West Ham United 2 Tottenham Hotspur 1
Football League First Division, Boleyn Ground, 28 August 1961
West Ham United: Lawrie, Kirkup, Bond, Malcolm, Brown, Moore, Scott, Woosnam, Sealey, Dick, Musgrove
Tottenham Hotspur: Brown, Norman, Baker, Henry, Blanchflower, Marchi, Jones, Dyson, L.Allen, B.Smith, J.Smith
Alan Sealey will forever be known as the man whose two goals fired West Ham United to European Cup Winners’ Cup glory at Wembley Stadium in May 1965.
While his double-strike that Wednesday evening will forever remain the outside right’s crowning moment in Claret and Blue, Sealey had also hit the headlines four years earlier when his goal downed reigning Double winners Tottenham Hotspur.
Then just 19 and making only his tenth appearance for the Hammers, the young forward settled a breathtaking match described by one newspaper as ‘a victory for British football’.
Hampton-born Sealey had joined West Ham the previous year, 1960, from near-neighbours Leyton Orient, for whom he had played just four League matches and scored only one goal.
Despite his inexperience and youth, the teenager was given a first-team debut by new West Ham manager Ron Greenwood at Leicester City on 2 April 1961, three weeks before his 19th birthday, and he remained in the side for the remainder of the 1960/61 First Division campaign.
Having netted his first goal in Claret and Blue in a 1-1 home draw with Manchester City on 15 April 1961, Sealey began the 1961/62 season in the team and went on to have the most prolific campaign of his career, with eleven goals.
The second and most important of those strikes came against Bill Nicholson’s all-conquering Spurs at the Boleyn Ground on Bank Holiday Monday 28 August 1961.
To put Sealey’s strike into context, Tottenham had romped to the title the previous season, winning 31 and losing just seven of their 42 league matches, while scoring 115 goals. The Lilywhites had also defeated Leicester City 2-0 at Wembley to lift the FA Cup, completing the first domestic ‘Double’ since Aston Villa had achieved the same feat in 1897.
West Ham, meanwhile, had finished 16th, with long-time manager Ted Fenton leaving the Club in March 1961, and 39-year-old Arsenal assistant manager Greenwood selected as his replacement.


