Cheikh Sabaly (Senegal), Habib Diarra (Senegal), Ismaïla Sarr (Senegal), Arttu Hoskonen (Finland), Vangelis Pavlidis (2 Greece) and Mikel Oyarzabal (Spain)

David de Gea (415), Cesc Fàbregas (350), César Azpilicueta (349) and David Silva (309)

Danny Welbeck (7), Eberechi Eze (4), Jaidon Anthony (4), Callum Wilson (4), Morgan Rogers (3), Morgan Gibbs-White (3), Jarrod Bowen (3), Bukayo Saka (3) and Harvey Barnes (3)

Luis Enrique, Christophe Galtier, Mauricio Pochettino, Thomas Tuchel, Unai Emery and Laurent Blanc

George Boateng (384), Dennis Bergkamp (315), Edwin van der Sar (313) and Virgil van Dijk (313)

Granit Xhaka (Sunderland), Noah Okafor (Leeds United) and Dan Ndoye (Nottingham Forest)

2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany: Uruguay failed to qualify while Argentina and Brazil made the Quarter Finals

Belgium, Croatia, England, France, Netherlands, Norway, Spain and Switzerland

Italy: Mateo Retegui (5), Moise Kean (4), Giacomo Raspadori (3) and Francesco Pio Esposito (3)

Eleven Players: Joe Rodon (2), Harry Wilson (2), Kieffer Moore (2), Daniel James, Ben Davies, Rabbi Matondo, David Brooks, Sorba Thomas, Brennan Johnson, Nathan Broadhead and Jordan James

Six German Clubs: Bayern München (2 Players), Borussia Dortmund (2 Players), 1.FC Köln, Hamburger SV, Werder Bremen SV and Bayer Leverkusen

Tirana (26), Dinamo City (18), Partizani (17), Vllaznia (9) and Skënderbeu (8)

Ché Adams (5), Scott McTominay (2), John Souttar, George Hirst, Ryan Christie, Lewis Ferguson, Lyndon Dykes and Zakhar Volkov (Belarus Own Goal)

Branislav Ivanović 274, Nemanja Matić 251, Nemanja Vidić 211, Dejan Stefanović 190, Luka Milivojević 183 and Aleksandar Kolarov 165

Ahmad Elrich (Australia), Tyrese Francois (Australia), Mark Schwarzer (Australia), Ashkan Dejagah (Iran), Andranik Teymourian (Iran), Junichi Inamoto (Japan), Zesh Rehman (Pakistan) and Seol Ki-hyeon (South Korea)

Andorra, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Moldova and San Marino

Joel Matip (Liverpool Feb 2022) and Bryan Mbeumo (Manchester United Oct 2025)

Nuno Espirito Santo (7), José Mourinho (4), André Villas-Boas (2), Bruno Lage, Vítor Pereira and Ruben Amorim

How many Manchester United v Tottenham Hotspur matches were played outside England?
Six Times: June 1952 Toronto Tottenham Hotspur 5-0 Manchester United, June 1952 New York Tottenham Hotspur 7-1 Manchester United, June 1983 Swaziland Manchester United 2-1 Tottenham Hotspur, June 1983 Swaziland Tottenham Hotspur 2-0 Manchester United, July 2019 Shanghai Manchester United 2-1 Tottenham Hotspur and May 2025 Bilbao Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 Manchester United

Ayegbeni Yakubu (Maccabi Haifa 3-0 Olympiacos) and Victor Osimhen (Ajax 0-3 Galatasaray)

Daniel Ballard (Northern Ireland & Sunderland), Trai Hume (Northern Ireland & Sunderland) and Josh Cullen (Republic of Ireland & Burnley)

Stamford Bridge (1877 Chelsea), Turf Moor (1883 Burnley), Anfield Stadium (1884 Liverpool), Molineux (1889 Wolverhampton Wanderers), St James’ Park (1892 Newcastle United) and Craven Cottage (1896 Fulham)

How many times have England scored ten or more goals in a Full International match?
Six Times: 18 Feb 1882 Ireland 0-13 England, 18 Feb 1899 England 13-2 Ireland, 08 Jun 1908 Austria 1-11 England, 25 May 1947 Portugal 0-10 England, 27 May 1964 United States 0-10 England and 15 Nov 2021 San Marino 0-10 England






