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Hi, I'm Gabriel Gatehouse.
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And I'm Ed Jervis.
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And we're about to play you a clip from Foul Play, a new podcast
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series in which we investigate whether the
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CIA poisoned my grandad and possibly laid a curse on English football. It's an unbelievable tale of sport, spies and family secrets.
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And here's a taster.
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We'll hear the name of your grandfather, please.
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My name's Ed and I feel like I'm having a sort of out of body experience right now.
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Banks, Gordon.
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Yes.
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Let me check.
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I'm an ordinary dad of two small kids from Stoke on Trent in the English Midlands. I don't travel much.
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They have a little secret repository. Nobody knows
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we missed this. So it feels pretty surreal right now to be in Mexico, in an old prison, digging through the archives of the Mexican secret police.
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Maybe we can find something.
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You're putting Gordon Banks name into a secret, secret database.
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I'm here with Gabriel Gatehouse, an investigative journalist, and we're looking for evidence that more than 50 years ago, in the summer of 1970, spies were surveilling my granddad.
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Yes. They have photos of your grandfather.
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What?
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Yeah.
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Can we see?
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Yeah.
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My granddad wasn't a secret agent. He had no links to Mexico. No, his name has got no business being in this archive. My granddad was a football player. Maybe you call it soccer. He was quite famous, actually. He almost made it.
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And if it hadn't been Gordon Banks
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in that goal, he would have done. Gordon Banks, the world's number one goalkeeper. Gordon Banks, my grandad, was the man in goal in 1966, the one and only time England have ever won the World Cup.
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Well done, Gordon Banks, the hero of England. They think it's all over. It is now.
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Some argue my granddad was the greatest goalkeeper to have ever played the game. So what the hell is his photo doing in the archives of the Mexican secret police?
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They have more information.
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Oh, my God.
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I know.
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Yeah. So that other voice you hear is me. And yes, I am a serious journalist. At least I think I am. I've covered wars and revolutions, stories about Russian spies for two days. In 2011, a contact of mine had the body of the Libyan dictator, Colonel Gaddafi hidden in his fridge. I've reported some crazy stories in my time, but this one I've been dragged into, against my better judgment, because at first sight it seems absurd. Couldn't have happened. Unless it did. In which case it might just be the craziest story I've ever heard. It all started three years ago when a Stranger comes up to me. You're Gabriel Gatehouse, aren't you? He says. I loved your podcast. This happens to me from time to time, ever since I did a series about conspiracy theories in America. Thanks, I say. Who are you?
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It's me, Ed, I tell Gabriel. I've got a story for him about football.
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Let me stop you right there, I say. I'm not into football. I don't know anything about it. But Ed won't let it go. Have you heard of Gordon Banks? He asks.
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Gordon Banks. Another trophy for his sideboard.
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John Mahoney, the substitute goalkeeper, right? National hero from a bygone age when the England men's football team still won things. Yeah, even I've heard of Gordon Banks. So Ed starts telling me this story about his famous granddad and the World cup. But not 1966, the one we won? No, the next one in Mexico. In 1970, England were the defending champions, Ed says, one of the favorites to win. But Grandad fell ill. Food poisoning, apparently. Gordon Banks was too sick to play. He recovered a few days later, but England crashed out and English football was never the same again.
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We didn't even qualify for another World cup for another 12 years, and even then it seemed like a curse had been laid on the national team.
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We're talking about the men's team here. The women are doing just fine. Anyway, Ed says his grandad was always suspected. His illness was no accident. I was nobbled, he'd say. He thought someone had got to him all those years ago, though who or how. To his dying day, he never knew. Ed never really took it seriously.
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We would just sort of laugh it off and kind of, oh yeah, all right, Grandad won too many tacos for some dodgy street vendor or whatever it was.
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But after Gordon Banks death, Ed says someone tells him your granddad was poisoned to sabotage England and the plot was masterminded by the CIA. The CIA. I may not know much about football, but I do know about conspiracy theories, and this looks like a classic. I mean, why would the CIA want to poison an English footballer? Something about the Cold War and supporting a military dictator. Ed said it sounded kind of ridiculous. I told him I'd look into it, thinking I'll debunk this straight away. Well, three years later, here I am, and the deeper I dig, the stranger it gets. Follow Foul Play on the Audible app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of Foul Play early and ad free right now by joining Audible in the Audible app or on Apple Podcasts.
Release Date: June 16, 2026
Hosts: Audible presents with Gabriel Gatehouse and Ed Jervis
Episode Focus: A mysterious case involving football legend Gordon Banks, old family secrets, and alleged Cold War espionage
This teaser episode introduces Foul Play, a podcast blending sports history, Cold War mysteries, and personal intrigue. The story is driven by Ed Jervis, the grandson of the legendary England goalkeeper Gordon Banks, who joins investigative journalist Gabriel Gatehouse to examine an astonishing theory: was the celebrated footballer poisoned during the 1970 World Cup by the CIA, and did it forever alter the course of English football?
The episode balances journalistic skepticism with personal intrigue. Gabriel Gatehouse’s analytical perspective is matched by Ed Jervis’s mix of disbelief and emotional curiosity. The tone is earnest and sometimes playful, especially as both hosts share their surprise and bemusement at each twist—making this an accessible and engaging exploration of a real-life mystery at the intersection of sports and espionage.
This episode sets the stage for an unusual, captivating investigation: Did Cold War intrigue sabotage England’s football destiny? Through archive hunts, family anecdotes, and a growing web of clues, Foul Play promises an exploration into the strange places where sport, history, and spying collide.
For more, listen to ‘Foul Play’ on Audible and follow along as the story unfolds.