UK News
‘Got!’: Panini 1970 World Cup sticker book completed after 56 years | Panini stickers
This week, Stephen Butler completed a collection that he started almost 60 years ago. With the final piece in place, it’s now worth thousands of pounds, but he has no interest in selling it.
Butler was moving house five years ago when he stumbled across a box in the loft that he had not thought about in years. Inside was his old school cap, some exercise books, photos and, in the middle of it all, a 1970 Panini World Cup sticker book.
“It brought back an awful lot of memories,” said Butler.
The 1970 World Cup meant everything to Stephen at the time. He was a 13-year-old boy in the Ribble valley, Lancashire watching England play in colour for the first time, in Mexico City of all places. They had entered the tournament as cup holders, having beaten West Germany in the 1966 finals, which only added to the excitement.
“It was in colour, it was live, it was the other side of the world. So when Dad bought the colour television I thought bloody hell, bring on the school holidays.”
Decades later, Butler was surprised at the details that he still remembered. First and foremost was his concern for the players and how they would hold up in the heat, but as he flicked through the Panini sticker book he also reminisced on his favourites – Pelé and Jairzinho playing for Brazil in the final, Italian players such as Boninsegna and Facchetti, who impressed him if only with their exotic names.
The stickers were all devotedly collected in 1970, the year that marked the beginning of Panini’s 60-year partnership with Fifa, which ends in 2030. Back then, Butler paid five pre-decimalisation pennies for a pack of four stickers at the tobacconist or sweet shop. But as he flicked through the book as an adult, he noticed something: a sticker was missing.
It wasn’t a player, but a country: Chile had a sticker they earned for hosting the World Cup in Santiago, 1962, and Butler had not managed to find it in 1970.
So for five more years the collection remained unfinished, tucked away in a new box, in a new home. Until recently, when Butler heard on the radio that Panini was going to stop making the sticker books for Fifa.
“It’s a shame when that amount of heritage is lost,” says Butler. “It leaves a sour taste in the mouth.”
He looked at his book again, and thought about the missing sticker.
“Now, I’m no collector,” says Butler. But on this one occasion, he thought, he should try to finish the job. So he went online and, after some searching, found somebody selling the missing Chile sticker.
On the exact day Fifa announced that its partnership with Panini would end in 2030, Butler finished the collection he started in the year it began. He bought the Chile sticker for £150, which seemed high, but complete 1970s sticker books have auctioned for £7,000-£10,000.
“On the basis of five pennies for four stickers, I think it’s worth about 1,000 times more than what it would originally cost,” said Butler.
But he isn’t interested in selling it off. “It’s a part of my life – it brings back interesting memories,” he says. “My memories are not someone else’s, you know?”
Stephen Butler is 69 and lives near Chichester with his wife, Helen. They have three adult children “who would love to get their hands on [the sticker book]”.
“They’ll have to bid for it, won’t they?” he jokes.
UK News
Labour leadership talk ‘froth and nonsense’, says senior minister – UK politics live | Politics
Nandy calls speculation on leadership challenge ‘froth and nonsense’
The culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, has said the prime minister Keir Starmer will not have resigned by the school summer holidays, despite a major challenge to his leadership after the local election results.
“He was very clear with the cabinet on Tuesday, that if people want to challenge him there is a process for doing that, there is a way to trigger a leadership contest,” Nandy said. “Nobody has done that yet, despite the absolute feverish speculation.
“Most of it has turned out to be just froth and nonsense. We have got to get on with the job.”
Key events
Voters who abandoned Labour will return to support Burnham, says culture secretary
The culture secretary said voters who abandoned Labour have said they will return to the party to support mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham in the Makerfield by-election.
Lisa Nandy told Laura Kuenssberg on the BBC: “I have to say knocking on doors yesterday, people – because of Andy’s record as mayor – who didn’t vote for us last week were saying they would vote for us again.
“He won every single ward in Makerfield every time he stood to be mayor, even when Labour hasn’t and that’s why I make no apology for saying he is a really important voice that needs to be heard loud and clear in the centre of Westminster.”
Female Labour leader ‘long overdue’, Nandy says
Trevor Phillips asked Lisa Nandy why the Labour party had “three white blokes” who would face Kemi Badenoch across the dispatch box, suggesting it raises a question about the Labour party pointing a finger at others being institutionally sexist and racist.
The culture secretary pointed out she “did try to fix that” when she put her name forward for the leadership of the party in 2019.
But she added:
I agree with you, I think a woman leader is long overdue. We are talking as if we are in a leadership contest here, but on the way here – I have just come over from Wigan to Salford – I have had two people already say to me ‘can you just get on with the job’.
“If people want to trigger a leadership contest they can, but I think the idea the rest of the country is obsessing about who is the leader of the Labour party is just for the birds.”
Lisa Nandy told Trevor Phillips the leadership crisis in the Labour party was “really winding” her up, during her morning interview on Sky News.
“I am sorry if I am coming across as a bit irritated, I think what is really winding me up if I’m honest is that people told us loud and clear last Thursday that things weren’t good enough, that they needed far more fundamental far more urgent change in their lives.
“Somehow we seem to have just completely cut them out of the conversation in the last week and Westminster has gone into introspection mode where the debate is being led about personalities and about individuals,
“What I think the public really need to hear from us right now is that we’ve got a plan to turn things around.”
Culture secretary brands Streeting’s call to rejoin the EU ‘a bit odd’
Asked about former health secretary Wes Streeting’s call for the UK to re-join the European Union, the culture secretary called the stance “a bit odd”
Lisa Nandy said the government was “trying to take a far more pragmatic approach” of forming a closer relationship with the EU, “rather than re-opening the Brexit wars”.
Commenting on her former cabinet colleague’s position, Nandy said: “I just think it’s a bit odd if I’m honest. Essentially, If re-joining the EU is the answer to what we were just told loud and clear by the country and parts of the country like mine where we lost 25 out of 25 wards, then essentially what we are saying to people is life was fine in 2015, we just need to go back there.”
Nandy said Streeting will “hear loud and clear from people” while campaigning that the public in Leave voting areas did not agree with his stance.”
Asked by Trevor Phillips on Sky News why she had not told Andy Burnham to “stay in Manchester”, Lisa Nandy said she wanted the Greater Manchester Mayor – whose decision to stand as an MP has led to a by-election in Makerfield – to return to Westminster.
“When you say, ‘stay in Manchester’, we can hear you up north. Our voices matter in national politics. Andy brings a perspective from this part of the country that has not been heard loud and clear enough in Westminster for decades,” the culture secretary said.
The sort of fights we have been prepared to have in recent years, the fight for renters, the fight for workers, the fight for football fans – people need to see more of that from us. I think Andy can come and bring that perspective and that fight and that energy to this team.”
Nandy calls speculation on leadership challenge ‘froth and nonsense’
The culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, has said the prime minister Keir Starmer will not have resigned by the school summer holidays, despite a major challenge to his leadership after the local election results.
“He was very clear with the cabinet on Tuesday, that if people want to challenge him there is a process for doing that, there is a way to trigger a leadership contest,” Nandy said. “Nobody has done that yet, despite the absolute feverish speculation.
“Most of it has turned out to be just froth and nonsense. We have got to get on with the job.”
UK News
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