The top thirteen 'One-Club Footballer' ever to play under the English Premier League – Part 2
Article Continued from part 1
The 37-year-old has adorned the English game with his magnificent talents. After cementing his grounds as a prolific player and striker, Giggs has netted the goal in every season, ever
since the new league started in 1992. He has broken many of the club’s records, including the record for making the highest appearances and also the number of trophies won by a single player.
Tony Adams
Anthony Tony Alexander Adams is a former English football player and the current manager of http://www.senore.com/Football-soccer/Azerbaijan-c2845 side, Gabala Football Club. The 44-year-old dazzling footballer was deployed as a
defender in the English Premier League club, Arsenal. He played for the Gunners’ side his entire professional career as a footballer for a good twenty-two years. Adams is considered to be one of the most loyal and trusted officials the English club has ever
come across.
An epitome of his brilliance, Adams won the league title four times with the Arsenal side in 1989, 1991, 1998 and 2002. He also triumphed over three FA Cups in 1993, 1998 and 2002, two
Football League Cups, a UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup and three FA Community Shields. In the player’s entire football playing career he managed to step onto the football field 504 times with netting a total of 32 goals.
http://www.senore.com/Football-soccer/Tony-c35440 Adams was also made a part of the English national football team in 1985 when he was added to the list of players in the under-twenty-one team. After a further three years he was
hired for the second national team and then finally in 1987 he was added to the ranks for the first team national football squad.
Adams represented his country seventy five times with a score total of seven goals for international glory.
The player announced his official retirement in his playing days in 2002 and after just a year he tried his wits in the managerial part of the game.
He started with Wycombe Wanderers in 2003 and then left them after a year. After a further four years he took up the managers’ post with Portsmouth and dealt with the team for a year before
he moved to Gabala in 2010 and has been their manager ever since.
Billy Wright
William Ambrose Billy Wright was an English professional football player, who served the British club Wolverhampton Wanderers his entire life. The legendary player was positioned as a
centre-back in the team. Born in Ironbridge, England, Billy was the first ever footballer to have gained hundred international caps. He was an integral part of the http://www.senore.com/Football-soccer/England-c749 National squad, captaining them for a record ninety times.
Billy Wright played for Wolverhampton Wanderers from 1939 to 1959 and made an amazing total of four hundred and ninety appearances with thirteen goals to his part. He triumphed over the
1949 FA Cup with http://www.senore.com/Football-soccer/Wolves-c40952, as well as the Football League first division in 1954, 1958 and 1959. Aged 70, Billy passed away on the 3rd of September, 1994 in London. Billy Wright’s brilliance will continue to be an inspiration for the young talented
footballers. His memoirs still have an everlasting impression in the English Premier League and across the globe.
Article Continued in Part 3 of The top thirteen One-Club Men ever to play under the English Premier League.
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