Category
page 1UEFA Euro 2000 players
Zinedine Zidane
French association football player and manager

David Beckham
Sir David Robert Joseph Beckham is an English former professional footballer, the president and co-owner of Inter Miami CF and co-owner of Salford City F.C.. Primarily a right midfielder and known for his range of passing, crossing ability and set-piece taking, Beckham is considered one of the best players of his generation and one of the greatest set-piece specialists of all time. He won 19 major trophies in his career, and is the only English player to win league titles in four different countries: England, France, Spain, and the United States.
Francesco Totti
Italian association football player

Thierry Henry
French association football player and manager (born 1977)
Iker Casillas
Spanish association football player
Steven Gerrard
English association football player and manager
Pep Guardiola
Spanish association football player and manager

Alessandro Del Piero
Italian association football player
Lothar Matthäus
German association football player, manager, and pundit (born 1961)
Raúl
Spanish association football player
Paolo Maldini
Italian association football player (born 1968)
Oliver Kahn
German association football player (born 1969)
Fabio Cannavaro
Italian association football player and manager
Michael Ballack
German association football player (born 1976)
Luís Figo
Portuguese football player

Michael Owen
Michael James Owen is an English former professional footballer who played as a striker for Liverpool, Real Madrid, Newcastle United, Manchester United, and Stoke City, as well as the England national team. Since retiring from football in 2013, he has become a racehorse breeder and owner and regularly features as a sports pundit and commentator. Regarded as one of the best strikers of his generation, in 2001, Owen was the recipient of the Ballon d'Or. In 2004, he was named by Pelé in the FIFA 100 list of the world's greatest living players.
Edwin van der Sar
Dutch association football player (born 1970)

Dennis Bergkamp
Dutch association football player (born 1969)
Didier Deschamps
French association football player and manager (born 1968)

Alan Shearer
English footballer
Lilian Thuram
French footballer (born 1972)
Paul Scholes
English association football player

Patrick Vieira
French football manager
David Trezeguet
French footballer (born 1977)

Nicolas Anelka
French football manager (born 1979)
Filippo Inzaghi
Italian footballer and manager

Ole Gunnar Solskjær
Norwegian association football manager

Jens Lehmann
German association football player (born 1969)

Gheorghe Hagi
Romanian association football player and manager
Gary Neville
English football pundit and former player
Peter Schmeichel
Danish association football player
Antonio Conte
Italian association football player and manager
Freddie Ljungberg
Swedish association football player and manager
Pavel Nedvěd
Czech association football player
Clarence Seedorf
Dutch association football player and manager (born 1976)
Marcel Desailly
French footballer (born 1968)
Fabien Barthez
French footballer (born 1971)
Dragan Stojković
Serbian association football player and manager
Alessandro Nesta
Italian association football player and manager (born 1976)
Tomáš Rosický
Czech footballer
Giovanni van Bronckhorst
Dutch association football player and manager (born 1975)

Laurent Blanc
French football manager
Bixente Lizarazu
French footballer (born 1969)

Henrik Larsson
Edward Henrik Larsson is a Swedish professional football coach and former player who played 106 times for the Swedish national team. A striker, Larsson began his career with Högaborgs BK. In 1992, he moved to Helsingborg IF where in his first campaign he helped the club win promotion to Allsvenskan after 24 seasons. He moved to Feyenoord in November 1993, staying for four years before leaving in 1997 to join Scottish Premiership club Celtic and enjoying great success there. During his time in the Dutch Eredivisie, he won two KNVB Cups with Feyenoord. He later played for Barcelona, earning the Spanish title twice and the Champions League before returning to Helsingborg. He had a loan spell at Manchester United, with whom he won the English Premier League in 2006–07, and retired in 2009.
Patrick Kluivert
Dutch football manager

Rui Costa
Portuguese footballer (born 1972)
Hakan Şükür
Turkish association football player (born 1971)
Robert Pires
French footballer (born 1973)
Edgar Davids
Dutch association football player and manager
John Arne Riise
Norwegian association football player
Frank de Boer
Dutch association football player and manager (born 1970)
Youri Djorkaeff
French footballer (born 1968)
Gareth Southgate
English professional football manager and former player (born 1970)
Dejan Stanković
Serbian association football manager and former player
Gareth Barry
English association football player
Gianluca Zambrotta
Italian association football player

Emmanuel Petit
French footballer (born 1970)
Rüştü Reçber
Turkish association football player (born 1973)
Adrian Mutu
Romanian footballer (born 1979)

Fernando Hierro
Spanish football player and manager