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On this Day in 1971 - 'Marsh the Master Grabs Hat-Trick'

Posted: Fri Apr 03, 2026 7:36 am
by Steve Russell
QPR (4) – Bolton Wanderers (0) – ‘Marsh the Master Grabs Hat-Trick’
League Division Two

Team: Parkes, Clement, Gillard, Venables, Hunt, Hazell, Ferguson, Francis, Leach,
Marsh, Salvage
Sub: McCullough

Attendance: 8,613

On 3rd April 1971, Rangers took on struggling Bolton Wanderers at Loftus Road. Roy Horobin
later filed the following match report:

‘A sizzling hat-trick from Rodney Marsh, the idol of Loftus Road, left poor Bolton in tatters.

Marsh began his magic in the 26th minute, when he sent Ian Gillard away with a glorious pass
and the left-back grazed a post with his shot.

After 35 minutes, Rangers went ahead. Terry Venables took a free kick on the left and the leaping
Marsh headed the ball over the hesitant Bolton defence and into the net.

Bolton began the second-half with spirit, and after forcing two corners, Roger Hunt must have
equalised but for a slip at the crucial moment. But Bolton’s hopes vanished after 62 minutes.

Marsh, playing with the ball in the penalty area for a full minute, goaded the Bolton defence
into an indiscretion when at last Redfern brought him down. Marsh himself took the penalty kick
and made no mistake.

Bolton were now fighting a lost cause, and Marsh chalked up his hat-trick in the 77th minute
with a fierce header from a Tony Hazell cross.

Three minutes from the end, Marsh put Mick Leach through for the fourth goal.

Rangers’ manager Gordon Jago said afterwards: “Rodney is a truly great player by any standards.”

And Pat Collins’ report (edited) appeared in ‘The People’:

‘This belonged entirely to the incredible Rodney Marsh. He turned an ordinary, uninspiring game
into a cracker with his second hat-trick of the season.

His first goal was a back-header from a free kick. His second was a penalty after Redfern had
chopped him down in the box, and the third was a header from Hazell’s cross.

Bolton began playing the numbers game with Hulme wearing No.9 and playing as a second stopper,
and strikers Hunt and Greaves wearing four and six respectively.

This was Marsh’s day, and he knew it. His second goal was sheer showmanship, when he beat
Rimmer several times before Redfern frustratedly made the tackle that brought the penalty.

Typically, Marsh applauded Peter Clarke for a great save which prevented his fourth.

And he was one of the first, after supplying the chip to let in Leach for the fourth, to go across
and congratulate the scorer.

It wasn’t much of a match, more a one-man show by R. Marsh, Esq,. Soccer entertainer extraordinary.’