West Ham United 6 Arsenal 0
Football League First Division, Boleyn Ground, Saturday 5 November 196
West Ham United: Rhodes, Moore, Bond, Lyall, Brown, Malcolm, Dunmore, Woodley, Grice, Dick, Woosnam
Arsenal: Kelsey, Wills, McCullough, Snedden, Barnwell, Docherty, Haverty, Herd, Charles, Strong, Groves
The late 1950s saw West Ham United end their long and unwanted stay in Football League Division Two with the title and promotion in 1958. The following season, the Hammers finished sixth in Division One, three places behind London rivals Arsenal. The Gunners were seven-times champions of England, winning their most-recent title in 1953, while West Ham had never finished higher than the sixth-place they achieved in 1959. While the 1960/61 season was far from the most vintage in Arsenal’s history, in prolific Scotland forward David Herd the Gunners still possessed one of the best strikers in the English top-flight. Herd, who would score 30 goals that season, was in the Arsenal line-up when the north Londoners made the short trip to the Boleyn Ground on Guy Fawkes’ Day 1960. Alongside him was another Scot who would go on to reach great heights as a manager, right half Tommy Docherty, Wales captain Mel Charles and his long-serving compatriot and goalkeeper Jack Kelsey. West Ham’s starting XI included a number of players who would go on to become household names – Bobby Moore and Ken Brown in defence, John Dick in attack and left-back John Lyall, who would go on to manage the Hammers from 1974 until 1989. The man who took centre-stage against George Swindlin’s Arsenal was a Cumberland-born former York City forward signed from the Gunners’ great rivals Tottenham Hotspur in March 1960. Dave Dunmore was born in the footballing outpost of Whitehaven, a town on the coast overlooking the wild Irish Sea, before joining York as a teenager. After scoring 25 goals in just 48 league appearances, Dunmore was signed by Spurs for a club-record £10,500 fee in February 1954 – the same month he celebrated his 20th birthday. Over the next six years, Dunmore would find his opportunities at White Hart Lane somewhat limited, mainly due to the presence of the outstanding Bobby Smith, but he did manage to score 23 times in 75 league games for the Lillywhites. While Smith and company were busy putting together a season that would ultimately end in them becoming the first side in the 20th century to do the ‘Double’, Dunmore set about scoring goals for West Ham. After netting twice at the tail-end of the 1959/60 campaign, the 26-year-old enjoyed a fine 1960/61 campaign, scoring 16 times in 30 matches in all competitions – including a run of eleven goals in eight successive games between 24 October and 17 December 1960.

