Game 4 Grenfell

Summary

Game 4 Grenfell was a charity match played on 2 September 2017 to raise money for those affected by the Grenfell Tower fire, which happened three months previous. It was played at Loftus Road, which is located only a mile from Grenfell Tower. Former professional footballers, celebrities and people associated with the Grenfell Tower fire played in the match.

Game 4 Grenfell
Team Ferdinand won 5–3 on penalties
Date2 September 2017 (2017-09-02)
VenueLoftus Road, White City, London
Man of the MatchMo Farah (Team Ferdinand)
RefereeMark Halsey
Attendance17,468

It was simultaneously aired live on Sky 1 and the Freeview channel Pick. The live show was presented by comedian Adam Hills, with punditry provided from fellow comedian Alan Davies and former professional footballer Ian Wright. Match commentary was provided by Joe Speight and comedian Matt Lucas, with sideline reporting by Chris Kamara.

Teams edit

Match edit

Summary edit

Team Ferdinand quickly took the lead through Mo Farah, who dinked the ball over goalkeeper David James. It was a somewhat lucky situation, as three Team Shearer players were simultaneously bundled over by Damian Lewis as he tried to get a shot on goal. Team Shearer would equalise twelve minutes later, when Danny Jones went on a mazy run, laying the ball off to Trevor Sinclair, who put it past David Seaman. Team Ferdinand contested the decision to let the goal stand, as they thought Sinclair was offside, but referee Mark Halsey waved their appeals away. A few minutes before half-time, both sides made a double substitution consisting of the first firefighters to arrive at Grenfell Tower; this action prompted a standing ovation from the Loftus Road crowd.[1]

Team Shearer took the lead soon after the break, with Sinclair scoring from a direct free-kick. He took advantage of substitute goalkeeper Shay Given trying to sort out his defensive wall, and his strike left Given well beaten, ricocheting off the left hand post and into the net. Team Ferdinand's namesake Les Ferdinand came on in the second half, and almost equalised for his side, but was denied by James. Ferdinand left the pitch a few minutes later.[1]

James himself was also substituted, making way for an unusual choice: Manchester United manager José Mourinho. Mourinho quickly became the centre of attention by getting himself booked for timewasting, and for punching away a corner from Team Ferdinand. However, Team Shearer conceded the equaliser, when Stan Collymore squared the ball to Chris Edwards, who tapped it in from close range. Mourinho was furious at his defence, particularly as he felt that Team Shearer should have had a penalty at the other end just moments before.[1]

The match was paused on the eightieth minute in remembrance of those who lost their lives in the tower fire, and both sides made a double substitution consisting of four survivors. The match would end in a draw, and went straight to penalties (in the ABBA sequence, which had recently been implemented).[1]

Penalty shootout edit

Team Ferdinand went up first, with Grenfell resident Shahin Sadafi slotting it past Mourinho, despite the Portuguese getting a touch on it. Team Ferdinand also made a goalkeeper change, as neither Seaman or Given would face the penalty shootout, and Bastille drummer Chris Wood was selected for the shootout, having previously played in an outfield position earlier in the match. Firefighter David Badillo hammered his shot against the crossbar, but resident Oluwaseun Talabi soon levelled things up for Team Shearer. Firefighter Adam Foster, and volunteer Omar Salha, were both successful with their spot kicks. Mourinho then put his shot past Wood, and firefighter Dean Smith followed suit. Olly Murs scored the match-winning penalty, in what was a bit of karma for the Englishman, when he had been intentionally tackled by Mourinho in the 2014 edition of Soccer Aid.[1]

After the match, Mourinho joked to Adam Hills that he had chosen the position of goalkeeper so that he did not have to run as much, and that he wanted to bring something fun and different to the charity match, given his status as a football manager. Grenfell resident Paul Menacer told the BBC: "We met people who want to talk and actually care about us. Someone as big as José Mourinho coming down and talking to us is just an amazing thing."[2]

Match details edit

Game 4 Grenfell
Team Ferdinand2–2Team Shearer
Farah   2'
Edwards   75'
Report Sinclair   14', 49'
Penalties
Sadafi  
Foster  
Salha  
Jules  
Murs  
5–3 Badillo  
Talabi  
Mourinho  
Smith  
Attendance: 17,468
Referee: Mark Halsey
GK 1 David Seaman
RB 2 Danny Gabbidon
CB 6 Clint Hill
CB 4 Ben Shephard
LB 3 Clive Wilson
RM 8 Mo Farah
CM 4 Damian Lewis
LM 11 DJ Spoony
RF 7 Olly Murs
CF 25 Peter Crouch
LF 10 Marcus Mumford (c)
Substitutes:
GK 13 Shay Given
ST 12 Stan Collymore
CM 15 Tinie Tempah
CB 18 Marc Bircham
LM 19 Serge Pizzorno
CM 20 Jack Whitehall
CM 21 Paul Merson
RM 22 Chris Edwards
RM 23 Iain Glen
LM 24 Damien Duff
CM 26 Omar Salha
CM/GK 26 Chris Wood
ST 27 Shahin Sadafi
ST 29 Gregg Jules
CM 30 Adam Foster
CM 32 Wretch 32
Player-manager:
Les Ferdinand
GK 1 David James
RB 3 Ralf Little
CB 5 Des Walker
CB 6 Danny Jones
LB 2 Lee Mack
RM 7 Darren Campbell
CM 8 Jamie Redknapp
CM 9 Jamie Dornan
LM 11 Trevor Sinclair (c)
ST 20 Chris Sutton
ST 6 Ben Cohen
Substitutes:
GK 1 José Mourinho
CM 12 Jody Morris
ST 14 Dave
CB 15 Richard Ashcroft
LM 16 Andy Sinton
RB 17 Jarvis Cocker
CF 18 James Bay
LM 19 Ed Westwick
ST 21 Kevin Gallen
ST 22 Tamer Hassan
RM 23 Russell Howard
CM 24 Paul Bullion
CM 25 Steve Mackey
CM 26 Oluwaseun Talabi
CM 27 Bobby Ross
CM 28 Paul Menacer
ST 29 David Badillo
CM 30 Dean Smith
Manager:
Alan Shearer

Man of the match:

Match officials:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Scriven, David (2 September 2017). "Game4Grenfell: Team Ferdinand prevail on penalties". BBC News. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  2. ^ "Jose Mourinho stars in Game4Grenfell charity match". BBC News. 2 September 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2017.

External links edit

  • Official website