England (86), France (26), Netherlands (24), Brazil (20), Spain (12), Portugal (11) and Germany (10)

John McGinn (74 caps Scotland 2018-), Olof Mellberg (69 caps Sweden 2001-08), Steve Staunton (64 caps Republic of Ireland 1991-98), Emiliano Martinez (57 caps Argentina 2021-) and Paul McGrath (51 caps Republic of Ireland 1989-96)

Matt O’Riley (£30m Brighton & Hove Albion), Kieran Tierney (£25m Arsenal), Jota (£25m Al-Ittihad), Moussa Dembélé (£20m Olympique Lyonnais), Nicolas Kühn (£16.5m Coimo), Odsonne Édouard (£14m Crystal Palace), Kristoffer Ajer (£13.5m Brentford), Virgil van Dijk (£13.5m Southampton) and Victor Wanyama £12.5m Southampton)

Alfred Preissler (177), Marco Reus (170), Michael Zorc (159), Manfred Burgsmüller (158), Friedhelm Konietzka (155) and Lothar Emmerich (148)

Cristiano Ronaldo (183), Iker Casillas (177), Lionel Messi (163), Thomas Müller (163), Manuel Neuer (157), Karim Benzema (152) and Xavi (151)

Four Clubs: Brighton & Hove Albion (1901), Chelsea (1905), Crystal Palace (1905) and Leeds United (1919)

Ian Callaghan (640), Jamie Carragher (508), Steven Gerrard (504), Emlyn Hughes (474), Ray Clemence (470), Ian Rush (469), Tommy Smith (467), Phil Neal (455) and Bruce Grobbelaar (440)

Reece James (2023-26), Cesar Azpilicueta (2019-23), Gary Cahill (2017-19), John Terry (2004-17), Marcel Desailly (2001-04), Dennis Wise (1993-2001), Andy Townsend (1992-93), Peter Nicholas (1990-92) and Graham Roberts (1988-90)

Harry Wilson (Fulham), David Brooks (AFC Bournemouth), Brennan Johnson (Crystal Palace), Joe Rodon (Leeds United), Ethan Ampadu (Leeds United), Neco Williams (Nottingham Forest) and Ben Davies (Tottenham Hotspur)

Anthony Gordon (4 Goals Newcastle United v Qarabağ), Harry Kane (4 Goals Bayern Munich v Dinamo Zagreb & Tottenham Hotspur v APOEL), Marcus Rashford (Manchester United v RB Leipzig), Raheem Sterling (Manchester City v Atalanta), Danny Welbeck (Arsenal v Galatasaray) and Michael Owen (Manchester United v Wolfsburg)

Koke (718), Adelardo Rodríguez (553), Jan Oblak (525), Tomás Reñones (483), Antoine Griezmann (478), Enrique Collar (470), Ángel Correa (469), Carlos Aguilera (456) and Saúl (427)

Alessandro Del Piero (290), Giampiero Boniperti (179), Roberto Bettega (178), David Trezeguet (171), Omar Sívori (167), Felice Borel (158), Pietro Anastasi (130) and John Hansen (124)

Michael Carrick (Jan 2026 Manchester United), Sean Dyche (Apr 2024 Everton), Eddie Howe (Oct & Feb 2022 Newcastle United), Mike Jackson (Apr 2022 Burnley), Steve Bruce (Apr 2021 Newcastle United) and Dean Smith (Dec 2020 Aston Villa)

Which eight Players scored the most Premier League Goals for West Bromwich Albion?
Peter Odemwingie (30), James Morrison (29), Chris Brunt (24), Salomón Rondón (24), Saido Berahino (23), Shane Long (19), Romelu Lukaku (17) and Gareth McAuley (15)

David Linighan (112), Geraint Williams (109), John Wark (101), Micky Stockwell (96), Chris Kiwomya (90), Matt Holland (76), Craig Forrest (74), Hermann Hreidarsson (74) and Phil Whelan (74)

Brentford FC finished the 1935-36 Football League Division One Season in 5th Place, making them London’s Top Club

Kevin (£34.6m), Emile Smith Rowe (£27m), Oscar Bobb (£27m), Jean Michaël Seri (£25m), Joachim Andersen (£25m), André-Frank Zambo Anguissa (£22.8m), Aleksandar Mitrović (£22m), Alex Iwobi (£22m) and Sander Berge (£20m)

Sharp Electronics (1982-2000), Vodafone (2000-06), AIG (2006-10), Aon (2010-14), Chevrolet (2014-21), TeamViewer (2021-24) and Snapdragon (2024-26)

Lucas Moura (152), Heurelho Gomes (96), Richarlison (91), Sandro (81), Emerson Royal (77), Paulinho (45), Carlos Vinícius (9), Gilberto (7) and Souza (1)

Eberechi Eze (£68m Arsenal), Michael Olise (£50.8m Bayern Munich), Aaron Wan-Bissaka (£45m Manchester United), Joachim Andersen (£30m Fulham), Yannick Bolasie (£25m Everton) and Marc Guéhi (£20m Manchester City)

Federico Chiesa (Liverpool), Riccardo Calafiori (Arsenal), Nicolò Savona (Nottingham Forest), Lorenzo Lucca (Nottingham Forest), Wilfried Gnonto (Leeds United), Sandro Tonali (Newcastle United) and Destiny Udogie (Tottenham Hotspur)

BetBright (2018–19), Football Index (2019–21), BOXT (2021–22), UNHCR (2022–23), Kaiyun (2023–25) and Bally’s (2025–26)

Alexander Isak (£125m Liverpool), Elliot Anderson (£35m Nottingham Forest), Andy Carroll (£35m Liverpool), Yankuba Minteh (£33m Brighton & Hove Albion), Ayoze Pérez (£30m Leicester City) and Moussa Sissoko (£30m Tottenham Hotspur)

Iliman Ndiaye (Everton), Ismaïla Sarr (Crystal Palace), Pape Matar Sarr (Tottenham Hotspur), Idrissa Gueye (Everton), El Hadji Malick Diouf (West Ham United) and Habib Diarra (Sunderland)

Jobe Bellingham (£32m Borussia Dortmund), Jordan Pickford (£30m Everton), Darren Bent (£24m Aston Villa), Jordan Henderson (£20m Liverpool), Jack Clarke (£20m Ipswich Town) and Patrick van Aanholt (£14m Crystal Palace)

Saab (1982-84), Philips (1984-87), Brother (1987-99), Eidos (1999-2002), First Advice (2002-04), Thomas Cook (2004-09) and Etihad Airways (2009-26)



