Spurs at the World Cup | 1970
The 2026 FIFA World Cup - the greatest football show on earth - kicks-off in just 12 days’ time.
It all starts with co-hosts Mexico taking on South Africa at the famous Azteca (now known as the Estadio Banorte) in Mexico City on Thursday, 11 June (8pm UK).
Co-hosted by USA and Canada, this will be the 23rd World Cup, the inaugural tournament back in 1930.
As we build up to the summer’s football fest, we take a look at the Spurs players to feature on the greatest stage of all…
Spurs at the World Cup | 1970 - Alan Mullery, Martin Peters
Two Spurs players headed to Mexico for the 1970 World Cup with holders England - one an experienced hand at playing in the major tournament, the other tasting the event for the very first time.
Martin Peters and Alan Mullery had played seven times alongside each other in our midfield towards the end of the 1969/70 campaign, following Peters’ arrival from West Ham in March, 1970. Just a few months later they teamed up again, this time in Alf Ramsey’s England side as the Three Lions bid to retain the Jules Rimet trophy.
Peters, then at West Ham, was already a World Cup winner having scored in the 1966 final at Wembley Stadium, as England beat West Germany 4-2 in extra time. Mullery missed out on that tournament and travelled to Mexico hoping to make his World Cup bow and to make a similar impression on the tournament that Peters had done four years previous.
As reigning world champions, there was no need for England to qualify so their first competitive World Cup game for four years came against Romania in Group 3 in Guadalajara.
Both Spurs men started, alongside the likes of Gordon Banks, Alan Ball, Bobby Charlton, skipper Bobby Moore and Geoff Hurst, and the latter’s 65th-minute strike was enough to get England off to the perfect start.
The Spurs duo played the full 90 minutes against Romania and did so again four days later for the clash against Brazil, Mario Zagallo’s gifted side featuring true footballing greats including Pele, Rivellino, Jairzinho and Carlos Alberto.
The match was the highlight of the first round, a thrilling contest between two quality teams which featured the most famous save in the history of football, when Banks dived full-length across his goal to somehow tip Pele’s downward header over the bar. Brazil emerged victorious though, Jairzinho scoring the winner.
It meant England needed to beat Czechoslovakia to progress, which they duly did courtesy of Allan Clarke’s 50th-minute penalty – and booked a mouth-watering quarter-final against West Germany in Leon, a rematch of that dramatic final four years earlier.
For Peters and Mullery, it was a match full of mixed emotions. England were without their keeper Banks, taken ill before the game, but seemed well in control when both Spurs players hit the target. Mullery was first, opening the scoring on 31 minutes and when Peters added a second four minutes after the interval, there seemed no way back for the Germans.
But there was plenty of drama to come. Two goals in eight minutes from Franz Beckenbauer and then Uwe Seeler levelled it up and, just as it was in 1966, extra time was required to settle the tie.
This time though, it was West Germany who ran out victors, their in-form striker Gerd Muller firing the winner with 12 minutes remaining to deflate Peters and Mullery and end England’s grip on the World Cup.
Two years later, Mullery's highlight at Spurs as he lifted the UEFA Cup after scoring in the second leg of the final against Wolves at the Lane - he also netted in the semi-final against AC Milan in the San Siro.
Joining us from Fulham in 1964, 'Mullers' made 373 appearances before moving back to Craven Cottage in 1972. He won the FA Cup in 1967, took over the captaincy from Dave Mackay in 1968 and picked up the League Cup in 1971 and then the UEFA Cup in 1972.
As mentioned above, Martin joined us in March, 1970. He scored 76 goals in 260 appearances, lifting the League Cup in 1971 and 1973, the UEFA Cup in 1972 and playing in the UEFA Cup final of 1974. He moved to Norwich City in 1975.