His West Ham career was interrupted when World War II started and he never played another competitive match for the club, though he did win the Football League War Cup with them in 1940.
Following the conflict, he signed with West Londoners Chelsea for £4,500 and linked up well with fellow new signings Tommy Lawton and Tommy Walker – the trio scored 47 goals between them in 1946–47 – though the side failed to make to challenge for honours, coming closest in the FA Cup, when they lost to Arsenal in the semi-finals, despite having led 2–0. Len retired as a player in 1950, having made 111 Chelsea appearances and scored 17 goals.
He won 14 England caps while a West Ham player, scoring four goals.
He also appeared in several wartime internationals, but these are not considered official full international matches.
The match against Germany in Berlin in 1938 is notorious because the England team were pressured by the Foreign Office into giving the Nazi Salute while the German national anthem was played. The British ambassador, Neville Henderson, believed that doing so would help defuse dangerously high international tensions.
There were 110,000 Germans watching the game, including Hermann Goering and Josef Goebbels, and Hitler had hoped to use the game for propaganda. Hitler was expected at the game, but it is believed that he did not attend.
Len, who was Jewish, scored the final goal in England's 6–3 victory. The shot was so powerful that it ripped the net from the crossbar; he is then reported to have shouted, "Let 'em salute that one!". His goal has been described as the East End's Jesse Owens moment.
He remained at Chelsea until 1952, before moving to Hertfordshire in November 1952 for a management opportunity at Watford. His first match in charge was a 1–1 draw at home to Coventry, and by the end of 1952–53 he had guided his team to a top-10 finish in the Third Division South.
After guiding Watford to 4th and 7th in the next two campaigns, he stepped down to become a coach midway through the 1955–56 season. However, his successor and former player Johnny Paton's spell yielded just 2 wins from 15 games, including defeat at the hands of non-league clubs Aldershot and Bedford Town. Len took over for the remainder of the season, but was only able to salvage a 21st-placed finish.
After three years coaching overseas, Len returned to Watford in 1959, as part of new manager Ron Burgess's coaching staff. Burgess and Len's impact was immediate; Watford won promotion from the Fourth Division in 1960, and very nearly a second consecutive promotion in 1961. He departed the following season, again coaching overseas, before returning to management in England with Banbury United in 1965. Len, assisted by his former player Maurice Cook, helped Banbury reach the Southern League for the first time in their history. After leaving in 1967, Len's final role in football came at Oxford United, where he managed the reserve team from 1969.
His West Ham career was interrupted when World War II started and he never played another competitive match for the club, though he did win the Football League War Cup with them in 1940.
Following the conflict, he signed with West Londoners Chelsea for £4,500 and linked up well with fellow new signings Tommy Lawton and Tommy Walker – the trio scored 47 goals between them in 1946–47 – though the side failed to make to challenge for honours, coming closest in the FA Cup, when they lost to Arsenal in the semi-finals, despite having led 2–0. Len retired as a player in 1950, having made 111 Chelsea appearances and scored 17 goals.
He won 14 England caps while a West Ham player, scoring four goals.
He also appeared in several wartime internationals, but these are not considered official full international matches.
The match against Germany in Berlin in 1938 is notorious because the England team were pressured by the Foreign Office into giving the Nazi Salute while the German national anthem was played. The British ambassador, Neville Henderson, believed that doing so would help defuse dangerously high international tensions.
There were 110,000 Germans watching the game, including Hermann Goering and Josef Goebbels, and Hitler had hoped to use the game for propaganda. Hitler was expected at the game, but it is believed that he did not attend.
Len, who was Jewish, scored the final goal in England's 6–3 victory. The shot was so powerful that it ripped the net from the crossbar; he is then reported to have shouted, "Let 'em salute that one!". His goal has been described as the East End's Jesse Owens moment.
He remained at Chelsea until 1952, before moving to Hertfordshire in November 1952 for a management opportunity at Watford. His first match in charge was a 1–1 draw at home to Coventry, and by the end of 1952–53 he had guided his team to a top-10 finish in the Third Division South.
After guiding Watford to 4th and 7th in the next two campaigns, he stepped down to become a coach midway through the 1955–56 season. However, his successor and former player Johnny Paton's spell yielded just 2 wins from 15 games, including defeat at the hands of non-league clubs Aldershot and Bedford Town. Len took over for the remainder of the season, but was only able to salvage a 21st-placed finish.
After three years coaching overseas, Len returned to Watford in 1959, as part of new manager Ron Burgess's coaching staff. Burgess and Len's impact was immediate; Watford won promotion from the Fourth Division in 1960, and very nearly a second consecutive promotion in 1961. He departed the following season, again coaching overseas, before returning to management in England with Banbury United in 1965. Len, assisted by his former player Maurice Cook, helped Banbury reach the Southern League for the first time in their history. After leaving in 1967, Len's final role in football came at Oxford United, where he managed the reserve team from 1969.
Gravesite Details
No known memorial.
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