Intriguing to see at 1.03 that one-handed catch from a cross by Pat Jennings. It was still very early in his long and distinguished career but the way he pulled it down first and then wrapped the same hand around it, he made it look so easy. Maybe the cross was not the fiercest but he made a habit of catching them single-handed over the years and some were much more difficult than that. The wondrous sight of him rising way above a sea of heads, his arm even higher as he plucked the ball out of the air is one indelibly imprinted on the memory.
It's a skill you rarely if ever get to witness nowadays, no doubt because of the changes in the way modern footballs are made. Leather and pigskin have long since been replaced by compounds of plastic and rubber that make them lighter and more swervy in flight and therefore presumably much more difficult to grasp. Even at times with both hands, going by the frequency the ball is punched or parried nowadays.
But even in his own day it was a rare sight among other keepers. Perhaps the memory is playing tricks but I'm struggling to recall any that had also mastered that magnificent skill. Certainly none that could perform it so routinely.