Appearances and goals Goulden won 14
England caps while a
West Ham player, scoring four goals. He made his debut on 14 May 1937, against
Norway in
Oslo. England won 6–0 with Goulden scoring in the 85th minute; barging through the defence he scored with a left foot shot. He also appeared in several wartime internationals, but these are not considered official full international matches.
Berlin 1938 The match against Germany in Berlin in 1938 is notorious because the England team were pressured by the Foreign Office into giving the
Nazi salute while the German national anthem was played. The team were furious: However, the British ambassador,
Nevile Henderson, insisted, believing that doing so would help defuse dangerously high international tensions. There were 110,000 Germans watching the game, including
Hermann Goering and
Josef Goebbels, and
Hitler had hoped to use the game for propaganda, in part because the German side included a player from the newly annexed Austria. Hitler was expected at the game, but it is believed that he did not attend. Goulden, who was Jewish, and normally known for his creativity rather than his shooting ability; scored the final goal in England's 6–3 victory, a goal has been described as the ''East End's
Jesse Owens moment
and which teammate Stanley Matthews described as probably the greatest goal I ever saw''.
Other notable matches A week after the Berlin game, England played
Switzerland at
Sportplatz Hardturm in
Zurich. The match was started by a drop ball released from an aircraft - after circling the stadium, the aeroplane swooped over the pitch releasing the ball which landed almost exactly on the centre circle. The match finished 1–1. On 26 October 1938, England played a
Rest of Europe side managed by
Vittorio Pozzo at
Highbury in London, to celebrate the 75th anniversary of
the Football Association. The match was the second ever to be shown on live on TV, though only the first half was shown. Goulden scored the final goal in a 3–0 victory. Sixty three years later, in 2001,
FIFA retrospectively downgraded the match to unofficial, though the FA disputes this decision and continues to treat the match as official. ==Coaching and managerial career==