Sancho 10), Bellingham rises, Kane overtakes Gazza and Owen – ranking every foreign-based England player

England players Harry Kane, Kevin Keegan and Joe Hart

Harry Kane has rocketed while Jordan Henderson has stalled since their career moves. Jude Bellingham keeps rising up the foreign-based England player ranks.

 

32) Angel Gomes – 1 cap (of 1)

Lille (1)

When Angel Gomes became the first player born in the 2000s to make a Premier League appearance – coming on as a substitute to replace captain Wayne Rooney at Old Trafford, no less – he seemed destined to soon make the England grade. But he needed both a quietly impressive spell in France with Lille, and the interim appointment of U21s manager Lee Carsley, to do so.

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31) Scott Carson – 1 cap (of 4)

Bursaspor (1)

After three years in the international wilderness, Fabio Capello saw fit to reintroduce Scott Carson to the England fold in 2011. The goalkeeper’s most recent appearance for the Three Lions had come during his time at West Brom, but when he replaced Joe Hart at half-time of a 1-0 win over Sweden, he was plying his trade in Turkey with Bursaspor. Jack Rodwell and Bobby Zamora also featured in a game settled by a deflected Gareth Barry header, which feels remarkably fitting.

The 37-year-old has won 12 trophies in 107 minutes at Manchester City. Time for another cap.

 

30) Gordon Cowans – 2 caps (of 10)

Bari (2)

A European Cup and PFA Young Player of the Year award-winner with Aston Villa, Cowans left to join Bari in 1985. He played twice for England during his time in Italy, scoring in a 4-0 win over Egypt and starting a 1-0 victory over the USSR in 1986.

 

29) Laurie Cunningham – 3 caps (of 6)

Real Madrid (3)

He was the first British player to feature for Real Madrid, and the first black player to be capped by England at any level, but Cunningham was still largely overlooked on the international scene. He had played three times for England before moving to Spain in 1980, with his subsequent three caps all falling in that calendar year. He later moved to Sporting Gijon, Marseille, Charleroi and Rayo Vallecano (twice) before his untimely passing in 1989, but never again came onto the Three Lions radar.

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28) Fikayo Tomori – 4 caps (of 5)

AC Milan (3)

A Serie A winner he may be, Tomori has nevertheless fallen foul of that age-old problem: a starter’s job that apparently requires prior experience.

 

27) Gerry Hitchens – 4 caps (of 7)

Inter Milan (4)

One year with Highley Miners Welfare, two apiece at Kidderminster Harriers and Cardiff and four years as a striker at Aston Villa persuaded the oft-ignored Gerry Hitchens to move further afield for his opportunities. And to be fair to him, more than half his caps came after he left England behind for Italy. He was actually the first player to be capped for England while playing abroad, and the first to go to a major tournament (the 1962 World Cup) while playing for a foreign team.

 

26) David Watson – 4 caps (of 65)

Werder Bremen (4)

No, not the Dave Watson of Everton FA Cup-winning fame. This is the David Watson of relative journeymanship, who ended up at Werder Bremen in 1979 after spells with Notts County, Rotherham, Sunderland and Manchester City. His red card and subsequent eight-week ban in his second Werder game – as well as an early return to England – meant he played more often for his country (four times) than his club (twice) while in Germany.

 

25) Jordan Henderson – 4 caps (of 81)

Al-Ettifaq (4)

Just a massive shame all round really. Maybe Ajax can open that door again?

 

24) Tammy Abraham – 5 caps (of 11)

Roma (5)

In that eternal race to live off a cameo minute every other game when Kane is given a rest by being substituted late on, Abraham really staked his claim in a 27-goal debut season with Roma. But things have tailed off since for a striker whose international victims scream Three Lions heritage: Montenegro, Andorra and San Marino.

 

23) Luther Blissett – 5 caps (of 19)

AC Milan (5)

“No matter how much money you have here, you can’t seem to get Rice Krispies,” Luther Blissett once remarked of life in Italy. But the man who scored a hat-trick on his international debut against Luxembourg still found a handful of England caps despite his relative struggles abroad.

 

22) Trevor Steven – 6 caps (of 36)

Marseille (6)

When Marseille signed Trevor Steven for £5.5m in August 1991, it was the joint-highest fee involving a British player at the time. Then 27, the winger would stay around the England set-up, earning his last six international caps in France. Not bad to say he left after 12 months, and had only been capped five times in two years with Rangers.

 

21) Joe Hart – 7 caps (of 75)

Torino (7)

What a time to be alive this was. After his particular brand of Fronting Up reached a crescendo at Euro 2016, Hart was bombed out of the Manchester City starting line-up by Pep Guardiola but held on to his England shirt for a while, including during that weird loan in Italy where his name was listed as ‘John’ on a team sheet that one time, despite his actual name being neither that nor Joe, but instead Charles. Fair play. No chance you get away with calling yourself ‘Hartdog’ if your name is Charles.

 

20) Glenn Hoddle – 9 caps (of 53)

Monaco (9)

Already in his 30s by the time he left England to exhibit his talent elsewhere, Hoddle managed to carve out four successful years in Monaco. He won the Ligue Un title in his first season, was voted Best Foreign Player in his second, and continued even after his Three Lions retirement in 1988.

 

19) Michael Owen – 11 caps (of 89)

Real Madrid (11)

Owen is not remembered all that fondly in Real Madrid – or any of his former clubs really – despite an impressive record of 17 goals in 26 starts. During his sole season in Spain, he retained his England place and duly netted six times in 11 matches. That included a hat-trick in a win over Colombia in May 2005 – six days after former club Liverpool had lifted the Champions League.

 

18) Paul Gascoigne – 12 caps (of 57)

Lazio (12)

In total, 34 of Gascoigne’s 57 caps came while he was playing club football outside of England. He earned more caps in three years at Rangers (22) than in four with Tottenham (20), as well as 12 at Lazio and three with Middlesbrough. He was sadly never even called up while at Chinese second-tier side Gansu Tianma, despite boasting a record of two goals in four games.

 

17) Steve McManaman – 13 caps (of 37)

Real Madrid (13)

UEFA once noted that ‘of all England’s footballing exports in the modern era, none was as successful as McManaman’. Yet even while he was scoring in Champions League finals and winning La Liga crowns, he was never truly a regular for his country.

 

16) Harry Kane – 15 caps (of 99)

Bayern Munich (15)

More than a year on from his bold career move to Germany, it seems only fair to point out nothing has changed for Harry Kane: he remains a trophyless fraud with a burgeoning collection of individual accolades – sharing the Euro 2024 Golden Boot despite being roundly awful all tournament the latest – while scoring no actually legitimate England goals.

 

15) Tony Woodcock – 16 caps (of 42)

FC Koln (16)

England’s 1982 World Cup squad contained three players each from Ipswich, Liverpool and Manchester United, two from Arsenal, Manchester City, Nottingham Forest and Tottenham, and then one from Aston Villa, Brighton, Southampton and West Ham. Woodcock, then coming to the end of his first spell at FC Koln, was truly the odd one out.

 

14) Paul Ince – 17 caps (of 53)

Inter Milan (17)

Ince had just barely left Serie A by the time his most memorable and blood-soaked England performance came against Italy in October 1997. But the midfielder was in the midst of his Italian job during Euro ’96, where he was supposedly the designated sixth penalty taker in that semi-final shoot-out.

 

13) Des Walker – 17 caps (of 59)

Sampdoria (17)

Paul Gascoigne emerged from the 1990 World Cup as a global superstar, but he was not the only England player to impress sufficiently to earn a move to Italy. In the same summer Gazza left Tottenham for Lazio, Walker departed his Nottingham Forest home to try his luck at Sampdoria. His time in Serie A was not quite so memorable, with Sven-Goran Eriksson playing him out of position at right-back in his only year outside of England, but he did keep his international place.

 

12) Chris Waddle – 18 caps (of 62)

Marseille (18)

Did you know that Waddle signed for Stocksbridge Park Steels in the same year a teenage Jamie Vardy joined their youth system? Well you bloody do now.

 

11) Kieran Trippier – 19 caps (of 42)

Atletico Madrid (19)

Two-and-a-half seasons of learning under the cojones of Diego Simeone did absolutely nothing whatsoever to impact the England prospects of Trippier; it might even have strengthened them, considering it was somewhere around the defender’s move to Spain when Gareth Southgate decided that yeah, this man is also a left-back. It does not feel like a coincidence that he retired from international football straight after the manager resigned.

 

10) Jadon Sancho – 22 caps (of 23)

Borussia Dortmund (22)

That says plenty about his brilliance in Germany. It also says absolutely loads about how things have gone in England. It doesn’t feel like Chelsea is a much better fit than Manchester United but time will tell.

 

9) Trevor Francis – 22 caps (of 52)

Detroit Express (2), Sampdoria (20)

Most will know that many of Francis’ England caps came during his spell in Sampdoria, but he also earned a couple of call-ups while on a weird kind of loan with NASL side Detroit Express. He headed to America at the end of the 1977/78 season with Birmingham, returned to become the first £1m footballer with Nottingham Forest in February 1979, then went back to Detroit that summer, never fully losing his grip on an England place.

 

8) Ray Wilkins – 22 caps (of 84)

AC Milan (22)

Far from damaging his England prospects, Wilkins found that his candle shone brighter away from the spotlight. He made nine and ten international appearances in 1985 and 1986 respectively – his two full calendar years in Italy. Only in 1982 (12) did he play more often for his country.

 

7) Gary Lineker – 24 caps (of 80)

Barcelona (24)

Two players have won the World Cup Golden Boot outright without reaching the semi-finals at the same tournament. Much like James Rodriguez earned a move to Real Madrid with his exploits in 2014, Spain’s other giant saw fit to bring in Gary Lineker in 1986. He played 24 of a possible 25 England games as a Barcelona player, scoring 17 goals.

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6) Kevin Keegan – 25 caps (of 63)

Hamburg (25)

And that really might have been more had England not botched qualification for the 1978 World Cup, despite having the reigning Ballon d’Or winner within their ranks. Keegan won the Bundesliga two years after becoming a European champion with Liverpool, yet his most memorable moments for his country are rather less successful and almost entirely dugout-based.

 

5) Mark Hateley – 27 caps (of 32)

Milan (20), Monaco (7)

With his final cap coming at Rangers under Graham Taylor in 1992, Hateley only actually made four appearances for England while plying his club trade on home soil. They all came during his more formative years at Portsmouth.

 

4) David Platt – 33 caps (of 62)

Bari (7), Juventus (13), Sampdoria (13)

One of two players to have earned England caps while playing for three different foreign clubs, Platt scored the Three Lions’ only goal at Euro 92 shortly after leaving Bari for Juventus. He would then have been at the 1994 World Cup as a Sampdoria player, had England actually qualified.

 

3) Jude Bellingham – 36 caps (of 36)

Borussia Dortmund (24), Real Madrid (12)

The only England international to earn none of his caps while playing in England. And if things continue as they are at Real Madrid he really might never come back at club level.

 

2) Owen Hargreaves – 39 caps (of 42)

Bayern Munich (39)

Largely for the crime of playing club football in Germany and not becoming tabloid cannon fodder, Hargreaves was booed by a section of supporters and once described by The Sun as having ‘the public persona of a mass murderer’. Tunes were very much changed after an excellent 2006 World Cup but the midfielder was always on the right side of that argument.

 

1) David Beckham – 55 caps (of 115)

Real Madrid (36), LA Galaxy (14), AC Milan (5)

The second footballer to play for England while with a non-European club, Beckham did not quite blaze the trail for Brits abroad, but he took it to greater lengths than anyone before him managed. He was England’s regular captain throughout his time in Spain, which included three major international tournaments, and was even skipper once against Trinidad and Tobago in 2008 during his American sojourn.

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