York was born in Trinidad and Tobago in 1971 and has played for Aston Villa, Manchester United, Blackburn, Birmingham and Sunderland. In 1989, York signed Aston Villa as a right winger. Until the 1995-96 season, he successfully transformed into a center, making himself one of the best strikers in the Premier League. During his nine years at Aston Villa, York won the love of fans, although some people hated calling him Judas, because he chose to join Aston Villa's arch-rival Birmingham in 24-5. In August 1998, York joined Manchester United and began the proudest period of his career. During his four seasons in Manchester United, he made 95 appearances in the Premier League for the Red Devils and scored 47 goals. In the Champions League, York scored goals in Manchester United's matches against Barcelona, Juventus, Inter Milan and Bayern Munich. In May 29, 38-year-old York retired in Sunderland.
Andy Cole is one year younger than Alan Shearer, but he is 83 goals short of the Premier League top scorer list, ranking second with 187 goals. Andy Cole may not have won as many honors as Alan Shearer in his career, but he has a Champions League medal that Shearer did not win, which was won with Manchester United in 1998-99. Although Andy Cole has played in 13 clubs during his 19-year career since his debut at Arsenal in 1989, Manchester United is the team with the longest stay and the largest number of goals. During the six years from January 1995 to December 21, Andy Cole * * * made 195 appearances and scored 93 goals for the Red Devils, with a tough football style and an efficient scoring rate. In the winter of 21, Andy Cole was sold to Blackburn for 8 million pounds. Later, he played for Fulham, Manchester City, Portsmouth, Birmingham, Sunderland and Burnley respectively, and finally announced his retirement in November 28 because he was dissatisfied with not playing in Nottingham Forest.