Nolberto Solano (302), André Carrillo (28), Ysrael Zúñiga (22), Claudio Pizarro (21) and Diego Penny (1).
Kostas Tsimikas (Liverpool), Konstantinos Mavropanos (West Ham United) and George Baldock (Sheffield United).
Erik Lamela (17), Cristian Romero (4), Giovani Lo Celso (3), Mauricio Taricco (2), Juan Foyth and Alejo Véliz.
Mick Channon (21), Terry Paine (7), James Ward-Prowse (2), Kevin Keegan (2), Rickie Lambert (2), Dave Watson, Ryan Bertrand, Alan Shearer, Danny Ings and Danny Wallace.
Luis Díaz (Liverpool), Luis Sinisterra (AFC Bournemouth), Jhon Durán (Aston Villa) and Jefferson Lerma (Crystal Palace).
Peter Bonetti (1966 England), Frank Leboeuf (1998 France), André Schürrle (2014 Germany), Olivier Giroud (2018 France) and N’Golo Kanté (2018 France).
Callum Wilson (West Ham United, 22 August 2015), Joshua King (West Ham United, 11 March 2017), Callum Wilson (Huddersfield Town, 18 November 2017) and Dominic Solanke (Nottingham Forest, 23 December 2023).
On 14th May 2023 Brighton & Hove Albion beat Arsenal 3-0 at the Emirates Stadium.
Marouane Fellaini, Romelu Lukaku, Kevin Mirallas and Amadou Onana.
Chris Wilder, Paul Heckingbottom, Slaviša Jokanović, Nigel Adkins, Nigel Clough and Chris Morgan.
Pascal Gross (28), Glenn Murray (26), Neal Maupay (26), Leandro Trossard (25), Danny Welbeck (20), Alexis Mac Allister (16), Solly March (14), Lewis Dunk (14), Evan Ferguson (12) and Kaoru Mitoma (10).
Felipe Anderson (2018–21), Ilan (2009–10), Lucas Paquetá (2022–) and Nenê (2014–15).
Spain (2 Clubs, 8 Wins), Brazil (3 Clubs, 4 Wins), England (3 Clubs, 3 Wins), Italy (2 Clubs, 2 Wins) and Germany (1 Club, 2 Wins).
Rodri (Manchester City), Pedro Porro (Tottenham Hotspur), Pablo Sarabia (Wolverhampton Wanderers), Pau Torres (Aston Villa), Ansu Fati (Brighton & Hove Albion), Àlex Moreno (Aston Villa) and Sergio Gómez (Manchester City).
Nobby Stiles (1966 England), Bobby Charlton (1966 England), John Connelly (1966 England), Paul Pogba (2018 France) and Lisandro Martínez (2022 Argentina).
Ollie Watkins (Aston Villa), Angel Gomes (Lille), and Angus MacDonald (Aberdeen).
Chuba Akpom (Ajax, 3), Jarell Quansah (Liverpool), Todd Cantwell (Rangers), Marcus Edwards (Sporting CP) and Christian Burgess (Union Saint-Gilloise).
Harry Kane (Bayern Munich, 4), Jude Bellingham (Real Madrid, 4), Bukayo Saka (Arsenal, 3), Phil Foden (Manchester City, 3), Eddie Nketiah (Arsenal), Jamie Bynoe-Gittens (Borussia Dortmund), Micah Hamilton (Manchester City), Kalvin Phillips (Manchester City), Harry Maguire (Manchester United), Dan Burn (Newcastle United) and Sean Longstaff (Newcastle United).
Fernando Gomes (355), Hernâni Ferreira da Silva (183), Mário Jardel (168), António Teixeira (164), Artur de Sousa Pinga (146), Domingos Paciência (142), Antonio Araújo (137), Correia Dias (113) and Custodio Pinto (102).
Michael Zorc (572), Mats Hummels (488), Roman Weidenfeller (453), Stefan Reuter (421), Lars Ricken (407) and Marco Reus (407).
Martin Jol (Tottenham Hotspur), Ronald Koeman (Southampton, 3 Times) and Erik ten Hag (Manchester United, 3 Times).
Leeds United (1970), Middlesbrough (1997), Aston Villa (2000), Manchester United (2007 & 2018), Everton (2009), Portsmouth (2010) and Liverpool (2012).
Unai Emery, Steven Gerrard, Dean Smith, Steve Bruce, Roberto Di Matteo, Rémi Garde, Tim Sherwood, Paul Lambert, and Alex McLeish.
Moussa Diaby (Aston Villa), Odsonne Édouard (Crystal Palace), Neal Maupay (Brentford), Jean-Philippe Mateta (Crystal Palace), William Saliba (Arsenal), Jean-Ricner Bellegarde (Wolverhampton Wanderers), Lucas Digne (Aston Villa), and Malo Gusto (Chelsea).
Vic Watson (326), Geoff Hurst (252), John Dick (166), Jimmy Ruffell (166), Tony Cottee (146), Johnny Byrne (107), Pop Robson (104), Trevor Brooking (102), Malcolm Musgrove (100), and Martin Peters (100).
Eyal Berkovic (Celtic, 1999–2000), Nir Bitton (Celtic, 2013–), Gil Blumstein (Inverness CT, 2010–11), Rami Gershon (Celtic, 2013), Beram Kayal (Celtic, 2010–13), and Jan Talesnikov (Dundee United, 1999–2000).
Juninho Paulista (March 1997, Middlesbrough), Edu (February 2004, Arsenal), David Luiz (March 2011, Chelsea), and Lucas Moura (August 2018, Tottenham Hotspur).
Jérémy Doku (Manchester City), Leandro Trossard (Arsenal), Youri Tielemans (Aston Villa), and Orel Mangala (Nottingham Forest).
KB (Kjøbenhavns Boldklub, 15 Times), FC København (KB and B 1903, 13 Times), Brøndby IF (11 Times), AB (Akademisk Boldklub, 9 Times), B 93 (Boldklubben af 1893, 9 Times), and B 1903 (Boldklubben af 1903, 7 Times).
David de Gea (147), Pepe Reina (116), Vicente Guaita (42), Manuel Almunia (38), Adrián (38), Kepa (35), Robert Sánchez (30), David Raya (24), and Joel Robles (17).
Arjen Robben, Dennis Bergkamp (4 Times), Rafael van der Vaart, Robin van Persie (5 Times), Ruud van Nistelrooy (3 Times), Tim Krul, and Virgil van Dijk.