England
Football World Cup 2006 Germany
England
England
|
Nickname |
Three Lions |
Association |
The Football Association |
Coach |
Sven-Göran Eriksson,
2001-present |
Most
caps |
Peter Shilton (125) |
Top scorer |
Sir Bobby Charlton (49) |
First international
Scotland 0 - 0 England
(Partick, Scotland; 30 November 1872) |
Largest win
Ireland 0 - 13 England
(Belfast, Northern Ireland; 18 February 1882) |
Worst defeat
Hungary 7 - 1 England
(Budapest, Hungary; 23 May 1954) |
World Cup |
Appearances |
12 (First in
1950) |
Best result |
Winners,
1966 |
European Championship |
Appearances |
7 (First in
1968) |
Best result |
Third,
1968, Semi-finals, 1996 |
The England national football team represents
England in international football competitions such as the
World Cup and the
European Championships. It is controlled by The Football Association, the governing body for football in England.
As the founders of the game and sport, England's governing body is the
only one to use the acronym FA without a preceding letter signifying
national affiliation as the English would believe it redundant.
Due to historical precedent, and continuing national sentiment among
them, each of the four
Home Nations of the United Kingdom possesses its own separate football
association, domestic league and national team. Because the IOC does not
accept regional representative teams, England, like the other three, do not
compete in Olympic football.
England are by far the most successful of the Home Nations, having won
the
1966 World Cup and the British Home Championship outright thirty-four times, as many as the
other three nations have won outright altogether.
History
Early years
England played in the first ever international football match, against
Scotland at Hamilton Crescent in Partick, Glasgow, Scotland on November 30,
1872.(See Match Report
Here) The result was 0-0; England had to wait until the following year
to record their first win, 4-2, over Scotland at the
Kennington Oval.
England would only play the other Home Nations (Scotland,
Wales and what was then Ireland) for nearly 40 years - partly due to the
dominance of the UK in international football, as well as the problems of
arranging internationals in the days before air travel was commonplace.
England first played Continental opposition in a 1908 tour of Central
Europe, recording easy wins over Austria, Hungary and Bohemia. England's
first defeat to a team outside the British Isles came in 1929, when they
lost 4-3 to Spain in Madrid.
The FA had joined
FIFA in
1906, but the relationship between FIFA and the British associations was
fraught, and the British nations withdrew from FIFA in 1928, in a dispute
over payments to amateur
players. This meant that England did not enter the first three
World Cups. However many in England declared the team unofficial "World
Champions" after they defeated
1934 World Cup winners
Italy in the "Battle of Highbury" in November 1934.
Post-war
After the
Second World War, the FA started to modernise their approach; they
rejoined FIFA
in 1946, the same year they appointed the first dedicated team manager,
Walter Winterbottom (before then, the team was picked by a committee).
England lost their first match at home to non-British opposition when they
were defeated 0-2 by the Republic of Ireland in 1949 at Goodison Park,
Liverpool. England's World Cup debut came in 1950; however, they suffered an
infamous 1-0 loss to the
United States and failed to get beyond the first group stage. England
struggled in the
1954 and 1958 tournaments, and all the signs pointed to how far English football
had fallen behind the rest of the world.
England's tactical inferiority was highlighted on
November 25, 1953, when Hungary came to visit Wembley Stadium. Hungary, one
of the best sides in the world and fielding legendary players such as Sándor
Kocsis and Ferenc Puskás, outclassed the English 6-3 - this was England's
first ever home loss to Continental opposition. In the return match in
Budapest,
Hungary won 7-1, which still stands as England's worst ever defeat.
By the 1960s English tactics and training had started to improve, and
England turned in a respectable performance in the
1962 World Cup, losing in the quarter-finals to eventual winners
Brazil. After Winterbottom retired in 1962, former captain Alf Ramsey was appointed; Ramsey boldly predicted that England would win
the following tournament, which England were hosting.
1966 World Cup
Ramsey's prediction came true, and the
1966 World Cup was England's finest moment. Captained by Bobby Moore, England's "Wingless Wonders" dispatched
Argentina and then
Portugal to set up a final with
West Germany at Wembley. England won 4-2 after extra time, with three
goals from Geoff Hurst and one from Martin Peters. The game created the
famous English catchphrase "They think it's all over... it is now!", which
were BBC commentator Kenneth Wolstenholme's words as Hurst scored his third goal in the 120th
minute.
Decline in the 1970s
England came third in the
1968 European Championships, and were one of the favourites to win the 1970
World Cup; however, they fell in the quarter-finals to West Germany 3-2,
having been 2-0 up. West Germany also beat England 3-1 on aggregate in the
quarter-finals of the 1972 European Championships. Worse was to come as
England failed to qualify for the 1974 World Cup after only managing a 1-1 draw against
Poland in a qualifier at Wembley, largely thanks to the heroics of
Polish goalkeeper
Jan Tomaszewski. In the aftermath of England's failure to reach the
World Cup Finals, the FA sacked Sir Alf Ramsey. Of their 113 matches under
Ramsey, England had won 69 and drawn 27. There was widespread distaste that,
given his distinguished record, Ramsey had not been given the opportunity to
resign.
After a brief period where
Joe Mercer was caretaker manager of the side, the FA appointed Don Revie as
Ramsey's permanent successor. He fared even worse than Ramsey, as England
failed to qualify from the group stages of the 1976 European Championships;
Revie resigned halfway through England's unsuccessful bid to qualify for the
1978 World Cup. At the same time the team were attracting an ever-growing
hooligan element in their support, especially at their matches abroad - at
the 1980 European Championships Italian police deployed tear gas during a
group match with Belgium. England qualified for the 1982 World Cup but failed to progress from the second group stage
despite not losing any of their matches, in another tournament marred by
violence.
Revival under Robson
Although at the time he was widely derided by the press,
Bobby Robson is now looked upon as one of England's more successful
managers. Having failed to make the final stages of the 1984 European
Championships by losing out to Denmark, he took England to the 1986 World
Cup. Following a poor start, in which England lost to
Portugal,
drew with Morocco and were without their injured captain Bryan Robson, three
goals by Gary Lineker against
Poland
ensured a place in the next round. Having defeated
Paraguay
3-0 in the second round, they were to fall short in controversial
circumstances against the eventual winners Argentina in the quarter finals,
thanks to two goals from
Diego Maradona - the first the infamous "Hand of God" goal, where Maradona
punched the ball into the net, the second after a 50-yard dribble past five
England players that is widely regarded as one of the finest goals in
history. As a small consolation, Gary Lineker won the tournament's Golden
Boot.
England's
1990 World Cup was their best since 1966; after a slow start in the group
stage, England squeaked single-goal wins over Belgium and Cameroon in the
knockout rounds, before being beaten on penalties by West Germany in the
semi-finals, after drawing 1-1. Stuart Pearce and Chris Waddle missed from
the spot. The team's good performance, the relative lack of violence and the
emergence of Paul Gascoigne - England's player of the tournament, who cried
after being booked against West Germany (which would have ruled him out of
the final had England won) - were all factors in the rehabilitation of
football in British society in the 1990s. After the World Cup, Peter Shilton retired from international football with 125 caps; a
record which remains to this day.
Mixed 1990s
Robson's successor,
Graham Taylor, was largely a failure - the team failed to win a game at Euro
92. Taylor was widely castigated for substituting Gary Lineker in his final
England appearance, when England needed a goal. England missed out on
qualifying for the 1994 World Cup altogether; the team infamously went 1-0
down to minnows San Marino in a qualifying match after just eight seconds,
one of the fastest international goals of all time, before recovering to win
7-1. Taylor was sacked in 1993 and replaced by Terry Venables, who oversaw a
much improved performance at Euro 96. With the tournament hosted in England and it being the 30th
anniversary of the 1966 World Cup victory, fans' expectations were high;
however, after famous victories over Scotland - featuring a brilliant
Paul Gascoigne goal - and the
Netherlands, and a rare penalty shoot-out win over
Spain, England fans were treated to
déjŕ vu
as their side lost a semi-final on penalties to Germany again after drawing
1-1.
Gareth Southgate missed the vital penalty this time.
Venables stepped down after Euro 96; his successor Glenn Hoddle oversaw
England's successful qualification for the 1998 World Cup with a 0-0 draw at
the Stadio Olimpico in Rome, but the
team were knocked out of the tournament on penalties again, this time to old
enemies
Argentina after
David Beckham had been sent off. Hoddle resigned the following year after
stating his controversial beliefs about the disabled in a newspaper
interview. Hoddle said he thought disabled people were paying for sins
committed in their past life. Former captain Kevin Keegan took over, only
just managing to get England into Euro 2000 (after a 2-1 playoff win over
Scotland), where a lacklustre England failed to get beyond the group stage.
Keegan resigned in September 2000, after England lost their very last match
at the old Wembley Stadium, a World Cup qualifier against Germany.
The Eriksson era
In 2001, the Swede Sven-Göran Eriksson was appointed as Keegan's
successor, becoming the first foreign national to manage England. Eriksson
turned around the team's 2002 World Cup campaign with a 5-1 victory over
Germany; England came from behind with goals from Emile Heskey, Steven
Gerrard and a Michael Owen hat-trick.
England ensured qualification after a tense final game against
Greece;
David Beckham scored from a free kick in the last seconds of the game to
make the score 2-2 and put England top of their group on goal difference. In
the finals in Japan and South Korea, England beat
Argentina 1-0 in the group stage and reached the quarter-finals before
being beaten 2-1 by the eventual winners Brazil.
In
Euro 2004, England came top of their qualification group after drawing 0-0
away to Turkey in their final qualifier. In the finals, despite a last-minute
loss to
France in the group stage, England were favoured to do well, but were
knocked out in yet another penalty shootout, this time to hosts
Portugal after a 2-2 draw in the quarter-finals.
The year 2005
saw Eriksson receive heavy criticism from fans for his defensive strategies
and alleged lack of passion, his lack of communication with the players from
the bench, and a perceived inability to change tactics when necessary in a
game, as witnessed against
Brazil in 2002. A 4-1 loss to
Denmark in a friendly was followed by a humiliating 1-0 defeat to Northern
Ireland in a
2006 World Cup qualifier, which compounded criticism. An unconvincing
1-0 victory over
Austria did nothing to relieve the pressure. However, despite these
criticisms England qualified for the World Cup finals with one match to
spare, and travel to Germany as group winners following a 2-1 victory and a
much improved performance against
Poland.
In their first friendly match following qualification for the World Cup,
England beat Argentina 3-2 in Geneva, Switzerland, in a game many have described as England's best performance
in a very long time.
The Swede has also received a degree of criticism during his time in
charge for experimenting with his teams excessively during friendly matches,
sometimes changing the entire eleven at half-time before FIFA ruled that
only a maximum of five substitutions would be allowed in such games from
2004. He also received criticism from some quarters of the English media for
'cheapening' the captaincy of the England team by allowing lower-profile
players such as Emile Heskey and Philip Neville to lead the team after substitutions. However, these
critics generally ignored or were not aware of the fact that only the player
leading the team at kick-off is officially recorded as having captained
England, so players inheriting the armband later in games were not 'England
captains' in the official sense.
Following revelations in the
News of the World newspaper during January 2006, the Football Association
decided to come to an agreement with Eriksson over his future and on 23rd
January 2006, it was announced that the Swede was to stand down after the
summer's World Cup Finals. Possible successors linked with the job include
Sam Allardyce, Steve McClaren, Guus Hiddink, Luiz Felipe Scolari, Alan
Curbishley, Paul Jewell, Stuart Pearce, Martin O'Neill and current under
21's manager and previous national team caretaker manager Peter Taylor.
World Cup record
1930 to 1938 - Did not enter
1950 - Round 1 (last 15) lost to Spain
1954 - Quarter-finals lost to Uruguay 4-2
1958 - Round 1 lost to Soviet Union 1-0
1962 - Quarter-finals lost to Brazil 3-1
1966 - Winners
1970 - Quarter-finals lost to West Germany 3-2
1974 - Did not qualify
1978 - Did not qualify
1982 - Round 2 (last 12) eliminated on goal difference by West Germany
after 0-0 draw
1986 - Quarter-finals lost to Argentina 2-1
1990 - Semi-Finals eliminated by West Germany on penalties after 1-1
draw
1994 - Did not qualify
1998 - Round 2 eliminated by Argentina on penalties after 2-2 draw
2002 - Quarter-finals lost to Brazil 2-1
2006 - Qualified
European Championship record
1960 - Did not enter
1964 - Did not qualify lost to France
1968 - Semifinals lost to Yugoslavia 1-0
1972 - Did not qualify (last 8) lost to West Germany
1976 - Did not qualify lost to Czechoslovakia
1980 - Round 1 (last 8) lost to Italy 1-0
1984 - Did not qualify lost to Denmark 1-0
1988 - Round 1 (last 8) lost to Holland 3-1
1992 - Round 1 (last 8) lost to Sweden 2-1
1996 - Semifinals eliminated by Germany on penalties after 1-1 draw
2000 - Round 1 lost to Romania 3-2
2004 - Quarter-finals eliminated by Portugal on penalties after 2-2 draw
Forthcoming fixtures
- Friendly: England v
Hungary, 30th May at
Old Trafford
- Friendly: England v
Jamaica, 3rd June at
Old Trafford
-
2006 World Cup Group B:
- England v
Paraguay, 10th June at
Waldstadion, Frankfurt (2pm BST)
- England v
Trinidad & Tobago, 15th June at
Frankenstadion, Nuremberg (5pm BST)
-
Sweden v England, 20th June at
RheinEnergieStadion, Cologne (8pm BST)
- Up to four other fixtures (Round of 16, Quarter Final, Semi
Final, Final/Third Place Playoff), pending on results in the three
group games.
-
Euro 2008 Qualifying Group E:
- England v
Andorra, September 2
-
Republic of Macedonia v England, September 6
- England v
Republic of Macedonia, October 7
-
Croatia v England, October 11
- Friendly:
Netherlands v England, November 15 at the
Amsterdam ArenA
-
Euro 2008 Qualifying Group E (continued):
-
Israel v England, March 24, 2007
-
Andorra v England, March 28, 2007
-
Estonia v England, June 6, 2007
- England v
Israel, September 8, 2007 at
Wembley Stadium
- England v
Russia, September 12, 2007 at
Wembley Stadium
- England v
Estonia, October 13, 2007 at
Wembley Stadium
-
Russia v England, October 17, 2007
- England v
Croatia, November 21, 2007 at
Wembley Stadium
Famous past players
Tony Adams 1987-2000
Viv Anderson 1978-1988
Alan Ball 1965-1975
Gordon Banks 1963-1972
John Barnes 1983-1995
Peter Beardsley 1986-1996
Steve Bloomer 1895-1910
Terry Butcher 1980-1990
Bobby Charlton 1958-1970
Ray Clemence 1972-1983
Dixie Dean 1927-1932
Duncan Edwards 1955-1957
Tom Finney 1946-1958
|
Paul Gascoigne 1988-1998
Jimmy Greaves 1959-1967
Johnny Haynes 1954-1962
Glenn Hoddle 1979-1988
Emlyn Hughes 1969-1980
Geoff Hurst 1966-1972
Paul Ince 1992-2000
Kevin Keegan 1972-1982
Gary Lineker 1984-1992
Nat Lofthouse 1950-1958
Stanley Matthews 1934-1957
Bobby Moore 1962-1973
Stuart Pearce 1987-1999
|
Martin Peters 1966-1974
David Platt 1989-1996
Bryan Robson 1980-1991
Kenny Sansom 1979-1988
Paul Scholes 1997-2004
David Seaman 1988-2002
Alan Shearer 1992-2000
Teddy Sheringham 1993-2002
Peter Shilton 1970-1990
Nobby Stiles 1965-1970
Chris Waddle 1985-1991
Ray Wilkins 1976-1986
Vivian Woodward 1903-1911
Billy Wright 1946-1959
|
Current players
Players who have recently been called up to England squads include:
- Goalkeepers
Player |
Club |
Caps (goals) |
Debut |
Most Recent Call Up |
David James |
Manchester City |
33 (0) |
v
Mexico, March 29 1997 |
v
Uruguay,
March
1 2006 |
Paul Robinson |
Tottenham Hotspur |
19 (0) |
v
Australia, February 12 2003 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Robert Green |
Norwich City |
1 (0) |
v
Colombia, May 31 2005 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Chris Kirkland |
West Bromwich Albion
(on loan from
Liverpool) |
0 (0) |
n/a |
v
Poland, October 12 2005 |
Scott Carson |
Sheffield Wednesday
(on loan from
Liverpool) |
0 (0) |
n/a |
v
Colombia,
May 31
2005 |
- Defenders
Player |
Club |
Caps (goals) |
Debut |
Most Recent Call Up |
Gary Neville |
Manchester United |
78 (0) |
v
Japan, June 3 1995 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Sol Campbell |
Arsenal |
66 (1) |
v
Hungary, May 18 1996 |
v
Argentina,
November 12 2005 |
Rio Ferdinand |
Manchester United |
45 (1) |
v
Cameroon, November 15 1997 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Ashley Cole |
Arsenal |
44 (0) |
v
Albania, March 28 2001 |
v Poland, October 12 2005 |
Jamie Carragher |
Liverpool |
23 (0) |
v
Hungary, April 28 1999 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Wayne Bridge |
Fulham
(on loan from
Chelsea) |
22 (1) |
v
Netherlands, February 13 2002 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
John Terry |
Chelsea |
22 (0) |
v
Serbia & Monten., June 3 2003 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Ledley King |
Tottenham Hotspur |
16 (1) |
v
Italy, March 27 2002 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Wes Brown |
Manchester United |
9 (0) |
v
Hungary, April 28 1999 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Matthew Upson |
Birmingham City |
7 (0) |
v
South Africa, May 22 2003 |
v
N. Ireland, September 7 2005 |
Luke Young |
Charlton Athletic |
7 (0) |
v
USA, May 28 2005 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Jonathan Woodgate |
Real Madrid |
6 (0) |
v
Bulgaria, June 9 1999 |
v Argentina, November 12 2005 |
Glen Johnson |
Chelsea |
4(0) |
v
Denmark, November 16 2003 |
v
Denmark,
August 17 2005 |
Zat Knight |
Fulham |
2 (0) |
v
USA, May 28 2005 |
v N. Ireland, September 7 2005 |
Paul Konchesky |
West Ham |
2 (0) |
v
Australia, February 12 2003 |
v Argentina, November 12 2005 |
Stephen Warnock |
Liverpool |
0 (0) |
n/a |
v Poland, October 12 2005 |
- Midfielders
Player |
Club |
Caps (goals) |
Debut |
Most Recent Call Up |
David Beckham (Captain) |
Real Madrid |
87 (16) |
v
Moldova, September 1 1996 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Steven Gerrard |
Liverpool |
40 (6) |
v
Ukraine, May 31 2000 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Frank Lampard |
Chelsea |
38 (10) |
v
Belgium, October 10 1999 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Owen Hargreaves |
Bayern München |
31 (0) |
v
Netherlands, August 15 2001 |
v N. Ireland, September 7, 2005 |
Joe Cole |
Chelsea |
30 (5) |
v
Mexico, May 25 2001 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Kieron Dyer |
Newcastle United |
28 (0) |
v
Luxembourg, September 4 1999 |
v
Azerbaijan,
March 30 2005 |
Phil Neville |
Everton |
52 (0) |
v
China, May 23 1996 |
v Argentina, November 12 2005 |
Alan Smith |
Manchester United |
16 (1) |
v
Mexico, May 25 2001 |
v Argentina, November 12 2005 |
Jermaine Jenas |
Tottenham Hotspur |
15 (0) |
v
Australia, February 12 2003 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Shaun Wright-Phillips |
Chelsea |
8 (1) |
v
Ukraine, August 18 2004 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Michael Carrick |
Tottenham Hotspur |
5 (0) |
v
Mexico, May 25 2001 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Kieran Richardson |
Manchester United |
4 (2) |
v
USA, May 28 2005 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Stewart Downing |
Middlesbrough |
1 (0) |
v
Netherlands, February 9 2005 |
v Colombia, May 31 2005 |
- Strikers
Player |
Club |
Caps (goals) |
Debut |
Most Recent Call Up |
Michael Owen |
Newcastle United |
75 (35) |
v
Chile, February 11 1998 |
v Argentina, November 12 2005 |
Emile Heskey |
Birmingham City |
43 (5) |
v
Hungary, April 28 1999 |
v Azerbaijan, March 26, 2005 |
Wayne Rooney |
Manchester United |
29 (11) |
v
Australia, February 12 2003 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Darius Vassell |
Manchester City |
22 (6) |
v
Netherlands, February 13 2002 |
v Poland, September 8 2004 |
Jermain Defoe |
Tottenham Hotspur |
16 (1) |
v
Sweden, March 31 2004 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Peter Crouch |
Liverpool |
5 (1) |
v
Colombia, May 31 2005 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Andy Johnson |
Crystal Palace |
2 (0) |
v
Netherlands, February 9 2005 |
v N. Ireland, September 7 2005 |
Darren Bent |
Charlton Athletic |
1 (0) |
v
Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
v Uruguay, March 1 2006 |
Coaching Staff
- Manager:
Sven-Göran Eriksson
- Assistant Manager:
Tord
Grip
- Coach:
Steve McClaren
- Coach:
Sammy
Lee
- Goalkeeping Coach:
Ray Clemence
- Team Doctor:
Dr. Leif Swaird
- Physiotherapist:
Gary Lewin
- Masseur:
Chris Neville
- Masseur:
Steve Slattery
- Masseur:
Rod Thornley
- Kit Manager:
Martin Grogan
- Kit Manager:
Tom McKechnie
Player records
Most capped England players
As of March 1, 2006,
the ten players with the most caps for England are:
# |
Name |
Career |
Caps |
Goals |
1 |
Peter Shilton |
1970-1990 |
125 |
0 |
2 |
Bobby Moore |
1962-1973 |
108 |
2 |
3 |
Sir Bobby Charlton |
1958-1970 |
106 |
49 |
4 |
Billy Wright |
1946-1959 |
105 |
3 |
5 |
Bryan Robson |
1980-1991 |
90 |
26 |
6 |
David Beckham* |
1996- |
87 |
16 |
7 |
Kenny Sansom |
1979-1988 |
86 |
1 |
8 |
Ray Wilkins |
1976-1986 |
84 |
3 |
9 |
Gary Lineker |
1984-1992 |
80 |
48 |
10 |
John Barnes |
1983-1995 |
79 |
11 |
Members of the 1966 World Cup-winning team are in bold. * denotes a
player still playing or available for selection.
Top England goalscorers
# |
Player |
Career |
Goals (Caps) |
1 |
Sir Bobby Charlton |
1958-70 |
49 (106) |
2 |
Gary Lineker |
1984-92 |
48 (80) |
3 |
Jimmy Greaves |
1959-67 |
44 (57) |
4 |
Michael Owen* |
1998-now |
35 |
5 |
Sir Tom Finney |
1946-58 |
30 (76) |
= |
Nat Lofthouse |
1950-58 |
30 (33) |
= |
Alan Shearer |
1992-2000 |
30 (63) |
8 |
Viv Woodward |
1903-11 |
29 (23) |
9 |
Steve Bloomer |
1895-1907 |
28 (23) |
10 |
David Platt |
1989-96 |
27 (62) |
11 |
Bryan Robson |
1979-91 |
26 (90) |
12 |
Sir Geoff Hurst |
1966-72 |
24 (49) |
13 |
Stan Mortensen |
1947-53 |
23 (25) |
14 |
Tommy Lawton |
1938-48 |
22 (23) |
15 |
Mick Channon |
1972-77 |
21 (46) |
= |
Kevin Keegan |
1972-82 |
21 (63) |
17 |
Martin Peters |
1966-74 |
20 (77) |
18 |
George Camsell |
1929-36 |
18 (9) |
= |
Dixie Dean |
1927-32 |
18 (16) |
= |
Johnny Haynes |
1954-62 |
18 (56) |
= |
Roger Hunt |
1962-69 |
18 (34) |
Members of the 1966 World Cup-winning team are in bold. * denotes a
player still playing or available for selection.
England captains
# |
Player |
England career |
Captain (Total Caps) |
1 |
Billy Wright |
1946-59 |
90 (105) |
= |
Bobby Moore |
1962-73 |
90 (108) |
3 |
Bryan Robson |
1980-91 |
65 (90) |
4 |
David Beckham* |
2000-Present |
51 (87) |
5 |
Alan Shearer |
1992-2000 |
34 (63) |
6 |
Kevin Keegan |
1972-82 |
31 (63) |
7 |
Emlyn Hughes |
1969-80 |
23 (62) |
8 |
Bob Crompton |
1902-14 |
22 (41) |
= |
Johnny Haynes |
1954-1962 |
22 (56) |
10 |
Eddie Hapgood |
1933-39 |
21 (30) |
Members of the 1966 World Cup-winning team are in bold. * denotes a
player still playing or available for selection.
England managers
Manager |
England career |
Played |
Won |
Drawn |
Lost |
GF1 |
GA2 |
Win % |
Sir Walter Winterbottom |
1946-1962 |
139 |
78 |
33 |
28 |
383 |
196 |
56.11% |
Sir Alf Ramsey |
1963-1974 |
113 |
69 |
27 |
17 |
224 |
98 |
61.06% |
Joe Mercer (caretaker) |
1974 |
7 |
3 |
3 |
1 |
9 |
7 |
42.85% |
Don Revie |
1974-1977 |
29 |
14 |
8 |
7 |
49 |
25 |
48.27% |
Ron Greenwood |
1977-1982 |
55 |
33 |
12 |
10 |
93 |
40 |
59.99% |
Sir Bobby Robson |
1982-1990 |
95 |
47 |
30 |
18 |
151 |
60 |
49.47% |
Graham Taylor |
1990-1993 |
38 |
18 |
13 |
7 |
62 |
32 |
47.36% |
Terry Venables |
1994-1996 |
23 |
11 |
11 |
1 |
35 |
13 |
47.82% |
Glenn Hoddle |
1996-1999 |
28 |
17 |
6 |
5 |
42 |
13 |
60.71% |
Howard Wilkinson (caretaker) |
1999 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
2 |
0.00% |
Kevin Keegan |
1999-2000 |
18 |
7 |
7 |
4 |
26 |
15 |
38.88% |
Howard Wilkinson (caretaker) |
2000 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0.00% |
Peter Taylor (caretaker) |
2000 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0.00% |
Sven-Göran Eriksson3 |
2001
- Present |
61 |
36 |
15 |
10 |
115 |
59 |
59.02% |
Notes
- GF = Goals for
- GA = Goals against
- Accurate up to and including
1st
March 2006.
Home stadium
For the first 50 years of its existence, the England team played its home
matches at different venues all around the country; for the first few years
it used cricket grounds, before later moving on to football clubs' stadiums.
England played their first match at Wembley Stadium in 1924, the year after
it was completed, against Scotland, but for the next 27 years would only use Wembley as a venue
for Scotland matches; other opposition were still entertained at club
grounds around the country.
In May 1951, Argentina became the first team other than Scotland to be
entertained at Wembley, and by 1960 nearly all of England's home matches
were being played there. Between 1966 and 1995, England did not play a single home match anywhere else.
England's last match at Wembley before its demolition and reconstruction
was against
Germany on
October 7, 2000, a game which England lost 1-0. Since then the team has
played at 14 different venues around the country, with Old Trafford having
been the most often used. The FA have ruled that when the new Wembley is
completed in mid-2006, England's travels will end, and the team will play
all of their home matches there until at least 2036. The main
reason for this is financial. The FA did not own the old Wembley stadium,
but it does own the new one, and has taken on debts of hundreds of millions
of pounds to pay for it. Thus it needs to maximise the revenue from England
matches, and does not wish to share it with the owners of other grounds.
100 Greatest Sporting Moments
In 2002, England featured three times in Channel 4's
100 Greatest Sporting Moments:
- The 5-1 win over Germany in the 2001 World Cup Qualifer was ranked
2nd.
- The 4-2 World Cup Final win over Germany in 1966 was ranked 3rd.
- The 4-1 win over Holland in Euro '96 was ranked 25th.
External links
Home | Up | Croatia | Czech Republic | England | France | Germany | Italy | Netherlands | Poland | Portugal | Serbia and Montenegro | Spain | Sweden | Ukraine | Switzerland
Football World Cup 2006, made by MultiMedia | Free content and software
This guide is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
|