Sports
15 Greatest Players in WSL History [Ranked]
The Women’s Super League (WSL) was established in 2010, replacing the FA Women’s Premier League National Division, which ran from 1991-2010 as the top flight of women’s football in England, before operating as part of the league’s second division and then folding completely in 2013.
Initially, there were only eight clubs, though fast-forward to today, and there are now 12, with the likes of Manchester City, Manchester United, and Tottenham Hotspur all having entered the league over the last decade. Since it’s inception, the WSL has gone on to produce a plethora of footballing talent, from defenders who had seasons in which they conceded just single-digit goals, to goalscoring midfielders and some of the best forwards in world football.
As such, GIVEMESPORT has compiled a list of the WSL’s greatest ever players, and has ranked them in order based on the following factors:
Ranking factors
- Major trophies won
- Statistical data – appearances, goals, assists, etc.
- Legacy on the women’s game
15
Mary Earps
WSL clubs played for: Manchester United
Indeed, Mary “Queen of Stops” Earps always had an eccentric blunder or two up her sleeves, while she has done her reputation very little good since launching several unnecessary attacks towards her England manager, Sarina Wiegman, and successor, Hannah Hampton. But that shouldn’t take much away from the fact she holds the record for most clean sheets in WSL history with 56.
She transformed the perception of goalkeepers during her time with Manchester United, but can’t rank any higher for afoementioned reasons, alongside the fact she never won a league title during her career.
14
Fara Williams
WSL clubs played for: Chelsea, Charlton Athletic, Everton, Liverpool, Arsenal, Reading
While Fara Williams made 246 appearances in her two-decades-long club career, only 144 of those came in the WSL, in which she scored 42 goals, with her having been playing long before the WSL was established in place of the FA Women’s Premier League. Her move to Liverpool in 2012 was where she found league success, being part of the squad that won back-to-back WSL titles in 2013 and 2014, scoring nine goals in 35 appearances.
Making the switch to Arsenal in 2016 saw her spend a season in north London, where she won her second FA Cup, which would be the last domestic honour of her career, moving to Reading in 2017, where she scored 25 goals in 67 appearances before retiring at the age of 37.
13
Ellen White
WSL clubs played for: Chelsea, Arsenal, Birmingham City, Manchester City
Ellen White has been named England’s International Player of the Year three times, in 2011, 2018 and 2021. With the Lionesses, she remains the all-time top goalscorer, and while most of her plaudits are with her nation, that’s not to say she didn’t have the same effect on the WSL, too.
She won the competition twice with Arsenal towards the formative years of her career, and was a reliable goalscoring presence everywhere she went, scoring 61 times across 143 appearances.
12
Khadija ‘Bunny’ Shaw
WSL clubs played for: Manchester City
Despite only joining the WSL in 2021, when she joined Manchester City from French club Bordeaux, Khadija ‘Bunny’ Shaw has transcended the modern era of the WSL with her frightening goalscoring form since she burst onto the scene for the Cityzens.
Having made just 92 WSL appearances so far, the Jamaican international has already recorded 81 goals and 18 assists, earning the honour of being the WSL’s top goalscorer in the 2023/24 and 2024/25 seasons as she uses her superior physicality to overpower her opponents.
11
Jordan Nobbs
WSL clubs played for: Arsenal, Aston Villa
Jordan Nobbs played in every single season of the WSL since it’s inaugural season in 2010, when she was 18-years-old, up until she left for Newcastle United in 2025. Having swapped her childhood club Sunderland for Arsenal, she spent 12 years with the Gunners, winning 12 trophies, including three WSL titles, before making the switch to Aston Villa in the summer of 2023.
In her 17-year career, which has been unfortunately mired by a plethora of serious injuries, she has still managed to score 58 goals across her 198 league appearances, and is the highest-scoring midfielder in WSL history. Nobbs has also made 71 appearances for the Lionesses and was part of the squad that reached the 2023 World Cup final.
10
Beth England
WSL clubs played for: Doncaster, Liverpool, Chelsea, Tottenham
With 84 goals in 167 WSL matches, Beth England ranks as the competition’s second-highest goalscorer of all time. The striker was Chelsea’s top scorer in both the 2018/19 and 2019/20 campaigns, with her goals in the latter instrumental in firing the Blues to the WSL title.
She would go on to win league gold a further three times with the Blues, but recent success has been few and far between, meaning the 31-year-old’s constant stream of goals are not being supported by those around her at Tottenham as they reached the 2024 FA Cup final.
9
Steph Houghton
WSL clubs played for: Arsenal, Manchester City
Hanging up her boots for good at the end of the 2023/24 campaign, Steph Houghton completed her legacy as one of the greatest defenders in WSL history. With the WSL beginning in 2010, she was then at Arsenal, but it was her 10-year spell with Man City which began in 2014, that she is most remembered for.
Leading from the back in the heart of the City defence, Houghton wasn’t just a prolific defender, but also a free-kick specialist, and under her leadership as captain, City won their first WSL title in 2016, with the backline conceding just four goals in the entire league campaign. She finished her career having won three WSL titles, five women’s FA Cups, and seven Continental Cups.
8
Ji So-Yun
WSL clubs played for: Chelsea
Ji So-Yun was integral to Chelsea’s insurmountable success between 2014 and 2022, in which her 68 goals in 210 appearances across all competitions – 37 of which came in the WSL – helped the club to win the first 13 major trophies in the WSL era, including six league titles.
While the midfielder is known more for her creativity and brilliance on the ball, former manager Emma Hayes put it best, praising the South Korean for the uniqueness that she brought to not just the club, but women’s football overall.
She is a dream to watch and Ji at her best, I don’t think there’s been anyone better in this country. I think she has won more trophies than most but it’s the way she plays football. She’s mesmerising to watch.
The South Korean’s five PFA Team of the Year nominations still remains the most in WSL history, and the fact she did so in just nine seasons with the west London outfit really highlights both just how important she was to the team, and the legacy she left behind.
7
Beth Mead
WSL clubs played for: Sunderland, Arsenal
Having led Sunderland to the top flight of women’s English football, Mead’s debut season in the WSL in 2015 saw her fire in 12 goals in 14 games, which saw her win the Golden Boot, while also helping the newly-promoted Black Cats to finish fourth in the league. She also boasts the second-fastest hat-trick in WSL history, having hit three in just 18 minutes that season.
Earning a move to north London, where she joined one of the league’s heavy-hitters, Arsenal, she was deployed as a winger, and has since gone on to record 54 WSL goals and 50 assists in 131 appearances for The Gunners.
6
Kim Little
WSL clubs played for: Arsenal
While Kim Little first laced up for Arsenal in 2008, netting 54 times in 87 appearances between 2009-13, before going abroad for a few years, and returning to the Gunners in 2017, where she has been the heartbeat of the midfield.
In her time with Arsenal, so far, the club captain has won 15 major honours, including three WSL titles, whilst also having been named PFA Players’ Player of the Year, and named to the PFA Team of the Year three times. Having racked up 55 WSL goals, the Scottish midfielder is inside the top 10 on the WSL’s all-time goal-scorers list, with all those above her, aside from Jordan Nobbs, recognised as attackers.
Sports
Liverpool Working on ‘Fast’ Deal for Diomande, He’s Iraola’s Next Semenyo
Liverpool are closing in on appointing Andoni Iraola as their new manager with an agreement already reached between the two parties.
Liverpool chiefs will have tasked the former Bournemouth boss with turning their fortunes around following a tough season on and off the pitch at Anfield.
The Reds produced a miserable defence of their Premier League title as they finished fifth and 25 points behind champions Arsenal, although they faced the heartbreaking loss of Diogo Jota, while club-record signing Alexander Isak was impacted by injury throughout the campaign.
Meanwhile, Iraola led the Cherries to sixth and Europa League football, following an outstanding second half of the season on the south coast.
The 43-year-old arrives at Anfield as one of the best young coaches in European football, and a manager who is brilliant tactically and loves to play the high-intensity football that Reds supporters love.
While Liverpool still have a lot of good players in their ranks, there will be changes this summer, with some enforced after the departures of Mohamed Salah, Andy Robertson and Ibrahima Konate this summer.
Incomings are on their way, especially in attacking areas where there is a shortage of quality and depth after Salah’s exit.
Romano: Liverpool In Talks Over ‘Fast’ Yan Diomande Deal
Liverpool’s priority is to sign a replacement for Salah this summer, and RB Leipzig sensation Yan Diomande has emerged as one of their top targets to replace the Egyptian on the right after a breakthrough campaign for the Bundesliga outfit.
The 19-year-old scored 13 goals and registered a further 10 assists this term for Leipzig, which are impressive numbers for a teenager, and reports in Germany have suggested that the club value him at up to £130m.
As well as his goal contribution numbers, Diomande has also impressed with his pressing intensity and his work rate, which prove he is a team player despite being someone who causes nightmares for defenders.
Romano has issued the latest on Liverpool’s pursuit of Diomande, who is also a target for Paris Saint-Germain, on his YouTube channel, with the player’s representatives wanting a deal wrapped up before the World Cup begins on June 11.
He said: “Liverpool are in negotiations. They are on it, for sure. PSG are also speaking with the player’s camp. The battle is on.
“I can tell you the preference on the player side is to do the deal fast before the start of the World Cup so Diomande can go to the World Cup without thinking. They will try to accelerate the deal before the World Cup.
“It will depend on Leipzig. It is never easy to negotiate with them but Liverpool and PSG are both working on it.”
Diomande Would be Iraola’s Next Semenyo
Semenyo exploded under Iraola at the Vitality Stadium prior to his move to Manchester City, scoring 10 Premier League goals this season before his transfer in the January window.
Like Diomande, Semenyo showed he could play on both flanks during his time with Bournemouth, and he caused big issues for his opponents.
Germany-based journalist Seb Stafford-Bloor is someone who has watched a lot of Diomande during the 2025-26 campaign, and he even said himself that the Ivorian ‘reminds me of Semenyo’.
It appears as though Diomande isn’t going to come cheap this summer, but he has the attributes to thrive under Iraola at Anfield if a move does materialise.
Sports
Gilberto Silva Ranked Gerrard, Lampard and Scholes From Worst to Best
One of the biggest debates in English football, one that still rages today, is who was the better player: Paul Scholes, Steven Gerrard or Frank Lampard? The question is one that has split opinions throughout the sport, with fans, players and pundits offering their takes on the subject.
All three shone in the Premier League. Scholes represented Manchester United and was key to their success throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Gerrard was Liverpool through and through, guiding the Merseyside club to the promised land on multiple occasions throughout the 2000s and 2010s, and Lampard first impressed at West Ham United before becoming a Chelsea legend, known for his goalscoring exploits as the Blues wrestled control of the Premier League from United during the 2000s and 2010s.
All three were very different kinds of players, but they’ve been compared to one another for two decades now. Former Arsenal midfielder Gilberto Silva was the latest former player to give his opinion on the trio and he ranked them from worst to best during an appearance on the podcast, From My Left.
Gerrard vs Scholes vs Lampard: Total Career Ballon d’Or Votes Compared
The number of Ballon d’Or votes Frank Lampard, Paul Scholes and Steven Gerrard received during their careers.
Gilberto’s Ranking of Scholes, Gerrard and Lampard
During his appearance on the From My Left podcast, Gilberto was tasked with ranking Patrick Vieira with Scholes, Gerrard and Lampard. The Brazilian wasted no time ranking his former teammate in first place, before then moving onto the English trio. In first place, he picked Scholes.
The two did battle during Arsenal’s rivalry with United in the early 2000s, with the two teams competing for the Premier League title. The ex-Gunner even went on to describe Scholes as the toughest player he ever had to face off against. Speaking about the former United star, he said:
“He was very smart. Every time I had to face him in the middle, the challenge, he was very smart. These players raise your game and you have to raise your standard to face them.”
Scholes is considered the best midfielder in Premier League history, so there won’t be many who disagree with Gilberto’s decision to rank him ahead of Gerrard and Lampard. In second place, he picked the Liverpool man. Over the years, Gerrard earned a reputation for his ability to lead Liverpool through the toughest of circumstances. He is beloved by the Reds faithful and there aren’t many fans of the club who would choose anyone over him.
Lampard Chosen Last, But Certainly Not Least
Lampard came last in Gilberto’s ranking. The former Chelsea man is the greatest goalscoring midfielder in Premier League history. He became the first player in his position to score at least 10 league goals in 10 straight seasons and always stepped up to the plate when the Blues needed it most.
He was a fierce competitor and was also a dependable leader, always rising to the occasion when John Terry was unavailable, such as in the 2012 Champions League final.
Every Current 2026/27 Premier League Manager [Ranked]
From Mikel Arteta to David Moyes, all current Premier League managers have been ranked from best to worst.
Now, out of the trio, he is the best manager of England’s golden generation midfield, with his latest achievement seeing him take Coventry City from consistent Championship playoff contention to the league title, with the Sky Blues back in the Premier League.
Sports
Dean Saunders Names 5 Managers Liverpool Should Sign Before Iraola
The general consensus surrounding Liverpool’s decision to replace Arne Slot – the Reds’ latest Premier League-winning manager – with Andoni Iraola is that it is a gamble worth taking. Swapping the Dutchman’s slower, more methodical tactical style for the explosive, front-footed approach of Bournemouth’s former mastermind feels much more like a return to the Jurgen Klopp blueprint.
It was that exciting brand of football that earned the Cherries a place in next season’s Europa League, as they went unbeaten throughout the second half of the league campaign. Meanwhile, Slot was struggling to get a tune out of nearly all of his expensive new signings, including British transfer-record arrivals Florian Wirtz and Alexander Isak, as the fallen champions only just scraped into the top five.
This new era has set the wheels in motion for a fresh start under leadership that should reignite an Anfield crowd which lost most of its spark last season. However, not everyone is convinced by the bold approach. One of Liverpool’s former FA Cup winners has already spoken out, revealing the five alternative candidates he would have preferred to see appointed instead of Iraola.
Why Liverpool Have Decided to Hire Andoni Iraola Instead of Xabi Alonso
A journalist claims Liverpool didn’t miss out on Xabi Alonso.
Why Former Liverpool Ace is Against Andoni Iraola’s Appointment
Dean Saunders, who played for Liverpool in the early ’90s and won an FA Cup for his efforts, is not so sure the Spaniard is the right choice, doubting his ability to step up to the pressurised situation of managing an elite club. “Only certain people can manage Liverpool,” Saunders told talkSPORT.
“If I’m the recruitment team at Liverpool and I’ve sacked Slot, they would have thought that this bloke don’t know how to win games every week. For Liverpool it’s a disaster if you draw. At a top club the rules are different. You’ve got to win every single game and you’ve got to know how to do it.”
He added: “You think of people who know how to win football matches and know how to take the game to the opposition. They know how to break parking the bus down every week, they know how to do it.”
Indeed, the 61-year-old, who also had stints at the likes of Aston Villa, Derby County, and Brighton & Hove Albion, has a point. Iraola has never won a major trophy, never managed a club whose ambitions depend on the ultimate currency of success, while you would have to look a fair way back before seeing the last time a manager from outside of the top six joined one and was a hit.
The Five Managers Saunders Would Have Turned To Instead
Needless to say, Saunders’ call for the Reds to try tie Pep Guardiola down to a contract just weeks after leaving his beloved Manchester City is one hell of a sensational call. But the point he was making with his list of alternatives is that he believes Liverpool should have looked towards the tried, tested, and successful head coaches first.
“Liverpool can pay the manager whatever they want. I would think, right we’re going to sack Slot who can we get?” he continued. “Jurgen Klopp, can we get Jurgen Klopp back?
“What about Pep Guardiola? Can we get Pep Guardiola? Honestly! If we get any of them two, we’re going to win games and leagues. Can’t get them. What about [Luis] Enrique? No don’t want to leave PSG. What about Mourinho? Proven winner.
“I would go through the list. [Carlo] Ancelotti, would he leave Brazil at the end of the World Cup and come and manage us? I would go through that list, before I start going into [Xabi] Alonso, [Steven] Gerrard, Iraola, young managers. I would start with the people who know how to win football matches.”
Steven Gerrard Makes Feelings Clear About Slot and Iraola After Liverpool Sack Decision
Former Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard has given his thoughts on Arne Slot’s exit from Anfield.
The Athletic report that Iraola has verbally agreed a deal to become Liverpool manager and is set to sign a two-year contract at Anfield. It will undoubtedly be a giant step for the 43-year-old, who has a glowing reputation, but has a managerial history of AEK Larnaca, Mirandes and Rayo Vallecano before his three-year stint with Bournemouth.
While silverware will be expected at Anfield, though, it won’t be number one priority next season. The Spaniard’s high-octane style of football should keep his new supporters interested for a while yet anyway, and the red half of Merseyside usually takes a lot of hits before changing their mind on their manager.
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