Andy Cole
![Cole in 2014](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8d/Andy_Cole_%28cropped%29.jpg)
As well as Manchester United and Newcastle United, Cole also played in the top division of English football for Arsenal, Blackburn Rovers, Fulham, Manchester City, Portsmouth and Sunderland, as well as in The Football League for Bristol City, Birmingham City, Burnley and Nottingham Forest. He is the fourth-highest goalscorer in Premier League history with 187 goals, and used to hold the Premier League records for most goals scored in a 42-game season (34), the fastest player to score 50 goals (65 matches), and the first player to top both the Premier League's goalscoring and assist charts in the same season (1993–94).
Cole has the distinction of having won every top-level team competition in English football at least once, as well as the primary European competition, the UEFA Champions League. As an individual he has won the PFA Young Player of the Year award. Cole was capped 15 times for the England national team between 1995 and 2001, scoring once against Albania in a 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifier. Provided by Wikipedia
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12by Campagnano, Gabriele, Zilberberg, Oded, Gornyi, Igor V., Feldman, Dmitri E., Potter, Andrew Cole, Gefen, YuvalOther Authors: “...Potter, Andrew Cole...”
Published 2012
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13by Andrew Cole, Elisaveta Sokolov, Philipp Karschnia, Reuben Benjamin, Robert D M Hadden, Robert C D Elwes, Lee Drummond, Devyani Amin, Vitor Paiva, Alex Pennisi, Aline Herlopian, Robin Sanderson, Shafquat InamGet full text
Published 2020-07-01
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14by Richard D. Bartlett, Dina Radenkovic, Stefan Mitrasinovic, Andrew Cole, Iva Pavkovic, Peyton Cheong Phey Denn, Mahrukh Hussain, Magdalena Kogler, Natalia Koutsopodioti, Wasima Uddin, Ivan Beckley, Hana Abubakar, Deborah Gill, Daron SmithGet full text
Published 2017-12-01
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