Ranking the 20 best English footballers of all time – in order

Ranking the 20 best English footballers of all time – in order

By  Callum Altimas
165 – 209 minutes

 

England Football

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15 Best English Footballers Ever Ranked

Summary

  • Members from the 1966 World Cup winning squad feature, including legends Bobby Moore and Sir Bobby Charlton.
  • Modern-day stars like Harry Kane and Wayne Rooney also feature highly.
  • Ranking factors include success at club and international level and longevity.

England have produced a whole host of wonderfully talented footballers over the years. While the Three Lions have only won a major international tournament once, countless incredible footballers have graced the famous Wembley turf.

Wayne Rooney topped the voting as he was crowned the greatest footballer to play for England in the eyes of fans. However, there will be other supporters who strongly feel that Sir Bobby Charlton or Bobby Moore deserve that title, given the fact they were key figures in the nation’s triumph at the World Cup in 1966. We’ve crunched the numbers and ranked the top 20 best English players ever, which includes members of the country’s ‘Golden Generation’ as well as a few names of England’s World Cup win.

Ranking factors

  • Importance to club and country.
  • Success with club and country.
  • The calibre of teams they played for.
  • Longevity.
  • Goals.
  • Assists.
  • Clean sheets.
Ranking the 20 best English footballers of all time
Rank Player Caps Teams played for
1. Sir Bobby Charlton 106 Manchester United, Preston North End, Waterford, Newcastle KB United, Perth Azzurri, Blacktown City
2. Bobby Moore 108 West Ham United, Fulham, San Antonio Thunder, Seattle Sounders, Herning Fremad, Carolina Lightnin’
3. Harry Kane 103 Tottenham Hotspur, Leyton Orient, Millwall, Norwich City, Leicester City, Bayern Munich
4. Wayne Rooney 120 Everton, Manchester United, D.C. United, Derby County
5. Gordon Banks 73 Chesterfield, Leicester City, Stoke City, Cleveland Stokers, Hellenic, Fort Lauderdale Strikers, St Patrick’s Athletic
6. Jimmy Greaves 57 Chelsea, AC Milan, Tottenham Hotspur, West Ham United, Brentwood, Chelmsford City, Barnet, Woodford Town
7. Paul Gascoigne 57 Newcastle United, Tottenham Hotspur, Lazio, Rangers, Middlesbrough, Everton, Burnley, Gansu Tianma, Boston United
8. Kevin Keegan 63 Scunthorpe United, Liverpool, Hamburger SV, Southampton, Newcastle United, Blacktown City
9. Alan Shearer 63 Southampton, Blackburn, Newcastle
10. Steven Gerrard 114 Liverpool, LA Galaxy
11. David Beckham 115 Manchester United, Preston North End, Real Madrid, LA Galaxy, AC Milan, Paris Saint-Germain
12. Gary Lineker 80 Leicester City, Everton, Barcelona, Tottenham Hotspur, Nagoya Grampus
13. Stanley Matthews 54 Stoke City, Blackpool, Toronto
14. Ashley Cole 107 Arsenal, Crystal Palace, Chelsea, Roma, LA Galaxy, Derby County
15. Paul Scholes 66 Manchester United
16. Frank Lampard 106 West Ham, Swansea City, Chelsea, Manchester City, New York City
17. Peter Shilton 125 Leicester City, Stoke City, Nottingham Forest, Southampton, Derby County, Plymouth Argyle, Wimbledon, Bolton Wanderers, Coventry City, West Ham, Leyton Orient
18. Michael Owen 89 Liverpool, Real Madrid, Newcastle United, Manchester United, Stoke City
19. Jude Bellingham 40 Birmingham City, Borussia Dortmund, Real Madrid
20. Jordan Pickford 73 Sunderland, Darlington, Alfreton Town, Burton Albion, Carlisle United, Bradford City, Preston North End, Everton

20 Jordan Pickford

England caps: 73

Jordan Pickford in action for England

Jordan Pickford is a divisive figure in club football, often criticised for his inconsistent performances. However, you can’t say the same when he puts on an England shirt. The Everton goalkeeper established himself as the number one in time for the 2018 World Cup, where the Three Lions reached the semi-finals. This included a crucial penalty save against Colombia, which was England’s first shootout victory in World Cup history.

He also saved penalties in the Euro 2020 final defeat to Italy and the Three Lions’ quarter-final victory against Switzerland at Euro 2024. In fact, of the 20 penalties Pickford has faced as an England goalkeeper, he has saved five of them. His performances in major tournaments for the Three Lions have been invaluable in helping the country reach consecutive European Championship finals.

England's Jordan Pickford reacts during the penalty shootout

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19 Jude Bellingham

England caps: 40

Jude Bellingham scored a bicycle kick for England vs Slovakia

Jude Bellingham has already earned 40 caps for England, despite being only 21. Following his Champions League and La Liga victory at Real Madrid, the Birmingham-born midfielder came close to delivering European glory for the Three Lions. In the Round of 16 at Euro 2024, he scored a bicycle kick in the dying stages to send Gareth Southgate’s side’s match against Slovakia to extra time. He also scored at the 2022 World Cup, becoming the second-youngest player to score for England at the World Cup.

Bellingham will have plenty more options to end the 58 years of hurt for England in major tournaments. In the meantime, he will likely win multiple domestic titles for Real Madrid and become one of the country’s most decorated footballers ever.

Jude Bellingham celebrates after scoring against Slovakia

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18 Michael Owen

England caps: 89

Michael Owen on England duty

With 40 goals for his country, Michael Owen is the sixth top scorer in English football history. The former Liverpool and Manchester United striker played in five tournaments, scoring in four of them. He is most famous for his goal against Argentina in the 1998 World Cup, which remains one of the most memorable goals for the Three Lions in a major tournament.

He was also extremely successful at domestic level, winning the Premier League, FA Cup and UEFA Cup. In 2001, he won the Ballon d’Or after winning three trophies for Liverpool in the same season. Owen remains the youngest scorer for England at a World Cup with his goal against Romania on 22nd June 1998. He was just 18 years and 190 days old at the time of the goal.

17 Peter Shilton

England caps: 125

MixCollage-01-Jul-2024-12-04-PM-9558

No one has played more games for England than this man, Peter Shilton. As such, he’s done more than enough to earn a spot on this list of the Three Lions’ all-time greatest players. The former Leicester City man played 125 times for his country, and his time with England spanned the course of two decades, with his first appearance coming in 1970, and his last in 1990.

Having been inducted into the England Hall of Fame back in 2002, Shilton’s excellent legacy with the international team can’t be overstated. No one could usurp him in between the sticks at major tournaments with England for quite some time.

16 Frank Lampard

England caps: 106

Frank Lampard in action for England

Devastating disallowed goal against Germany in the 2010 World Cup aside, Frank Lampard had a great career with his national team. Playing over 100 times and scoring just under 30 goals, his return in front of the net is one that even many of the country’s best strikers would be envious of.

Alongside Paul Scholes and Steven Gerrard, Lampard has been part of a longstanding debate on the best English midfielders of all time, and while he ranks below both of those stars on this list, there is no denying the fact that he was still a very, very good footballer.

15 Paul Scholes

England caps: 66

Paul Scholes in action for Manchester United

Paul Scholes will go down as one of the best midfielders to ever play in the Premier League. He spent his entire club career with Manchester United and won several trophies under Sir Alex Ferguson. The Red Devils legend was known for his exceptional vision, precise control, and passing ability, which allowed him to dictate the tempo of games.

It’s a travesty that he was occasionally wasted when playing for England – arguably one of the big reasons why the Three Lions failed to win anything in the early 2000s. Steven Gerrard, Frank Lampard, and Scholes should have been a midfield capable of winning either the Euros or the World Cup. Alas, no manager – particularly Sven-Goran Eriksson – could get it done. The former Swedish manager has revealed in the past that the United man was the best of the three.

Steven Gerrard, Frank Lampard and Paul Scholes

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14 Ashley Cole

England caps: 107

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