The Busby Babes: European pioneers who were denied their chance at glory

  • Munich air disaster in February 1958 tragically took the life of 23 people
  • 44 people on board as airplane failed to take off in snowy conditions
  • United and footballing world pay tribute every year to remember those who lost their lives

Manchester United players lined up for the final time in Belgrade
Manchester United players lined up for the final time in Belgrade / Aleksandra Grujic/Getty Images
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The story of the Munich Air Disaster in 1958 is well known around the world, a tragedy that resulted in the deaths of 23 of the 44 people on board a flight from Belgrade to Manchester that had stopped in southern Germany for a scheduled refuelling.

That plane was carrying Manchester United, reigning back-to-back champions of England and one of the best teams in Europe in the early days of formal international club football.

Eight of the 17 players in the travelling squad died. Two more never played football again as a result of the injuries they sustained. It was a team more than cut in half in a cruel instant.

Roger Byrne, Eddie Colman, Mark Jones, David Pegg, Tommy Taylor and Liam Whelan were killed instantly. So too was Geoff Bent, who had recently returned from injury and only travelled as extra cover. Duncan Edwards, the great star of the side, died from his injuries 15 days later.

Edwards, Colman, Pegg and Whelan were all 22 or younger, but they were established stars. Edwards had already played close to 200 games for United since making his debut at just 16, while he was becoming a star for England as well. Pegg had also been capped. Colman was, by all accounts, expected to be called up sooner rather than later, while Whelan was capped by Ireland.

Jones was 24, Taylor was 26, Bent was 25, and Byrne, the captain and among the oldest in the squad, was only 28. These were players who were already the best in English league, were becoming the best in Europe, and most were still well short of hitting their peak. With the exception of Taylor, bought from Barnsley aged 21 for £29,999 in 1953, all those who died were home-grown.


Roger Byrne
Roger Byrne was captain and the original 'Busby Babe' / Lee/Getty Images

Johnny Berry suffered a fractured skull, broken jaw, broken elbow, broken pelvis and broken leg and never played again. Doctors at the Rechts der Isar hospital in Munich feared he wasn’t well enough to be told of the plight of his teammates and it remains a story of great sorrow that during his recovery Berry complained about Taylor not visiting him, unaware his friend was dead.

Multiple serious injuries also ended Jackie Blanchflower’s career – he was initially close to death.

Three of United’s staff, trainers Bert Whalley and Tom Curry, and club secretary Walter Crickmer, also died. Busby himself was badly injured in the crash and was twice read the Last Rites on what seemed as though it would be his deathbed in that Munich hospital.

Thankfully, he pulled through, eventually returning home to Manchester in April. Although, racked with guilt that so many of his players had paid the ultimate price chasing his ambitions, he contemplated quitting football altogether until he was persuaded to carry on in pursuit of that European glory so that those who had lost their lives had not done so in vain.


Duncan Edwards
Duncan Edwards died from his injuries 15 days after the crash / Monty Fresco Jnr/Getty Images

Legendary assistant coach Jimmy Murphy, the man who rebuilt the club in his boss’ absence, was not on the plane. He had stayed behind in order to fulfil his commitment as Wales manager in a World Cup qualifying playoff against Israel in Cardiff. How history and United’s recovery could have been so different had they lost Murphy in Munich as well – his remarkable story is told in author Wayne Barton’s excellent biography The Man Who Kept the Red Flag Flying.

Busby had won his first league title with United in 1951/52, but it was an old established team featuring a number of players who had been with the club since football resumed after the Second World War, or in some cases, since even before the conflict began at the end of the 1930s.

By the late 1940s and early 1950s, United were starting to see the fruits of the Manchester United Junior Athletic Club, which had been created in 1937 so that the club, which had twice come close to going out of business in the first half of the 20th century, could develop its own talent instead of relying on buying players – it is a legacy that still exists to this day more than 80 years on.

It was unusual at that time for clubs to focus on youth development when first-team professionals were typically much older, but Busby bought into the philosophy when he arrived at United after the war and by the mid-1950s had created the great side that became known as the ‘Busby Babes’.

The new-look United side recaptured the league title in 1955/56, only a fourth in the club’s history at that stage, with Edwards, Pegg and Dennis Viollet, who was 22, all playing more than 30 games. Colman played 25 times, despite being just 19 when the season began. The slightly older Byrne missed only three games, while centre-half Jones, also just 22, was an ever-present at the back.


Matt Busby considered quitting football after the tragedy
Matt Busby considered quitting football after the tragedy / Getty Images/Getty Images

That pattern became even more pronounced the following season in 1956/57 when United retained the title and there was more game time for Whelan and the emergence of Bobby Charlton.

The Busby Babes were not just good, they were head and shoulders above the rest of the clubs England had to offer. United won the league by 11 points in 1956, an equivalent of 16 today when wins are worth more. In 1957, it was an eight-point margin of victory, which would have been 14 today. In both seasons, they won at least five games more than their nearest challenger.

The Babes were also newly flying the flag for English football in Europe as well.

When the European Cup was created in 1955, Chelsea were invited to compete as reigning champions of England, only to be strongly ‘advised’ against entering by the Football League. They duly fell in line under pressure from Football League chairman Alan Hardaker.


Manchester United's 'Busby Babes' pictured in 1957
Manchester United's 'Busby Babes' pictured in 1957 / Central Press/Getty Images

Brian Glanville of The Times once described Hardaker as an ‘unbending autocrat’, a man whose ‘attitude was supremely negative and self-aggrandising, probably influenced by the fear that his own competition would be overshadowed by the new one.’

United met similar resistance from Hardaker the following season, but Busby was insistent that his team should enter the European sphere and pushed ahead anyway.

Immediately, the young team reached the semi-finals in their first foray into international contests. In their first ever European ‘home’ game, which was actually played across Manchester at Maine Road because Old Trafford did not have floodlights, they beat Anderlecht 10-0, which still remains the club’s all-time record win to this day.

Victories against Borussia Dortmund and Athletic Bilbao, champions of Germany and Spain respectively, followed and it wasn’t until the semi-finals that United succumbed 5-3 on aggregate to holders Real Madrid, who claimed a second successive title.

Of the quarter-final clash against Bilbao, Charlton recalled in his 2007 autobiography, “Matt Busby had declared that [European football] was the future of the game and here, in this match, was the hardest evidence that he was right.


The Old Trafford clock is a permanent tribute to Munich
The Old Trafford clock is a permanent tribute to Munich / PAUL ELLIS/Getty Images

“United versus Bilbao had produced the best of football, some brilliant skill and a razor edge of competition. Charges that United had got above themselves were promptly withdrawn.”

A year later, United returned to the European Cup semi-finals. The trip to Belgrade, which ended in such tragedy halfway home, had seen the team draw 3-3 against Red Star Belgrade in the last eight, holding onto a first leg aggregate lead and progressing to the last four a second time.

The semi-final against AC Milan wasn’t played until May, around a month after the other tie between Real Madrid and Vasas of Hungary. Reeling from the disaster at Munich, United had resumed domestic action within a couple of weeks, playing with a vastly different side. Remarkably, they won the first leg 2-1 at Old Trafford, but crumbled to a 4-0 scoreline in the return.

Dominant at home and seemingly on the cusp of something even more special abroad until disaster struck. And, so goes the final verse of the iconic The Flowers of Manchester:


"Oh, England’s finest football team its record truly great,
Its proud successes mocked by a cruel turn of fate.
Eight men will never play again, who met destruction there,
The flowers of English football, the flowers of Manchester."

The Flowers of the Manchester
Home-grown players were key to Man Utd winning the European Cup in 1968
Home-grown players were key to Man Utd winning the European Cup in 1968 / Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Ultimately, Manchester United were rebuilt. Survivors like Charlton, Bill Foulkes and heroic goalkeeper Harry Gregg underpinned the core of new side that was added to over the coming years. Troubled by survivor’s guilt for many years, Charlton went on to become one of the best players in the world and was consistently nominated for the Ballon d’Or throughout the 1960s.

United paid big money to sign Denis Law, but the same youth ranks that had produced the likes of Edwards, Colman, Whelan, Byrne and others a decade or more earlier also gave rise to new individuals like George Best, Nobby Stiles, John Aston Jr. and Brian Kidd, all of whom were then part of the club’s historic European Cup triumph 10 years on from the tragedy.

The United way, born in the 1930s and perfected in the 1950s, delivered the ultimate prize in 1968 and continues to live on, still burning brightly. Those pioneers whose lives were taken from them on that awful day at 3.04pm on 6 February 1958 in pursuit of that glory will never be forgotten.


dark. Next. Munich - Remembering the 8. Remembering the 8 Manchester United players killed in the Munich air disaster


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