Discipline
- Most yellow cards
- David Beckham, 17
- Most red cards
- David Beckham, 2
- Wayne Rooney, 2
- List of all England players sent off
- Alan Mullery, 5 June 1968, 0-1 vs. Yugoslavia in Florence, 1968 European Championship
- Alan Ball, 6 June 1973, 0-2 vs. Poland in Chorzow, 1974 World Cup qualifier
- Trevor Cherry, 12 June 1977, 1-1 vs. Argentina in Buenos Aires, friendly
- Ray Wilkins, 6 June 1986, 0-0 vs Morocco in Monterrey, 1986 World Cup
- David Beckham, 30 June 1998, 2-2 vs. Argentina in Saint-Etienne, 1998 World Cup
- Paul Ince, 5 September 1998, 1-2 vs. Sweden in Stockholm, 2000 European Championship qualifier
- Paul Scholes, 5 June 1999, 0-0 vs. Sweden in London, 2000 European Championship qualifier
- David Batty, 8 September 1999, 0-0 vs. Poland in Warsaw, 2000 European Championship qualifier
- Alan Smith, 16 October 2002, 2-2 vs. Macedonia in Southampton, 2004 European Championship qualifier
- David Beckham, 8 October 2005, 1-0 vs. Austria in Manchester, 2006 World Cup qualifier
- Wayne Rooney, 1 July 2006, 0-0 vs. Portugal in Gelsenkirchen, 2006 World Cup
- Robert Green, 10 October 2009, 0-1 vs. Ukraine in Dnipropetrovsk, 2010 World Cup qualifier
- Wayne Rooney, 7 October 2011, 2-2 vs. Montenegro in Podgorica, 2012 European Championship qualifier
- Steven Gerrard, 11 September 2012, 1-1 vs. Ukraine in London, 2014 World Cup qualifier
Read more about this topic: England National Football Team Records
Famous quotes containing the word discipline:
“If the factory people outside the colleges live under the discipline of narrow means, the people inside live under almost every other kind of discipline except that of narrow meansfrom the fruity austerities of learning, through the iron rations of English gentlemanhood, down to the modest disadvantages of occupying cold stone buildings without central heating and having to cross two or three quadrangles to take a bath.”
—Margaret Halsey (b. 1910)
“... the surest test of discipline is its absence.”
—Clara Barton (18211912)
“I think of discipline as the continual everyday process of helping a child learn self-discipline.”
—Fred Rogers (20th century)
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