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Hugh McIlvanney - in his own words

The great sports writer covered some of the most famous events of the 20th century.

Sports writer Hugh McIlvanney, who has died at the age of 84, reported on many of the greatest sporting events of the 20th century.

Here Press Association Sport picks out five of his most memorable pieces of prose from his 60 years in the industry.

On George Best, 1992

George Best
George Best was one of the stars of the Manchester United side of the 1960s (PA Archive)

Best had come in along the goal line from the corner flag in a blur of intricate deception. Having briskly embarrassed three or four challengers, he drove the ball high into the net with a fierce simplicity that made spectators wonder if the acuteness of the angle had been an optical illusion.

On the death of Johnny Owen, 1980

Johnny Owen
Johnny Owen , pictured right (PA Archive)

It was boxing that gave Johnny Owen his one positive means of self-expression. Outside the ring he was an inaudible and almost invisible personality. Inside, he became astonishingly positive and self-assured. He seemed to be more at home there than anywhere else. It is his tragedy that he found himself articulate in such a dangerous language.

On the 'Rumble in the Jungle', 1974

Muhammad Ali
Muhammad Ali at a workout (PA Archive)

We should have known that Muhammad Ali would not settle for any ordinary old resurrection. His had to have an additional flourish. So, having rolled away the rock, he hit George Foreman on the head with it.

On the 1966 World Cup final

1966 World Cup
Bobby Moore lifts the World Cup (British Pathe PLC)

Then we were up and yelling and stamping and slapping one another as Hurst shot that last staggering goal. The sky had been overcast all afternoon, but now the clouds split and the sun glared down on the stadium. Maybe those fellows were right when they said God was an Englishman.

On Sir Matt Busby,  1994

Sir Matt Busby
Sir Matt Busby managed United to European Cup glory in 1968 (PA Archive)

Greatness does not gad about, reaching for people in handfuls. It settles deliberately on a blessed few, and Matt Busby was one of them. If Busby had stood dressed for the pit, and somebody alongside him in the room had worn ermine, there would have been no difficulty about deciding who was special.

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