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Huw Davies

Ranked! The 10 best Welsh players ever

The 10 best Welsh players ever: Gareth Bale celebrates after scoring for Wales against USA at the 2022 World Cup.

Picking the best Welsh players is harder than it looks. This tiny country may have stereotypically been more into rugby than football but narrowing this list down to just 10 players was difficult.

10 isn't much… it's an entire team minus Neville Southall between the sticks, right? Our original list featured European Cup winner Joey Jones and Everton giant Kevin Ratcliffe, while other bona fide legends don't get a look-in, unfortunately. Aaron Ramsey, scorer of two FA Cup final goals and stalwart of three major tournaments for the Dragons is omitted – as are Trevor Ford (38 caps, 23 goals, British record transfer in 1950) and John Toshack (seven major titles as a player).

None of our final score deserved to be left out though, in arguably the biggest selection headache that anyone has had with a group of Welsh players since Chris Coleman…

The 10 best Welsh players ever: 10. Gary Speed

The late Gary Speed was a true Dragons legend (Image credit: Getty Images)

As the song says: there’s only one Gary Speed. Consistency and commitment earned the midfielder 85 caps and 614 top-flight appearances, the 12th-most in English history. Even at 37, Speed – a title-winner with Leeds 15 years previous – started every match of Bolton’s 2006/07 Premier League campaign. 

He was leadership personified, fighting for his team and even himself: when one Wales manager tried to transfer his captaincy to Mark Hughes, Speed simply told him, “F**k off. F**k you. I’ve worked my arse off to be captain of my country and you’re not taking the armband from me.” He was correct.

9. Terry Yorath

Terry Yorath plays against England in the early 80s (Image credit: Getty)

Yorath must’ve spent his childhood walking under ladders and kicking black cats. His first misfortune was to compete for a place in Leeds’ midfield with Billy Bremner and Johnny Giles, two of Don Revie’s favourite bastards. He also lost in finals of the European Cup (as the first Welshman to play in one), UEFA Cup and Cup Winners’ Cup, experienced tragedy at the Bradford stadium fire, then came within a crossbar’s width of coaching Wales to a World Cup.

But there’s a reason team-mates respected, even revered Yorath. A creator and a destroyer, he inspired Wales to reach the last eight of Euro 76. Terrible hair, mind.

8. Cliff Jones

(Image credit: Getty)

Winning the Double was deemed impossible before Tottenham did it in 1961. Flying down the wing was Jones, who was prolific for a player of his type in his time: 16 goals in 59 caps buttressed 159 in 378 appearances for Spurs, where he added the Cup Winners’ Cup to four domestic honours.

Jones, a World Cup quarter-finalist who drew a world-record transfer bid from Juventus, taught PE after retiring. In 2020’s lockdown he was filmed, aged 85, demonstrating a fitness routine. Who needs Joe Wicks?

7. Neville Southall

Gary Speed and Neville Southall stand for the Welsh national anthem (Image credit: David Davies/Offside via Getty Images)

In the late 1980s, Southall was probably the world’s best goalkeeper. That’s no exaggeration. His reactions were peerless, a flurry of limbs repelling shots in phenomenal displays for Wales and Everton. He lifted five major trophies, received two Ballon d’Or nominations and remains the most recent keeper to win FWA Footballer of the Year… 37 years ago.

The former binman and future campaigner was unique. One story encapsulates him well. Everton beat Manchester United 1-0 in the 1995 FA Cup Final with a masterclass from their 36-year-old goalkeeper, but while his team-mates partied, Southall drove home, gave a lift to some stranded United fans, and was in bed by 10.30pm.

6. Billy Meredith

Billy Meredith while with the Welsh national team (Image credit: Getty)

One of football’s first superstars, the rakish, toothpick-chewing Meredith starred in a film, was banned for bribing an opponent, formed the PFA’s forerunner and played from 1893 right up to 1924, but most impressively of all, he won fans at Manchester City and Manchester United. Making more than 300 league appearances for each, winning four trophies, will have that effect.

Meredith was strong, fit and agile, which many attributed to the winger’s work in the mines between the ages of 12 and 21. We wouldn’t recommend it.

5. Mark Hughes

Mark Hughes in action against Bulgaria in Cardiff (Image credit: Chris Cole/ALLSPORT)

Familiarity breeds contempt, and memories of Hughes’ playing days may have been tainted by seeing him grumpily inhabit Premier League technical areas for 15 years. But he was an extraordinary talent at Manchester United, who spent a club-record fee to bring him back after losing him to Barcelona

The PFA Young Player of the Year became a two-time PFA Player of the Year and one-time Ballon d’Or contender with 11 major honours and a delicious international highlights reel, featuring a debut winner against England and an acrobatic stunner against Spain a year later. Hughes turned the volley into an artform.

He also played twice on the same day in 1987, for Wales and Bayern Munich – commitment rarely shown by our next entrant…

4. Ryan Giggs

Ryan Giggs of Wales during the European Championship Qualifier match against Italy (Image credit: Tom Shaw /Allsport)

Most Cymru fans wouldn’t put Giggs in their all-time XI, such is the distaste for his priorities as a player. Injury-free, he nonetheless played in just 57% of all Wales games between his first cap and international retirement, then represented Manchester United for another seven years. 

But, if we’re talking greats, you can’t argue with 22 major trophies and the sixth-most top-flight appearances in English football.

3. Ian Rush

Wales goalscorer Ian Rush celebrates after Wales beat West Germany 1-0 in the 1992 European Championships qualifier at Cardiff Arms Park in 1991 (Image credit: Simon Bruty/Allsport/Getty Images)

Forget the ’90s – in the 1980s, Rush was elite. How else do you score the fourth-most top-flight goals in English post-war history?

The goals flowed in tandem with trophies, with two European Cups, five league titles and eight domestic cups jostling for room on Rush’s mantelpiece with his European Golden Boot, English Golden Boot, FWA Footballer of the Year, PFA Player of the Year and PFA Young Player of the Year awards. He finished 4th in the Ballon d’Or after netting 47 goals (no penalties) in Liverpool’s 1983/84 season. 

Inevitably he became Wales’ top scorer, at least until 2018, taking them to the brink of two major tournaments with a Euro 92 winner against Germany and eight goals in USA 94 qualifying – or rather, not qualifying. He deserved to be there.

2. John Charles

The legendary John Charles was ‘a team unto himself’ (Image credit: Getty)

How good was the Gentle Giant? Well, England legend Billy Wright was once asked to name the best centre-forward he’d faced. He said John Charles. Nat Lofthouse was asked to name the best centre-back he’d faced. He said John Charles.

As Bobby Robson put it, no other player has been world-class in two positions, but Charles – “a team unto himself”, in Jack Charlton’s words – managed it. In attack, he politely bullied defenders and had two great feet competing in a three-way Golden Boot race with his head. Wales reached the 1958 World Cup quarter-finals and could’ve gone further had Charles not been hacked to pieces by defenders.

Charles doubled the British transfer record when Juventus signed him from Leeds and he justified it with five trophies and two goalscoring awards. From 1957 to 1962, his Ballon d’Or placings read: 6th, 4th, 3rd, 7th, 8th, 8th. Decent pipes, too.

1. Gareth Bale

Gareth Bale poses during the official World Cup 2022 portrait session (Image credit: Adam Pretty - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

Leading Cymru to only their second World Cup takes Bale to No.1. Or maybe it’s his record-breaking 38 Wales goals, his five players’ awards within three years at Spurs, or five Champions League triumphs with Real Madrid. All right, four meaningful ones. ‘Just’ four.

As a tearaway tearing away down the left, an unstoppable worldie-merchant cutting in from the right, and finally an inspirational captain dominating through the middle, Bale has consistently put in match-winning performances in the biggest games, up to a World Cup play-off brace featuring his seventh international free-kick goal. He has two Champions League Final winners, including – sorry, Zinedine – the best goal ever seen in a European Cup showpiece, and won a Copa del Rey Clasico Final with a mesmerising run through Barcelona’s technical area. He’d scored virtually the same goal against Iceland six weeks earlier. 

Time and again, he delivers. What’s next?

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