Players from one nation winning the men's ‘big five' leagues in a season
'The success of Scott McTominay, Billy Gilmour, Harry Kane and Eric Dier means that British players have won three of the 'big five' leagues this season. Has that happened before? And have any countries managed five out of five?' wonders Philipp Lohan.
To answer the first question, yes, it has happened before and not too long ago. Robbie Dale emailed in to highlight the 2020-21 season, when Kieran Trippier (Atlético), Ashley Young (Inter) and Phil Foden, John Stones and few others (Manchester City) also ticked three of the five boxes for British players. If we move on to nations who provided players who won all of the 'big five' leagues then we had better get busy making a list.
Advertisement
2000-01
France
Fabien Barthez and Mikaël Silvestre (Manchester United), Claude Makélélé (Real Madrid), Vincent Candela and Jonathan Zebina (Roma), Bixente Lizarazu and Willy Sagnol (Bayern Munich) and French FC Nantes players. Email from Lowri Cusack
2003-04
Brazil
Edu and Gilberto Silva (Arsenal), Ricardo Oliveira (Valencia), Dida, Cafú, Kaká and Serginho (Milan), Aílton (Werder Bremen), Claudio Caçapa, Edmilson, Juninho Pernambucano and Giovane Élber (Lyon). Email from Dirk Maas
2007-08
Argentina
Carlos Tévez (Manchester United), Gabriel Heinze, Fernando Gago, Gonzalo Higuaín and Javier Saviola (Real Madrid), Nicolás Burdisso, Walter Samuel, Javier Zanetti, Esteban Cambiasso, Santiago Solari, Hernán Crespo and Julio Cruz (Inter), Martín Demichelis and José Sosa (Bayern München), César Delgado (Lyon). Email from Dirk Maas
2007-08 (again)
Brazil
Anderson (Manchester United), Marcelo, Júlio Baptista and Robinho (Real Madrid), Júlio César, Maicon, Maxwell and César (Inter), Lúcio and Zé Roberto (Bayern München), Anderson, Cris, Juninho Pernambucano and Fred (Lyon). Email from Dirk Maas
2009-10
France
Patrick Vieira (Inter), Thierry Henry and Eric Abidal (Barcelona), Florent Malouda and Nicolas Anelka (Chelsea), Franck Ribéry (Bayern Munich), Steve Mandanda (Marseille). Email from Thomas Bickley
With so many players on a high, France must have been unbeatable at that summer's World Cup, eh? Oh.
Advertisement
2016-17
Brazil
David Luiz and Willian (Chelsea), Danilo, Marcelo and Casemiro (Real Madrid) Alex Sandro and Dani Alves (Juventus), Rafinha and Douglas Costa (Bayern Munich), Jemerson, Boschilia and Fabinho (Monaco). Email from Dirk Maas
2021-22
Spain
Dani Carvajal, Marco Asensio, Isco and others (Real Madrid), Aymeric Laporte and Rodri (Manchester City), Brahim Díaz and Samu Castillejo (Milan), Marc Roca (Bayern Munich), Sergio Ramos, Juan Bernat and Ander Herrera (PSG). Emails from Seán Smith and Boris Cule
2023-24
Brazil
Éder Militão, Vinícius Júnior and Rodrygo (Real Madrid), Ederson (Manchester City), Carlos Augusto (Inter), Arthur (Bayer Leverkusen, though he only played four times), Marquinhos and Lucas Beraldo (PSG). Emails from Seán Smith, Tim Dockery and Lloyd Jones
We also had word that Brazilian, French and German players won the 'big five' leagues in 2017-18, Brazilians and Germans in 2018-19 and Brazilians in 2019-20 but we've run out of air to take another deep dive down for details.
Late-career goalscoring centurions
'Brian Graham recently scored his 100th goal for Partick Thistle at the age of 37 having not joined the club until the age of 32. Has anyone ever reached a century after joining so late in their career?' writes Calum Stewart.
Advertisement
Let's start with two of modern football's deadliest netbusters. Cristiano Ronaldo and Robert Lewandowski joined Juventus and Barcelona respectively at the age of 33. Ronaldo scored 101 goals for Juve, Lewandowski is on the same total after hitting two against Athletic Bilbao in the last game of the season. Adam Webster points out that Ronaldo is one short of a century for Al-Nassr, the club he joined at the age of 37 – although he may have scored his last goal for the club.
A word too for another Real Madrid legend: Ferenc Puskas, who moved to Spain at 31 and scored a whopping 242 goals over the next eight seasons. 'Romário returned to Vasco da Gama at the age of 33, after leaving at 22,' adds Ben. 'He went on to score another 171 goals for them in two stints: 132 from 2000-2002 and 39 from 2005-2006.
Now to some lesser known hitmen, whose stories are in some ways more interesting. 'One answer is Gary Abbott at Aldershot Town,' writes Chris Heath. 'He joined the Shots, newly promoted to the Isthmian Premier League (then the sixth tier of English football) in the summer of 1998, making his debut three months shy of his 34th birthday. Over the next three seasons he scored 120 goals in 156 games, including 10 hat-tricks.'
If Ronaldo does leave Al-Nassr at the age of 40, he'll have the chance to surpass the feat of Aleksandar Duric. 'He joined Singapore Armed Forces FC in 2004, aged 34, and scored his 100th goal for them sometime in 2008,' writes Thanos Michail. 'He then moved to Tampines Rovers in 2010, aged 39, and reached a century of goals shortly after his 43rd birthday.'
Mind the (league title) gap
'Royale Union Saint-Gilloise have just won the title in Belgium – 90 years after their last championship in 1935. Are there any longer gaps between two national titles for any team?' asks Holger Seiffert.
Advertisement
'To beat that you'll need to travel to another multilingual European country,' writes Ben. 'In Switzerland, St Gallen were champions in 1903-04, and weren't league champions again until 96 years later, in 1999-2000. In all the seasons in between, they weren't even runners-up, their best being third in 1917-18 and in 1982-83.'
Knowledge archive
'I remember reading about a football pitch in South America which had a large tree in an awkward position near the centre of the pitch,' wrote John Malcolm in September 2007. 'Local bureaucrats refused permission to uproot said tree due to political/environmental reasons stemming from the deforestation of South American rainforests, so the local side just played there anyway! Was this true? Does the tree still stand? And are there any other examples of such environmentally friendly football pitches?'
Unfortunately we haven't been able to track down John's tree thus far, but a couple of St Albans City fans did email in to give us details of the large oak tree that once dominated the main terrace at their Clarence Park ground. Due to its age, the tree was legally protected, and couldn't be taken down as long as it was healthy.
Advertisement
'It used to get a huge cheer if any opposing player managed to hit it with a wayward strike,' recalls Fraser Mann, but supporters were less enthused when it prevented the club from getting promoted in 1992-93. According to the club's website: 'During a second spell in charge, John Mitchell took the Saints to the (Isthmian League) Premier Division runners up position in 1992-93 only to be denied promotion to the Conference at that time due to a 140-year old oak tree standing within the terrace behind one of the goals. In 1998 the diseased tree was felled.'
Can you help?
'This season, Fenerbahçe finished the season runners-up again, fourth season in a row and 26th time in the Turkish top flight (since 1959),' weeps Emre Öztürk. 'Which teams have been runners-up most times? Is my team second in that list, too?'
'Truro City will have a few long trips next season in the National League,' begins Mel Slattery. 'The distance from their stadium to Gateshead's is 457 miles according to Google Maps. Have two clubs in England ever met who are based further apart? Competitively or otherwise.'
Advertisement
'The Charlie Kelman offside goal mentioned in the last couple of weeks was the opening goal in the Leyton Orient v Stockport County playoff semi-final first leg. It was part of a (continuing) run of Stockport conceding first in their last seven games but not losing any (W4, D3). What is the longest such run of conceding first but not losing in consecutive games?' asks Ian Waterhouse.
'Édouard Mendy and Riyad Mahrez have won continental championships – for club or country – in three different confederations: the Africa Cup of Nations (Senegal and Algeria respectively), the Uefa Champions League (Chelsea/Manchester City) and now the AFC Champions League Elite (Al-Ahli). Has any other player in history achieved a similar 'triple crown'?' wonders Ben.
'At each major Wembley final this year (League Cup, FA Cup, Women's FA Cup, Championship, League One and League Two playoff finals, FA Trophy final and National League playoff final), the fans of the winning team were allocated the same (western) half of the stadium,' notes Tom Davies. 'Has this happened before?'
'PSV scored 103 goals in the 2024-25 Eredivisie,' fact-states Dirk Maas. 'Their best goal scorer was Luuk de Jong, netting 14 times. This gives a percentage of 13.59%. Has there ever been a player with a lower percentage in a team that scored 100+ goals in a professional football league season?'
Advertisement
'Has any team done a full Beautiful South during European competition?' asks Sean Boiling. 'That means playing in 'Rotterdam, or anywhere, Liverpool or Rome' in that order (ignoring the 'or')?'
• Mail us with your questions and answers
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 minutes ago
- Yahoo
What the Trump travel ban means for the 2026 World Cup and 2028 Olympic Games
GENEVA (AP) — U.S. President Donald Trump often says the 2026 World Cup and 2028 Los Angeles Olympics are among the events he is most excited about in his second term. Yet there is significant uncertainty regarding visa policies for foreign visitors planning trips to the U.S. for the two biggest events in sports. Trump's latest travel ban on citizens from 12 countries added new questions about the impact on the World Cup and the Summer Olympics, which depend on hosts opening their doors to the world. Here's a look at the potential effects of the travel ban on those events. What is the travel ban policy? When Sunday ticks over to Monday, citizens of 12 countries should be banned from entering the U.S. They are Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. Tighter restrictions will apply to visitors from seven more: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela. Trump said some countries had 'deficient' screening and vetting processes or have historically refused to take back their own citizens. How does it affect the World Cup and Olympics? Iran, a soccer power in Asia, is the only targeted country to qualify so far for the World Cup being co-hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico in one year's time. Cuba, Haiti and Sudan are in contention. Sierra Leone might stay involved through multiple playoff games. Burundi, Equatorial Guinea and Libya have very outside shots. But all should be able to send teams to the World Cup if they qualify because the new policy makes exceptions for 'any athlete or member of an athletic team, including coaches, persons performing a necessary support role, and immediate relatives, traveling for the World Cup, Olympics, or other major sporting event as determined by the secretary of state.' About 200 countries could send athletes to the Summer Games, including those targeted by the latest travel restrictions. The exceptions should apply to them as well if the ban is still in place in its current form. What about fans? The travel ban doesn't mention any exceptions for fans from the targeted countries wishing to travel to the U.S. for the World Cup or Olympics. Even before the travel ban, fans of the Iran soccer team living in that country already had issues about getting a visa for a World Cup visit. Still, national team supporters often profile differently to fans of club teams who go abroad for games in international competitions like the UEFA Champions League. For many countries, fans traveling to the World Cup — an expensive travel plan with hiked flight and hotel prices — are often from the diaspora, wealthier, and could have different passport options. A World Cup visitor is broadly higher-spending and lower-risk for host nation security planning. Visitors to an Olympics are often even higher-end clients, though tourism for a Summer Games is significantly less than at a World Cup, with fewer still from most of the 19 countries now targeted. How is the U.S. working with FIFA, Olympic officials? FIFA President Gianni Infantino has publicly built close ties since 2018 to Trump — too close according to some. He has cited the need to ensure FIFA's smooth operations at a tournament that will earn a big majority of the soccer body's expected $13 billion revenue from 2023-26. Infantino sat next to Trump at the White House task force meeting on May 6 which prominently included Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem. FIFA's top delegate on the task force is Infantino ally Carlos Cordeiro, a former Goldman Sachs partner whose two-year run as U.S. Soccer Federation president ended in controversy in 2020. Any visa and security issues FIFA faces — including at the 32-team Club World Cup that kicks off next week in Miami — can help LA Olympics organizers finesse their plans. 'It was very clear in the directive that the Olympics require special consideration and I actually want to thank the federal government for recognizing that," LA28 chairman and president Casey Wasserman said Thursday in Los Angeles. 'It's very clear that the federal government understands that that's an environment that they will be accommodating and provide for,' he said. 'We have great confidence that that will only continue. It has been the case to date and it will certainly be the case going forward through the games.' In March, at an IOC meeting in Greece, Wasserman said he had two discreet meetings with Trump and noted the State Department has a "fully staffed desk' to help prepare for short-notice visa processing in the summer of 2028 — albeit with a focus on teams rather than fans. IOC member Nicole Hoevertsz, who is chair of the Coordination Commission for LA28, expressed 'every confidence' that the U.S. government will cooperate, as it did in hosting previous Olympics. 'That is something that we will be definitely looking at and making sure that it is guaranteed as well,' she said. 'We are very confident that this is going to be accomplished. I'm sure this is going to be executed well." FIFA didn't immediately respond to a request for comment about the new Trump travel ban. What have other host nations done? The 2018 World Cup host Russia let fans enter the country with a game ticket doubling as their visa. So did Qatar four years later. Both governments, however, also performed background checks on all visitors coming to the month-long soccer tournaments. Governments have refused entry to unwelcome visitors. For the 2012 London Olympics, Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko — who is still its authoritarian leader today — was denied a visa despite also leading its national Olympic body. The IOC also suspended him from the Tokyo Olympics held in 2021. ___ AP Sports Writer Beth Harris in Los Angeles contributed to this report. ___ AP soccer: and AP Olympics at
Yahoo
5 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The spectacular end of Elon Musk and Donald Trump's bromance
During a press conference in the Oval Office last week, President Trump praised Elon Musk, his adviser and the outgoing head of the president's Department of Government Efficiency, for waging war on the federal workforce. 'Elon has worked tirelessly to lead the most sweeping and consequential government reform program in generations,' Trump said alongside Musk, who wore a black DOGE hat and 'DOGEfather' T-shirt while standing next to the president. For nearly an hour, Trump heaped effusive praise on the billionaire Tesla chief executive, SpaceX founder and owner of X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, whose stint as a special government employee had come to an end. 'Elon's really not leaving,' the president added. 'He's gonna be back and forth I think.' What a difference a week makes. Trump and Musk's unlikely bromance unraveled in spectacular fashion on Thursday, with the president telling reporters in the Oval Office that he was 'very disappointed' with Musk's criticism of his 'one big beautiful' spending bill, and Musk railing at Trump in real time on X. "I'm very disappointed in Elon," Trump said before a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. "I've helped Elon a lot." The president suggested that Musk, like many others before him, had become 'hostile' upon leaving his administration. "I'll be honest, I think he misses the place," Trump said. 'People leave my administration, and they love us, and then at some point they miss it so badly, and some of them embrace it, and some of them actually become hostile." "They leave, and they wake up in the morning, and the glamour is gone," the president added. "The whole world is different, and they become hostile. I don't know what it is." Trump also suggested that Musk was upset that the Republican-backed reconciliation bill did not include an electric vehicle mandate, which would have benefited EV manufacturers, including Tesla. 'He knew the inner workings of the bill better than anybody sitting here. He had no problem with it. All of a sudden he had a problem and he only developed the problem when he found out we were going to cut the EV mandate." "False, this bill was never shown to me even once and was passed in the dead of night so fast that almost no one in Congress could even read it!" Musk wrote on X. 'Whatever,' Musk continued. 'Keep the EV/solar incentive cuts in the bill, even though no oil & gas subsidies are touched (very unfair!!), but ditch the MOUNTAIN of DISGUSTING PORK in the bill.' 'In the entire history of civilization, there has never been legislation that [is] both big and beautiful. Everyone knows this!' Musk added. 'Either you get a big and ugly bill or a slim and beautiful bill. Slim and beautiful is the way.' Musk, who was one of Trump's most fervent and visible supporters during the 2024 campaign, wasn't done. "Without me, Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate," Musk wrote. "Such ingratitude." Trump wasn't done either. 'Elon was 'wearing thin,'' Trump wrote on Truth Social. 'I asked him to leave, I took away his EV Mandate that forced everyone to buy Electric Cars that nobody else wanted (that he knew for months I was going to do!), and he just went CRAZY!" 'The easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts,' Trump added. 'I was always surprised that Biden didn't do it!' Musk tried to get the last word in, suggesting Trump's name is in unreleased FBI files on Jeffrey Epstein, the late financier and convicted sex offender. "Time to drop the really big bomb," Musk wrote. "@realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT!" "Mark this post for the future," Musk added moments later. "The truth will come out." On Thursday night, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that 'this is an unfortunate episode from Elon, who is unhappy with the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' because it does not include the policies he wanted." She added "The president is focused on passing this historic piece of legislation and making our country great again.' The split capped a longtime partnership for the pair, with Musk stumping for Trump on the campaign trail, and the president, after installing Musk as the head of DOGE, boosting Tesla amid criticism of Musk with an unusual event at the White House. ("Trump turns the White House lawn into a Tesla showroom," NBC News proclaimed.) But in the last few months, there had been reports that Trump was privately growing tired of Musk. On May 27, three days before Musk's farewell press conference in the Oval Office, CBS aired a clip that showed him expressing disappointment that Trump's signature spending bill would undermine his DOGE work. Then on Tuesday, Musk went full blast on the spending package. "I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore," he wrote on X. "This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it." "Call your Senator, Call your Congressman," Musk wrote on Wednesday. "Bankrupting America is NOT ok! KILL the BILL." That brought us to Thursday, when Trump was asked about Musk's attacks during his Oval Office meeting with Merz. "Elon and I had a great relationship," Trump told reporters. "I don't know if we will anymore." In a phone interview with CNN on Friday morning, Trump said he was "not even thinking about" Musk and would not be speaking with him anytime soon. 'I'm not even thinking about Elon. He's got a problem. The poor guy's got a problem,' Trump said, adding: "I won't be speaking to him for a while I guess, but I wish him well.'
Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump says fresh US-China trade talks in London next week
US President Donald Trump announced Friday a new round of trade talks with China in London next week, a day after calling Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in a bid to end a bitter battle over tariffs. The talks in the British capital on Monday will mark the second round of such negotiations between the world's two biggest economies since Trump launched his trade war this year. "The meeting should go very well," said Trump in a post on his Truth Social platform. The president added that US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer would meet the Chinese team. The first talks between Washington and Beijing since Trump slapped levies on allies and adversaries alike took place in Geneva last month. While Trump had imposed a sweeping 10 percent duty on imports from most trading partners, rates on Chinese goods rocketed as both countries engaged in an escalating tariffs battle. In April, additional US tariffs on many Chinese products hit 145 percent while China hit back with countermeasures of 125 percent. Following the talks last month, both sides agreed to temporarily bring down the levels, with US tariffs cooling to 30 percent and China's levies at 10 percent. But this temporary halt is expected to expire in early August and Trump last week accused China of violating the pact, underscoring deeper differences on both sides. US officials have accused China of slow-walking export approvals of critical minerals and rare earth magnets, a key issue behind Trump's recent remarks. While Trump's long-awaited phone call with Xi this week likely paved the way for further high-level trade talks, a swift resolution to the tariffs impasse remains uncertain. dk-bys/acb