The Guardian (USA)

The 25th anniversar­y of the last all-English Premier League XI

- Michael Butler FULL ENGLISH

It’s a decent quiz question. What is the significan­ce of this band of players? Michael Oakes, Steve Watson, Riccardo Scimeca, Gareth Southgate, Alan Wright, Paul Merson, Ian Taylor, Simon Grayson, Lee Hendrie, Julian Joachim and Dion Dublin. Don’t read on for the answer … yet. Go on, have a guess. Some of you will know that these lot played for Aston Villa in the 1990s, others will spot that this is an entirely English XI. The brightest readers on the Football Daily mailing list might guess that this was the last time an all-English XI was put out in the Premier League. They would be right, and today marks the 25th anniversar­y of that match. But rather than being something to celebrate, some sort of post-Brexit ‘thisused-to-be-a-country’ love letter to the glories of yesteryear, it should be noted that Villa were absolutely hopeless on 27 February 1999, battered 4-1 at home to Coventry, who boasted such luminaries as John Aloisi (Australia, two goals that day), future Villa legend George Boateng (Netherland­s, two goals that day), Magnus Hedman (Sweden), Roland Nilsson (Sweden) and Gary McAllister (Scotland).

The Premier League had already long been better for the introducti­on of foreign players, but John Gregory, Villa’s English managerial maverick, apparently hadn’t got the memo. Even Villa’s substitute­s that day – Mark Draper, Gareth Barry and Stan Collymore – were all English. Not to say that this was a bad football team: Villa would lose the next three matches before rallying to finish sixth that season, above Gérard Houllier’s Liverpool side. Merson, Collymore, Southgate and Hendrie were all England internatio­nals and a young Barry, controvers­ially signed from Brighton a couple of years before, went on to be the Premier League’s all-time record appearance holder. Per Opta, there have been 52 all-English starting XIs named in Premier League history – 19 of those coming from Gregory’s Aston Villa side between October 1998 and February 1999, but Villa’s 4-1 defeat 25 years ago was the most recent.

There have been a few teams that have since come close to taking the title. Steve McClaren’s starting Middlesbro­ugh XI on 7 May 2006 contained 11 players with an average age of 20 years and 181 days – the youngest starting line-up in Premier League history. Fifteen of the 16 players in their squad were born within 30 miles of the River

side Stadium, but James Morrison was capped by Scotland two years later in May 2008. And of course Burnley, under Sean Dyche, fielded 10 starting English players alongside Czech striker Matej Vydra on four separate occasions between June 2020 and February 2021.

And so 27 February 1999 remains in the history books. Later that year, on Boxing Day, Chelsea would field the first foreign XI in the Premier League, away at Southampto­n, to much bristling on the terraces and in the media. Even Big Website joked that “Chelsea will soon be accepting euros at the club shop” and that skipper Dennis Wise, absent on the day, might change his name to “Dennis Raisonnabl­e”. Mercifully these days, we can (mostly) get on with just enjoying the brilliant football in front of us, without worrying about that sort of thing. But for anyone that is upset that there aren’t so many Alans, Gareths, Ians, or Lees playing in the Premier League any more, please take heart that the best current player in the division is still just a bloke called Kevin.

LIVE ON BIG WEBSITE

Join John Brewin now for MBM coverage of the Lionesses 3-1 Italy in their internatio­nal friendly, while Rob Smyth will be in situ for FA Cup clockwatch coverage of all the evening’s fifth-round action from 7.30pm.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“How can you not savour that at the end? I thought Coventry’s fans were magnificen­t. I don’t think they were just supporting Coventry but also Maidstone, deep down. Nobody can take this moment away from us. We have created so many beautiful moments and it is not just for our community but globally. We have inspired so many people all around the world with how we’ve gone about it. For me, football is the winner, because football brings communitie­s together and inspires so many people around the world” – George Elokobi hails his players and supporters after their FA Cup adventure came to an end with a 5-0 shellackin­g by the Championsh­ip side.

FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS

Send letters to the.boss@theguardia­n.com. Today’s winner of our letter o’ the day is … John Myles, who lands a copy of Pat Nevin: football and how to survive it, published by Octopus Books.

This is an extract from our daily football email … Football Daily. To get the full version,just visit this page and follow the instructio­ns.

 ?? ?? George Boateng sticking it to the last Premier League all-English XI. Photograph: Colorsport/Shuttersto­ck
George Boateng sticking it to the last Premier League all-English XI. Photograph: Colorsport/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? Riccardo Scimeca there. Photograph: Paul Popper/Popperfoto/Getty Images ??
Riccardo Scimeca there. Photograph: Paul Popper/Popperfoto/Getty Images

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