English top scorers outside the Premier League are still hard to spot on,
especially at the top level.
The 2024/25 season has just ended but left a remarkable note for English
players abroad. Apart from Harry Kane’s success in lifting his first-ever
silverware in his career, the English players also mark a new record by winning
the top scorer award in not just one but two major leagues in Europe.
While Mo Salah thrived in the Premier League, Harry Kane and Mason Greenwood
managed to shine abroad. The former Spurs star was awarded the Bundesliga
Golden Boot in two consecutive seasons, whereas Greenwood won the top scorer
award in Ligue 1 by notching 21 goals with Olympique Marseille in his season debut. He
shared his accolade with PSG’s Ousmane Dembélé.
Such is a rare milestone carved in European football, as English strikers
are not known to be prolific outside their home soil. Although Kane and
Greenwood have had remarkable campaigns with such awards in hand, they are not
the first and only ones who did it in history, especially when being referred
to the leagues outside European top five. These forwards below snatched the
similar awards as them. Their names deserved to be recognised due to their
unusual achievements as the top scorers in foreign lands.
Herbert Potts (Beerschot)
He was the first English footballer who became the top scorer abroad. Potts
did it in the early 20th century while playing for Belgium’s Beerschot AC. In
his first season there in 1900/01, the Kent-born striker netted 26 goals. He
even replicated his success in the following season with 16 goals.
Unfortunately, his goals did not help his team win the title. Beerschot only
finished second on the table in 1901 and 4th in the final round in 1902 when
the league changed format with an additional final round after the regular
league phase. His team lost to Racing Club de Bruxelles in both seasons.
Interestingly, Potts never played for England. He was in fact capped four
times with the Belgium national team for unofficial matches. The former Antwerp
man played for Beerschot until the age of 27, when he hung up his boots. He
returned to his home soil to work in the import business.
Maurice Bunyan (Racing Club de Bruxelles)
About 10
years later, another Englishman became the top scorer in Belgium's top division
again. Maurice Bunyan was playing for Racing Club de Bruxelles when he won the
award. Just like Potts, he was also the leading scorer in the league twice, in
1912 and 1914. Bunyan scored 35 goals and 28 goals, respectively, but his tally
did not help his team win silverware either. They only finished third and 6th
in the final standings. However, Bunyan helped them win the Belgian Cup in
1912.
The
forward who joined the club in 1909 bagged 150 goals in 158 matches before
moving to France with Stade Francais in 1923. He was also part of Great
Britain's squad in the Antwerp 1920 Summer Olympics. Sadly, GBR’s campaign was
short-lived as they were knocked out by Norway in the first round following
their 3-1 loss.
Billy Lansdowne (Kalmar FF)
In the
modern era, the first Englishman who won the Golden Boot award abroad was Billy
Lansdowne. He was the former West Ham man in the early 1980s before switching
sides to Charlton and Gillingham.
Lansdowne’s
career really took off when he joined Sweden’s Kalmar FF in 1983. He became the
top scorer in 1985 with 10 goals, the accolade which he shared with his
teammate, Peter Karlsson, and Soren Borjesson. He also contributed to helping
them become the runner-up in the final playoff round against Malmo, the best
team in the country.
The
Epping-born frontman was also instrumental in helping his side win the Swedish
Cup in 1987. Kalmar FF thumped GAIS 2-0 in the final, and Lansdowne scored one of the goals. He stayed there till 1988 before going back to England to play
for Leystone & Ilford and Dagenham FC. Landsdowne ended his career back in
Sweden with Anderstorps IF in the lower division.
Bradley Wright-Phillips (New York Red Bulls)
The son
of Arsenal star in the 1990s, Ian Wright, fled to MLS in 2013 following his
frustrating career in England after failing to seal his place in Manchester
City back in 2006. He signed for Southampton before eventually joining Plymouth
Argyle, Charlton and Brentford in the second and third tiers of English
football. Sadly, he was unable to thrive and make a significant impact for
their campaign.
However,
things turned around when he moved to New York Red Bulls. In his first season,
he was able to help them win their first major title, the MLS Supporters’
Shield, plus reach the conference semifinal. In 2014, BWP, his nickname, was
awarded MLS top scorer with 27 goals plus one assist, as well as contributing
to his team’s campaign to the conference final.
The
brother of former England international Shaun Wright-Phillips even replicated
his success two years later. He registered 24 goals and four assists for NY Red
Bulls and brought them to another Eastern Conference semifinal. The forward who
turned down an offer to switch allegiance to Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago
won two more Supporters’ Shields in 2015 and 2018 before leaving New York in
2019.
Gary Martin (KR, Valur, IBV)
The
34-year-old forward has achieved something more than Harry Kane, at a different
level. Martin was awarded the top scorer in Iceland's top flight, Urvalsdeild,
three times in 2013, 2014 and 2019.
The
former Middlesbrough man had a loan spell in Hungary’s Ujpest before heading to
Iceland in 2010. He finally made his mark three years later with KR Reykjavik, as he
helped them win the league and won the joint top scorer award with 13 goals.
Martin repeated his top form in 2014 by scoring another 13 goals to lead the
top scorer table. Unfortunately, his team only finished third but managed to
clinch the domestic cup title.
His third
Urvalsdeild Golden Boot award was snatched in 2019, when he was playing for
Valur and IBV. The Darlington-born striker notched up 14 times throughout the
season but failed to save IBV from relegation. They were stuck at the bottom of
the table.
Martin,
who also had stints in Norway and Belgium's top flight with Lillestrom and
Lokeren, respectively, is currently playing for Northern Premier League side
Hebburn Town. They are competing in the seventh tier of English football.
Ashley Coffey (AC Oulu)
The most
recent Englishman with a Golden Boot abroad besides Kane and Greenwood was
Ashley Coffey. He was the joint top scorer in the Finnish top tier,
Veikkausliiga, last season with 12 goals and two assists while playing for AC
Oulu. He shared the awards with Nicaraguan international Jaime Moreno.
Coffey
signed for Oulu in 2023 from Sweden’s second-tier side, AFC Eskilstuna. He soon
made an impact for the Finnish side in his first season, as he was the club’s
top scorer in 2023 before winning the Golden Shoe award.
Unfortunately,
his goals were only enough to help his team avoid relegation. In 2024, AC Oulu
only sat in ninth place in the regular league phase but managed to finish third
in the relegation round to stay in the top division.
Prior to
his venture in Finland’s top flight, the former Bradford City man was also
working as a teacher at the International English School in Stockholm. He was a
part-time player for Huddinge IF and IFK Haninge, which competed in the fourth
and third tiers in Swedish football, respectively.
The
31-year-old frontman opted to leave Oulu in January 2025 and joined Shanghai
Jianding Huilong. He is no longer playing in the top flight but in the second
tier of the Chinese football system instead. He has netted six times plus
provided one assist in eight matches in China League One.
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