Richard Dunn’s remarkable journey took him from Yorkshire building sites to boxing’s biggest stage amid the upheaval of the 1970s, writes JOHN WIGHT
IT WAS the line that altered the course of movie history. With the Allied football team trailing 4-1 to the Nazis, Ipswich Town’s 21-year-old centreback, Russell Osman, stepped up ahead of Pele and Bobby Moore as Sylvester Stallone and Michael Caine prepared to escape and uttered the immortal words: “I don’t want to go. Let’s go back … We can win this!”
Forty years ago today, Victory, directed by renowned film-maker John Huston, was released in the United States. Better known around the world as Escape to Victory, the film was a remake of the 1961 Hungarian release Ket felido a pokolban (Two Half Times in Hell) and based upon the Soviet propaganda myth of a Ukrainian team who were executed at Babi Yar in Kiev after winning a game against their German occupiers.
Deviating from that tragic ending, Escape to Victory instead uses the match between a hastily assembled group of prisoners of war and a Nazi select 11 to tell an allegorical story of the second world war on a football field.
New releases from Kneecap, Sam Blasucci, and Juni Habel
Dabbagh and his Palestinian team’s World Cup campaign may have come to an end, but it has given fans hope amid war and tragedy, writes JOHN DUERDEN


