Sir Bobby Charlton funeral details announced

The funeral for Sir Bobby Charlton will take place at Manchester Cathedral next Monday, Manchester United has said.

The football icon died aged 86 on 21 October, prompting tributes from across the sporting world.

An inquest last week concluded he died after a fall at a Cheshire care home.

His funeral cortege will pass Old Trafford on its way to the cathedral on 13 November, with fans and members of the public invited to pay their respects along the route.

It is expected up to 1,000 guests will attend the cathedral to pay their respects to Sir Bobby "and celebrate his incredible life as a husband, father, grandfather and, of course, as one of the finest footballers this country has ever produced," Manchester United said.

The service will begin at 2pm and will be led by Canon Nigel Ashworth. It will include eulogies by family members and the football club.

The club said the service within the cathedral will remain private and will not be broadcast or filmed.

"The Charlton family and Manchester United would like to thank everyone for the outpouring of love and respect towards Sir Bobby," it said.

Sir Bobby is known as one of England's World Cup winners in 1966.

He also won the European Cup with United in 1968, after surviving the Munich air crash - which killed 23 people, including eight of the club's 'Busby babe' players - 10 years earlier.

He earned 106 England caps and scored 49 goals, the latter being the all-time record from 1970 until 2015.

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Charlton was one of the game's greatest players

It comes as the shirt worn by Sir Bobby in the 1966 World Cup semi-final will be auctioned off later this month.

The signed top was worn in the 2-1 victory over Portugal on 26 July 1966, when the football great scored both goals in front of more than 94,000 spectators at Wembley, before England's victory over West Germany in the final.

The shirt, which was put up for auction before Sir Bobby's death, is being sold by Derbyshire-based Hansons Auctioneers on 14 November, with a guide price of £50,000-80,000.