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・ List of UK Dance Chart number-one singles of 2007
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List of UK hit singles by footballers
・ List of UK Independent Album Breakers Chart number ones of the 2000s
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・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one albums of 2009
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one albums of 2010
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one albums of 2011
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one albums of 2012
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one albums of 2013
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one albums of 2014
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one albums of 2015
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one singles of 1990
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one singles of 1991
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one singles of 1992
・ List of UK Indie Chart number-one singles of 1993


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List of UK hit singles by footballers : ウィキペディア英語版
List of UK hit singles by footballers

Professional association football players have released records in the United Kingdom since at least the 1930s, when the Arsenal team issued a now-collectible gramophone disc. The first such record to achieve commercial success was "Back Home", released by the England national team as part of their build-up to the 1970 FIFA World Cup, at which they would defend the trophy they had won four years earlier. The single, written by Bill Martin and Phil Coulter, spent 17 weeks in the UK Singles Chart and reached number one on the chart dated 16 May.〔Roberts, p.662〕 England did not qualify for the World Cup again until 1982, but the Scotland national team had hits in 1974 and 1978 with singles released ahead of the World Cup, on the latter occasion teaming up with celebrity fan Rod Stewart.〔 England topped the charts again in 1990 with the single "World in Motion", recorded in collaboration with the band New Order and remembered for the rap performed by player John Barnes.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The best footie songs : England and New Order: World In Motion )
From the 1970s onwards, it became a tradition for the two teams which had reached the final of the FA Cup to each release a single as part of the build-up to the match, and several of these reached the top 10. The songs were often adapted from existing well-known recordings, such as Middlesbrough's 1997 hit "Let's Dance", which added new lyrics to a 1987 song by Chris Rea,〔 and were characterised by their "rowdy, altogether-now" style.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The best footie songs : Tottenham Hotspur FC and Chas & Dave: Ossie’s Dream )〕 Several different teams recorded songs written by Ivor Novello Award-winning songwriter Tony Hiller. The first FA Cup final single to reach number one was "Come on You Reds", released in 1994 by Manchester United. The single, adapted from the song "Burning Bridges" by Status Quo, who also performed on the recording, topped the charts on the weekend of United's victory over Chelsea in the final, but has been described as "so bad it's good".〔Roberts, p.694〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The best footie songs : Manchester United FC and Status Quo: Come On You Reds )〕 Although cup final singles have fallen out of fashion in recent years, Cardiff City collaborated with singer James Fox on a single to mark their appearance in the FA Cup final in 2008.〔 Other clubs, such as Lincoln City, have released singles to raise money in times of financial difficulties.〔Roberts, p.357〕
In addition to the hits scored by teams singing ''en masse'', individual professional players have also made appearances in the charts. Paul Gascoigne, then of Tottenham Hotspur, achieved the biggest hit by an individual player when he reached Number 2 with the single "Fog on the Tyne (Revisited)" in 1990.〔Roberts, p.208〕 Two other Tottenham players, Glenn Hoddle and Chris Waddle, reached Number 12 in 1987 with the song "Diamond Lights", although the single is now mostly remembered for the dated fashions sported by the duo when performing the song on television. Only a very small number of UK hit singles have been recorded by sportsmen other than footballers, including top 20 hits for the national rugby union team in 1991 and the national cricket team in 2005.〔
==Hits==
The list contains every single recorded by a professional football team or individual player which spent at least one week in the UK top 75. It does not contain singles recorded in tribute to football teams by existing bands or groups of fans such as the 1975 hit "Viva El Fulham" by Tony Rees and the Cottagers, or other hits with a general football theme such as the 1996 number one hit "Three Lions" by David Baddiel, Frank Skinner and The Lightning Seeds. An asterisk (
*) after the number of weeks spent in the top 75 indicates that the record dropped out of the charts and re-entered. The total number of weeks for the two runs is shown. Where two titles are shown for the same single, this represents a double A-side.

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