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Soccer Aid
English annual charity football event
English annual charity football event
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| image | Soccer Aid logo (2018).png |
| genre | Charity event |
| creator | Robbie Williams |
| Jonathan Wilkes | |
| presenter | Ant & Dec (2006–08) |
| Dermot O'Leary (2010–present) | |
| Kirsty Gallacher (2010–2020) | |
| Alex Scott (2021–present) | |
| Backstage: | |
| Cat Deeley (2012–2014) | |
| Regular Pundit: | |
| Maya Jama (2020–2023) | |
| Extra Time: | |
| Sara Cox (2006) | |
| Dave Berry (2010–2012) | |
| Jermaine Jenas (2023) | |
| Joelah Noble (2023) | |
| Alex Scott & Dermot O'Leary (2025) | |
| starring | Guest Panellists |
| Vicky McClure | |
| Jason Manford | |
| Jermaine Jenas | |
| num_series | 13 editions |
| num_episodes | 16 |
| country | England |
| language | English |
| runtime | 210–220 minutes (inc. adverts) |
| company | Initial |
| network | ITV |
| Virgin Media Sport | |
| first_aired | |
| last_aired | present |
Jonathan Wilkes Dermot O'Leary (2010–present) Kirsty Gallacher (2010–2020) Alex Scott (2021–present) Backstage: Cat Deeley (2012–2014) Regular Pundit: Maya Jama (2020–2023) Extra Time: Sara Cox (2006) Dave Berry (2010–2012) Jermaine Jenas (2023) Joelah Noble (2023) Alex Scott & Dermot O'Leary (2025) Vicky McClure Jason Manford Jermaine Jenas Virgin Media Sport () ()
Soccer Aid is an English annual charity event that has raised over £121 million in aid of UNICEF UK, through ticket sales and donations from the public. The televised event is an exhibition-style football match between two teams, England and the Soccer Aid World XI (formerly Rest of the World (ROW) until 2018), composed of celebrities and former professional players representing their countries. It is the only mixed-sex match officially sanctioned by The Football Association.
Event details
Soccer Aid was initiated in 2006 by Robbie Williams and Jonathan Wilkes. It initially took place every two years, but since the 2018 edition it is now held annually. The television broadcast is produced by Initial and distributed by Endemol Shine Sport, a Dutch company that distributes Dutch Eredivisie coverage. Television coverage began on ITV on 22 May 2006 in a show presented by Ant & Dec. Dermot O'Leary took over as main presenter in 2010.
The ROW/World XI team narrowly leads the head-to-head, with eight wins to the England team's six.
On 16 June 2019, the fixture was the first to include female players as part of the squads. In 2020, the match was played behind closed doors due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
| Edition | Year | Winners | Score | Runners–up | Venue | Attendance | England | England (2) | Rest of the World | England (3) | Rest of the World (2) | England (4) | England (5) | World XI (3) | World XI (4) | World XI (5) | World XI (6) | World XI (7) | England (6) | World XI (8) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2006 | 2–1 | Rest of the World | Old Trafford, Manchester | 71,960 | |||||||||||||||
| 2 | 2008 | 4–3 | Rest of the World | Wembley Stadium, London | 45,000 | |||||||||||||||
| 3 | 2010 | 2–2 | ||||||||||||||||||
| (7–6 p) | England | Old Trafford, Manchester | 65,493 | |||||||||||||||||
| 4 | 2012 | 3–1 | Rest of the World | 67,346 | ||||||||||||||||
| 5 | 2014 | 4–2 | England | 65,574 | ||||||||||||||||
| 6 | 2016 | 3–2 | Rest of the World | 70,000 | ||||||||||||||||
| 7 | 2018 | 3–3 | ||||||||||||||||||
| (4–3 p) | World XI | 71,965 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 8 | 2019 | 2–2 | ||||||||||||||||||
| (3–1 p) | England | Stamford Bridge, London | 39,836 | |||||||||||||||||
| 9 | 2020 | 1–1 | ||||||||||||||||||
| (4–3 p) | England | Old Trafford, Manchester | 0 | |||||||||||||||||
| 10 | 2021 | 3–0 | England | Etihad Stadium, Manchester | 51,674 | |||||||||||||||
| 11 | 2022 | 2–2 | ||||||||||||||||||
| (4–1 p) | England | London Stadium, London | 54,410 | |||||||||||||||||
| 12 | 2023 | 4–2 | England | Old Trafford, Manchester | 74,000 | |||||||||||||||
| 13 | 2024 | 6–3 | World XI | Stamford Bridge, London | 40,000 | |||||||||||||||
| 14 | 2025 | 5–4 | England | Old Trafford, Manchester | 74,000 |
Soccer Aid 2006
Soccer Aid 2006 was held between 22–27 May 2006, and broadcast in the UK on ITV.
Event schedule
- 22 May 2006 – Start of the television coverage, presented by Ant and Dec. Rest of the World defeats England in a penalty shoot-out
- 23 May 2006 – Practice match: England 1–0 England Legends (Craven Cottage, London)
- 24 May 2006 – Practice match: Rest of the World 3–7 Scotland Legends (Craven Cottage, London)
- 25 May 2006 – Rest of the World defeats England in a Football Quiz
- 26 May 2006 – Coaches name starting line-ups for the match
- 27 May 2006 – Soccer Aid Match: England 2–1 Rest of the World (Old Trafford, Manchester), attendance 71,960 The practice matches were played over 60 minutes, with the Soccer Aid match played over 90 minutes.
The competition was organised on behalf of UNICEF UK with profits from the matches, along with donations and sponsorship, donated to UNICEF programs in Africa, Asia and the Americas.
England beat the Rest of the World 2–1. Goals from Les Ferdinand and Jonathan Wilkes put England into a two-goal lead but a handball inside the area from David Gray resulted in a penalty, converted by Diego Maradona. Wilkes won the Man of the Match award.
England squad
The England squad was managed by former England national football team manager Terry Venables, assisted by David Geddis and Ted Buxton. The original squad comprised 16 players, with Bryan Robson added later. A handful of the players, notably Angus Deayton, had previous celebrity international experience from the previous month's England v Germany: The Legends match in Reading, which Germany won 4–2. The England squad went into the match with no major injury worries. Their victory over a squad of ex-England internationals from the 1960s to 1990s on Tuesday morning was tempered with defeats to the Rest of the World in a penalty shootout and football quiz.
Celebrities
- Robbie Williams (captain)
- David Gray
- Jamie Theakston
- Bradley Walsh
- Jonathan Wilkes
- Ben Shephard
- Ronnie O'Sullivan
- Damian Lewis
- Angus Deayton
- Dean Lennox Kelly
Legends
- David Seaman
- Tony Adams
- Paul Gascoigne
- Jamie Redknapp
- Les Ferdinand
- John Barnes
- Bryan Robson
- Graeme Le Saux
Coaching Staff
- Manager: Terry Venables
- Assistant manager: David Geddis
- Coach: Ted Buxton
Rest of the World squad
The Rest of the World squad was managed by Ruud Gullit, with Gus Poyet as his assistant. Captain Gordon Ramsay injured his leg in the early training sessions and was considered doubtful for the match. The original squad of 16 players, which later saw 2 changes, was supplemented by the addition of Diego Maradona during the build-up to the competition. Lothar Matthäus had appeared in the England v Germany: The Legends match the previous month.
The Rest of the World squad was wracked by injuries and withdrawals, and suffered from a lack of players. Desailly, Matthäus, Schmeichel and Ginola all arrived with only 2 or 3 days to spare before the match; Ginola arrived during half time of their warm-up defeat to the Scotland Legends on Wednesday afternoon, and Diego Maradona only joined the squad on the day before the match.
Also, Craig Doyle and Brian McFadden went into the match carrying knocks, which led to management members Ruud Gullit and Gus Poyet coming on as substitutes on Wednesday and in the match itself.
Celebrities
- Gordon Ramsay (captain)
- David Campese
- Patrick Kielty
- Eddie Irvine (withdrew and was replaced by Gareth Thomas)
- Gareth Thomas (replacement for Eddie Irvine)
- Ben Johnson
- Sergei Fedorov
- Brian McFadden
- Alastair Campbell
- Craig Doyle
- Alessandro Nivola
- Michael Greco
Legends
- Gianfranco Zola
- Marcel Desailly
- David Ginola
- Dunga
- Lothar Matthäus
- Peter Schmeichel
- Diego Maradona
Coaching Staff
- Player/Manager: Ruud Gullit
- Player/Assistant Manager: Gus Poyet
Other notable participants
The match was refereed by Pierluigi Collina, the Italian referee considered by many fans as the best referee of all time.
The match
Wilkes
| Terry Venables |
|---|
| Ruud Gullit |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2008
Paolo Di Canio (2 goals)
Soccer Aid 2008 was played on 7 September 2008. It was broadcast in the United Kingdom on ITV and presented by Ant & Dec. Before kick-off Jonathan Ansell sang the footballing anthem "Nessun Dorma", whilst the players were introduced to Sir Geoff Hurst.
The referee at the start of the match was Pierluigi Collina, who also refereed the previous match in 2006 and is regarded as the best referee of all time. However, after Collina was injured in the first half he was replaced by Scottish referee Hugh Dallas. The process of two professional referees overseeing one half of the match each has since been maintained in subsequent series.
England squad
The England squad was coached by Harry Redknapp, with Bryan Robson as his assistant manager.
Celebrities
- Ben Shephard
- Jamie Theakston
- Kyran Bracken
- Jonathan Wilkes
- Gareth Gates
- Tom Felton
- Danny Jones
- Craig David
- Chris Fountain
- Angus Deayton
- Hugo Speer
Legends
- Alan Shearer
- Jamie Redknapp
- Teddy Sheringham
- David Seaman
- Graeme Le Saux
- Des Walker
Rest of the World squad
The Rest of the World squad was coached by Kenny Dalglish, with Ian Rush as player-assistant manager.
Celebrities
- Gordon Ramsay
- Brian Lara
- Nicky Byrne
- Kenny Logan
- Patrick Kielty
- Alastair Campbell
- Gethin Jones
- Rodrigo Santoro
- Santiago Cabrera
- Gilles Marini
- Brian McFadden
- Jesse Metcalfe (withdrawn) Legends
- Franco Baresi
- Jaap Stam
- Paolo Di Canio
- Romário
- Luís Figo
- Cláudio Taffarel (replacement for Peter Schmeichel)
- Ian Rush
- Peter Schmeichel (withdrew and was replaced by Cláudio Taffarel)
The match
Shearer Wilkes Marini
| Harry Redknapp |
|---|
| Kenny Dalglish |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2010
Soccer Aid 2010 was played on 6 June 2010. It was broadcast in the United Kingdom on ITV and presented by Dermot O'Leary.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Robbie Williams (captain)
- Paddy McGuinness
- Bradley Walsh
- Jamie Theakston
- Ricky Hatton
- Damian Lewis
- Olly Murs
- Jonathan Wilkes
- Dominic Cooper
- Ralf Little
- Rupert Penry-Jones (injured)
- Danny Cipriani (injured)
- Ben Shephard
;Legends
- David Seaman
- Alan Shearer
- Teddy Sheringham
- Jamie Redknapp
- Martin Keown
- Nicky Butt
- Manager: Harry Redknapp
- Assistant manager: James Corden
- Coach: Bryan Robson
Rest of the World squad
;Celebrities
- Michael Sheen (captain)
- James Kyson
- Gordon Ramsay
- Brian Lara
- Patrick Kielty
- Shane Filan
- Nicky Byrne
- Mike Myers
- Joe Calzaghe
- Gethin Jones
- Woody Harrelson
- Ronan Keating (withdrawn)
- Simon Baker
;Legends
- Jens Lehmann
- Henrik Larsson
- Zinedine Zidane
- Ryan Giggs
- Luís Figo
- Sami Hyypiä (replacement for Paolo Maldini)
- Paolo Maldini (withdrew and was replaced by Sami Hyypiä)
- Manager: Kenny Dalglish
- Coaches: Ian Rush and Eric Harrison
The match
Sheringham Hyypiä Little McGuinness Shephard Williams Lewis Murs Hatton Walsh Cooper Theakston Byrne Filan Ramsay Jones Calzaghe Sheen Kielty Myers Baker Harrelson }}
| Harry Redknapp |
|---|
| Kenny Dalglish |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2012
Soccer Aid 2012 was played on 27 May 2012, as something of a precursor to UEFA Euro 2012 and the 2012 Summer Olympics. It was broadcast in the United Kingdom on ITV and presented by Dermot O'Leary. Cat Deeley presented the backstage build up show before the main event.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Robbie Williams
- Paddy McGuinness
- Marvin Humes
- Jamie Theakston
- Aston Merrygold
- John Bishop
- Olly Murs
- Jonathan Wilkes (Captain)
- Jason Isaacs
- Mark Owen
;Legends
- David Seaman
- Des Walker
- Teddy Sheringham
- Kevin Phillips*
- Martin Keown
- Graeme Le Saux
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Sam Allardyce
- Assistant manager: Peter Reid
- Coach: Bradley Walsh
Rest of the World squad
;Celebrities
- Michael Sheen (captain)
- Will Ferrell
- Gordon Ramsay
- Gerard Butler
- Patrick Kielty
- James McAvoy
- Serge Pizzorno
- Mike Myers
- Joe Calzaghe
- Edward Norton
- Woody Harrelson
;Legends
- Edwin van der Sar
- Jaap Stam
- Clarence Seedorf
- Roy Keane
- Hernán Crespo
- Freddie Ljungberg
- Ruud van Nistelrooy (withdrawn) ;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Kenny Dalglish
- Assistant manager: Ian Rush
- Coach: Eric Harrison
The match
Wilkes Phillips
| Sam Allardyce |
|---|
| Kenny Dalglish |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2014
The 2014 match was played at Old Trafford on 8 June 2014.
The main match was hosted by Dermot O'Leary with Kirsty Gallacher, and Cat Deeley presented the backstage build-up show before the main event. Caroline Flack presented from the BT Tower in London. Match commentators were Sam Matterface and Graham Taylor, and Sol Campbell was a studio guest.
By full-time, the total raised for UNICEF was £4,233,019.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Danny Jones
- Stephen Moyer
- Jack Whitehall
- Mark Owen
- Olly Murs
- Paddy McGuinness
- Jonathan Wilkes (captain)
- Jamie Theakston
- Ben Shephard
- John Bishop
- Marvin Humes
- Dominic Cooper
- Matt Smith (withdrawn injured)
;Legends
- Jamie Redknapp
- Jamie Carragher
- Paul Ince (withdrawn)
- Des Walker
- David Seaman
- Teddy Sheringham (withdrawn injured)
- Matt Le Tissier
- Kevin Phillips (replacement for Sheringham)
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Sam Allardyce
- Assistant manager: Robbie Williams (injured)
- Coach: Peter Reid
- Coach: Bradley Walsh
Rest of the World squad
;Celebrities
- Michael Sheen (captain)
- James McAvoy
- Gordon Ramsay
- Kevin Bridges
- Nicky Byrne
- Patrick Kielty
- Adam Richman
- Jeremy Renner
- Santiago Cabrera
- Sam Worthington
- Mark Salling
- Martin Compston ;Legends
- Edwin van der Sar
- Jaap Stam
- Edgar Davids
- Alessandro Del Piero
- Clarence Seedorf
- Andriy Shevchenko
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: José Mourinho
- Assistant manager: Rui Faria
- Coach: José Morais
- Coach: Vic Bettinelli
The match
Phillips Byrne
| Sam Allardyce |
|---|
| José Mourinho |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2016
The 2016 match was played at Old Trafford on Sunday, 5 June. The main match was hosted by Dermot O'Leary and Kirsty Gallacher, with commentary from Clive Tyldesley and Chris Kamara.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Louis Tomlinson
- Olly Murs
- Paddy McGuinness
- Damian Lewis
- Ben Shephard
- Jonathan Wilkes (Captain)
- Jack Whitehall
- Jamie Theakston (Goalkeeper)
- John Bishop
- Mark Wright
- Marvin Humes
- Danny Jones (Withdrawn due to injury)
;Legends
- Jamie Carragher
- Robbie Fowler
- Phil Neville
- Sol Campbell
- Jermain Defoe
- Danny Murphy
- Kieron Dyer
- David Seaman (Goalkeeper)
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Sam Allardyce and José Mourinho
- Assistant manager: Robbie Williams (Player-assistant manager)
- Coach: Bradley Walsh
Rest of the World squad
;Celebrities
- Gordon Ramsay (Withdrawn due to injury)
- Nicky Byrne
- Niall Horan
- Serge Pizzorno
- AP McCoy
- Michael Sheen (Captain)
- Matthew Morrison
- Shayne Ward
- Iwan Rheon
- Sean Fletcher
- Thom Evans
- Rickie Haywood Williams
- Patrick Kielty (Goalkeeper)
- Gareth Thomas (Replacement for Gordon Ramsay)
;Legends
- Ronaldinho
- Cafu
- Jaap Stam
- Samuel Eto'o (withdrawn due to injury)
- Fabio Cannavaro
- Dimitar Berbatov
- Edgar Davids
- Dida (Goalkeeper)
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Claudio Ranieri
- Assistant Manager: Niall Horan (Player-assistant manager)
The match
Defoe
| Sam Allardyce |
|---|
| José Mourinho |
| Claudio Ranieri |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2018
The 2018 match was played at Old Trafford on Sunday 10 June. The main match was hosted by Dermot O'Leary and Kirsty Gallacher, with commentary from Clive Tyldesley and Robbie Savage.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Olly Murs (Captain)
- Mo Farah
- Joe Wicks
- Mark Wright
- Paddy McGuinness
- Damian Lewis
- Myles Stephenson
- David Harewood
- Andrew Flintoff
- Lee Mack
- Blake Harrison
- Jack O'Connell
- Jeremy Lynch
- Robbie Williams (withdrawn due to injury)
- Billy Wingrove (withdrawn due to injury)
- Ben Shephard (withdrawn due to injury) ;Legends
- David Seaman
- Wes Brown
- Phil Neville
- Jamie Redknapp
- Danny Murphy
- Michael Owen
- Darren Bent
- Darius Vassell
- Robbie Fowler (withdrawn due to injury) ;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Sam Allardyce
- Assistant Manager: Bradley Walsh
- Coach: Robbie Williams
- Coach: John Bishop
- Coach: Ben Shephard
Soccer Aid World XI squad
;Celebrities
- Usain Bolt (Captain)
- Gordon Ramsay
- Brendan Cole
- Kevin Pietersen
- Dan Carter
- Ashley Fongho
- Martin Compston
- Ioan Gruffudd
- Nicky Byrne
- Danny O'Carroll
- Hayden Christensen
;Legends
- Edwin van der Sar
- Jaap Stam
- Clarence Seedorf
- Yaya Touré
- Robert Pires
- Juan Sebastián Verón
- Claude Makélélé
- Patrick Kluivert
- Eric Cantona
- Robbie Keane ;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Harry Redknapp and Eric Cantona
- Coach: Michael Sheen
The match
Lynch Owen Verón Seedorf Wicks Wright McGuinness Mack Harrison Fongho Pietersen Byrne Cole Christensen }}
| Sam Allardyce |
|---|
| Harry Redknapp |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2019
The 2019 match was played at Stamford Bridge. The main match was hosted by Dermot O'Leary and Kirsty Gallacher, with commentary from Clive Tyldesley and Graeme Le Saux. The game was opened by poet Hussain Manawer with his poem Game of Hearts. The 2019 edition was the first to feature female players. As in 2018, the referee was Mark Clattenburg.
At half-time British singer and actress Rita Ora performed new song "Ritual" with British DJ Jonas Blue and Dutch DJ Tiësto, the first time a musician has performed at Soccer Aid. American actor and filmmaker Tom Hanks kicked-off this year's Soccer Aid. Alan Sexton played in the England team as the first and only non-celebrity or legend player at Soccer Aid.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Mo Farah (Captain)
- Jeremy Lynch
- Mark Wright
- Joe Wicks
- Ben Shephard
- David Harewood
- Marvin Humes
- Danny Jones
- Ant Middleton
- Lee Mack
- Sam Claflin
- Alan Sexton ;Legends
- David Seaman
- Jamie Carragher
- Glen Johnson
- John Terry
- Jamie Redknapp
- Joe Cole
- Katie Chapman
- Michael Owen
- Rachel Yankey
- Casey Stoney (withdrawn due to injury) ;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Sam Allardyce
- Assistant Manager: Susanna Reid
- Coach: Bradley Walsh
Soccer Aid World XI squad
;Celebrities
- Usain Bolt (Captain)
- Billy Wingrove
- Kem Cetinay
- Niall Horan
- Martin Compston
- Danny O'Carroll
- Jack Savoretti
- Roman Kemp
- Locksmith
- Nicky Byrne
- James McAvoy ;Legends
- Júlio César
- Ricardo Carvalho
- Roberto Carlos
- Michael Essien
- Robert Pires
- Rosana
- Francielle
- Didier Drogba
- Robbie Keane
- Eric Cantona ;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Harry Redknapp
- Assistant Manager: Piers Morgan
The match
Cetinay Wicks Wright Mack Locksmith Cetinay
| Sam Allardyce |
|---|
| Harry Redknapp |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2020
The 2020 match was scheduled to be played at Old Trafford on 6 June 2020. With the outbreak of COVID-19, the match was postponed with a rescheduled date of 6 September 2020. This Soccer Aid 2020 match was played behind closed doors.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Olly Murs (captain)
- Joe Wicks
- Joel Dommett
- Marvin Humes
- Russell Howard (withdrawn)
- Danny Jones
- Mark Wright
- Lee Mack
- Tom Davis
- James Bay
- John Bishop
- Alfie Allen
- Yung Filly
- Chunkz
- Paddy McGuinness
- Liv Cooke (withdrew due to injury)
;Legends
- David James
- Wes Brown
- Ashley Cole
- John Terry
- Katie Chapman
- Joe Cole
- Gareth Barry
- Kelly Smith
- Andy Cole
- Casey Stoney (withdrew due to injury)
- Michael Owen (withdrew due to injury)
- Emile Heskey
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Wayne Rooney, Sam Allardyce and Bradley Walsh
Soccer Aid World XI squad
;Celebrities
- Mo Gilligan (captain)
- Kem Cetinay
- Jason Manford
- Dave
- Chelcee Grimes
- Iain Stirling
- Jeremy Lynch
- Dermot Kennedy
- Roman Kemp
- Ore Oduba
- Locksmith
- Serge Pizzorno
- Billy Wingrove (Withdrew due to injury)
;Legends
- Shay Given
- Patrice Evra
- Mikael Silvestre
- Jaap Stam (withdrew)
- Yaya Touré (removed from squad)
- Darren Fletcher
- Claude Makélélé
- Michael Essien
- Robbie Keane
- Lianne Sanderson
- Julie Fleeting
- Roberto Carlos (withdrew) ;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Harry Redknapp, Bryan Robson and Vic Bettinelli
Note: Yaya Touré was dropped from the event after sending inappropriate messages in a squad WhatsApp group.
The match
Mark Wright
Mack
Bay
Chunkz
Locksmith
Pizzorno
Kennedy
Cetinay
| Sam Allardyce |
|---|
| Wayne Rooney |
| Bradley Walsh |
| Harry Redknapp |
|---|
| Bryan Robson |
|}
Soccer Aid 2021
The 2021 match was held at the City of Manchester Stadium on 4 September 2021. Lee Mack switched teams to the Rest of the World squad, due to his Irish heritage.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Olly Murs (captain)
- Liv Cooke (withdrew due to illness)
- James Arthur
- Paddy McGuinness (withdrew due to an injury)
- Chunkz
- Mark Wright
- Joel Dommett
- Mo Farah
- Aitch
- Max Whitlock
- James Bay
- Harriet Pavlou
- Stephen Mulhern ;Legends
- David James
- Gary Neville
- Jamie Carragher
- Paul Scholes
- Jamie Redknapp
- Fara Williams
- Shaun Wright-Phillips
- Joe Cole
- Wayne Rooney
- Kelly Smith
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Sven-Göran Eriksson
- Coaches: David Seaman, Micah Richards and Robbie Williams
Soccer Aid World XI squad
;Celebrities
- Usain Bolt (captain)
- Kem Cetinay
- Roman Kemp (withdrew due to illness)
- Ore Oduba
- Tom Grennan
- Martin Compston
- Dermot Kennedy
- Yungblud
- Chelcee Grimes
- Big Zuu
- Lee Mack
;Legends
- Shay Given
- Roberto Carlos
- Patrice Evra
- Pablo Zabaleta
- Ingrid Moe Wold
- Wes Morgan
- Nigel de Jong
- Clarence Seedorf
- Darren Fletcher
- Robbie Keane (replacement for Rivaldo)
- Rivaldo (withdrawn)
- Julie Fleeting
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Harry Redknapp
- Player-Assistant Manager: Robbie Keane
- Tea Lady / Dish Washer : Judy Murray
Other staff
- UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador: David Beckham
The match
Mack
| Sven-Göran Eriksson |
|---|
| Harry Redknapp |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2022
The 2022 match was held at the London Stadium, home of West Ham United, on 12 June 2022.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Liam Payne (captain)
- Lucien Laviscount (withdraw)
- Tom Grennan
- Chunkz
- Alex Brooker
- Damian Lewis
- Mo Farah
- Mark Wright
- David Harewood
- Aitch
- Russell Howard
;Legends
- David James
- Gary Neville
- Jamie Carragher
- Anita Asante
- Fara Williams
- Joe Cole
- Mark Noble
- Stewart Downing
- Teddy Sheringham
- Eniola Aluko
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Harry Redknapp and Emma Hayes
- Coach: David Seaman and Vicky McClure
Soccer Aid World XI squad
;Celebrities
- Usain Bolt (captain)
- Martin Compston
- Mo Gilligan
- Chelcee Grimes
- Steven Bartlett
- Lee Mack
- Noah Beck
- Munya Chawawa
- Kem Cetinay
- Mark Strong
- Tom Stoltman
;Legends
- Petr Cech
- Patrice Evra
- Cafu
- Roberto Carlos
- Andrea Pirlo (withdrew)
- Heather O'Reilly
- Carli Lloyd
- Andriy Shevchenko
- Dimitar Berbatov
- Robbie Keane
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Arsène Wenger
- Player/Coach: Robbie Keane
- Coach: Idris Elba and Graham Stack
The match
Grennan Cetinay Howard Wright Compston Cetinay Mack
| Harry Redknapp |
|---|
| Arsène Wenger |
|---|
|}
Soccer Aid 2023
The 2023 match was held at Old Trafford on 11 June 2023. Jill Scott became the first female to captain a team in any edition. Steven Bartlett withdrew from the game after a hamstring injury he picked up during practice.
England squad

;Celebrities
- Paddy McGuinness
- Bugzy Malone
- Tom Grennan
- Mo Farah
- Alex Brooker
- Chunkz
- Joel Corry
- Scarlette Douglas
- Liam Payne
- Danny Dyer
- Asa Butterfield
- Tom Hiddleston
;Legends
- David James
- Gary Neville
- Gary Cahill
- Michael Dawson
- Jill Scott (captain)
- Karen Carney
- Jack Wilshere
- Nicky Butt (withdrew)
- Paul Scholes
- Zavon Hines
- Eniola Aluko
- Jermain Defoe
;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Stormzy, Harry Redknapp and Emma Hayes
- Player/Coach: Zavon Hines
- Coach: Vicky McClure, Robbie Williams and David Seaman
Soccer Aid World XI squad

;Celebrities
- Usain Bolt (captain)
- Lee Mack
- Steven Bartlett (withdrew)
- Kem Cetinay
- Mo Gilligan
- Maisie Adam
- Tommy Fury
- Noah Beck
- Leon Edwards
- Sam Claflin
- Niko Omilana ;Legends
- Ben Foster
- Roberto Carlos
- Patrice Evra
- Kaylyn Kyle
- Heather O'Reilly
- Nani
- Darren Fletcher
- Izzy Christiansen
- Francesco Totti
- Hernán Crespo
- Gabriel Batistuta (withdrew)
- Robbie Keane ;Coaching Staff
- Manager: Mauricio Pochettino and Martin Compston
- Assistant Manager: Jesús Pérez
- Player/Coach: Robbie Keane
- Coach: Melanie C and Daniel Bachmann
The match
Scholes Keane Cetinay
| Stormzy |
|---|
| Harry Redknapp |
| Emma Hayes |
| Vicky McClure |
| David Seaman |
| Mauricio Pochettino |
|---|
| Martin Compston |
| Melanie C |
| Robbie Keane |
| Jesus Perez |
|}
Soccer Aid 2024
The 2024 match was held at Stamford Bridge on 9 June 2024. Steven Bartlett switched teams to the England squad. England lifted the trophy for the first time since 2018, after a 6–3 win against the World XI, breaking the previous highest scoring record from 2008 of seven. Ellen White also became the first female player to score in a Soccer Aid match.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Stuart Broad
- Bobby Brazier
- Sam Thompson
- Paddy McGuinness
- Tom Grennan
- Mo Farah
- Alex Brooker
- Erin Doherty (withdrew)
- Steven Bartlett
- Danny Dyer
- Sam Quek
- Miniminter
- Eddie Hearn
- Tom Hiddleston ;Legends
- David James
- Gary Cahill
- Ashley Cole
- Jill Scott (captain)
- Karen Carney
- Jack Wilshere
- Joe Cole
- Theo Walcott
- Ellen White
- Jermain Defoe
;Coaching Staff
- Manager/Coach: Frank Lampard, Robbie Williams, Vicky McClure, Harry Redknapp, and David Seaman
Soccer Aid World XI squad
;Celebrities
- Usain Bolt (captain)
- Maisie Adam
- Tommy Fury
- Livi Sheldon
- Martin Compston
- Roman Kemp
- Lee Mack
- Theo Baker
- Jason Manford
- Tony Bellew
- Tion Wayne
- Micheal Ward
- Emmett J. Scanlan
- Billy Wingrove
- Iain Stirling ;Legends
- Petr Čech
- Roberto Carlos (withdrew)
- Patrice Evra
- Michael Essien
- Mikel John Obi (withdrew)
- Kaylyn Kyle
- Kheira Hamraoui
- Eden Hazard
- Alessandro Del Piero
- Olga García
- Robbie Keane ;Coaching Staff
- Manager/Coach: Mauricio Pochettino, Jesús Pérez and Toni Jiménez
- Player/Coach: Billy Wingrove and Robbie Keane
The match
White Bartlett Defoe Walcott Del Piero Wingrove
| Frank Lampard |
|---|
| Harry Redknapp |
| Robbie Williams |
| Vicky McClure |
| David Seaman |
| Mauricio Pochettino |
|---|
| Robbie Keane |
| Jesus Perez |
| Billy Wingrove |
| Toni Jimenez |
|}
Soccer Aid 2025
The 2025 match was held at Old Trafford on 15 June 2025. The World XI team won the match 5-4, with Big Zuu scoring the winner, with 6 minutes left. Carlos Tevez also scored 4 goals, as they came from 3-0 down.
England squad
;Celebrities
- Paddy McGuinness (GK)
- Louis Tomlinson
- Sam Thompson
- Steven Bartlett
- Alex Brooker
- Mo Farah
- Angryginge
- Tom Grennan
- Sam Quek
- Bear Grylls (withdrew)
- Denise Lewis
- James Nelson-Joyce
- Bella Ramsey
- Roman Kemp
;Legends
- Joe Hart (GK)
- Phil Jagielka
- Steph Houghton
- Gary Neville
- Paul Scholes (withdrew)
- Jack Wilshere
- Jill Scott (captain)
- Michael Carrick
- Aaron Lennon
- Toni Duggan
- Wayne Rooney
- Jermain Defoe ;Coaching Staff
- Manager/Coach: Tom Hiddleston, Tyson Fury, David James, Vicky McClure, Robbie Williams and Harry Redknapp
- Player/Coach: Wayne Rooney
Soccer Aid World XI squad
;Celebrities
- Nicky Byrne (GK)
- Livi Sheldon
- Lee Mack (withdrew)
- Gorka Márquez
- TBJZL
- Bryan Habana
- Dermot Kennedy
- Tony Bellew
- Richard Gadd
- Billy Wingrove
- Noah Beck
- Big Zuu
- Maisie Adam
- Asim Chaudhry
;Legends
- Edwin van der Sar (GK)
- Nemanja Vidić (Captain)
- Leonardo Bonucci
- John O'Shea
- Kheira Hamraoui
- Kaylyn Kyle
- Harry Kewell
- Nadia Nadim (withdrew)
- Robbie Keane
- Carlos Tevez
- David Trezeguet
- Rivaldo ;Coaching Staff
- Managers: Peter Schmeichel, Robbie Keane, Martin Compston and Emmett J. Scanlan
- Player/Coach: Robbie Keane
- Goalkeeper Coach: Daniel Bachmann
The match
- Rooney
- Duggan
- Defoe
- Tevez
- Big Zuu
| Tyson Fury |
|---|
| Harry Redknapp |
| Robbie Williams |
| Tom Hiddleston |
| Vicky McClure |
| David James |
| Peter Schmeichel |
|---|
| Robbie Keane |
| Martin Compston |
| Emmett J. Scanlan |
|}
Soccer Aid 2026
Statistics
As of the 2025 match.
Top scorers
| Rank | Player | Goals |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jermain Defoe | 6 |
| 2 | Kem Cetinay | 5 |
| 3 | Clarence Seedorf | 4 |
| Robbie Keane | ||
| Carlos Tevez | ||
| 4 | Teddy Sheringham | 3 |
| Jonathan Wilkes | ||
| Jeremy Lynch | ||
| 5 | Alan Shearer | 2 |
| Paolo Di Canio | ||
| Steven Bartlett | ||
| Jamie Redknapp | ||
| Kevin Phillips | ||
| Dimitar Berbatov | ||
| Mark Wright | ||
| Usain Bolt | ||
| 6 | Les Ferdinand | 1 |
| Diego Maradona | ||
| Serge Pizzorno | ||
| Gilles Marini | ||
| Joe Calzaghe | ||
| Sami Hyypiä | ||
| Nicky Byrne | ||
| Darren Bent | ||
| Juan Verón | ||
| Michael Owen | ||
| Yung Filly | ||
| Lee Mack | ||
| Noah Beck | ||
| Tom Grennan | ||
| Asa Butterfield | ||
| Paul Scholes | ||
| Joe Cole | ||
| Eden Hazard | ||
| Alessandro Del Piero | ||
| Ellen White | ||
| Theo Walcott | ||
| Billy Wingrove | ||
| Billy Wingrove | ||
| Wayne Rooney | ||
| Toni Duggan | ||
| Big Zuu |
Most appearances
| Rank | Player | Appearances |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Paddy McGuinness | 9 |
| 2 | David Seaman | 8 |
| Robbie Keane | ||
| 4 | Ben Shephard | 7 |
| Jamie Redknapp | ||
| Lee Mack | ||
| Mo Farah | ||
| Nicky Byrne | ||
| Olly Murs | ||
| 10 | Jamie Theakston | 6 |
| Jonathan Wilkes | ||
| Mark Wright | ||
| Martin Compston | ||
| Patrick Kielty | ||
| Usain Bolt | ||
| 16 | Damian Lewis | 5 |
| David James | ||
| Gordon Ramsay | ||
| Jaap Stam | ||
| Jamie Carragher | ||
| Joe Cole | ||
| Kem Cetinay | ||
| Marvin Humes | ||
| Patrice Evra | ||
| Tom Grennan | ||
| 26 | Alex Brooker | 4 |
| Chunkz | ||
| Clarence Seedorf | ||
| Danny Jones | ||
| Edwin van der Sar | ||
| Gary Neville | ||
| Jermain Defoe | ||
| John Bishop | ||
| Robbie Williams | ||
| Roberto Carlos | ||
| Roman Kemp | ||
| Teddy Sheringham | ||
| 38 | Billy Wingrove | 3 |
| Chelcee Grimes | ||
| Darren Fletcher | ||
| David Harewood | ||
| Dermot Kennedy | ||
| Des Walker | ||
| Graeme Le Saux | ||
| Jack Wilshere | ||
| James McAvoy | ||
| Jeremy Lynch | ||
| Jill Scott | ||
| Joe Wicks | ||
| Kaylyn Kyle | ||
| Maisie Adam | ||
| Michael Essien | ||
| Michael Sheen | ||
| Mo Gilligan | ||
| Noah Beck | ||
| Serge Pizzorno | ||
| Steven Bartlett | ||
| 58 | 65 Players | 2 |
| 123 | 171 Players | 1 |
Notes
References
References
- "2023 Match Report".
- (27 February 2018). "ITV announces Soccer Aid for Unicef".
- (10 April 2020). "IFFHS (Fußball Historie & Statistiken)".
- (16 March 2014). "Soccer Aid returns to ITV". ITV Press Centre.
- (8 June 2014). "Soccer Aid raises over £4 million as Jose Mourinho's all stars win out". ITV.
- (16 May 2014). "Twitter / socceraid: A statement from Matt Smith".
- Gemma Thompson. (8 June 2014). "Soccer Aid 2014: England 2 Rest of the World 4 - Official Manchester United Website". Manchester United Ltd..
- Soccer Aid. (6 June 2014). "NEWS: Teddy Sheringham withdraws from England @socceraid squad due to injury. His replacement will be Kevin Phillips".
- (10 June 2014). "Soccer Aid Champion". Fulham Football Club.
- Chris Slater. (8 June 2014). "Soccer Aid 2014: Celebs and football legends come together to raise £4m for charity - Manchester Evening News". Manchester Evening News.
- (23 March 2016). "Soccer Aid 2016". Unicef.
- (23 March 2016). "THIS SUMMER MARKS THE 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF SOCCER AID – THE FOOTBALL MATCH WHERE THE STARS UNITE FOR UNICEF". Unicef.
- (28 May 2016). "Soccer Aid Teams". Unicef.
- "Soccer Aid ⚽️ on Twitter".
- "Ben Shephard on Twitter".
- (9 April 2019). "When is Soccer Aid 2019 and what are the teams this year?". Manchester Evening News.
- (17 June 2019). "Soccer Aid 2019".
- (2 May 2019). "Soccer Aid teams with Brunel for first mixed match". [[Brunel University London]].
- [https://www.southendstandard.co.uk/news/17704909.superdad-alan-earns-a-spot-at-soccer-aid/ Superdad Alan earns a spot at Soccer Aid] Southend Standard. 13 June 2019. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
- "Soccer Aid at Old Trafford".
- Sansome, Jessica. (30 July 2020). "ITV confirms I'm A Celebrity will return - alongside loads of new shows".
- (5 September 2020). "Yaya Touré dropped from charity match over reported pornographic post". The Observer.
- [https://www.sportbible.com/football/news-yaya-toure-axed-from-soccer-aid-after-sending-inappropriate-message-20200905 Yaya Toure Removed From Soccer Aid Line-Up After Sending 'Inappropriate WhatsApp Message'] Sport Bible. 5 September 2020. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
- (7 March 2023). "Soccer Aid 2023: Jill Scott to captain England against Usain Bolt's World XI". [[BBC Sport]].
- O'Hare, Mia. (11 June 2023). "Soccer Aid star forced to pull out of match just minutes before kick-off".
- (19 March 2024). "When is Soccer Aid 2024? Date, line-ups and how to watch charity match". [[The Independent]].
- (9 June 2024). "White scores as Soccer Aid raises £15m". [[BBC Sport]].
- (2025-03-11). "Soccer Aid 2025: Tyson Fury and Wayne Rooney to co-manage England at Old Trafford".
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