The World Cup vanished 56 years ago and this Ottawa man discovered it was missing - Action News
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The World Cup vanished 56 years ago and this Ottawa man discovered it was missing

John McLarens was working as a security guard in 1966 when the Jules Rimet Trophy was stolen from a hall in downtown London. With the World Cup kicking off this weekend, his story is part of a new documentary on the theft.

John McLarens was working as a London security guard when trophy was swiped

Man who discovered the World Cup trophy had disappeared recounts the day

2 years ago
Duration 1:25
77-year-old John McLarens, who now lives in Ottawa, was working as a security guard in London in 1966 when the Jules Rimet Trophy the original prize for winning soccer's World Cup disappeared from the exhibition hall where it was being displayed.

When John McLarens realized the World Cuphad disappeared, all he could do was laugh.

In March 1966,McLarens was working as a security guard in a downtown Londonhall where the goldcup then known as the Jules Rimet Trophy was on exhibition.

England was hosting the global soccer tournament that summerand the trophy was being showcased at Methodist Central Hall as part of a big rarestamp show.

McLarens, an aspiring actor, would take all sorts of jobs just to pay the bills. On the day of the theft, he was part of atwo-person team assignedto watch over incredibly precious stamps in the basement of the hall.

After hours keeping watch in the dark basement, he asked to switch with the guards on the sunlit main floor, where the trophy was.

But when McLarens began his rounds, he soon discovered the plinth that was supposed to hold the trophy was empty.

"I started to have a bit of a nervous chuckle," recalled McLarens, now 77 and living in the Ottawa suburb of Bells Corners. "I'm not a nervous person, but I just sort of went, there's something wrong here."

A 'massive story' at the time

With the 2022 World Cup in Qatar set to kick offthis weekend, McLarens has shared his story in a new documentary called1966: Who Stole The World Cup? that'sairinginthe United Kingdom.

The theft was a "massive story" both in the U.K. and across the globe, said Tom Pettifor, the crime editorfor the London-based Daily Mirror and the documentary's co-producer.

"Various heads of football associations around the world spoke out with their anger at how the home of Scotland Yard could lose the World Cup under the noses of supposedly the best police force in the world," said Pettifor, whose investigative reporting eventually uncovered the identity of thethief who swiped the trophy.

"It made the nation a bit of a laughing stock. So it was with great relief that it turned up a week later."

While the trophy was later found more on that in a bit the immediate aftermath of the theft was pure chaos, McLarens said.

In this July 30, 1966, file photo, England midfielder Nobby Stiles, right, looks at the Jules Rimet Trophy as it's held by captain Bobby Moore following England's victory in the World Cup final. England hasn't won the World Cup since. (The Associated Press)

"I tell you, in 10 minutes, you could not move. There were hundreds of cops, it seemed like, all over the bloody place," he said.

"[They] swarmed into this hall. No one knew what was going on. They were running around like a bunch of penguins with their headscut off. It was just crazy."

The canine hero

McLarens said a pair of detectives spotted him, and a few days laterhe was down at Scotland Yardsharing his theory: that the theft was an inside job.

For a few days,McLarens said, he was a suspect.

But they realized he was beinghonest, and in any case, a ransom note demanding about $26,000 Cdnsoon arrived atthe offices of the Football Association in London.

A meeting was arranged, but the thief never showed up. At roughlythe same time, a small white-and-black collie dog named Pickles was going for a walk with his owner down aLondon street when he suddenly spotted something in a hedge.

It was the Jules Rimet Trophy, wrapped up in an old newspaper.

Photographers take photographs of Pickles, the dog who sniffed out the missing Jules Rimet Trophy after it was stolen in March 1966, near the spot where he found it. (Central Press/Getty Images)

Thief took secret to his grave

According to the documentary, the real thief was a 39-year-old man namedSidney Cugullerewho swiped the trophy after realizing the security around the stamps was simply too tight.

Cugulleredied in 2005 at the age of 79, having never been identified.

England would go on to win the World Cup that summer, but it would be the last time they would hoist the Jules Rimet Trophy.

When Brazil won the tournament four years later, they were granted rights to the trophy in perpetuity, leading world soccer governing body FIFA to commission the current gold statuetteawarded to World Cup champions.

Brazilian soccer player Carlos Alberto holds up the Jules Rimet Trophy in 1970 after his team defeated Italy in the World Cup final. The trophy would be stolen again in Brazil 13 years later this time for good. (Gianna Foggia/The Associated Press)

Then in 1983, the old trophywas stolen onceagain and despite the best efforts of police and Brazilian pet dogs, it hasn't been seen since.

As for McLarens, he says hegot"a few drinks" regaling friends with tales of his involvementin the 1966 theft. More than five decades later, he's still a bit stunned by all the fuss around it.

"It was a puny little cup!It really is. It's like, 15 inches high. It was [only] worth, I think, about 3,000 pounds," he said.

"The 'Penny Black' stamps downstairs ... they were worth millions of pounds! And we were all worried about this cup."

A man in a living room looks at the camera.
John McLarens says everything about the theft of the trophy felt like something out of a Monty Python sketch and he would know, as he once had a bit role with the comedy troupe. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)