One of the best players to ever win an entire England cap, Billy Bonds, who passed away at the age of 79, was one of West Ham United’s greatest player.
The bearded and buccaneering captain who later led the club, Bonds, is a figure of great significance who belongs alongside the Hammers’ Hall of Famers Bobby Moore, Sir Geoff Hurst, and Martin Peters. He is the embodiment of West Ham spirit.
Every member of West Ham United’s supporters who saw or heard about Bonds’ deeds will recite the phrase, “Rest in peace Billy, our courageous, inspirational, lion-hearted leader,” in a statement released by the club.
In May 1967, Bonds made his debut for West Ham, becoming the club’s longest-serving player, making 799 appearances, and earning the equivalent of £47, 000.
He was initially a right-back before turning out to be a top-notch midfielder and later playing as a capable central defender, making him a respectable replacement for Moore when he left for Fulham in 1974.
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When West Ham won the FA Cup in 1964 and the European Cup Winners’ Cup a year later, Moore had been the team’s captain. Bonds almost surpassed his success as West Ham’s coach when they reached the 1976 European Cup Final, where they lost 4-2 to Anderlecht.
At the conclusion of the 1980/81 season, West Ham also lost to Liverpool in the League Cup Final following a replay, and he also helped them reclaim the former First Division.
He collected team honors during that time in addition to those that were not. Bonds, who four times won the coveted “Hammer of the Year,” was awarded the 1988 Professional Footballers’ Association’s Merit award and received the MBE in the same year for his contributions to the sport.
West Ham fans voted Bonds as the club’s greatest player in 2018.
Bonds’ failure to win the England cap has sparked decades of controversy, particularly among West Ham supporters. He also ranks alongside Steve Bruce, an Everton midfielder, and Howard Kendall, a West Ham supporter, among those who have never won the honor.
When England defeated Italy 2-0 in a World Cup qualifier at Wembley in November 1977, Bonds was an unfilled substitute under the leadership of his former West Ham manager Ron Greenwood.
He was only eligible for England’s friendly against Brazil in May 1981 after suffering broken ribs in a fight with his own goalkeeper Phil Parkes, who had made him eligible.
The opportunity was never present.
In February 1990, he succeeded Lou Macari as West Ham manager, who brought the club back into the top of the table.
When West Ham reached the FA Cup semi-final in 1991, Bonds was also in charge, but the team never recovered from Tony Gale’s contented first-half dismissal, losing 4-0 to Nottingham Forest.
West Ham lost ground in 1992, but the club maintained its faith in Bonds, who then reinstated them in the new Premier League.
Bonds’ 27-year stint at West Ham came to an end in 1994 when Harry Redknapp took his place.
In May 1997, he took over as manager for West Ham’s fierce rivals Millwall, but it was a short-lived, unsuccessful spell, which led him to leave the following year.
West Ham’s name will always remain inextricably linked to Bonds. The first Lifetime Achievement Award given to him by the club was in 2013; he was also visibly moved when the team changed the name of the East Stand at the London Stadium in his honor in February 2019.
Bonds was a private family man away from the field, not the combative captain who was on the field. After the change of the name of the stand, he was moved to tears as he addressed West Ham’s fans while they were at his side, along with many of his former colleagues.
Bonds and West Ham put their best foot forward by combining remarkable fitness, a fiercely competitive nature, and skill with a potent combination that was at the heart of everything they did.
Football fans of a certain age, particularly those at West Ham, will immediately recall the bearded Bonds, who were soaked in mud from the 1970s and 1980s, who were always ready to carry the fight to the opposition.
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