Ranked! The 20 best Premier League wingers ever

10. David Beckham (Manchester United)

Manchester United's David Beckham celebrates after scoring his famous goal from the halfway line against Wimbledon, August 1996

David Beckham celebrates after scoring his famous goal from the halfway line against Wimbledon (Image credit: Getty Images)

Those who don't remember David Beckham will wonder if he ever really was any good – or whether he was just a very famous footballer married to a very famous singer. It's the former. That Manchester United didn't win a title for three years after Beckham left tells you a little of his influence. 

Becks was unplayable for much of his Premier League career, announcing himself with that Wimbledon worldie before becoming one of the best players on Earth. There was no passer like him in world football – there haven't been many since, actually – and had Ferguson not had issues with his off-field persona, he may well have spent another decade in England, racking up an assist tally that not even Kevin De Bruyne could reach. 

9. Riyad Mahrez (Leicester City, Manchester City)

LEICESTER, ENGLAND - MAY 07: Riyad Mahrez of Leicester City poses with the Premier League Trophy as players and staffs celebrate the season champion after the Barclays Premier League match between Leicester City and Everton at The King Power Stadium on May 7, 2016 in Leicester, United Kingdom. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)

Riyad Mahrez of Leicester City poses with the Premier League Trophy  (Image credit: Getty Images)

Claudio Ranieri's Leicester City miracle-workers were nothing but workmanlike, grinding out a title with rugged runners, blood, sweat and tears. But that's not to say they were bereft of sheer genius – and Riyad Mahrez really did exemplify that.

Easily the superstar of that side in terms of technical ability, the Algerian was the very prototypical winger of the 2010s: predictable that he would cut inside, yet unstoppable in any way. City snatched him and he simply soared to greater heights.

In his whole management career, Mahrez is one of a select few of Guardiola's wingers that the Catalan simply unleashed to go off and ball, regardless of what he asked of his other widemen. He was perfect as he was and too good to turn into anything else. 

8. Ryan Giggs (Manchester United)

Ryan Giggs

Ryan Giggs in action for Manchester United (Image credit: Getty Images)

The Premier League's all-time appearance holder until Gareth Barry came along, one suspects that Ryan Giggs was always Ferguson's favourite. 

The Welshman started life as a speedster able to spellbind on the left but over time, his ability to perform whatever his manager required was invaluable. A whole generation rued his birth beyond the border at a time when England simply couldn't produce left-footers. 

7. Robert Pires (Arsenal, Aston Villa)

CARDIFF, UNITED KINGDOM - APRIL 16: Robert Pires of Arsenal celebrates scoring the opening goal during the FA Cup Semi-Final match between Arsenal and Blackburn Rovers at the Millennium Stadium on April 16, 2005 in Cardiff, Wales. (Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)

Robert Pires while playing for Arsenal (Image credit: Getty Images)

Robert Pires used to do this thing where he could sit a defender down simply with a shoulder feint. The Frenchman was slight in frame, not exactly the quickest – but his incredible body manipulation was proof of just how intelligent and creative a footballer he really was. 

A real trailblazer as a right-footed left-winger, Pires was predominantly a playmaker alongside Ashley Cole and Thierry Henry. He just couldn't be held down, though: he loved to burst into space to finish chances off and he'd interchange with his team-mates to pop up where he was needed. 

Pires racked up 15 assists in 2001/02 by March, before being sidelined through injury. When he returned to lift a league title he'd helped deliver, his team-mates all took to their knees to praise him: it said it all of how revered he was. 

6. Gareth Bale (Southampton, Tottenham Hotspur)

Gareth Bale of Tottenham in action during the Barclays Premier League match between Aston Villa and Tottenham Hotspur at Villa Park on December 26, 2010 in Birmingham, England

Gareth Bale of Tottenham in action against Aston Villa (Image credit: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images)

Simply put, perhaps no one has used what they had better than Gareth Bale. A man who began life as a left-back, seemingly couldn't win a game in a Tottenham shirt, seemed to transfigure into a force of nature higher up the pitch – basically, just because he wanted to. 

Bale had pace and power that made him look like a teenager playing with the year below him at school. The Welsh wizard was devastating any time he got one-on-one with his full-back and his goal catalogue is simply breathtaking. He rightfully became the most expensive player on Earth. 

5. Sadio Mane (Southampton, Liverpool)

Liverpool forward Sadio Mane prepares to take a throw-in

Liverpool forward Sadio Mane (Image credit: Getty)

One of Sadio Mane's more niche abilities was that he used every inch of his body so well. Often, he would look incredibly unorthodox in the way he took down a pass or struck the ball – but such was his technical supremacy, the ball was almost under his spell.

As a right-winger at Liverpool, he was majestic – and then he moved to the left to ascend to new levels. If Mohamed Salah was icy cold and clinical, while Roberto Firmino was Copacabana-like warmth with his flare, Mane could be both – he could create and he could score; he was superb in tight spaces or when interpreting space. 

And for a unique system in which the press was the primary playmaker, Mane helped to open eyes to just how good forwards could be off the ball. Some argue that he's still missed by Liverpool.

4. Eden Hazard (Chelsea)

Chelsea's Belgian midfielder Eden Hazard celebrates scoring the opening goal of the English Premier League football match between Aston Villa and Chelsea at Villa Park in Birmingham, central England on February 7, 2015. AFP PHOTO / BEN STANSALL RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or "live" services. Online in-match use limited to 45 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games or single club/league/player publications. (Photo credit should read BEN STANSALL/AFP via Getty Images)

Eden Hazard celebrates scoring the opening goal against Aston Villa  (Image credit: Getty Images)

Eden Hazard never scored or assisted the most – but he may be the Premier League's greatest-ever player in terms of pure enjoyment. He was simply beautiful on the ball: if you love football, you loved watching Hazard.

The brilliant Belgian could decide games on a whim. His dribbling skills are now legendary and his creativity was sublime. In two Chelsea sides, he was utterly sensational, though 2014/15's vintage truly orbited around his talents. And for such an aesthetic player, he was ruthless: unafraid to bully or batter when need be. Forever a Leicester hero, too, for scoring the equaliser against Spurs to take the title to the Midlands. 

3. Son Heung-min (Tottenham Hotspur)

Son Heung-min

Son Heung-min in action for Tottenham (Image credit: Getty Images)

Harry Kane is one of three Premier League players to have netted 200+ goals and will forever receive his flowers for doing so. Son Heung-min deserves, in many respects, to be spoken about with the same affection. He matched his Tottenham partner stride for stride.

For one of the Premier League's enduringly amiable characters, Sonny is an assassin of a winger, as if on a mission to slice through every defence he faces. He is one of the best strikers of a football that English football has ever seen – and from his humble beginnings as a Spurs squad player to a superstar of the European game, he has enraptured audiences. He is Asia's finest export to the Premier League, for sure. 

2. Cristiano Ronaldo (Manchester United)

MANCHESTER, UNITED KINGDOM - NOVEMBER 15: Cristiano Ronaldo of Manchester United celebrates scoring his team's fifth goal during the Barclays Premier League match between Manchester United and Stoke City at Old Trafford on November 15, 2008 in Manchester, England. (Photo by Alex Livesey/Getty Images)

Cristiano Ronaldo of Manchester United celebrates scoring against Stoke (Image credit: Getty Images)

Funnily enough, we're talking about the first United spell. He played as a striker in the second one, anyway.

Cristiano Ronaldo was always a fun footballer with a box of tricks, long before something clicked inside him and he activated his own ‘God mode’. But when he flicked a switch to become the best he possibly could, he literally changed the game. He rewrote the template of what a winger could become, simply with his sheer output. He was unstoppable. 

From 2006 onwards, he reached a level that few players ever will (some still say none). 2007 saw him become the first player to win four major end-of-season individual honours before he scored 31 times in the league in 2008 from the left wing, leading United to league and European glory. The rest, as they say, is history. 

1. Mohamed Salah (Chelsea, Liverpool)

Mohamed Salah enjoys the acclaim of the crowd after scoring against Newcastle

Mohamed Salah celebrates yet another goal (Image credit: Getty Images)

A strike on Matchday 1 of 2024/25 for Mohamed Salah saw the Egyptian king hit 300 goals and assists for Liverpool in just 350 appearances. Not even Ronaldo had time to rack up those kinds of numbers in English football. 

Salah has been the consistent through it all: as the Reds attack as evolved around him, he's simply kept scoring. 32 goals in 36 Premier League games in his first Liverpool season saw him hit the ground running – and he's netted 18 or more every year since.

And it's all come from the right wing. Often numbers that good see a promotion to centre-forward, and yet Salah's game is simple: stay wide, until you don't. No one has beaten it in all this time. 

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Mark White
Content Editor

Mark White is the Digital Content Editor at FourFourTwo. During his time on the brand, Mark has written three cover features on Mikel Arteta, Martin Odegaard and the Invincibles, and has written pieces on subjects ranging from Sir Bobby Robson’s time at Barcelona to the career of Robinho. An encyclopedia of football trivia and collector of shirts, he first joined the team back in 2020 as a staff writer.