Sports Site| Live Scores
 
  Home
  Contact Us
  Guestbook
  Pics
  Polls
  Newsletter
  Toplist
  Chat Room Offline
  Chat Room Online
  Site stat
  Watch T.V online
  SOCCER Live scores
  Real Madrid F.C
  Manchester United F.C.
  A.C Milan F.C
  Bayren Munich F.C
  Barcelona F.C
  Chelsea F.C
  UEFA Champions League
  English Premier League(EPL)
  => History(origins)
  => Establishment
  => Structure(EPL)
  => Competition format and sponsorship
  => Qualification for European competitions
  => Sponsorship&Finances
  => Media coverage
  => Players(EPL)
  => Transfer records
  => Premiership-Football League gulf
  => Premier League members for 2007-08
  => Stadium Rank
  => Top scorers(EPL)
  => All EPL History
  Sports News
  Today in sports History
  Tennis Ranking Mens
  Tennis Ranking Womens
  Tennis Last 10 Scores Mens
  Tennis Last 10 Scores Womens
  Pakistan Football(Soccer)
  Cricket Scorecard
  Fifa World Ranking
  EPL Table
  Epl Live Scores
Players(EPL)

Players

At the inception of the Premier League in 1992–93, just eleven players named in the starting line-ups for the first round of matches were 'foreign' (players hailing from outside of the United Kingdom or Republic of Ireland).[34] By 2000-01, the number of foreign players participating in the Premiership was 36%. In the 2004-5 season the figure had increased to 45%. On 26 December 1999, Chelsea became the first Premier League side to field an entirely foreign starting line-up,[35] and on 14 February 2005 Arsenal were the first to name a completely foreign 16-man squad for a match.[36]

Despite being an English competition, no English manager has ever actually won the Premier League. Only four different managers have won the title as of 2006: two Scots (Sir Alex Ferguson, Manchester United and Kenny Dalglish, Blackburn Rovers), a Frenchman (Arsène Wenger, Arsenal) and a Portuguese (José Mourinho, Chelsea). Two English managers have achieved second place in the Premiership. They are Ron Atkinson (Aston Villa in 1993) and Kevin Keegan (Newcastle United in 1996).

Over 260 foreign players compete in the league, and 101 players from England's domestic leagues competed in the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea and Japan. At the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany, the Premier League was the most represented league with more than eighty players in the competition, including 21 of the 23 players in England's squad.

As a result of the increasingly lucrative television deals, player wages rose sharply following the formation of the Premier League. In the first Premier League season the average player wage was £75,000 per year,[37] but subsequently rose by an average 20% per year for a decade,[38] peaking in the 2003-04 season, when the annual salary of the average Premier League player was £676,000.[39]

 
 
   
Ads  
   
 
 


 
Tracker  
  You are From  
This website was created for free with Own-Free-Website.com. Would you also like to have your own website?
Sign up for free