Background
He was known as "Ernie" – a contraction of Ernest, his father"s name – to avoid confusion with Liverpool and England striker Roger Hunt.
He was known as "Ernie" – a contraction of Ernest, his father"s name – to avoid confusion with Liverpool and England striker Roger Hunt.
At international level, he was capped three times for the England under-23 team Born in Swindon, Hunt was working for British Rail when he was signed as an amateur by Swindon Town in 1957. He progressed through their youth ranks, made his debut on 15 September 1959 in a 3–0 defeat in the Third Division at Grimsby Town, which made him Swindon"s youngest ever first-team player, aged 16 years 182 days, a record which stood until 1980, and signed professional forms in March 1960.
Swindon were relegated at the end of the 1964-1965 campaign, and Hunt left to join Wolverhampton Wanderers in September 1965, for a fee of £40,000, which was at the time Swindon"s record transfer receipt.
In all competitions, he scored 88 goals from 237 games for Swindon. However, he made just six outings in the top flight for Wolves before the club sold him to Everton for £80,000 in September 1967.
His time at Goodison Park was short-lived as he failed to settle, making only 12 appearances before a £65,000 transfer to Coventry City in March 1968, just six months after arriving. The striker was a fans" favourite during his five-year spell at Coventry and scored one of the most famous goals in English football history in October 1970, ironically against Everton.
Awarded a free kick just outside the penalty area, Willie Carr gripped the ball between his heels and flicked it up for Hunt to volley home.
The match was televised on British Broadcasting Corporation"s Match of the Day, so the goal gained huge fame, but the move was outlawed at the end of the season. He spent a loan spell at Doncaster Rovers before leaving Coventry to join Bristol City, where he ended his league career in the 1973-1974 season. He subsequently served a number of non-League clubs.
After retiring from the game, he did a variety of jobs, including running a public in Ledbury and window cleaning.
In 2008, he was living in Gloucester.