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!width=19%|Debut
!width=19%|Debut
!width=19%|Most recent callup
!width=19%|Most recent callup
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| [[Dean Ashton]] || [[November 24]][[1983]] || {{flagicon|England}} [[West Ham United F.C.|West Ham United]] || 0 (0) || N/A || v [[Greece national football team|Greece]]<br><small>August 2006</small>
|-
|-
| [[David Nugent]] || [[May 2]][[1985]] || {{flagicon|England}} [[Portsmouth F.C.|Portsmouth]] || 1 (1) || v [[Andorra national football team|Andorra]], <br><small>[[March 28]] [[2007]]</small> || v [[Israel national football team|Israel]] / [[Andorra national football team|Andorra]] <br><small> [[March 2007]] </small>
| [[David Nugent]] || [[May 2]][[1985]] || {{flagicon|England}} [[Portsmouth F.C.|Portsmouth]] || 1 (1) || v [[Andorra national football team|Andorra]], <br><small>[[March 28]] [[2007]]</small> || v [[Israel national football team|Israel]] / [[Andorra national football team|Andorra]] <br><small> [[March 2007]] </small>

Revision as of 19:17, 21 August 2007

England
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)The Three Lions
AssociationThe Football Association
ConfederationUEFA (Europe)
Head coachEngland Steve McClaren
CaptainJohn Terry
Most capsPeter Shilton (125)
Top scorerBobby Charlton (49)
Home stadiumWembley Stadium
FIFA codeENG
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current12[1]
Highest4 (Sept 2006/Dec 1997)
Lowest27 (Feb 1996)
First international
 Scotland 0 - 0 England England
(Partick, Scotland; 30 November 1872)
Biggest win
 Ireland 0 - 13 England England
(Belfast, Ireland; 18 February 1882)
Biggest defeat
 Hungary 7 - 1 England England
(Budapest, Hungary; 23 May 1954)
World Cup
Appearances12 (first in 1950)
Best resultWinners, 1966
European Championship
Appearances7 (first in 1968)
Best result1968: Third, 1996 Semi-finals

The English national men's football team represents England in international men's football and is controlled by The Football Association, the governing body for football in England. Although it is a Home Nation of the United Kingdom, England is represented by its own side that plays in all the major professional tournaments, with the exception of the Olympic Games as the IOC only recognises Great Britain as a whole.

England are the most successful of the four Home Nations, having won the British Home Championship 54 times and the FIFA World Cup once when they hosted it in 1966. More recently, their greatest achievement has been reaching the competition's semi-final in 1990. They have never won the UEFA European Football Championship, only advancing to the semi-finals twice.

Traditionally, England's greatest rivals have been Scotland.[2] England's most recent meeting with Scotland was the second leg of the Euro 2000 play-offs in November 1999, which Scotland won 1-0 at the old Wembley Stadium. Since regular fixtures against Scotland came to an end in the late 1980s, other rivalries have become more prominent. Rivalries with Argentina and Germany have produced particularly eventful encounters.

History

The England national football team is the oldest in the world, alongside Scotland. The two countries first played in the first international match, at Hamilton Crescent in Partick, Scotland on 30 November 1872.[3] Over the next forty years, England played exclusively with the other three Home nations - Scotland, Wales and Ireland. The games were made competitive with the British Home Championship from 1883 to 1984.

Before the Wembley Stadium was opened, England had had no permanent home ground. England joined FIFA in 1906, playing its first ever game outside the British Isles in 1908. However, the relationship between the two were strained, resulting in the British nations' departure from FIFA in 1928, before rejoining in 1946. As a result, England did not compete in a World Cup until 1950, in which they were humiliated in a 1-0 defeat against the United States, failing to get past the first round. A 6-3 loss in 1953 to Hungary was England's first ever defeat to a non-British team at Wembley and along with losing more than half of the home Chamionships to Scotland previously English claims to dominate football seemed unfounded.

Although Walter Winterbottom was appointed as the first ever full time manager in 1946, the team was still picked by a committee until Alf Ramsey took over in 1963. Under Ramsey, England experienced its greatest ever success, winning the 1966 World Cup Final against West Germany 4-2 after extra time. Geoff Hurst famously scored a hat-trick in the final. The 1966 World Cup was also held in England. Though England lost again to the Auld Enemy Scotland only a year later with a famous 3-2 for the Scots at Wembley. After this the fortunes of England continued to decline and it was unsuccessful in the 1970s, qualifying for no tournaments at all. In 1982, England under Ron Greenwood qualified for 1982 World Cup in Spain after a 12-year absence and were eliminated from the second round without losing a match. The team under Bobby Robson fared better as England reached the quarter finals of the 1986 World Cup and finished fourth in the tournament four years later, which was the best performance in the World Cup since 1966.

Graham Taylor's short reign as Robson's successor ended after his England failed to qualify for the 1994 World Cup, but then the 1996 European Championships were held in England, and under new coach Terry Venables the team had its best performance at a European Championship, reaching the semi-final. The England team of the 1990s and 2000s has been consistently in football's top twenty countries, but failed to progress beyond the quarter finals of any international tournament, and has had a quick turnover of coaches, with both Glenn Hoddle and Kevin Keegan lasting little more than two years each in the role. Sven-Göran Eriksson, in charge from 2001 to 2006, was notable as the first non-English manager of England.

Recent history

Steve McClaren is the new head coach, with John Terry his choice to replace David Beckham as captain. The revised management team now features Terry Venables, the former head coach. Beckham was left out of McClaren's first international squad for the friendly match against Greece on 16 August 2006, and was not recalled until the friendly against Brazil on 1 June, 2007, almost a year later.

After a good start with three straight victories against Greece, Andorra, and Macedonia, England had a goalless draw against the same Macedonia side on home ground, followed by a 2-0 defeat to Croatia in Zagreb, which ended Paul Robinson's run of six consecutive clean sheets for his country. This defeat was the worst competitive defeat suffered by England in almost exactly thirteen years, since the loss to Holland by the same score in the qualifying matches for the 1994 World Cup. England's unimpressive form continued as they lost 1-0 to Spain in a friendly match, with the cold and disappointed crowd booing off the home side at the final whistle. England's return to competitive football in March 2007 resulted in a disappointing 0-0 draw in Tel Aviv against Israel with yet another jeering and booing from English fans.

On 28 March, 2007, England finally ended their goal drought thanks to a goal in the 54th minute of their match against Andorra by Steven Gerrard. The match ended with a 3-0 win for England, with the second goal by Gerrard and a very close-range goal from David Nugent, ending their run of 5 games without a win. England were heavily booed off the pitch at half-time by a primarily English crowd, angry at their team's failure to score in the first-half. However, even after scoring there were still loud chants off "We want McClaren out" and "There's only one David Beckham" (in reference to McClaren's afore-mentioned dropping of Beckham from the team in August 2006), as well as continued booing at the final whistle. It should be emphasised that the crowd's disappointment was a combined result of England's poor form in previous games and the under par performance of an England team, ranked 6th in the March 2007 FIFA World Rankings,but are currently 12th, [4] in a game against an Andorran team (mostly made up of part-time players) ranked 157 places below them in 163rd position.

On June 1 England took on Brazil at Wembley Stadium, seven years after the old stadium was demolished. McClaren recalled Beckham after 11 months away from the international squad, and after an even first half, captain John Terry latched on to a free-kick from Beckham, his predecessor as skipper, to score the first full international goal at the new Wembley. The Brazilians equalized with just 30 seconds remaining to level the match at 1-1. Following the friendly in Wembley, England met Estonia in the Euro 2008 qualifiers on June 6. Goals by Joe Cole, Peter Crouch and Michael Owen, the latter two assisted by the recalled Beckham, led to a 3-0 victory against Estonia in Tallinn, bringing England back up to 3 points behind Croatia in the group.

After the 2007 summer break, England are now entering the climax of their Euro 2008 qualifying campaign, with their final 5 games approaching over the next 3 months. Before this England will have a warm-up friendly at the new Wembley against fierce rivals Germany. However it looks as though the Three Lions will be with out key players in the form of Gary Neville, Owen Hargreaves, Steven Gerrard, John Terry, David Beckham, Michael Owen and Wayne Rooney, the latter suffered his third hairline fracture in 3 years during a match with club side Manchester United. The last time the two sides met the Three Lions triumphed in a historic 5-1 away victory.

Home stadium

For the first 50 years of its existence, England played its home matches 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 against Scotland, but for the next 27 years only used Wembley as a venue for Scotland matches.

In May 1951, Argentina became the first team other than Scotland to be played 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 the old Wembley was against Germany on 7 October 2000, a game which England lost 1-0. Since then the team has played at 14 venues around the country, with Old Trafford having been the most used. The FA have ruled that England will play all of their home matches at the new Wembley 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.

The new Wembley held its first international game in March 2007, when England U21s played Italy U21s in front of 55,700 people. The match was drawn 3-3, with David Bentley scoring the first goal in an England shirt at the new stadium. Italian striker Giampaolo Pazzini scored the first goal, after just 29 seconds, as well completing the first Wembley hat-trick in the 68th minute.[5] 1 June, 2007, saw the England first team's first match at the new stadium, against Brazil, resulting in a 1-1 draw.


England on tour

In the seven years between the last game prior to demolition against Germany and the first in the new stadium against Brazil, England played a total of 34 home games at 14 different stadia. Of those, the record was 22 victories, 7 draws and 5 defeats. In competitive games (World Cup and European Championship qualifiers), the record stands at 11 victories and 3 draws from 14 games. The stadia utilised are as follows[6]:

Kits

England have traditionally worn white shirts with navy shorts and since the early 1960s, white socks. Their change kit is red shirts, white shorts and red socks.

Other away kits worn by England have included green shirts, yellow shorts and red socks during the 1930s, '40s and '50s and pale blue (first used during the 1970 World Cup and again from 1986-1992 as a rarely-used third choice kit). In 1956 England wore a change kit of yellow shirts and socks with blue shorts, and at Euro '96 an all-grey kit was used as a second choice strip. This deviation from tradition was so unpopular amongst supporters that since then, England's away kit has remained red.[7]

In modern times England's kit has been supplied by Umbro, with the exception of the years 1974 - 1984 when it was manufactured by Admiral.

England rotates its kits every two years, with a new home kit released at the beginning of every odd numbered year and a new away kit released at the beginning of every even numbered year. The previous home kit (used during the 2006 FIFA World Cup) made its final appearance on 15 November, 2006 against the Netherlands. A new kit was released on 5 February, 2007 and was first used on 7 February, 2007 against Spain. The jersey has a single red stripe partially across the front of the shoulders. The crest and gold star appear on the left of the chest, with the Umbro logo, now gold, and the front shirt number appearing on the right. This symmetry also applies to the away jersey. There are now Umbro diamonds on the top of the right shoulder. A navy and white stripe depicting the three lions appears on the sides. The numbering and lettering font and colour is the same as the previous two home jerseys, and continues with silver Umbro diamonds, first seen in 2005.

Player names and numbers

For the first 65 years of competition, England footballers' shirts contained no identifying names or numbers.[8] Numbers were first worn in 1922 in a match against Scotland in Glasgow. They quickly became associated with a certain position, so to describe someone as 'England's number 9' would be to describe a player as the best choice for centre forward.[9] This terminology continues today, and the team has kept to the tradition of numbering players from 1 to 11 (12 upwards for substitutes), outside of major tournaments such as the FIFA World Cup or the UEFA European Football Championship, where permanent squad numbers are required.

Numbers are traditionally associated with a certain position, but there are no set rules. Furthermore, established players will tend to use the same number whenever they play.[10] Steven Gerrard, for example, retains the England number 4 no matter what position he plays in. However, when Gerrard does not play, another player will be number 4.

The first time that England wore names on their jerseys was at EURO 92 in Sweden. They have since worn player names on their jerseys at every major tournament. However, it was nine more years before names were worn outside major tournaments. This was due to the fact that England would issue new numbers (and therefore new jerseys) for every game. Outside the FIFA World Cup and the UEFA European Football Championship, England first wore player names for the 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifying match on 6 October, 2001 against Greece at Old Trafford, Manchester. With new technology, player names can now be affixed to the jerseys as late as the day of the match[11], although occasionally with the odd error, such as when Peter Crouch wore 21 (his squad number) on the front of his shirt and shorts, and 12 (erroneously) on his back for a game against Uruguay in early 2006.[12]

Results and fixtures

see England national football team results

Forthcoming fixtures

Recent results

This is a list of match results from the past year. Goal scorers in brackets.

England squad

Current squad

Most Recent Squad
Date announced 17 August2007
Game(s)  Germany, 22 August 2007
Venue{s} Wembley Stadium
Competition Friendly
Dropped Jermaine Jenas, Robert Green, David Bentley
Injured Ben Foster, Ledley King,
Scott Parker, Michael Dawson, Gary Neville,
Aaron Lennon, Jonathan Woodgate, Wayne Rooney, Wayne Bridge
Called Up Steven Taylor, Gareth Barry, Andrew Johnson,
Shaun Wright-Phillips, Darren Bent, Sol Campbell,
David James, Owen Hargreaves
Pulled Out Owen Hargreaves, Steven Gerrard, Sol Campbell, Darren Bent, Andrew Johnson


Goalkeepers
Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut
Paul Robinson October 151979 England Tottenham Hotspur 36 (0) v Australia, 12 February 2003
David James August 311970 England Portsmouth 34 (0) v Mexico, 29 March 1997
Scott Carson September 31985 England Aston Villa 0 (0) N/A
Defenders
Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut
Rio Ferdinand November 71978 England Manchester United
59 (1) v Cameroon, 15 November 1997
Ashley Cole December 201981 England Chelsea 58 (0) v Albania, 28 March 2001
Phil Neville January 211977 England Everton 56 (0) v China, 23 May 1996
John Terry (c) December 71980 England Chelsea 39 (3) v Serbia & Montenegro, 3 June 2003
Wes Brown October 131979 England Manchester United 12 (0) v Hungary, 28 April 1999
Micah Richards June 241988 England Manchster City 4 (0) v Netherlands, 15 November 2006
Nicky Shorey February 191981 England Reading 1 (0) v Brazil, 1 June 2007
Steven Taylor January 231986 England Newcastle 0 (0) v N/A
Midfielders
Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut
David Beckham May 21975 United States Los Angeles Galaxy 96 (17) v Moldova, 1 September 1996
Frank Lampard June 201978 England Chelsea 55 (12) v Belgium, 10 October 1999
Joe Cole November 81981 England Chelsea 40 (7) v Mexico, 25 May 2001
Kieron Dyer December 29 1978 England West Ham United 32 (0) v Luxembourg, 4 September 1999
Stewart Downing July 221984 England Middlesbrough 14 (0) v Netherlands, 9 February 2005
Michael Carrick July 281981 England Manchester United 13 (0) v Mexico, 25 May 2001
Shaun Wright-Phillips October 251981 England Chelsea 12 (1) v Ukraine, 18 August 2004
Gareth Barry February 231981 England Aston Villa 9 (0) v France, September 2000
Strikers
Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut
Michael Owen December 141979 England Newcastle United 82 (37) v Chile, 11 February 1998
Jermain Defoe October 71982 England Tottenham Hotspur 24 (3) v Sweden, 31 March 2004
Peter Crouch January 30 1981 England Liverpool 19 (12) v Colombia, 31 May 2005
Alan Smith October 281980 England Newcastle 18 (1) v Albania, 28 March 2001

Recent callups

The following players have also been called up to the England squad within the last twelve months:

Goalkeepers
Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut Most recent callup
Ben Foster April 31983 England Manchester United 1 (0) v Spain,
7 February 2007
v Israel / Andorra
March 2007
Chris Kirkland May 21981 England Wigan Athletic 1 (0) v Greece,
16 August 2006
v Spain,
February 2007
Defenders
Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut Most recent callup
Gary Neville February 181975 England Manchester United 85 (0) v Japan
3 June 1995
v Israel / Andorra
March 2007
Jonathan Woodgate January 221980 England Middlesbrough 6 (0) v Bulgaria,
9 June 1999
v Israel / Andorra
March 2007
Luke Young July 191979 England Middlesbrough 7 (0) v USA,
28 May 2005
v Israel / Andorra
March 2007
Michael Dawson November 191983 England Tottenham Hotspur 0 (0) N/A v Brazil / Estonia
May 2007
Midfielders
Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut Most recent callup
Aaron Lennon April 161987 England Tottenham Hotspur 9 (0) v Jamaica, 3 June 2006 v Brazil / Estonia
May 2007
Scott Parker October 131980 England West Ham United 3 (0) v Denmark,
16 November 2003
v Israel / Andorra
March 2007
Kieran Richardson October 211984 England Sunderland 8 (2) v USA,
28 May 2005
v Netherlands,
November 2006
Strikers
Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut Most recent callup
David Nugent May 21985 England Portsmouth 1 (1) v Andorra,
March 28 2007
v Israel / Andorra
March 2007
Wayne Rooney October 241985 England Manchester United 38 (12) v Australia,
12 February 2003
v Israel / Andorra
March 2007

Coaching staff

Head Coach England Steve McClaren
Assistant Coach England Terry Venables
Coach England Steve Round
Goalkeeping Coach England Ray Clemence
Psychologist England Bill Beswick
Physiotherapist England Gary Lewin
Team Doctor Sweden Dr. Leif Swärd
Masseurs England Chris Neville
England Steve Slattery
England Rod Thornley
Kit Managers England Martin Grogan
Scotland Tom McKechnie

Previous squads

Competition history

FIFA World Cup record

Year Round Position GP W D* L GS GA
Uruguay 1930 Did Not Enter - - - - - - -
Italy 1934 Did Not Enter - - - - - - -
France 1938 Did Not Enter - - - - - - -
Brazil 1950 Round 1 11 3 1 0 2 2 2
Switzerland 1954 Quarter-finals 6 3 1 1 1 8 8
Sweden 1958 Round 1 11 4 0 3 1 4 5
Chile 1962 Quarter-finals 8 4 1 1 2 5 6
England 1966 Champions 1 6 5 1 0 11 3
Mexico 1970 Quarter-finals 8 4 2 0 2 4 4
West Germany 1974 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Argentina 1978 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Spain 1982 Group Round 2 6 5 3 2 0 6 1
Mexico 1986 Quarter-finals 8 5 2 1 2 7 3
Italy 1990 Semi-Finals 4 7 3 3 1 8 6
United States 1994 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
France 1998 Round 2 9 4 2 1 1 7 4
South KoreaJapan 2002 Quarter-finals 6 5 2 2 1 6 3
Germany 2006 Quarter-finals 7 5 3 2 0 6 2
Total 12/18 1 Title 55 25 17 13 74 47
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.
**Silver background color indicates that the tournament was held on home soil. Gold background color indicates that the tournament was won.

European Championship record

  • 1960 - Did not enter
  • 1964 - Did not qualify
  • 1968 - Third place
  • 1972 - Did not qualify (Quarter-finals)
  • 1976 - Did not qualify
  • 1980 - Round 1
  • 1984 - Did not qualify
  • 1988 - Round 1
  • 1992 - Round 1
  • 1996 - Semi-Finals
  • 2000 - Round 1
  • 2004 - Quarter-Finals

Player history

Famous past players

See also Category:England international footballers

Player records

Most capped England players

As of June 7, 2007, the 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 Bobby Charlton 1958 - 1970 106 49
4 Billy Wright 1946 - 1959 105 3
5 David Beckham[14] 1996 - 0000 96 17
6 Bryan Robson 1980 - 1991 90 26
7 Kenny Sansom 1979 - 1988 86 1
8 Gary Neville[14] 1995 - 0000 85 0
9 Ray Wilkins 1976 - 1986 84 3
10 Michael Owen[14] 1998 - 0000 82 37

Top England goalscorers

# Player Career Goals (Caps) Goals per game
1 Bobby Charlton 1958 - 1970 049 (106) 0.4622
2 Gary Lineker 1984 - 1992 48 (80) 0.6000
3 Jimmy Greaves 1959 - 1967 44 (57) 0.7719
4 Michael Owen[14] 1998 - 0000 37 (82) 0.4500
5 Tom Finney 1946 - 1958 30 (76) 0.3947
Nat Lofthouse 1950 - 1958 30 (33) 0.9091
Alan Shearer 1992 - 2000 30 (63) 0.4762
8 Viv Woodward 1903 - 1911 29 (23) 1.2609
9 Steve Bloomer 1895 - 1907 28 (23) 1.2174
10 David Platt 1989 - 1996 27 (62) 0.4355

England captains

# Player England career Captain (Total caps)
1 Billy Wright 1946 - 1959 090 (105)
Bobby Moore 1962 - 1973 090 (108)
3 Bryan Robson 1980 - 1991 65 (90)
4 David Beckham 1996 - 2006 58 (98)
5 Alan Shearer 1992 - 2000 34 (63)
6 Kevin Keegan 1972 - 1982 31 (63)
7 Emlyn Hughes 1969 - 1980 23 (62)
8 Bob Crompton 1902 - 1914 22 (41)
Johnny Haynes 1954 - 1962 22 (56)
10 Eddie Hapgood 1933 - 1939 21 (30)
11 John Terry 2006 - 10 (39)

England managers

Manager England career Played Won Drawn Lost GF[15] GA[16] Win %
Walter Winterbottom 1946 - 1962 139 78 33 28 383 196 56.11%
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 60.00%
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 00.00%
Kevin Keegan 1999 - 2000 18 7 7 4 26 15 38.88%
Howard Wilkinson (caretaker) 2000 1 0 1 0 0 0 00.00%
Peter Taylor (caretaker) 2000 1 0 0 1 0 1 00.00%
Sven-Göran Eriksson 2001 - 2006 67 40 17 10 128 61 59.70%
Steve McClaren 2006 - 0000 10 5 3 2 17 3 50.00%

Notes

  1. ^ FIFA/Coca-Cola World Rankings: July 2007
  2. ^ "A history of fierce football rivalry". BBC. 1999-10-03. Retrieved 2007-06-04.
  3. ^ England football on-line
  4. ^ "FIFA/World Rankings". FIFA. March 2007.
  5. ^ "Thriller at Wembley". www.TheFA.com. 2007-03-24. Retrieved 2007-03-25. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ "End of the road for England". BBC Sport. 2007-05-29. Retrieved 2007-05-29. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ http://www.englandfootballonline.com/TeamUnif/Unif.html
  8. ^ http://www.englandfootballonline.com/TeamUnif/UnifNosNames.html
  9. ^ http://www.englandfootballonline.com/TeamUnif/UnifNosNames.html
  10. ^ http://www.englandfootballonline.com/TeamUnif/UnifNosNames.html
  11. ^ http://www.englandfootballonline.com/TeamUnif/UnifNosNames.html
  12. ^ http://www.englandfootballonline.com/Seas2000-10/2005-06/M0835Uru2006.html
  13. ^ http://www.thefa.com/England/SeniorTeam/NewsAndFeatures/Postings/2007/05/EnglandGermany_Wembley.htm
  14. ^ a b c d Still available for selection
  15. ^ Goals for / scored
  16. ^ Goals against / conceded

See also

External links

Titles

Preceded by World Champions
1966 (First title)
Succeeded by

Template:Fb start

Template:FWC Winners Template:Fb end