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England national football team records and statistics

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The history of the England national football team, also known as the Three Lions, begins with the first representative international match in 1870 and the first officially-recognised match two years later. England primarily competed in the British Home Championship over the following decades. Although the FA had joined the international governing body of association football FIFA in 1906, the relationship with the British associations was fraught. In 1928, the British nations withdrew from FIFA, in a dispute over payments to amateur players. This meant that England did not enter the first three World Cups.

The Three Lions first entered the World Cup in 1950 and have since qualified for 16 of the 19 finals tournaments to 2022. They won the 1966 World Cup on home soil making them one of only eight nations to have won a FIFA World Cup. They have reached the semi-finals on two other occasions, in 1990 and 2018. The Three Lions have been eliminated from the World Cup quarter-final stage on seven occasions – more often than any other nation. England failed to qualify for the finals in 1974, 1978, and 1994.

England also compete in the UEFA European Championship. During the 2020 European Championships, they reached the final of the competition for the first time, finishing as runners-up. They were also runners-up in the next competition, in 2024. England reached the semi-finals in 1968 and 1996 with the latter held on home soil. England's most capped player is Peter Shilton with 125 caps and its top goalscorer is Harry Kane with 68 goals. England compete in the FIFA World Cup, UEFA European Championship, and UEFA Nations League. However, as a constituent country of the United Kingdom, England are not a member of the International Olympic Committee so are not eligible to compete in the Olympic games.

This list encompasses honours won by the England national team, and records set by both players and managers including appearance and goal records. It also records England's record victories.

Honours and achievements

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Source:[1][2]

Major

Regional

Minor

Awards

Individual records

[edit]

Player records

[edit]

Appearances

[edit]
Most appearances[11]
Goalkeeper Peter Shilton is England's most capped player with 125 appearances.
Rank Player Caps Goals Position Career
1 Peter Shilton 125[note 1] 0 GK 1970–1990
2 Wayne Rooney 120 53 FW 2003–2018
3 David Beckham 115 17 MF 1996–2009
4 Steven Gerrard 114[note 2] 21 MF 2000–2014
5 Bobby Moore 108 2 DF 1962–1973
6 Ashley Cole 107 0 DF 2001–2014
7 Bobby Charlton 106 49 MF 1958–1970
Frank Lampard 106 29 MF 1999–2014
9 Billy Wright 105 3 DF 1946–1959
10 Harry Kane 101 68 FW 2015–2024
First player to reach 100 appearances
Billy Wright, 11 April 1959, 1–0 vs. Scotland[12]
Fastest to reach 100 appearances
Bobby Moore, 10 years 271 days, 20 May 1962 – 14 February 1973[citation needed]
Most consecutive appearances[note 3]
Billy Wright, 70, 3 October 1951 – 28 May 1959[13][14]
Most appearances as a substitute
Jermain Defoe, 35, 31 March 2004 – 22 June 2017[15][note 4]
Most consecutive appearances as a substitute
Owen Hargreaves, 14, 1 June 2004 – 10 June 2006[16]
Most appearances as a substitute without ever starting a game
Carlton Cole, 7, 11 January 2009 – 3 March 2010[15][16]
Most appearances without ever completing a full game
Tammy Abraham, 11, 10 November 2017 – 11 June 2022
Dominic Calvert-Lewin, 11, 8 October 2020 – 3 July 2021
Most appearances in competitive matches (World Cup, European Championships, Nations League and qualifiers)
Harry Kane, 85, 27 March 2015 – 13 October 2024[17]
Longest England career
Stanley Matthews, 22 years 228 days, 29 September 1934 – 15 May 1957[18]
Shortest England career[note 5]
Nathaniel Chalobah, <1 minute, 15 October 2018, 3–2 vs. Spain[19]
Martin Kelly, 2 minutes, 26 May 2012, 1–0 vs. Norway[19]
Most consecutive appearances comprising entire England career
Roger Byrne, 33, 3 April 1954 – 27 November 1957[citation needed]
Youngest player
Theo Walcott, 17 years 75 days, 30 May 2006, 3–1 vs. Hungary[15][20]
Oldest player
Stanley Matthews, 42 years 103 days, 15 May 1957, 4–1 vs. Denmark[15][18]
Oldest debutant[note 6][21]
Alexander Morten, 41 years 113 days, 8 March 1873, 4–2 vs. Scotland[21][22]
Oldest outfield debutant
Leslie Compton, 38 years 64 days, 15 November 1950, 4–2 vs. Wales[21][22]
Most appearances at the World Cup finals[note 7]
Peter Shilton, 17, 16 June 1982 – 7 July 1990[23]
Most appearances without ever playing at the World Cup finals
Dave Watson, 65, 3 April 1974 – 2 June 1982[citation needed]
Appearances at three World Cup final tournaments[note 8][24]
Tom Finney and Billy Wright, 1950, 1954 and 1958[24]
Bobby Charlton[note 9][24] and Bobby Moore, 1962, 1966 and 1970[24]
Terry Butcher, Bryan Robson and Peter Shilton, 1982, 1986 and 1990[24]
David Beckham, Michael Owen and Sol Campbell, 1998, 2002 and 2006[24]
Ashley Cole, 2002, 2006 and 2010[24]
Steven Gerrard,[note 10] Frank Lampard and Wayne Rooney, 2006, 2010 and 2014[24]
Jordan Henderson and Raheem Sterling, 2014, 2018 and 2022[24]
Most non-playing selections for the World Cup finals[note 11]
Alan Hodgkinson, 2, 1958 and 1962[25][note 12]
George Eastham, 2, 1962 and 1966[25]
Viv Anderson, 2, 1982 and 1986[25]
Chris Woods, 2, 1986 and 1990[25]
Martin Keown and Nigel Martyn, 2, 1998 and 2002[25]
David James, 2, 2002 and 2006[citation needed]
Nick Pope, 2, 2018 and 2022[25]
Oldest player to feature at the World Cup finals
Peter Shilton, 40 years, 292 days, 7 July 1990, 1–2 vs. Italy[26]
Oldest outfield player to feature at the World Cup finals
Stanley Matthews, 39 years, 145 days, 26 June 1954, 2–4 vs. Uruguay[27][28]
Youngest player to feature at the World Cup finals[note 13]
Michael Owen, 18 years, 183 days, 15 June 1998, 2–0 vs. Tunisia[29]
Oldest player to feature in a World Cup qualifying match
Stanley Matthews, 42 years, 103 days, 15 May 1957, 4–1 vs. Denmark[15][18]
Youngest player to feature in a World Cup qualifying match
Wayne Rooney, 18 years, 351 days, 9 October 2004, 2–0 vs. Wales[citation needed]
First player to debut at the World Cup finals
Laurie Hughes, 25 June 1950, 2–0 vs. Chile[30][note 14]
Last player to debut at the World Cup finals[note 15]
Allan Clarke, 7 June 1970, 1–0 vs. Czechoslovakia[citation needed]
Most appearances at the European Championship finals
Harry Kane, 18, 11 June 2016 – 14 July 2024[31]
Most appearances without ever playing at the European Championship finals[note 16]
Rio Ferdinand, 81, 15 November 1997 – 4 June 2011[citation needed][note 17]
Appearances at three European Championship final tournaments[note 18]
Tony Adams, 1988, 1996 and 2000[note 19]
Alan Shearer, 1992, 1996 and 2000
Sol Campbell and Gary Neville, 1996, 2000 and 2004
Steven Gerrard, 2000, 2004 and 2012
Wayne Rooney, 2004, 2012 and 2016
Jordan Henderson, 2012, 2016 and 2020
Harry Kane and Kyle Walker, 2016, 2020 and 2024
Most non-playing selections for the European Championship finals[note 20]
Tony Dorigo, 2, 1988 and 1992
Ian Walker, 2, 1996 and 2004
Dean Henderson, 2, 2020 and 2024
Aaron Ramsdale, 2, 2020 and 2024
Oldest player to feature at the European Championship finals
Peter Shilton, 38 years, 271 days, 15 June 1988, 1–3 vs. Netherlands
Oldest outfield player to feature at the European Championship finals
Stuart Pearce, 34 years, 63 days, 26 June 1996, 1–1 vs. Germany
Youngest player to feature at the European Championship finals
Jude Bellingham, 17 years, 349 days, 13 June 2021, 1–0 vs. Croatia[32]
Oldest player to feature in a European Championship qualifying match
David Seaman, 39 years, 27 days, 16 October 2002, 2–2 vs. Macedonia
Oldest outfield player to feature in a European Championship qualifying match
Stuart Pearce, 37 years, 137 days, 8 September 1999, 0–0 vs. Poland
Youngest player to feature in a European Championship qualifying match
Wayne Rooney, 17 years, 156 days, 29 March 2003, 2–0 vs. Liechtenstein
Only player to debut at the European Championship finals[note 21]
Tommy Wright, 8 June 1968, 0–1 vs. Yugoslavia
Most appearances on aggregate at the World Cup and European Championship finals
Harry Kane, 28, 11 June 2016 – 14 July 2024
Most consecutive starts at the World Cup and European Championship finals
Jordan Pickford and John Stones, 26, 18 June 2018 – 14 July 2024
Most appearances without ever playing at the World Cup finals or the European Championship finals
Emlyn Hughes, 62, 5 November 1969 – 24 May 1980[note 22]
Fewest appearances in total, having played at both the World Cup finals and European Championship finals
Tommy Wright, 11, 8 June 1968 – 7 June 1970[note 23]
Most appearances without ever being in a World Cup or European Championship finals squad
Mick Channon, 46, 11 October 1972 – 7 September 1977[note 24]
Most appearances without featuring in a competitive match[note 25]
George Eastham, 19, 8 May 1963 – 3 July 1966[note 26]
Most Home International (British Championship) appearances[note 27]
Billy Wright, 38, 28 September 1946 – 11 April 1959
Most appearances without ever playing on a losing team[note 28]
David Rocastle, 14, 14 September 1988 – 17 May 1992
Most appearances without ever playing on a winning team[note 29]
Tommy Banks, 6, 18 May 1958 – 4 October 1958
Most appearances against a single opponent
Billy Wright, 13 vs. Ireland/Northern Ireland, 28 September 1946 – 4 October 1958 and vs. Scotland, 12 April 1947 – 11 April 1959
Most appearances against a single non-British opponent
Alan Ball, 8 vs. West Germany, 12 May 1965 – 12 March 1975
Most appearances at the old Wembley
Peter Shilton, 52, 25 November 1970 – 22 May 1990
Most appearances at the new Wembley
Joe Hart, 37, 24 May 2010 – 14 November 2017
Most appearances at a single non-English ground
Billy Wright, 7, Windsor Park, Belfast, 28 September 1946 – 4 October 1958
Most appearances at a single non-British ground[note 30]
Glenn Hoddle and Kenny Sansom, 5, Azteca Stadium, Mexico City, 6 June 1985 – 22 June 1986
Most consecutive years of appearances[note 31]
David Seaman, 15, 1988 to 2002 inclusive
Rio Ferdinand, 15, 1997 to 2011 inclusive
Most appearances in a single calendar year
Jack Charlton, 16, 1966
Harry Kane, 16, 2021
Longest gap between appearances
Ian Callaghan, 11 years 49 days, 20 July 1966, 2–0 vs. France – 7 September 1977, 0–0 vs. Switzerland[note 32]
Most tournaments appeared in consecutively[note 33]
Sol Campbell, 6, 1996 European Championships2006 World Cup
Wayne Rooney, 6, 2004 European Championships2016 European Championships
Jordan Henderson, 6, 2012 European Championships2022 World Cup
Appearances in three separate decades
Sam Hardy and Jesse Pennington, 1900s, 1910s, 1920s
Stanley Matthews, 1930s, 1940s, 1950s
Bobby Charlton, 1950s, 1960s, 1970s
Emlyn Hughes, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s
Peter Shilton, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s
Tony Adams and David Seaman, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s
Wes Brown, Jamie Carragher, Rio Ferdinand, Emile Heskey, David James and Frank Lampard, 1990s, 2000s, 2010s
Only player to make World Cup or European Championship finals appearances in three separate decades
Tony Adams, 1988 European Championships; 1996 European Championships and 1998 World Cup; 2000 European Championships
Most appearances in the same team
Ashley Cole and Steven Gerrard, 76, 2001 – 2014
Most appearances by a set of brothers
Gary and Phil Neville, 144, 1995 – 2007[note 34]
Most consecutive appearances by an unchanged team[note 35]
6, 23 July 1966 – 16 November 1966
Appearances under the most managers[note 36]
Gareth Barry, 8, 31 May 2000 – 26 May 2012[note 37]
First appearance by a player who had never played for an English club[note 38]
Joe Baker, of Hibernian, 18 November 1959, 2–1 vs. Northern Ireland
First player to debut as a substitute
Norman Hunter, 8 December 1965, 2–0 vs. Spain
Last appearance by a player from outside the top division of a country
Sam Johnstone, 9 October 2021, 5–0 vs. Andorra[note 39]
Most appearances by a player from outside the top division of a country[note 40]
Johnny Haynes, 32, 2 October 1954 – 28 May 1959
Most appearances by a player from outside the top two divisions[note 41]
Reg Matthews, 5, 14 April 1956 – 6 October 1956[note 42]
Most appearances by a player from outside the English League system
David Beckham, 55, 20 August 2003 – 14 October 2009[note 43]
Capped by another country[33][34]
John Hawley Edwards and Robert Evans (Wales)
Jack Reynolds (Ireland)
Gordon Hodgson (South Africa)
Ken Armstrong (New Zealand)
Jackie Sewell (Zambia)
Wilfried Zaha (Ivory Coast)
Declan Rice (Republic of Ireland)
Steven Caulker (Sierra Leone)[35]
Club providing the most England internationals in total
Tottenham Hotspur, 80[note 44]
Non-English club providing the most England internationals in total
Rangers, 7[note 45]
Most appearances per English club[note 46]
Club Player Caps (total) First cap – last cap
Arsenal Kenny Sansom 77 (86) 10 September 1980 – 18 June 1988
Aston Villa Gareth Southgate 42 (57) 12 December 1995 – 25 May 2001
Barnsley George Utley 1 15 February 1913
Birmingham City Harry Hibbs 25 20 November 1929 – 5 February 1936
Blackburn Rovers Bob Crompton 41 3 March 1902 – 4 April 1914
Blackpool Jimmy Armfield 43 13 May 1959 – 26 June 1966
Bolton Wanderers Nat Lofthouse 33 22 November 1950 – 26 November 1958
Bournemouth Callum Wilson 4 (9) 15 November 2018 – 14 October 2019
Bradford City Evelyn Lintott 4 (7) 13 February 1909 – 31 May 1909
Brentford Ivan Toney 6 26 March 2023 – 14 July 2024
Brighton & Hove Albion Lewis Dunk 6 15 November 2018 – 3 June 2024
Bristol City Billy Wedlock 26 16 February 1907 – 16 March 1914
Bristol Rovers Geoff Bradford 1 2 October 1955
Burnley Bob Kelly 11 (14) 10 April 1920 – 4 April 1925
Charlton Athletic Luke Young 7 28 May 2005 – 12 November 2005
Chelsea Frank Lampard 104 (106) 15 August 2001 – 24 June 2014
Coventry City Reg Matthews 5 14 April 1956 – 6 October 1956
Crewe Alexandra John Pearson 1 5 March 1892
Crystal Palace Marc Guéhi 20 26 March 2022 – 13 October 2024
Derby County Peter Shilton 34 (125) 9 September 1987 – 7 July 1990
Everton Jordan Pickford 71 10 November 2017 – 10 October 2024
Fulham Johnny Haynes 56 2 October 1954 – 10 June 1962
Grimsby Town Jackie Bestall 1 6 February 1935
George Tweedy 1 2 December 1936
Harry Betmead 1 20 May 1937
Huddersfield Town Ray Wilson 30 (63) 9 April 1960 – 6 June 1964
Ipswich Town Terry Butcher 45 (77) 31 May 1980 – 22 June 1986
Leeds United Jack Charlton 35 10 April 1965 – 11 June 1970
Leicester City Gordon Banks 37 (73) 6 April 1963 – 15 April 1967
Leyton Orient Owen Williams 2 21 October 1922 – 5 March 1923
John Townrow 2 4 April 1925 – 1 March 1926[note 47]
Liverpool Steven Gerrard 114 31 May 2000 – 24 June 2014
Luton Town Robert Hawkes 5 16 February 1907 – 13 June 1908
Paul Walsh 5 12 June 1983 – 2 May 1984
Manchester City John Stones 73 (83) 4 September 2016 – 13 October 2024
Manchester United Bobby Charlton 106 19 April 1958 – 14 June 1970
Middlesbrough Wilf Mannion 26 28 September 1946 – 3 October 1951
Millwall Leonard Graham 2 28 February 1925 – 4 April 1925
Reg Smith 2 9 November 1938 – 16 November 1938
Newcastle United Alan Shearer 35 (63) 1 September 1996 – 20 June 2000
Norwich City Dave Watson 6 (12) 10 June 1984 – 23 April 1986
Nottingham Forest Stuart Pearce 76 (78) 19 May 1987 – 4 June 1997
Notts County Henry Cursham 8 15 March 1880 – 23 February 1884
Oldham Athletic John Hacking 3 22 October 1928 – 13 April 1929
Portsmouth Jimmy Dickinson 48 18 May 1949 – 5 December 1956
Preston North End Tom Finney 76 28 September 1946 – 22 October 1958
Queens Park Rangers Terry Fenwick 19 (20) 2 May 1984 – 22 June 1986
Reading Herbert Smith 4 27 March 1905 – 19 March 1906
Sheffield United Ernest Needham 16 7 April 1894 – 3 March 1902
Sheffield Wednesday Ron Springett 33 18 November 1959 – 29 June 1966
Southampton Peter Shilton 49 (125) 22 September 1982 – 19 May 1987
Stockport County Harry Hardy 1 8 December 1924
Stoke City Gordon Banks 36 (73) 21 October 1967 – 27 May 1972
Sunderland Dave Watson 14 (65) 3 April 1974 – 24 May 1975
Swindon Town Harold Fleming 11 3 April 1909 – 4 April 1914
Tottenham Hotspur Harry Kane 84 (101) 27 March 2015 – 19 June 2023
Walsall Alf Jones 2 (3) 11 March 1882 – 13 March 1882
Watford John Barnes 31 (79) 28 May 1983 – 19 May 1987
West Bromwich Albion Jesse Pennington 25 18 March 1907 – 10 April 1920
West Ham United Bobby Moore 108 20 May 1962 – 14 November 1973
Wigan Athletic Emile Heskey 7 (62) 8 September 2007 – 15 October 2008
Wolverhampton Wanderers Billy Wright 105 28 September 1946 – 28 May 1959
Most appearances with non-English clubs
Club Country Player Caps (total) First cap – Last cap
Al-Ettifaq Saudi Arabia Jordan Henderson 4 (81) 9 September 2023 – 17 November 2023
Atlético Madrid Spain Kieran Trippier 19 (54) 7 September 2019 – 9 October 2021
Barcelona Spain Gary Lineker 24 (80) 15 October 1986 – 7 June 1989
Bari Italy David Platt 10 (62) 11 September 1991 – 17 June 1992
Bayern Munich Germany Owen Hargreaves 39 (42) 15 August 2001 – 28 March 2007[note 48]
Borussia Dortmund Germany Jude Bellingham 24 (38) 12 November 2020 – 26 March 2023
Bursaspor Turkey Scott Carson 1 (4) 15 November 2011
Cardiff City Wales Jay Bothroyd 1 17 November 2010
Celtic Scotland Fraser Forster 2 (6) 15 November 2013 – 7 June 2014
D.C. United United States Wayne Rooney 1 (120) 15 November 2018
1. FC Köln Germany Tony Woodcock 18 (42) 22 November 1979 – 5 July 1982
Hamburger SV Germany Kevin Keegan 25 (63) 8 June 1977 – 18 June 1980[note 49]
Hibernian Scotland Joe Baker 5 (8) 18 November 1959 – 22 May 1960[note 50]
Inter Milan Italy Paul Ince 17 (53) 27 March 1996 – 10 June 1997
Juventus Italy David Platt 10 (62) 9 September 1992 – 19 June 1993
Lazio Italy Paul Gascoigne 12 (57) 14 October 1992 – 11 June 1995
LA Galaxy United States David Beckham 14 (115) 22 August 2007 – 14 October 2009[note 51]
Lille France Angel Gomes 3 7 September 2024 – 13 October 2024
Marseille France Chris Waddle 18 (62) 6 September 1989 – 16 October 1991
Milan Italy Ray Wilkins 22 (84) 12 September 1984 – 12 November 1986
Monaco France Glenn Hoddle 9 (53) 9 September 1987 – 18 June 1988
Rangers Scotland Terry Butcher 32 (77) 10 September 1986 – 4 July 1990
Real Madrid Spain David Beckham 36 (115) 20 August 2003 – 6 June 2007
Roma Italy Tammy Abraham 5 (11) 17 August 2021 – 11 June 2022
Sampdoria Italy Trevor Francis 20 (52) 22 September 1982 – 23 April 1986
Swansea City Wales Jonjo Shelvey 5 (6) 5 September 2015 – 17 November 2015
Torino Italy Joe Hart 5 (75) 4 September 2016 – 15 November 2016
Werder Bremen Germany Dave Watson 2 (65) 12 September 1979 – 17 October 1979
England starting XI based on appearances
No. Position Player Caps Years
1 Goalkeeper Peter Shilton 125 1970–1990
2 Right back Kyle Walker 91 2011–2024
5 Central defence Billy Wright 105 1946–1959
6 Central defence Bobby Moore 108 1962–1973
3 Left back Ashley Cole 107 2001–2014
7 Midfield David Beckham 115 1996–2009
4 Midfield Steven Gerrard 114 2000–2014
8 Midfield Frank Lampard 106 1999–2014
9 Forward Bobby Charlton 106 1958–1970
10 Forward Wayne Rooney 120 2003–2018
11 Forward Harry Kane 101 2015–2024

Goals

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Top goalscorers[36]
Harry Kane is England's all-time top scorer with 68 goals.
Rank Player Goals Caps Average Career
1 Harry Kane (list) 68 101 0.67 2015–2024
2 Wayne Rooney (list) 53 120 0.44 2003–2018
3 Bobby Charlton (list) 49 106 0.46 1958–1970
4 Gary Lineker 48 80 0.60 1984–1992
5 Jimmy Greaves 44 57 0.77 1959–1967
6 Michael Owen 40 89 0.45 1998–2008
7 Nat Lofthouse 30 33 0.91 1950–1958
Alan Shearer 30 63 0.48 1992–2000
Tom Finney 30 76 0.39 1946–1958
10 Vivian Woodward 29 23 1.26 1903–1911
Frank Lampard Jr. 29 106 0.27 1999–2014
First goal
William Kenyon-Slaney, 8 March 1873, 4–2 vs. Scotland
Most goals[note 52]
Harry Kane, 68, 27 March 2015 – 10 September 2024
Most goals in competitive matches (World Cup, European Championship, Nations League and qualifiers)
Harry Kane, 60, 27 March 2015 – 10 September 2024
Most goals in a match[note 53]
Howard Vaughton, Steve Bloomer, Willie Hall and Malcolm Macdonald, all five[note 54]
Four goals or more in a match on the greatest number of occasions[note 55]
Steve Bloomer, Vivian Woodward, Tommy Lawton, Jimmy Greaves and Gary Lineker, twice each
Three goals or more in a match on the greatest number of occasions[note 56]
Jimmy Greaves, six times
Scoring in most consecutive internationals
Tinsley Lindley, 6, 5 February 1887 – 7 April 1888
Jimmy Windridge, 6, 16 March – 13 June 1908
Tommy Lawton, 6, 22 October 1938 – 13 May 1939
Harry Kane, 6, 7 September – 17 November 2019; 4 December 2022 – 19 June 2023
Scoring in most consecutive appearances[note 57][15]
Steve Bloomer, 10, 9 March 1895 – 20 March 1899[15]
Most appearances, scoring in every match[note 58]
George Camsell, 9, 9 May 1929 – 9 May 1936
Most goals on debut[note 59]
Howard Vaughton, 5, 18 February 1882, 13–0 vs. Ireland
Most goals in a World Cup tournament
Gary Lineker, 6, 1986 World Cup
Harry Kane, 6, 2018 World Cup
Most goals in total at World Cup tournaments
Gary Lineker, 10, 11 June 1986 – 4 July 1990
Most goals in a World Cup qualifying campaign
Harry Kane, 12, 2022 World Cup qualifying
Most goals in a World Cup finals match
Geoff Hurst, 3, 30 July 1966, 4–2 vs. West Germany[15]
Gary Lineker, 3, 11 June 1986, 3–0 vs. Poland[15]
Harry Kane, 3, 24 June 2018, 6–1 vs. Panama[15]
Most goals in a World Cup qualifying match
Jack Rowley, 4, 15 October 1949, 9–2 vs. Northern Ireland
David Platt, 4, 17 February 1993, 6–0 vs. San Marino
Ian Wright, 4, 17 November 1993, 7–1 vs. San Marino
Harry Kane, 4, 15 November 2021, 10–0 vs. San Marino
First goal in a World Cup finals match
Stan Mortensen, 25 June 1950, 2–0 vs. Chile
First goal in a World Cup qualifying campaign
Stan Mortensen, 15 October 1949, 4–1 vs. Wales
Oldest goalscorer at the World Cup finals
Tom Finney, 36 years, 64 days, 8 June 1958, 2–2 vs. Soviet Union
Youngest goalscorer at the World Cup finals
Michael Owen, 18 years, 190 days, 22 June 1998, 1–2 vs. Romania
Oldest goalscorer in a World Cup qualifying match
Teddy Sheringham, 35 years, 187 days, 6 October 2001, 2–2 vs. Greece
Youngest goalscorer in a World Cup qualifying match
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, 19 years, 58 days, 12 October 2012, 5–0 vs. San Marino
Most goals in a European Championship tournament
Alan Shearer, 5, 1996 European Championship
Most goals in total at European Championship tournaments
Alan Shearer, 7, 8 June 1996 – 20 June 2000
Harry Kane, 7, 29 June 2021 – 10 July 2024
Most goals in a European Championship qualifying campaign
Harry Kane, 12, 2020 European Championship qualifying[note 60]
Most goals in a European Championship finals match
Alan Shearer, 2, 18 June 1996, 4–1 vs. Netherlands
Teddy Sheringham, 2, 18 June 1996, 4–1 vs. Netherlands
Wayne Rooney, 2, 17 June 2004, 3–0 vs. Switzerland and 21 June 2004, 4–2 vs. Croatia
Harry Kane, 2, 3 July 2021, 4–0 vs. Ukraine
Most goals in a European Championship qualifying match
Malcolm Macdonald, 5, 16 April 1975, 5–0 vs. Cyprus
First goal in a European Championship finals match
Bobby Charlton, 8 June 1968, 2–0 vs. Soviet Union
First goal in a European Championship qualifying campaign
Ron Flowers, 3 October 1962, 1–1 vs. France
Oldest goalscorer at the European Championship finals
Trevor Brooking, 31 years, 260 days, 18 June 1980, 2–1 vs. Spain
Youngest goalscorer at the European Championship finals
Wayne Rooney, 18 years, 236 days, 17 June 2004, 3–0 vs. Switzerland
Oldest goalscorer in a European Championship qualifying match
Kyle Walker, 33 years, 104 days, 9 September 2023, 1–1 vs. Ukraine
Youngest goalscorer in a European Championship qualifying match
Wayne Rooney, 17 years, 317 days, 6 September 2003, 2–1 vs. Macedonia
Most Home International Championship goals
Steve Bloomer, 28, 9 March 1895 – 6 April 1907[note 61]
Most goals in a calendar year
Harry Kane, 16, 2021
Most goals in an English season[note 62]
Jimmy Greaves, 13, 1960–61
Most goals against the same opponent[note 63]
Steve Bloomer, 12 vs. Wales, 16 March 1896 – 18 March 1901
Most goals against the same non-British opponent[note 64]
Vivian Woodward, 8 vs. Austria, 6 June 1908 – 1 June 1909
Most goals scored from penalties[note 65]
Harry Kane, 22, 13 June 2017 – 10 July 2024
Most penalties scored in a match
Tom Finney, 2, 14 May 1950, 5–2 vs. Portugal
Geoff Hurst, 2, 13 March 1969, 5–0 vs. France
Gary Lineker, 2, 1 July 1990, 3–2 vs. Cameroon
Harry Kane, 2, 24 June 2018, 6–1 vs. Panama, 7 September 2019, 4–0 vs. Bulgaria and 15 November 2021, 10–0 vs. San Marino
Most goals in penalty shoot-outs[note 66]
Michael Owen, David Platt and Alan Shearer, 3
Most goals scored by a defender
Harry Maguire, 7, 7 July 2018 – 15 November 2021
Oldest goalscorer
Stanley Matthews, 41 years, 248 days, 6 October 1956, 1–1 vs. Northern Ireland
Youngest goalscorer
Wayne Rooney, 17 years, 317 days, 6 September 2003, 2–1 vs. Macedonia[15]
First goal by a substitute
Jimmy Mullen, 18 May 1950, 4–1 vs. Belgium
Fastest goal from kick-off
Tommy Lawton, 17 seconds, 25 May 1947, 10–0 vs. Portugal
Fastest goal at Wembley
Bryan Robson, 38 seconds, 13 December 1989, 2–1 vs. Yugoslavia
Fastest goal at the World Cup finals
Bryan Robson, 27 seconds, 16 June 1982, 3–1 vs. France
Fastest goal at the European Championship finals
Luke Shaw, 1 minute, 57 seconds, 11 July 2021, 1–1 vs. Italy
Fastest goal by a substitute
Teddy Sheringham, 15 seconds, 6 October 2001, 2–2 vs. Greece, 2002 World Cup qualifier
First player to score a hat-trick
Digger Brown or Howard Vaughton, 18 February 1882, 13–0 vs. Ireland[note 67]
Oldest player to score a hat-trick
Gary Lineker, 30 years, 194 days, 12 June 1991, 4–2 vs. Malaysia
Youngest player to score a hat-trick
Theo Walcott, 19 years, 178 days, 10 September 2008, 4–1 vs. Croatia
Most appearances for an outfield player without ever scoring
Ashley Cole, 107, 28 March 2001 – 5 March 2014
Most goalscorers in a match
7, 15 December 1982, 9–0 vs. Luxembourg[note 68]
7, 22 March 2013, 8–0 vs. San Marino[note 69]
7, 15 November 2021, 10–0 vs. San Marino[note 70]
Goals in three separate decades[note 71]
Stanley Matthews, 1930s, 1940s, 1950s
Bobby Charlton, 1950s, 1960s, 1970s
Most consecutive goalscoring tournaments
Michael Owen, 4, v Romania and Argentina, 1998 World Cup; v Romania, 2000 European Championships; v Denmark and Brazil, 2002 World Cup; v Portugal, 2004 European Championships
Harry Kane, 4, v Tunisia, Panama and Colombia, 2018 World Cup; v Germany, Ukraine and Denmark, 2020 European Championships; v Senegal and France, 2022 World Cup; v Denmark, Slovakia and Netherlands, 2024 European Championships
Longest gap between goals
Tony Adams, 11 years 196 days, 16 November 1988, 1–1 vs. Saudi Arabia – 31 May 2000, 2–0 vs. Ukraine
Last England goalscorer at the old Wembley[note 72]
Tony Adams, 31 May 2000, 2–0 vs. Ukraine
First England goalscorer at the new Wembley
John Terry, 1 June 2007, 1–1 vs. Brazil
Highest goals to games average[note 73]
George Camsell, 18 goals in 9 games, average 2.0 goals per game.
Most goals by a player from outside the top division of a country[note 74]
Vivian Woodward, 29, 14 February 1903 – 3 March 1911
Most goals by a player from outside the top two divisions[note 75]
Tommy Lawton, Joe Payne and Peter Taylor, all 2[note 76]
Most goals by a player from outside the English League system
David Platt, 19, 17 May 1992 – 8 June 1995[note 77]
Most goals per English club[note 78]
Club Player Goals (total) First goal – last goal
Arsenal Cliff Bastin 12 13 May 1933 – 26 May 1938
Bukayo Saka 12 2 June 2021 – 6 July 2024
Aston Villa Billy Walker 9 23 October 1920 – 12 February 1927
Birmingham City Joe Bradford 7 20 October 1923 – 22 November 1930
Blackburn Rovers Bryan Douglas 11 19 April 1958 – 5 June 1963
Blackpool Stan Mortensen 23 25 May 1947 – 25 November 1953
Bolton Wanderers Nat Lofthouse 30 22 November 1950 – 22 October 1958
Bournemouth Callum Wilson 1 (2) 15 November 2018
Brentford Ivan Toney 1 26 March 2024
Bristol City John Atyeo 5 30 November 1955 – 19 May 1957
Bristol Rovers Geoff Bradford 1 2 October 1955
Burnley Bob Kelly 6 (8) 10 April 1920 – 22 October 1924
Charlton Athletic Harold Miller 1 24 May 1923
Harold Hobbis 1 9 May 1936
Don Welsh 1 24 May 1939
Chelsea Frank Lampard 29 20 August 2003 – 29 May 2013
Crystal Palace Peter Taylor 2 24 March 1976 – 8 May 1976
Derby County Steve Bloomer 27 (28) 9 March 1895 – 25 February 1905
Everton Dixie Dean 18 12 February 1927 – 9 December 1931
Fulham Johnny Haynes 18 2 October 1954 – 15 April 1961
Huddersfield Town George Brown 5 20 October 1926 – 26 May 1927
Ipswich Town Paul Mariner 13 12 October 1977 – 16 November 1983
Leeds United Allan Clarke 10 11 June 1970 – 17 October 1973
Leicester City Jamie Vardy 6 26 March 2016 – 26 March 2017
Liverpool Michael Owen 26 (40) 27 May 1998 – 24 June 2004
Luton Town Joe Payne 2 20 May 1937
Manchester City Raheem Sterling 17 (20) 15 October 2018 – 29 March 2022
Manchester United Bobby Charlton 49 19 April 1958 – 20 May 1970
Middlesbrough George Camsell 18 9 May 1929 – 9 May 1936
Millwall Reg Smith 2 9 November 1938
Newcastle United Alan Shearer 20 (30) 1 September 1996 – 20 June 2000
Nottingham Forest Stuart Pearce 5 25 April 1990 – 15 November 1995
Notts County Henry Cursham 5 18 February 1882 – 23 February 1884
Portsmouth Jack Smith 4 17 October 1931 – 9 December 1931
Preston North End Tom Finney 30 28 September 1946 – 4 October 1958
Queens Park Rangers Gerry Francis 3 24 May 1975 – 11 May 1976
Les Ferdinand 3 (5) 17 February 1993 – 17 November 1993
Sheffield United Ernest Needham 3 29 March 1897 – 18 March 1901
Colin Grainger 3 9 May 1956 – 26 May 1956
Sheffield Wednesday Fred Spiksley 5 13 March 1893 – 3 March 1894
Southampton Mick Channon 21 14 February 1973 – 4 June 1977
Stoke City Stanley Matthews 8 (11) 29 September 1934 – 16 November 1938
Freddie Steele 8 17 April 1937 – 20 May 1937
Sunderland George Holley 8 15 March 1909 – 23 March 1912
Swindon Town Harold Fleming 9 29 May 1909 – 4 April 1914
Tottenham Hotspur Harry Kane 58 (68) 27 March 2015 – 19 June 2023
Watford Luther Blissett 3 15 December 1982
John Barnes 3 (11) 10 June 1984 – 14 November 1984
West Bromwich Albion Billy Bassett 8 23 February 1889 – 4 April 1896[note 79]
Derek Kevan 8 6 April 1957 – 28 May 1959
West Ham United Geoff Hurst 24 2 April 1966 – 1 December 1971
Wolverhampton Wanderers Dennis Wilshaw 10 10 October 1953 – 20 May 1956
Ron Flowers 10 28 May 1959 – 3 October 1962
Most goals with non-English clubs
Club Country Player Goals (total) First goal – last goal
Barcelona Spain Gary Lineker 17 (48) 15 October 1986 – 7 June 1989
Bari Italy David Platt 4 (27) 17 May 1992 – 17 June 1992
Bayern Munich Germany Harry Kane 10 (68) 12 September 2023 – 10 September 2024
Borussia Dortmund Germany Jadon Sancho 3 10 September 2019 – 12 November 2020
1. FC Köln Germany Tony Woodcock 5 (16) 26 March 1980 – 25 May 1982
Hamburger SV Germany Kevin Keegan 12 (21) 16 November 1977 – 13 May 1980
Hibernian Scotland Joe Baker 1 (3) 18 November 1959
Inter Milan Italy Gerry Hitchens 2 (5) 9 May 1962 – 10 June 1962
Juventus Italy David Platt 9 (27) 14 October 1992 – 19 June 1993
Lazio Italy Paul Gascoigne 4 (10) 18 November 1992 – 8 September 1993
Marseille France Trevor Steven 1 (4) 29 April 1992
Milan Italy Mark Hateley 8 (9) 17 October 1984 – 24 May 1986
Rangers Scotland Paul Gascoigne 4 (10) 23 May 1996 – 10 September 1997
Real Madrid Spain David Beckham 6 (17) 20 August 2003 – 25 June 2006
Michael Owen 6 (40) 18 August 2004 – 31 May 2005
Roma Italy Tammy Abraham 2 (3) 17 August 2021 – 15 November 2021
Sampdoria Italy David Platt 6 (27) 9 March 1994 – 8 June 1995

Clean sheets

[edit]

Most clean sheets[37]

Rank Player Clean sheets Caps Average Career
1 Peter Shilton 66 125 0.53 1970–1990
2 Joe Hart 43 75 0.57 2008–2017
3 David Seaman 40 75 0.53 1988–2002
4 Gordon Banks 35 73 0.48 1963–1972
5 Jordan Pickford 33 71 0.46 2017–2024
6 Ray Clemence 27 61 0.44 1972–1983
7 Chris Woods 26 43 0.60 1985–1993
8 Paul Robinson 24 41 0.59 2003–2007
9 David James 21 53 0.40 1997–2010
10 Nigel Martyn 13 23 0.57 1992–2002

Captains

[edit]
First captain
Cuthbert Ottaway, 30 November 1872, 0–0 vs. Scotland
Most appearances as captain
Billy Wright and Bobby Moore, both 90
Youngest captain
Bobby Moore, 22 years 47 days, 29 May 1963, 4–2 vs. Czechoslovakia
Oldest captain[note 80]
Alexander Morten, 41 years 113 days, 8 March 1873, 4–2 vs. Scotland
Last player to be captain in only international appearance
Claude Ashton, 24 October 1925, 0–0 vs. Ireland[38]

Discipline

[edit]
Most yellow cards
David Beckham, 19[note 81][39]
Most red cards
David Beckham and Wayne Rooney, 2 each[40]
List of all England players sent off
As of 17 October 2023[40]
Player Date Against Location Result Type of Game
Alan Mullery 5 June 1968 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia Stadio Artemio Franchi, Florence 0–1 1968 European Championship
Alan Ball 6 June 1973 Poland Poland Silesian Stadium, Chorzów 0–2 1974 World Cup Qualifier
Trevor Cherry 12 June 1977 Argentina Argentina Buenos Aires 1–1 Friendly
Ray Wilkins 6 June 1986 Morocco Morocco Estadio Tecnológico, Monterrey 0–0 1986 World Cup
David Beckham 30 June 1998 Argentina Argentina Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, Saint-Étienne 2–2[note 82] 1998 World Cup
Paul Ince[note 83] 5 September 1998 Sweden Sweden Råsunda Stadium, Solna 1–2 2000 European Championship Qualifier
Paul Scholes 5 June 1999 Sweden Sweden Wembley Stadium, London 0–0 2000 European Championship Qualifier
David Batty[note 84] 8 September 1999 Poland Poland Polish Army Stadium, Warsaw[41] 0–0 2000 European Championship Qualifier
Alan Smith 16 October 2002 North Macedonia Macedonia St Mary's Stadium, Southampton 2–2 2004 European Championship Qualifier
David Beckham[note 85] 8 October 2005 Austria Austria Old Trafford, Manchester 1–0 2006 World Cup Qualifier
Wayne Rooney 1 July 2006 Portugal Portugal Veltins-Arena, Gelsenkirchen 0–0[note 82] 2006 World Cup
Robert Green[note 86] 10 October 2009 Ukraine Ukraine Dnipro-Arena, Dnipropetrovsk 0–1 2010 World Cup Qualifier
Wayne Rooney 7 October 2011 Montenegro Montenegro Podgorica City Stadium, Podgorica 2–2 2012 European Championship Qualifier
Steven Gerrard[note 87] 11 September 2012 Ukraine Ukraine Wembley Stadium, London 1–1 2014 World Cup Qualifier
Raheem Sterling 4 June 2014 Ecuador Ecuador Sun Life Stadium, Miami 2–2 Friendly
Kyle Walker 5 September 2020 Iceland Iceland Laugardalsvöllur, Reykjavík 1–0 2020–21 UEFA Nations League
Harry Maguire 14 October 2020 Denmark Denmark Wembley Stadium, London 0–1 2020–21 UEFA Nations League
Reece James 14 October 2020 Denmark Denmark Wembley Stadium, London 0–1 2020–21 UEFA Nations League
John Stones 14 June 2022 Hungary Hungary Molineux, Wolverhampton 0–4 2022–23 UEFA Nations League
Luke Shaw 23 March 2023 Italy Italy Stadio Diego Armando Maradona, Naples 2–1 2024 European Championship Qualifier

Manager records

[edit]

Team records

[edit]
Biggest victory[note 88]
13–0 vs. Ireland, 18 February 1882
Heaviest defeat
1–7 vs. Hungary, 23 May 1954
Biggest home victory
13–2 vs. Ireland, 18 February 1899
Heaviest home defeat
1–6 vs. Scotland, 12 March 1881
Biggest victory at the World Cup finals
6–1 vs. Panama, 24 June 2018
Heaviest defeat at the World Cup finals
1–4 vs. Germany, 27 June 2010
Biggest victory at the European Championship finals
4–0 vs. Ukraine, 3 July 2021
Heaviest defeat at the European Championship finals
1–3 vs. Netherlands, 15 June 1988
1–3 vs. Soviet Union, 18 June 1988
Biggest victory in a competitive international (World Cup, European Championship, Nations League and qualifiers)
10–0 vs. San Marino, 15 November 2021[note 89]
Heaviest defeat in a competitive international (World Cup, European Championship, Nations League and qualifiers)
0–4 vs. Hungary, 14 June 2022[note 90]
First defeat to a non-British team
3–4 vs. Spain, 15 May 1929
First defeat to a non-British team on home soil
0–2 vs. Republic of Ireland, 21 September 1949
First defeat to a non-European team
0–1 vs. United States, 29 June 1950
Most consecutive victories[note 91]
10, 6 June 1908 vs. Austria – 1 June 1909 vs. Austria
Most consecutive victories in competitive internationals (World Cup, European Championship and qualifiers)
10, 7 September 2014 vs. Switzerland – 12 October 2015 vs. Lithuania[note 92]
Most consecutive matches without defeat
22, 18 November 2020 vs. Iceland – 29 March 2022 vs. Ivory Coast
Most consecutive defeats
3, Achieved on seven occasions, most recently 11 July 2018 vs. Croatia – 8 September 2018 vs. Spain[note 93]
Most consecutive matches without victory
7, 11 May 1958 vs. Yugoslavia – 4 October 1958 vs. Northern Ireland[note 94]
Most consecutive draws
4, Achieved on three occasions, most recently 7 June 1989 vs. Denmark – 15 November 1989 vs. Italy
Most consecutive matches without a draw[note 95]
21, 16 May 1936 vs. Austria – 15 April 1939 vs. Scotland
Most consecutive matches scoring[note 96]
52, 17 March 1884 vs. Wales – 30 March 1901 vs. Scotland
Most consecutive matches without scoring
4, 29 April 1981 vs. Romania – 23 May 1981 vs. Scotland
Most consecutive matches conceding a goal
13, 6 May 1959 vs. Italy – 8 October 1960 vs. Northern Ireland
Most consecutive matches without conceding a goal
7, 2 June 2021 vs. Austria – 3 July 2021 vs. Ukraine

Miscellaneous

[edit]
First substitute
Jimmy Mullen (for Jackie Milburn), 18 May 1950, 4–1 vs. Belgium
Players appearing both before and after World War II
Raich Carter, Tommy Lawton, Stanley Matthews
Club providing the most players in a single match
Starting XI – Arsenal, 7, 14 November 1934 vs. Italy[note 97]
Including substitutes – Manchester United, 7, 28 March 2001 vs. Albania[note 98]
Major tournament – Liverpool, 6, 19 June 2014 vs. Uruguay[note 99]
Club providing the most players in a major tournament squad
Liverpool, 6, 1980 European Championships, 2012 European Championships, 2014 World Cup[note 100]
Last amateur to appear
Bernard Joy, 9 May 1936, 2–3 vs. Belgium
Most consecutive clean sheets
Gordon Banks, 7, 26 June 1966 – 23 July 1966[note 101]
Jordan Pickford, 7, 18 November 2020 – 3 July 2021
Most penalty saves[note 102]
Ron Springett, 2, from Jimmy McIlroy of Northern Ireland, 18 November 1959 and from Oscar Montalvo of Peru, 20 May 1962
Most penalty saves in shoot outs
Jordan Pickford, 5, from Carlos Bacca of Colombia, 3 July 2018; Josip Drmić of Switzerland, 9 June 2019; Andrea Belotti and Jorginho of Italy, 11 July 2021; Manuel Akanji of Switzerland, 6 July 2024
Most penalty misses
Harry Kane, 4
Father and son both capped
George Eastham, Sr. (1 cap, 1935) and George Eastham (19 caps, 1963–1966)
Brian Clough (2 caps, 1959) and Nigel Clough (14 caps, 1989–1993)
Frank Lampard Sr. (2 caps, 1972–1980) and Frank Lampard (106 caps, 1999–2014)
Ian Wright (33 caps, 1991–1998) and Shaun Wright-Phillips (36 caps, 2004–2010)
Mark Chamberlain (8 caps, 1982–1984) and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (35 caps, 2012–2019)
Grandfather and grandson both capped
Bill Jones, (2 caps, 1950) and Rob Jones (8 caps, 1992–1995)
Great great- grandfather and great great-grandson both capped
Billy Garraty, (1 cap, 1903) and Jack Grealish, (24 caps, 2020–)
Most clubs represented by one player in an England career
Peter Shilton, 5, Leicester City, Stoke City, Nottingham Forest, Southampton and Derby County, 25 November 1970 – 7 July 1990
Dave Watson, 5, Sunderland, Manchester City, Werder Bremen, Southampton and Stoke City, 3 April 1974 – 2 June 1982
David Platt, 5, Aston Villa, Bari, Juventus, Sampdoria and Arsenal, 15 November 1989 – 26 June 1996
David James, 5, Liverpool, Aston Villa, West Ham United, Manchester City and Portsmouth, 29 March 1997 – 27 June 2010
Emile Heskey, 5, Leicester City, Liverpool, Birmingham City, Wigan Athletic and Aston Villa, 28 April 1999 – 27 June 2010
Scott Parker, 5, Charlton Athletic, Chelsea, Newcastle United, West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur, 16 November 2003 – 22 March 2013[note 103]
England players who later became manager/head coach
Alf Ramsey, 32 appearances as a player, 1948–1953, 113 matches as manager, 1963–1974
Joe Mercer, 5 appearances as a player, 1938–1939, 7 matches as manager, 1974[note 104]
Don Revie, 6 appearances as a player, 1954–1956, 29 matches as manager, 1974–1977
Bobby Robson, 20 appearances as a player, 1957–1962, 95 matches as manager, 1982–1990
Terry Venables, 2 appearances as a player, 1964, 23 matches as head coach, 1994–1996
Glenn Hoddle, 53 appearances as a player, 1979–1988, 28 matches as manager, 1996–1999
Kevin Keegan, 63 appearances as a player, 1972–1982, 18 matches as manager, 1999–2000
Peter Taylor, 4 appearances as a player, 1976, 1 match as manager, 2000[note 105]
Stuart Pearce, 78 appearances as a player, 1987–1999, 1 match as manager, 2012[note 106]
Gareth Southgate, 57 appearances as a player, 1995–2004, 102 matches as manager, 2016–2024

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "England national football team honours". 11v11. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  2. ^ Phil McNulty (9 June 2019). "Nations League: England beat Switzerland 6–5 on penalties". BBC Sport. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  3. ^ "Challenge Cup 1991 (England)". RSSF. 20 October 2006. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  4. ^ Joe Brewin (3 June 2022). "Le Tournoi, 25 years on: When England last won a tournament". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  5. ^ "FA Summer Tournament (2004) Manchester". RSSF. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  6. ^ "World Cup 1990 in Italy - World Cup Brazil 2014 Guide". Archived from the original on 12 December 2019. Retrieved 3 April 2015.
  7. ^ "1998 FIFA World Cup - England". FIFA. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  8. ^ "2006 FIFA World Cup Official FIFA Awards: Zidane wins adidas Golden Ball award". FIFA.com. 10 July 2006. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  9. ^ "Messi makes Golden Ball history". FIFA.com. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  10. ^ Sports Personality 2021: Gareth Southgate and England named Coach and Team of the Year BBC. BBC Sports Personality of the Year. 19 December 2021. Retrieved on 23 October 2023.
  11. ^ Mamrud, Roberto. "England – Record International Players". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Archived from the original on 2 April 2009. Retrieved 17 October 2023.
  12. ^ "100 caps: England's centurions". The Guardian. 27 March 2008. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  13. ^ David Barber (3 September 2014). "Remembering Billy Wright, our joint longest-serving captain". FA. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  14. ^ "Player Record Performances". England Football Online. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "As England approach game #1000, Opta have uncovered some facts and figures for us". FA. 12 November 2019. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  16. ^ a b Simon Burnton (20 February 2013). "Winning the most England caps as a starter – and as a substitute". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  17. ^ "England's Competitive Players". England Football Online. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
  18. ^ a b c "Sir Stanley Matthews was born one hundred years ago". FA. 1 February 2015. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  19. ^ a b "England's Players - The Shortest English careers". England Football Online. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  20. ^ "Walcott breaks Rooney's record as England prosper". The Guardian. 30 May 2006. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  21. ^ a b c Nicky Bandini (6 October 2010). "Who is England's oldest ever debutant?". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  22. ^ a b "England's Players - Oldest Debutants". England Football Online. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  23. ^ "England Football legend profile: Peter Shilton". England Football. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i "England in the World Cup Final Tournament". England Football Online. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  25. ^ a b c d e f "England in the World Cup Final Tournament - Players by Name". England Football Online. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  26. ^ "Oldest footballers to play in men's FIFA World Cup". Olympics. 27 May 2023. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  27. ^ Georgina Turner (14 November 2012). "Who is the oldest player to have been capped by England?". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  28. ^ "Uruguay vs. England". England Football Online. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  29. ^ "England's Players - Performance Records". England Football Online. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  30. ^ "England 2–0 Chile - Match summary". England Football Online. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  31. ^ "England: all their EURO records and stats". UEFA.com. 11 July 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  32. ^ McNulty, Phil (13 June 2021). "England 1–0 Croatia". BBC Sport. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  33. ^ Chris Bevan. "Three Lions: One World Cup, 147 years and 1,000 games - the numbers behind England men's milestone". BBC Sport. Retrieved 16 November 2019.
  34. ^ "England Players Appearing for Other National Sides in Official Matches". englandfootballonline. Retrieved 16 November 2019.
  35. ^ "Afcon 2021: Ex-England defender Steven Caulker named in Sierra Leone squad". BBC Sport. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  36. ^ "Top England Goal Scorers". EU Football Info. Retrieved 17 October 2023.
  37. ^ "England goalkeepers: most clean sheets". englandfootballonline.com. Archived from the original on 26 August 2019. Retrieved 7 September 2019.
  38. ^ "Claude Ashton". englandfootballonline. Retrieved 24 February 2024.
  39. ^ "England Players - David Beckham". England Football Online. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  40. ^ a b "England Player Dismissals". England Football Online. Retrieved 19 October 2023.
  41. ^ Lacey, David (9 September 1999). "Batty off as England await fate". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 October 2020.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Shilton also holds the record for the most starts (all 125 of his international appearances) and the most complete match appearances (110).
  2. ^ All of Steven Gerrard's appearances were made while playing for Liverpool and he holds the record for most appearances with one club.[citation needed]
  3. ^ Billy Wright's consecutive appearances were the last 70 of his international career. He had a further streak of 33 consecutive appearances at the start of his career, a total only exceeded by Ron Flowers (40) and Kenny Sansom (37), and equalled by Roger Byrne and David Watson.
  4. ^ Jermain Defoe made an additional 22 appearances as a starter and was himself substituted in all except two of them.
  5. ^ Both Chalobah and Kelly were on the pitch for several minutes longer than the amount stated because of the addition of injury time. The previous record was held by Peter Ward, whose only appearance was as a late substitute on 31 May 1980 vs. Australia. Jim Barrett appeared once for England, against Ireland on 22 October 1928. He was injured after four minutes and left the field shortly after.
  6. ^ There is some dispute about Alexander Morten's date of birth, which is usually cited as 15 November 1831. If Morten is excluded, the oldest England debutant is Leslie Compton (q.v.).
  7. ^ Peter Shilton played in every World Cup finals match of his career, and his record also stands as the most consecutive World Cup finals appearances.
  8. ^ David Seaman was in three World Cup squads, but only made appearances at the last two. He was sent home from his first tournament in 1990 with an injury before the competition began. Rio Ferdinand made appearances in 2002 and 2006, was a non-playing squad member in 1998 and withdrew with injury before the start of the 2010 tournament. Joe Cole was in the squad at three World Cup tournaments but only made appearances at the last two.
  9. ^ Bobby Charlton was also in the 1958 squad but did not play.
  10. ^ Steven Gerrard was also named in the 2002 squad but did not play
  11. ^ Of these players, only David James played in a World Cup finals match at any other tournament (2010).
  12. ^ Alan Hodgkinson was a non-travelling reserve in 1958. However, FIFA's official World Cup records include him in the squad.
  13. ^ Theo Walcott was 17 years old when he was selected for the 2006 World Cup squad but did not get on to the pitch during the tournament.
  14. ^ Laurie Hughes has an international record which is unlikely to be equalled – all of his England's games were at the World Cup finals. He was uncapped prior to the 1950 tournament, featured in all three group games and was not recalled after England's exit.
  15. ^ Allan Clarke also scored England's goal on his debut. Including Hughes and Clarke, a total of eight players have made their debuts at the World Cup finals. The others are Eddie Baily and Bill Eckersley (1950), Bill McGarry (1954), Peter Brabrook and Peter Broadbent (1958) and Alan Peacock (1962). Only one entirely uncapped outfield player has been selected for a World Cup since 1970, when Michael Dawson featured in the squad for the 2010 squad, but did not play.
  16. ^ Billy Wright made 105 appearances for England, but all prior to the founding of the European Championships.
  17. ^ Rio Ferdinand was an England player during the period when the team qualified for the 2000 and 2004 European Championship finals, but he was not selected for the 2000 squad and missed the 2004 finals due to a suspension for failing to take a drugs test. England failed to qualify for the 2008 finals. He was subsequently not selected for the 2012 squad
  18. ^ Phil Neville was in the squads at three European Championship tournaments, but only made appearances at the latter two. He also has the unusual honour of featuring in three European Championship squads without ever being selected for a World Cup.
  19. ^ Tony Adams was denied a place in England's 1992 European Championship squad by UEFA after the ruling body said his call-up as a replacement for an injured player was too late.
  20. ^ After Stuart Pearce withdrew with injury, Tony Dorigo was selected very late as a back-up player for the 1988 squad when he had never played for England. It would take until the end of 1989 before he finally made his debut.
  21. ^ Three other players, Gordon West in 1968, Tony Dorigo in 1988 and Jack Butland in 2012 have gone to a European Championship tournament without a cap to their name, but were not selected to play during the tournament.
  22. ^ Emlyn Hughes was in the England squads at the 1970 World Cup and the 1980 European Championships, but did not make an appearance at either.
  23. ^ Tommy Wright made his England debut in the third-place play-off match at the 1968 European Championships and won his last cap at the 1970 World Cup.
  24. ^ England did not qualify for the final stages of three tournaments during Mick Channon's five-year international career.
  25. ^ 'Competitive matches' include World Cup, European Championship and qualifiers. Bob Crompton appeared 41 times for England (3 March 1902 – 4 April 1914), but all before their first competitive match in October 1949. Sixteen additional players accumulated more than 19 caps during this period. If Home International appearances are included as "competitive", Tim Flowers (13 June 1993 – 27 May 1998) holds the record with 11 appearances. If Flowers is excluded because of participation in minor tournaments, Kevin Phillips (28 April 1999 – 13 February 2002) holds the record with 8 appearances.
  26. ^ George Eastham was selected for the squads for both the 1962 and 1966 World Cup finals, but featured in neither competition. His debut occurred after England had been eliminated in the qualifying stage of the 1964 European Championships. As hosts, England played no qualifying matches for the 1966 World Cup
  27. ^ Six of Billy Wright's Home International appearances were also qualifiers for the 1950 and 1954 World Cups. The record for "non-qualifier" Home International appearances is 34, by Bob Crompton (3 March 1902 – 4 April 1914).
  28. ^ The record for most appearances before playing on a losing team is held by Steven Gerrard who appeared in 21 internationals before featuring in a loss to Sweden on 31 March 2004.
  29. ^ The record for most appearances before playing on a winning team is held by Steve McMahon, who appeared in eight internationals before featuring in a victory over Yugoslavia on 13 December 1989.
  30. ^ Glenn Hoddle and Kenny Sansom played in the same five international matches at the Azteca Stadium. Only one of the matches was against Mexico, as the matches were either preparation for, or part of the 1986 World Cup. The most appearances at a single non-British ground against a non-neutral team is 3. This has been accomplished once by a number of players, and twice by Bobby Charlton (v Brazil at the Estádio do Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro, 13 May 1959 – 12 June 1969 and v Spain at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, Madrid, 15 May 1960 – 8 May 1968).
  31. ^ David Seaman and Rio Ferdinand's records are based on their winning at least one cap in each of the years stated. Peter Shilton played for England between 1970 and 1990, but was not selected for any games in 1976, leaving him with a record of 14 consecutive years of playing at least one match, one below Seaman and Ferdinand's, although the 20 calendar years total in which he played is a record. Stanley Matthews spent 24 calendar years as an England player (1934–1957) but played no games during the World War II years of 1940 to 1945 inclusive, nor in 1936, 1946 or 1952.
  32. ^ England played 108 internationals between these two appearances, Ian Callaghan's second and third caps. This is also a record.
  33. ^ The only other England player to appear in six major tournaments is Steven Gerrard. However, Gerrard's tournament appearances were not consecutive, his having missed the 2002 World Cup through injury. Although Wayne Rooney's six tournament appearances were for consecutive tournaments for which England qualified, they were not for consecutive tournaments played, as England failed to qualify for the 2008 European Championships.
  34. ^ Gary Neville made 85 and Phil Neville 59 of their collective 144 appearances. They also hold the record for the most appearances in the same team by two brothers (31).
  35. ^ The eleven players in question were Gordon Banks, George Cohen, Ray Wilson, Nobby Stiles, Jack Charlton, Bobby Moore, Alan Ball, Geoff Hurst, Bobby Charlton, Roger Hunt and Martin Peters. The sequence was broken in 1967 when Jimmy Greaves was recalled in place of Hunt, and subsequently the eleven players never again played together for England. During this unbroken sequence of unchanged sides, England won the World Cup.
  36. ^ Only David Seaman has appeared under six non-caretaker (appointed) managers. These were Bobby Robson, Graham Taylor, Terry Venables, Glenn Hoddle, Kevin Keegan and Sven-Göran Eriksson.
  37. ^ Three of the managers under whom Gareth Barry appeared were caretaker managers only appointed for a single game (Howard Wilkinson, Peter Taylor and Stuart Pearce). He additionally appeared 4 times under Kevin Keegan, twice under Sven-Göran Eriksson, 8 times under Steve McClaren, 35 times under Fabio Capello and once under Roy Hodgson.
  38. ^ Owen Hargreaves and Jadon Sancho have since matched this achievement. Baker played for an English club only after his international career had begun. Hargreaves and Sancho also did so following transfers to Manchester United.
  39. ^ Sam Johnstone was playing for West Bromwich Albion in the second tier of English football at the time of this appearance.
  40. ^ Johnny Haynes played in the Second Division for Fulham from his debut in 1954 until Fulham were promoted at the end of the 1958–59 season. The longest career composed entirely of appearances while playing outside the top-flight is 23, by Gil Merrick of Birmingham City (1951–54). Coincidentally, Haynes' debut came in the match following Merrick's last appearance.
  41. ^ Between the introduction of the Second Division in 1894 and the introduction of the Third Division in 1920 the following players made five or more England appearances while playing for a professional club outside the league system – Vivian Woodward (Tottenham Hotspur, 15), Harold Fleming (Swindon Town, 11), Jack Robinson (New Brighton Tower and Southampton, 9) and Bob Hawkes (Luton Town, 5). Woodward and Hawkes were amateurs but played for professional clubs which would later join the league.
  42. ^ Reg Matthews, a goalkeeper, played for Coventry City in the Third Division (South). These five appearances comprised his entire England career.
  43. ^ David Beckham's caps were as follows – 36 with Real Madrid, 14 with the LA Galaxy and 5 while on loan from the LA Galaxy to Milan.
  44. ^ Vivian Woodward was Tottenham Hotspur's first England player in 1903, and the 80th was Dominic Solanke in 2024.
  45. ^ The players in question were Terry Butcher, Chris Woods, Gary Stevens, Trevor Steven, Mark Walters, Mark Hateley and Paul Gascoigne.
  46. ^ Only English clubs which remain in existence to this day have been included. Numerous now-defunct or franchised clubs have also provided England international players.
  47. ^ Leyton Orient was known as Clapton Orient during the period when their two players were capped by England.
  48. ^ Owen Hargreaves is England's most capped player with a single non-English club.
  49. ^ Kevin Keegan's first appearance after joining Hamburger SV was also the first by any player representing a non-British side.
  50. ^ Joe Baker's first appearance was the first by any player who had never represented an English club.
  51. ^ This record does not include five caps attained while Beckham was on loan from LA Galaxy to Milan.
  52. ^ Vivian Woodward scored 29 goals for England between 1903 and 1911, and a further 44 goals for England Amateurs between 1906 and 1914, giving an overall total of 73. While the Football Association only recognizes Woodward's goals for the full England team, the FAs of each of the Amateur team's opponents recognize those fixtures as full internationals. See https://www.rsssf.org/miscellaneous/woodward-intl.html
  53. ^ Playing for England Amateurs, Stanley Harris scored seven goals against France on 1 November 1906 and Vivian Woodward scored six against Netherlands on 11 December 1909. While not recognized by the Football Association, these matches are considered full internationals by the Dutch and French FAs.
  54. ^ Of these players, only Malcolm Macdonald scored five in a competitive match, a European Championship qualifier against Cyprus.
  55. ^ None of these players scored 4 times in a competitive match. Other than Malcolm Macdonald, only Jack Rowley, David Platt, Ian Wright and Harry Kane have scored 4 goals in a competitive international for England. Vivian Woodward scored four goals in a match on three other occasions for England Amateurs in fixtures recognized as full internationals by their opponents' FAs.
  56. ^ Only one of Jimmy Greaves' hat-tricks came in a competitive match. Harry Kane holds the record for most competitive hat-tricks, with five. Vivian Woodward scored four hat-tricks for England and a further six for England Amateurs in fixtures recognized as full internationals by their opponents' FAs.
  57. ^ The post-war record is six, by Harry Kane.
  58. ^ The post-war record is three, by Fred Pickering, who scored five goals in his three appearances between 27 May and 21 October 1964.
  59. ^ The post-war record is four, by Stan Mortensen in the 10–0 defeat of Portugal on 25 May 1947. The only other player to score four goals on debut was Digger Brown, in the same game in which Howard Vaughton set the record.
  60. ^ Including at least one goal in each match, the only time an England player has achieved this in either a World Cup or European Championship qualifying campaign.
  61. ^ All of Steve Bloomer's international appearances and goals were in the Home International Championships.
  62. ^ A season is assumed to run from 1 August to 31 July.
  63. ^ The post-war record is held by Jimmy Greaves who scored 10 goals against Northern Ireland between 1960 and 1964.
  64. ^ The post-war record is 6, held jointly by Tom Finney vs. Portugal (1947 – 1951) and Gary Lineker vs. Poland (1986 – 1991) and Turkey (1985 – 1987).
  65. ^ Excluding penalty shoot-outs, Harry Kane has 22 successful penalties from 26 attempts, missing four. Kane also holds the records for both the most penalties taken and the most penalties missed. Of players who never missed a penalty, the top-scorer is Wayne Rooney who converted all seven of his attempts.
  66. ^ One of Michael Owen's penalty shootout goals was scored in a friendly tournament, the 1998 King Hassan II International Cup Tournament. All of David Platt and Alan Shearer's penalty shootout goals were scored in either World Cup or European Championship finals matches.
  67. ^ Digger Brown scored four and his Aston Villa colleague Howard Vaughton 5 in this game. However, contemporary reports do not record the timing of the goals so it is not possible to say who achieved the hat-trick first.
  68. ^ The goalscorers were Luther Blissett (3), Tony Woodcock, Steve Coppell, Glenn Hoddle, Mark Chamberlain, Phil Neal and Marcel Bossi, a Luxembourg player who scored an own goal.
  69. ^ The goalscorers were Jermain Defoe (2), Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Ashley Young, Frank Lampard, Wayne Rooney, Daniel Sturridge and Allesandro Della Valle, a San Marino player who scored an own goal.
  70. ^ The goalscorers were Harry Maguire, Harry Kane (4), Emile Smith Rowe, Tyrone Mings, Tammy Abraham, Bukayo Saka and Filippo Fabbri, a San Marino player who scored an own goal.
  71. ^ Tony Adams scored goals in non-consecutive decades (1980s and 2000s) but failed to score in the 1990s. He scored in his last game of the 1980s and in his first game of the 2000s.
  72. ^ Dietmar Hamann was the last player to score at the old Wembley when Germany defeated England 1–0 later in 2000.
  73. ^ George Camsell's record is for players who have appeared more than once for England. Five pre-World War I players, Albert Allen, John Yates, Walter Gilliat, John Veitch and Frank Bradshaw each scored three goals in a single appearance for England. Five additional players, William Kenyon-Slaney, Harold Halse, Billy Moore, Joe Payne and John Haines each scored twice on their sole England appearance.
  74. ^ All of Vivian Woodward's 29 England goals were scored from outside the First Division. His first 16 goals were scored when Tottenham Hotspur were a non-league club. After Tottenham's election to the Second division in 1908, Woodward scored a further 11 England goals while a Tottenham player, and a further 2 after being transferred to Second Division Chelsea prior to the 1909–10 season. The player with the most goals from outside the top tier since the introduction of the four division system in 1921 is Mick Channon, who scored 14 of his 21 England goals while Southampton were a Second Division club.
  75. ^ Between the introduction of the Second Division in 1894 and the introduction of the Third Division in 1920 both Vivian Woodward of Tottenham Hotspur and Harold Fleming of Swindon Town scored two or more goals for England while playing for professional clubs outside the league system, Woodward, an amateur, scoring 16 and Fleming 9.
  76. ^ Tommy Lawton played for Notts County, Joe Payne for Luton Town and Peter Taylor for Crystal Palace. These were Payne and Taylor's only England goals.
  77. ^ David Platt's goals were as follows – 4 while with Bari, 9 while with Juventus and 6 while with Sampdoria.
  78. ^ Only English clubs which remain in existence to this day, and have provided at least one international goalscorer have been included. Numerous now-defunct or franchised clubs have also provided England international goalscorers.
  79. ^ Some authorities (e.g. englandfootballonline.com) credit Billy Bassett with 7 goals, only counting one in the 3–2 defeat by Scotland on 13 April 1889.
  80. ^ There is some dispute about Alexander Morten's date of birth, which is usually cited as 15 November 1831. If Morten is excluded, the oldest player to captain England is Peter Shilton, who was aged 40 years and 292 days when he captained in his final international match against Italy on 7 July 1990.
  81. ^ David Beckham's total includes the two yellow cards which led to his red card against Austria in 2005.
  82. ^ a b England lost on penalties
  83. ^ Paul Ince's red card meant that players had been sent off in two consecutive England internationals for the first time.
  84. ^ David Batty is the only England player to have been sent off on his final international appearance.
  85. ^ With this red card, David Beckham became the first player to be sent off twice while playing for England.
  86. ^ Robert Green was the first goalkeeper to be sent off while playing for England.
  87. ^ Steven Gerrard was the first England player to be sent off at the new Wembley Stadium.
  88. ^ England's two largest victories (13–0 away and then 13–2 at home) coincidentally both occurred on 18 February, against Ireland. Five of England's six largest margins of victory occurred away from home. As well as the 13–0 victory, they defeated Austria 11–1 in 1908, Portugal 10–0 in 1947, the United States 10–0 in 1964, and San Marino 10–0 in 2021.
  89. ^ World Cup qualifier.
  90. ^ Nations League qualifier.
  91. ^ The post-war record is 8, achieved on two occasions : 29 March 2003 vs. Liechtenstein – 10 September 2003 vs. Liechtenstein and 8 October 2005 vs. Austria – 15 June 2006 vs. Trinidad & Tobago.
  92. ^ These games comprised the qualifying competition for the 2016 European Championship
  93. ^ These games included England's participation in the semi-finals and third place play-off of the 2018 World Cup.
  94. ^ These games included England's participation in the 1958 World Cup.
  95. ^ The post-war record is 19, 19 October 1948 vs. Northern Ireland – 15 November 1950 vs. Wales. These games included England's participation in the 1950 World Cup.
  96. ^ The post-war record is 18, 7 October 1950 vs. Northern Ireland – 18 April 1953 vs. Scotland.
  97. ^ The players in question were Frank Moss, George Male, Eddie Hapgood, Wilf Copping, Ray Bowden, Ted Drake and Cliff Bastin
  98. ^ Five Manchester United players started: Gary Neville, David Beckham, Nicky Butt, Paul Scholes and Andy Cole. Wes Brown (29 min) and Teddy Sheringham (84 min) came on as substitutes.
  99. ^ The players in question were Steven Gerrard, Jordan Henderson, Glen Johnson, Raheem Sterling and Daniel Sturridge, who started the match, and Rickie Lambert who came on as an 87th-minute substitute.
  100. ^ Liverpool have achieved this feat of having six players in a squad three times; no other team has achieved this once. Everton provided five players to the 1968 European Championships squad, Tottenham Hotspur provided five players to the 2010 World Cup squad and both Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur provided five players to the 2016 European Championships squad. The Liverpool players in question were: (1980 European Championships) – Ray Clemence, David Johnson, Ray Kennedy, Terry McDermott, Phil Neal and Phil Thompson; (2012 European Championships) – Andy Carroll, Stewart Downing, Steven Gerrard, Jordan Henderson, Glen Johnson and Martin Kelly; (2014 World Cup) – Steven Gerrard, Jordan Henderson, Glen Johnson, Rickie Lambert, Raheem Sterling and Daniel Sturridge
  101. ^ Gordon Banks did not concede a goal for 721 minutes during this run, from Jimmy Johnstone's 81st-minute goal for Scotland on 2 April 1966 to Eusébio's 82nd-minute penalty for Portugal in the World Cup semi-final on 26 July 1966. England did concede a goal to Norway during this run but Banks did not play in that match.
  102. ^ This record is specific to penalties 'saved' rather than 'not scored'. Two goalkeepers, Harry Hibbs and David Seaman, have faced three penalties from which the opposition failed to score. Each only actually saved one of the penalties faced, however. In both cases, one of the remaining penalties hit the crossbar and the other was sent wide.
  103. ^ Scott Parker played for his fifth club, Tottenham Hotspur, in only his seventh international appearance. Uniquely, his first four appearances were with four clubs.
  104. ^ Joe Mercer was appointed on a temporary basis between the dismissal of Alf Ramsey and the appointment of Don Revie.
  105. ^ Peter Taylor was appointed on a temporary basis between the resignation of Kevin Keegan and the appointment of Sven-Göran Eriksson.
  106. ^ Stuart Pearce was appointed on a temporary basis between the resignation of Fabio Capello and the appointment of Roy Hodgson.

General references

[edit]

Goodwin, C.; Isherwood, G.; Young, P. "England Football Online". Retrieved 8 September 2015.

Naylor, D. "englandstats.com - England International Database". Retrieved 8 September 2015.

"11v11.com - Home of football statistics and history". Association of Football Statisticians. Retrieved 8 September 2013.