# England's 1966 World Cup Winner Nobby Stiles Dies from Brain Injury Linked to Football Heading

*A coroner's court ruled that England's 1966 World Cup winner Nobby Stiles died from a brain condition caused by repeatedly heading a football.*

July 16, 2026 · Sports

A coroner's court has ruled that England 1966 World Cup winner Nobby Stiles died from a brain condition caused by repeatedly heading a football. Stiles, a former Manchester United midfielder, died almost six years ago aged 78 with severe dementia. The inquest into his death heard that he had headed a football around 140,000 times during his career. Expert analysis showed his dementia was due to Alzheimer's disease and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), linked to head trauma from heading a ball. Neuro-pathology expert Dr Daniel Du Plessis confirmed that repeated heading caused Stiles' CTE.

## Impact of Heading on Brain Health

Stiles' son John testified that his father headed the ball around 40 times a day, five days a week, over a 17-year career, estimating a total of 136,000 headers. He noted that footballs weighed around 16 ounces but got heavier when wet. Studies show heading a modern ball, which no longer absorbs water, is equivalent to around 80 percent of the impact of a boxer's punch.

## Legal Action and Football Association Response

John Stiles is among dozens of former footballers and their families suing England's governing Football Association, the Football Association of Wales, and the English Football League. They claim the authorities were negligent and breached their duty of care. In March, the Football Association told the High Court that science has not established a link between heading a ball and permanent brain damage. However, an inquest in January found heading likely contributed to the death of former Leeds, Manchester United, and Scotland defender Gordon McQueen. The FA is currently phasing out heading in youth football up to Under-11 level.

## Sources

- BSS

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Source: https://pulsetoday.com.bd/en/sports/nobby-stiles-death-brain-injury-heading-football
