FORMER England captain and Liverpool legend, Steven Gerrard, has launched a scathing critique of his generation of England stars, describing them as “egotistical losers” who failed to achieve their potential due to club rivalries, inflated egos, and lack of team unity.
Gerrard, 45, who earned 114 international caps and played under five full-time managers across six major tournaments, admitted that despite the immense talent in the squad, the so-called Golden Generation, which included stars like David Beckham, Frank Lampard, Paul Scholes, Rio Ferdinand, and John Terry, never became a cohesive unit.
“We were all egotistical losers,” Gerrard said bluntly while speaking on the Rio Ferdinand Presents podcast.
“I watch the telly now and see Jamie Carragher and Paul Scholes sitting together like best mates. But during our playing days, we barely spoke because of rivalry and ego.”
The former Liverpool skipper confessed that, at the time, players from top Premier League clubs, Liverpool, Manchester United, and Chelsea often carried their domestic tensions into the national camp, undermining England’s performance at international tournaments.
“We weren’t friendly or connected. We weren’t a team,” Gerrard said. “We never, at any stage, became a real good, strong team.”
In a rare moment of vulnerability, Gerrard also admitted that he “hated” being on England duty, despite his passion for representing his country.
“I didn’t enjoy it. I hated the hotel rooms,” he confessed.
“There were days I felt low, like really down. No social media, no DVDs, just Channel 1 to 5. I loved the games and training, but outside that, I didn’t feel part of a team.”
He said the sense of belonging he felt at Liverpool, where he spent nearly his entire playing career was missing from his national team experience.
“At Liverpool, I felt special. I couldn’t wait to be there. With England, I just wanted the games to come and go.”
Reflecting on England’s transformation under Gareth Southgate, Gerrard said the current setup had achieved what his generation never did unity, humility, and connection.
“Gareth Southgate is underrated for how he connected the England team,” he noted. “The talent was there in my time, but the team culture wasn’t. Southgate got that right.”
He acknowledged that England’s recent successes including the 2018 World Cup semi-final and back-to-back European Championship finals were the result of a healthier squad environment that transcended club rivalries.
Gerrard concluded by expressing lingering frustration at the wasted potential of his generation: “When I look back, I’m frustrated that we didn’t do better. We had the talent, but we were individuals. It never works like that.”
Gerrard captained England 38 times, the sixth-most in history, and remains one of the most respected figures in English football. His comments have reignited debate over why a team filled with global superstars including Beckham, Rooney, Lampard, and Scholes consistently underperformed on the international stage.
England’s Golden Generation is often remembered for high expectations and repeated heartbreaks at major tournaments between 2002 and 2014, usually bowing out on penalties or in quarterfinal stages.