Beatle", he was one of the most famous stars of Britain
in the 1960s. Best was the first pop-star footballer, a personification of 1960's
youth culture and the swinging sixties. Sadly this proved his eventual downfall
as he became a casualty of intense media attention. Unfortunatley, increasingly
wayward behaviour off the field and alcohol related problems impaired his health
and ultimately shortened his career. After a series of on-off retirements and a
dip in form, he left United for good on New Years Day 1974 in his final game against
QPR.
He then played for numerous other clubs, most notably Fulham (76-77) finally ended
his football career with Bournemouth in 1983.
George Best died in November 2005 due to multiple organ failure brought on by a
kidney infection, a side-effect of the immuno-supressive drugs he was required to
take after a liver transplant.