World's longest football match ends in a 333-293 win for the All Stars

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Fans of teams playing Manchester United may think that "Fergie Time" seems to last forever. But "Fergie Time" is not a patch on this record-breaking game.

The Cotswold All Stars took on Cambray FC in a 35 HOUR football match, which has entered the Guinness Book of Records as the longest football match ever played.

The match - to raise £30,000 to build a school for poverty-stricken children in India - was played in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, featuring two squads consisting of 18 players each. Each player raised £1000 for the charity.

Every player had to stay on the pitch for three hours at a time. Every three hours there was a five-minute break for substitutions. And for every hour on the pitch, the players earned a five-minute break.

The All Stars won 333-293.

Teams battle for 35 hours to break record for longest ever football match... and the final score was 333-293

By Daily Mail Reporter
5th May 2010

If you think 90 minutes of football is long enough for a match, then imagine having to sit through - or play - a 35-hour game.

The longest ever game of football ended today with a 333 to 293 scoreline.

The All Stars were eventually victorious after a marathon 35 hours on the pitch against Cambray FC in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire.



In for the long haul: Tents at the side of the pitch for the world's longest football match record attempt

They have now smashed the Guinness World Record for the longest match ever played - the previous record was 33 hours.

The 36 footballers, who came from churches around the area, had planned to play for 40 hours, but torrential rain made the pitch unsafe.

The teams were raising £30,000 to build a school for poverty-stricken children in India.

All Stars player Pete Sheppard, 24, said that tiredness was the biggest hurdle.

'We did a lot of intense training sessions but they don't prepare you for how long an ordeal this is,' he said.


Slog: The players admitted counting down the minutes towards the end of the mammoth game

Ninety minutes is a long time but you are playing double that before you have a break. That last hour everyone was really counting down the minutes.'

Each squad had 18 players, who each raised £1,000 for the game, and every player had to stay on the pitch for three hours at a time.

Every three hours there was a five-minute break for substitutions. And for every hour on the pitch, the players earned a five-minute break.

None of the players were allowed to leave the area around the pitch so tents were pitched along the sidelines, while invigilators watched.

Cambray player Andy Champion, 37, said the game had remained competitive until the final whistle.

'We started off quite fast because we were all so excited, but I was actually surprised by the pace of some of the lads hours into the game,' he said.

Cambray FC, from Cambray Baptist Church, and the Cotswold All Stars, made up of players from different churches, are on target to raise £30,000.

The money will help the Dalit community in India, who are considered outcasts and denied access to public areas such as parks.

Footballer's wife Emily McKeown, who helped organise the event, said: 'Supporters have been coming through the night to watch them and have even pitched up their tents as well.

'The players are completely shattered and many of them have been left with injuries.

'We had to make the decision to stop when the rain got heavier and it became a bit too dangerous.'

To donate, visit www.football4dalits.com.


Victory line-up: The teams just before the match

dailymail.co.uk