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
“WE’LL give all we’ve got to give for the folks back home. . .”
50 years ago today, the England World Cup Squad, the reigning champions, released a World Cup song. It would become the first single recorded by a football team to reach number one in the UK chart spawning many imitators down the years from New Order’s World in Motion to Baddiel and Skinner’s Three Lions.
In 1970, it was unheard of for an England squad to record a song, but the 1966 World Cup victory had opened people’s eyes to the potential money to be made from the increased commercialisation of the biggest sporting event in the world.
JONATHAN TAYLOR appreciates how, for a black British musician, to walk onstage can be a rebellious act
Klopp leads tributes as sports world mourns tragic loss of player and his brother
CHRIS SEARLE speaks to Ethiopian vocalist SOFIA JERNBERG
New releases from Toby Hay, Bruce Springsteen, Bonnie Dobson & The Hanging Stars


