Mar
30
2009

2009 Premier League Unsung Heroes XI

Written by Neil Jones

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Admit it, you know I made the team!

Rafa Benítez makes good copy for sports writers these days even when he doesn’t say much. His latest soundbyte arrived today when asked who his vote for PFA Player of the Season would be. Unsurprisingly, he went for his skipper, Steven Gerrard.

Agree or not with the Spaniard’s choice, it is certain that Gerrard will be in the chosen six nominees for the award, which is also certain to feature at least two Manchester United players, and probably another Liverpool one as well, with Chelsea also likely to feature.

The domination of the Big Four clubs at the PFA awards is no new thing — of the last eleven winners only former Tottenham winger David Ginola has managed it from outside of the fabled foursome — but it did get me thinking. How about some recognition for those who probably won’t get any? How about some appreciation for those who do a sterling job each week and get little more than a passing mention from Hansen, Shearer, Gray et al? Welcome ladies and gentlemen, to my own personal selections for a reassuringly “Big Four Free” team of the season.

Goalkeeper: Jussi Jääskeläinen (Bolton)

It is unusual for me to be blinded by one individual performance when making a selection. Especially with goalkeepers, of whom I am frighteningly critical. But Bolton’s Jussi Jääskeläinen deserves a spot in this team above any other keeper purely thanks to his display in the Trotters’ win over Hull City in November. Bolton won 1-0, thanks to Matty Taylor’s 50th minute strike, but Jääskeläinen was the main reason for their success. The Finn’s performance was perhaps the finest I have seen from a goalkeeper in the Premier League — which is no exaggeration. Staggering saves from Geovanni (three times) and Marlon King that just had to be seen to be believed. Match of the Day even afforded him individual praise. And you can’t say fairer than that.

Of course one swallow does not make a summer, and Jääskeläinen can make errors like any other keeper, but in terms of consistency, shot stopping ability and minimal-fuss goalkeeping, there are few better. Tim Howard at Everton, Robert Green at West Ham and Brad Friedel at Villa have all had solid seasons, but none have had an afternoon as inspired as Jussi had at the KC.

Right Back: Vedran Corluka (Spurs)

Tottenham’s spending spree raised more than a few eyebrows in the football world last summer. The attacking additions of David Bentley, Giovani Dos Santos, Luka Modric and Roman Pavlyuchenko, it was said, would make Spurs one of the most attractive sides in the league (football wise of course). But one that went almost un-noticed was the late-August capture of Vedran Corluka, the Croatian defender, from Manchester City.

Although the fee (around £8m) was far from modest, Corluka was hardly a marquee signing. And some hard-to-please City fans had expressed doubts over the tall, Bosnian-born full back’s pace. But since arriving at White Hart Lane he has proven Juande Ramos’ shrewdest signing (Modric aside). As competent at centre half as he is at right back (and able to fill in at left back or in central midfield), Corluka has plugged the gaps vacated regularly by Alan Hutton and Ledley King with ease. A man of the match display against Manchester United in November was a high point, but his performances have rarely dipped below the “Good” mark. Money well spent by Spurs? Surely not!

Left Back: Leighton Baines (Everton)

For the second season running, an Everton full back has found his performances catapulting him into international reckoning with England. But whilst Joleon Lescott was never a feasible option for England’s left back position, Leighton Baines has a far stronger claim to be vying with Ashley Cole.

What he lacks in stature, he more than makes up for in just about everything else. Assured in possession, accurate with both his passing and crossing (six assists and counting this season), and intelligent with his positional play and jockeying of wingers, Baines has emerged from the shadows in which he spent the bulk of last season to play his way into Fabio Capello’s latest England squad. Cole may be the standard-bearer in that position, but the 24 year-old Scouser is not far behind at all.

Centre Back: Phil Jagielka (Everton)

Alongside Baines is another player who has served his time in the Football League, and who is now establishing himself not only as a Premiership player, but a damn good one as well.

Phil Jagielka felt the pain of relegation with Sheffield United more than most. It was his barmy handball on the last day of the season which gave David Unsworth the penalty from which Wigan survived at the Blades’ expense. But how glad Everton fans must be that they did. Since his £4m switch to Goodison Park, Jagielka has shaken off his “utility man” tag to cement a place at the heart of Everton’s defence, where he regularly excels in a manner akin to a John Terry or a Jamie Carragher.

Impeccable timing is Jagielka’s forte, both in the tackle and in the air. His reading of the game has come on leaps and bounds under David Moyes’ tutelage and he has emerged as a Toffees captain in the making surely. A sticky debut against David Villa and Spain for England should not detract from what has been a truly remarkable season from the defender. Not bad considering Neil Warnock once claimed he was capable of “competing with Steven Gerrard for England”

Centre Back: Titus Bramble (Wigan)

I can hear you all now. Laughing. It’s always laughter where Titus Bramble is concerned, isn’t it? OK, so the former Ipswich and Newcastle player has done more for football comedy than Danny Baker and Nick Hancock ever managed, and at one point it was fair to say that an opposing manager’s team talk could justifiably have featured the words “target the big lad at the back”, but that was then.

Nowadays, under the very under-rated guidance of Steve Bruce, Bramble is a far more assured performer. OK, he is still capable of some shoddy clearances, and he will never be the top class defender that his physical attributes had once convinced George Burley and Sir Bobby Robson that he could be, but credit where is due please. Wigan have enjoyed a fine season, and Bramble has played a big part. Now stop laughing, please.

Right Midfield: Clint Dempsey (Fulham)

Americans and football, eh? When will they ever learn. OK, so John Harkes was decent, Brian McBride was decent, even Joe-Max Moore had his moments (well…moment). But you wouldn’t sign one, would you?

Fulham have a pretty rich history when it comes to American players. McBride was a hero in his time at the Cottage, Kasey Keller was in goal as they staved off relegation last season, whilst Eddie’s Lewis and Johnson have plied their trade in West London with varying success. But in Clint Dempsey, the Cottagers have a player who — whisper this — may just be the best of the bunch.

Skillful in possession, a workaholic with an eye for a goal and an assist (5 goals, 2 assists at time of writing), Dempsey has been a major factor in Fulham’s solid season under Roy Hodgson. No fear of reputations either, the part-time rapper notched twice against Chelsea, and has assumed greater responsibility within the side (along with Danny Murphy and Simon Davies) since the January departure of Jimmy Bullard to Hull.

Left Midfield: Ashley Young (Aston Villa)

So I guess Ashley Young has had plenty of praise over the past eighteen months. Fair do’s. But that shouldn’t cloud one’s judgment of what, let’s face it, have been some pretty stunning performances this season.

Villa have been punching above their weight this season, let’s get that straight. For all their qualities, they still only possess one right back in the squad. And he plays at left back for them. But in Young, they have that rare gem, a wide player with skill and pace who can put in a telling ball. Off either foot as well, Young was a bit one dimensional when he first arrived on Villa’s left flank, shaping to cross before cutting inside. It worked, but he has added to that. He has worked on his left foot and is as capable now of steaming down the line as he is of working a bit of space infield on his right foot, and his set pieces remain a potent threat — whether direct efforts at goal or whipped crosses for the likes of John Carew and Martin Laursen.

Maybe he needs to add more goals (5 from 28 in the league this season), but assist-wise he is almost peerless as a wide player, and at 23 he is only going to improve as well.

Centre Midfield: Wilson Palacios (Tottenham)

When your midfield holding player is Didier Zokora, you could be forgiven for splurging £14m on a replacement in the January transfer window. Hondurans have not exactly got a rich Premier League history behind them, but Wilson Palacios’ form at Wigan, and now Spurs, is set to change that.

It is no surprise that Palacios’ move to White Hart Lane came just weeks after he had orchestrated the Latics’ 1-0 win over Spurs with the kind of midfield display that resembled Michael Essien or even Patrick Vieira. Confidence in possession, bite and intelligence in the tackle, and range in the passing, Palacios formed a solid midfield trio with Lee Cattermole and Michael Brown at the JJB, and has since dovetailed neatly with Luka Modric and Jermaine Jenas at White Hart Lane, adding steel and craft to a Spurs midfield that has often lacked both since the departure of Michael Carrick in 2006. Steve Bruce and Arsene Wenger are big fans Harry Redknapp has already added his name to that list.

Centre Midfield: Stephen Ireland (Manchester City)

I remember seeing Stephen Ireland play a few seasons ago, and being suitably impressed by the deftness and ingenuity of his passing. I then remember reading crazy stories about his private life, and seeing pictures of his Pimped-Out Range Rover, and thinking “maybe it’s gone to his head”. This season, he has proved me wrong.

It couldn’t have been easy for someone like Ireland. A City youth product trying to establish himself at a club with a blank chequebook is going to find life tough, but Ireland’s performances in a more attacking midfield role this season have been one of the few constants at Eastlands. Seven goals and as many assists tell only half the tale; Ireland’s clever use of the ball, tireless running and constantly threatening forays into the box have carried City through a number of games (notably away to Hull). Mark Hughes is a huge admirer, and no doubt a few other managers will be looking towards Ireland should City aim their sights higher in the transfer market this summer. Kaka may not have signed, but City, and Ireland, may not live to regret that.

Forward: Kevin Davies (Bolton)

Kevin Davies always had some making up to do to me. After a fine debut season with Southampton in 1997/98, I had gleefully announced that Davies would go on to be one of the Premier League’s top marksmen. He had it all — pace, strength, finishing ability. But a £7m switch to Blackburn yielded little luck and even fewer goals, and his reinvention at Bolton made him into something of a warhorse, when once he promised much more.

In truth Davies has not changed too much about his game this season. He still gives defenders a torrid time aerially, he still walks with his chest puffed out further than Eric Cantona, and he is still more workmanlike than masterful. But with Kevin Nolan gone (and even before that), Davies has assumed the role of captain at the Reebok Stadium, and assumed it with relish. Eleven league goals is no mean feat for a Bolton centre forward (it got Michael Ricketts an England cap remember), and Davies contributes to most of the good things in Bolton’s game with his strength, desire and willingness to do the ugly things. He may never play for England, but Bolton fans know the value of Davies, and so do his managers.

Forward: Peter Crouch (Portsmouth)

Think back about five years. 2004 say. Imagine someone had walked up to you and said “Peter Crouch will not only play for Liverpool, win an FA Cup winners medal, cost over £25m in combined transfer fees, but also pick up plenty of England caps and play in a World Cup, as well as dating a rather tasty Scouse piece”. Once you had stopped laughing, what would you have said?

It says a lot for Crouch’s development that many Liverpool fans were disappointed to see him leave for Portsmouth in the summer, but Pompey fans were delighted to have the big man back on board, to form a classic little and large partnership with Jermain Defoe. In a season of turmoil on the south coast, Crouch has not disappointed. His 15 goals in all competitions have been priceless to Pompey, and he has become very much the main man since the departure of Defoe to Spurs in the January window. He is still derided of course, but in truth few forwards can rival his touch around the box, and his physical presence means he will always get chances. And unlike on Merseyside, he has a club and a manager who will give him those chances.

In closing…

So there you have it. You might not agree. In fact I know you won’t. But still it is hard to deny that these lads deserve a bit of praise as we approach the end of a long hard season. And if you don’t think so, then you are obviously a Big Four lover. Tut tut.




Discussion - 38 Responses

  1. shay given for goalkeeper please

  2. 30/03/2009 mike grah

    you can so tell from your articles that you basically watch liverpool every now and then and base everyhting else off match of the day and what you read

  3. 30/03/2009 kolo lamba

    there you go. the first two comments showed it. no one can even appreciate the thoughtfulness of the article. always disagreeing. always thinking their choices are the best, without even giving slight credit to the writer. yes there are different opinions, but keep it down a bit. or if you want to convey yours that bad, write a different article.

  4. I still find the ‘Abi Clancy’ part of the Crouch equation very intriguing :)

    Baines should have been given 90 mins against Slovakia.

  5. 30/03/2009 Steve Watson

    Tough to make a list like this. If people have heard of you, you’re too “sung”.

    ERWF – you’ve just named the most overrated keeper in the EPL to your unsung XI. Well done.

    I might go with Mark Schwarzer instead of Jaaskalainen – Bolton remains in the mire and Fulham have improved significantly this year.

    I’ve not seen a lot of Spurs this year, and most of that was early on, so I have issues with the Spurs choices, especially Corluka. Palacios is also hard to label as “unsung” when somebody splashed £14M on him in January. Same could be argued with Crouchy, but since most people are shocked to see how far up the goalscoring lists he is, that would seem to fit the bill quite nicely.

    Ashley Young has been getting a lot of press, Jagielka got an England call up and Stephen Ireland is a fantasy football gem.

    DAMN! Tough job to make a list like this! Good effort though.

  6. 30/03/2009 hamburg

    Agree Schwarzer might be a better choice, if not Friedel or Sorensen.

    Turner is another i admire. he commands the Hull back line well.

    Beattie too, if he doesnt make this XI, he defo make the best winter signing XI

    Hangeland is very underrated too.

    former Devil, Shawcross had a great season too for Stoke.

  7. Nice work. Although I think Ashley Young has gotten a little too much love from the media to be considered “unsung.” Nice to see “Deuce” getting some rightful praise. I thought he was one of Fulham’s best players last season (which, admittedly, wasn’t much of an accomplishment), and I was worried that Roy Hodgson was trying to run him out of town. He seems to have established himself, though, and he’s turned in some great performances this season.

    Now, if only Landon Donovan could figure out how to play outside MLS or CONCACAF…

  8. 30/03/2009 Neil Jones

    Yeah it is hard to distinguish between “sung” and “unsung”- I agree that the likes of Jagielka, Young, and before them Lescott, have had good amounts of praise. Maybe a better title would be “alternative team of the season”- the aim of which is to show the league’s quality beneath the marquee names and teams.

    WRT players:

    Friedel/Given- Both good. Given is a decent shout, performance for City on his debut v Boro was immense, and I have always been a big fan. Jaaskelainen was just a personal choice and I don’t think there is any reason to knock him.

    Sorensen/Schwarzer- I am not a huge fan of either. I find it quite strange that Fulham have such a good defensive record with Schwarzer & Paintsil in the backline. Schwarzer to me makes a lot of errors, certainly not as secure as a lot of other keepers. Sorensen I haven’t rated since Sunderland days, I think Stoke’s centre defenders are more influential than he.

    Turner- another good shout. Like most at Hull, good first half. Tailed off slightly, but he does tend to be one of their most consistent players. Goal threat too. Maybe the poor second half of the season has clouded re: Hull. The likes of Geovanni, Mendy & Zayatte all deserve mentions.

    Hangeland too. It was close between him and Bramble. Hangeland has been great since Fulham snapped him up, a lot more influential than Schwarzer in the clean sheets they pick up. In the end I chose Bramble on the bigger picture (e.g. the criticism he endures, the fact that Wigan get so little attention, his consistency over 2 seasons even). could have gone either way.

    Shawcross- coming good more of late as Stoke get some points. was tipped as a big thing when he left United (and even before), is starting to play really well. dont think he competes with Jagielka yet, and as i say Bramble to me merited a place.

    Beattie- i actually stated in another article what a great signing he was by Stoke. Pulis i am not a fan of, but he pulled one out the hat there. From the team point of view, simply not enough games to justify. A full season at his current rate would ensure a chance.

    Thanks for the comments though and keep ‘em coming.

  9. 30/03/2009 hamburg

    Warnock has been on fire lately, but before that he has been quite good at Left-Back.

    Kirkland gets a good chance if you consider how bad their back 4 can be.

    Matthew Taylor was always a player i look out for, even though ol’ Harry dumped him (for Matty being gay?) i always liked his game play. never fails to catch my eyes.

  10. 30/03/2009 qwerty

    i would put sagna at right back and denilson in the centre

  11. 30/03/2009 dominick

    Kudos to the choices, but to include the big 4, a vote for Park Ji-(Un)sung must be made. Tireless and reliable in the Man Utd midfield where Ronaldo, Carrick, and Giggs get most of the appluase.

    cheers//om

  12. 30/03/2009 Neil Jones

    @ Dominick- Very fair shout. I was tempted to include the Big Four (I apologise for using that misnomer so freely), as I felt the likes of Park, Aurelio & Song deserved a mention, but chose to go outside.

    @Hamburg- Warnock & Kirkland are two great shouts (ex Reds too, which helps!) Warnock (& maybe Andrews & Roberts) has been Blackburn’s shining light really, especially adapting to a new advanced role in midfield. Slightly surprised Capello hasnt followed up his England call up last July with another. Kirkland i have been saying for months is England’s best keeper when fit and ready, he really is superb.

    Matt Taylor is a strange one for me, I always feel he masks some average displays with some excellent goals (bit like John Arne Riise did for a few years). He is a tidy footballer but I’m not sure, just something about him that doesnt sit right with me. I think Young (even Pienaar) is a better call..

  13. 30/03/2009 andy jackson

    ashley young unsung??????? jagielka unsung?????

  14. 30/03/2009 Ask Jeeves

    QWERTY – point of this was to NOT include anyone from the “big four”. Which puts Sagna and Denilson as ineligible.

  15. Nice article Neil.

    Agree with a lot of your choices but what about Glen Johnson for the right-back slot? I’ve been really impressed with him every time I’ve seen Pompey this season and he’s done alright for England too.

  16. 31/03/2009 Arsenal

    Carson has a decent shout at Keeper spot. Though the Baggies will be relegated, I think Hull or even Sunderland might save him.

    I am a big fan of Konchesky, he must be one of the more consistant LB outside the big 4. He has keen eye for goal that is added to his game.

    Melchiot, great lad one of the underrated captains if not players outside the big 4. Holds the team well and I am sure some credit must go to him for bringing Wigan into the top half of the table.

  17. shwartzer is the reason manU lost the match. I play fantasy league and he is one of the highest rated keepers in it, mainly due to the amount of saves he makes per game. Hangelaand is also a very good defender so i can see him being lauded. Personally i really like milner and he is much more unsung then young is.

  18. Gary Cahill has been the player of the season for Bolton. He is the most underrated player in the league. He would easily find a place in the squad of any top 4 team.

  19. 31/03/2009 mike grah

    Kirkland gets a good chance if you consider how bad their back 4 can be.

    are you stupid? he has one of best defences in league at wigan. watch a game other than the odd motd and you would know . tossser

  20. 31/03/2009 mike grah

    and melchiot is pure class, but plays for wigan so media dont paise him, why? oh cos they dont have great crowds…neil, right about kirkland. motd must show good highlights on him

  21. how about scott parker, carlton cole, valon behrami, jack collinson, mathew upson, and herita illunga. not one west hame player picked and maany of them have had decent seasons. how can u pick ireland ahead of parker. he has an awful season.

  22. PARK JI-SUNG !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  23. 31/03/2009 Jake the Mackem (Sunderland till i die)

    Mark Schwarzer is an excellent keeper and is surely ahead of Jaaskelainen. Given is gonna need a good few season with city to make up for all those years at the scum at least he has seen the error of his ways.

  24. 31/03/2009 Neil Jones

    @ Mike Grah- obviously you have some sort of problem with my opinions, which is fine. Nice of you to resort to personal (and unfounded) abuse to get your point across.

    I expect an article like this to stir up debate- we all have our favourites and non-favourites after all. It is simply not viable to list every single right back outside the top four and give an opinion.

    I gave my opinion on what I perceived to be the best- Corluka. Of course you “can tell from reading my articles that i only watch MotD” and Liverpool “now and then”. far be it from me to justify my football viewing habits to someone who knows not the first thing about me (bar the six line profile I posted and the colour of my hair), but if you are interested- I dont rate Melchiot, I thought at Birmingham he was atrocious, really atrocious. He has improved somewhat at Wigan (maybe increased confidence, who knows), but he is nowhere near the level of Johnson, Corluka, Lucas Neill, even Tony Hibbert.

    As for Wigan’s defence. Figueroa has been a revelation (he was close to a shout for LB and has been a fantasy league mainstay for myself this season), but he, along with Bramble, Boyce, Melchiot and even Scharner if he drops back in there, afford a lot of chances to opposition strikers, meaning Kirkland gets plenty of chances to show off his worth. But then, thats just what Alan Hansen told me…….

  25. 31/03/2009 Neil Jones

    @ Terry

    I must confess I realised after compiling the team that West Ham deserved a few mentions. Especially Collison- who I rate as a huge talent (against Chelsea at SB he was phenomenal for such a young lad, especially playing wide right which is not his ideal position). I was hugely disappointed to see him pick up such a nasty injury- esp so close to Behrami’s own nightmare.

    Cole is the one I regret now. He deserves a place at least as much as Crouch in hindsight. I never really rated the lad (still dont) but he has been excellent for the Hammers. I saw some real signs of promise in his link up with Di Michele as well, and Zola/Clarke seem to have got him more aggressive and confident.

    Please don’t think I ignored West Ham deliberately. As i said earlier I think Lucas Neill (despite my personal disdain for the man) & Upson, even Ilunga who was excellent at Anfield despite committing at least 15 handballs(!) all merit mentions, unfortunately its an 11 man team and i was unable to mention them all in the original article.

  26. I don’t think crouch deserves to be here,you rightly agree that cole is more deserving
    Also,I think Scott Parker deserves a mention to

  27. 31/03/2009 Golden Gunner

    great artile; but instead of Jääskeläinen maybe Schwarzer, Clichy instead of Corluka, Macherano instead of Ireland. But this is a great article, its hard tofind people who aren’t mentioned that are good.

  28. 31/03/2009 antjhaydock

    I am a big bolton fan but gaz cahill doesn’t even make it into my 11. started off the season very rash 2 sending offs in 3 games(pre-season opener, stoke(didn’t) then northampton)but is now slowly getting there but is definetly not p.o.s. for bolton. That is Kevin Davis again.
    phil jagelka no. ashley young no. peter crouch NOOOOOOOO. the first two been in and out of the england squad all capellos reign. crouch has scored a couple of goals recentley now his ‘mate’has gone back to spurs. crouch has done nothing all season doesn’t worth a place in this. palacios moved to spurs for 17 million. and has been in and out of the side more times than tom huddlestone.
    no west ham player should be in it when only one player in a squad of 35-40 has played all there games so far this season.
    ji-sung park is a great shout. when he plays for united it is not cheataldo that is the most influencal its the little korean nuissance.
    everyone else though i do agree with. good job lad!

  29. 31/03/2009 antjhaydock

    schwarzer is donkey he only did well against united because they had an off day. (I died a little inside saying that!) i agree with this list mostly because most haven’t moved for stupid money or played for the top 4.

  30. 01/04/2009 hamburg

    Baines is should have a fair shout. has been doing well at the full-back and scoring some FKs too.

    Danny Murphy too. when Bullard left Fulham, i thought thats it Fulham is going down. but no, they are still safe and it is not just of their defence but they still create chances and score them. it is definately down to Murphy.

    Palacios is also another, i thought why let him leave when he is Wigan’s engine? he is indeed underrated. and Wigan let him leave at a cheap price.

  31. 01/04/2009 sold riebel

    neil – great article. well put together and of course we all have favourites, not everyone can always agree.

    i was wondering what you thought of tim cahill? understandably as you said only 11 players can be selected, was surprised at his exclusion. whilst being a liverpool fan im not the fondest of cahill in his everton guise, there’s no doubting he’s been fantastic. your thoughts?

  32. 01/04/2009 Neil Jones

    @ Sold Riebel

    Cahill is a strange one. Being a fellow Liverpool fan I understand the lack of fondness for him- he is probably the Everton player who most encapsulates the Everton mentality if you like (i.e. passionately against Liverpool), but I am a fair guy and credit where credit is due.

    But footballing wise I think he is hard to suss out. Where does he play? I don’t think he can play CM in an orthodox 4-4-2, yet I wouldn’t list him as a regular centre forward either. He really has redefined his own position, performing admirably with Everton’s striker shortage.

    Goalscoring wise he is phenomenal, in the air and on the ground he can finish clinically and he times his runs really well. But looking beyond that I have issues with what else he does. For example if he does go through a goal drought, what does he bring to the side? His passing isn’t marvellous by any means, he can tackle but he can also be rash and a bit reckless. His work rate is good but I wouldn’t call him a creative player or a disciplined defensive player. I suppose his aggression endears him to fans and managers, and taking it away would diminsh his overall contribution.

    Good player though, has had another solid season and scored plenty of important goals for Everton as usual. I would select Ireland over him though- I feel Ireland has had a better season all round (not too far off goals-wise, with more assists), and has done well to become one of City’s key men in a side with a blank chequebook

  33. Like I said above, what about Park Ji-Sung ?????????? How many more times will he keep getting overlooked ??????

  34. Like I said in the article, the top four sides were not considered for this….

  35. garry cahill is alot better than jagielka and jloyd samuel and is matty taylor actually gay?

  36. 01/04/2009 Ask Jeeves

    I like the debate going on here regarding the not mentioned players. Not an Everton fan but it is hard to dismiss Cahill. That said, I do agree with Neil, have to go with Ireland over Cahill. Not a City fan either, just have to give credit where credit is due.

    Problem with some other posts on this thread – post # 10, 22, 27, 28, 33 – apparently some people didn’t read the introduction of the article. Either that, or don’t realize that the “big four” are Liverpool, Chelsea, Arsenal, Manchester United (in no certain order, I only put Liverpool first in respect to the author).

  37. 02/04/2009 Azz0020

    Vincent Kompany has been unsung as for Young & ireland every1 has been singing their praisels about how class they are. Totally agree about Jussi gd call

  38. 23/05/2009 Joshua Boultwood-Neale

    GK: Mark Schwarzer
    DEF:RB-Tony Hibbert,CB-Ryan Shawcross,CB-Aaron Hughes,LB:Herita Ilunga.
    MID:RM:Ji-Sung Park, CDM:Danny Murphy, LM:Chris Brunt, CAM:Stephen Ireland
    RS: Kevin Davies
    LS:James Beattie

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