This striker became known as “The King” during the mid‑90s.
Alan Shearer
This term describes organised supporter groups involved in football‑related violence.
Firms
This nation hosted the 1966 World Cup, which they also went on to win.
England
This player scored the famous last‑minute winner that secured Manchester City the 2011/12 Premier League title.
Sergio Agüero
This stadium, nicknamed “The Theatre of Dreams,” was the largest in the Premier League throughout the entire Barclays era.
Old Trafford
Manchester United
This club’s firm, the “Headhunters,” became some of the most notorious in London during the 80s and 90s.
Chelsea
This country won the very first FIFA World Cup in 1930.
Uruguay
This midfielder is the only player between to complete over 100 passes in a match for three different Premier League clubs.
Gareth Barry
The name of Arsenals stadium before the Emirates Stadium.
Highbury
This Scottish manager led Blackburn Rovers to the Premier League title in 1994/95.
Kenny Dalglish
This major international tournament saw England supporters involved in highly publicised clashes in Marseille, leading to some of the most widely reported scenes of fan disorder in the 1990s.
The 1998 World Cup
This country became the first African team to reach a World Cup semi‑final in 2022.
Morocco
This striker became the first player in Premier League history to score in seven consecutive away matches, achieving the feat in the 2013/14 season. (Liverpool)
Daniel Sturridge
This Premier League stadium was the only one to host both Premier League matches andOlympic events.
City of Manchester Stadium (Etihad Stadium)
This midfielder scored a famous halfway‑line goal against Wimbledon in 1996.
David Beckham
This club’s fans, known for their rivalry with Millwall, are linked to the “Bushwackers’” main enemies.
West Ham United
This country became the first Asian nation to reach the World Cup semi‑finals
South Korea
This Premier League striker is the only player to score a hat‑trick in the competition for three different clubs.
Nicolas Anelka
This stadium was the smallest to host Premier League football during the 2005–2015 era, with a capacity under 12,500 — and it belonged to a club that survived multiple seasons in the top flight.
Dean Court (AFC Bournemouth)
This Chelsea midfielder scored the winning goal in the 1998 UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup Final, making him the last player ever to score the decisive goal in that competition before it was discontinued.
Gianfranco Zola
This club’s firm, known as the “Bushwackers,” became one of the most feared groups in London during the 90s.
Millwall
This player is the only goalkeeper to win the Golden Ball (best player of the tournament) at a World Cup.
Oliver Kahn (2002)
This defender is the only player in the Barclays era to score a Premier League goal, provide an assist, and save a penalty — all in the same season — despite not being a goalkeeper.
Phil Jagielka
This Premier League stadium was the only one between 2005 and 2015 to host top‑flight matches and serve as a temporary home ground for another club due to stadium redevelopment — a situation that lasted an entire season.
Upton Park (West Ham United, temporary home for Charlton Athletic in 2006/07)