Footballers are always some of the first to push the boat out with hairstyles, thus it's no surprise to see that some of the game's greats were ahead of the curve with the mullet trend that's come back around.
We've seen it all in football, from the long locks like Beckham, to the short spikes and mohawks, and the quiff/headband combination that Jack Grealish has made so popular these days.
But somewhere between all that, the mullet has lay dormant until now. It's taken over the world once again, so we thought we'd trawl the archives and rank the very best of the best when it comes to mullets in football.
The late Bulgarian famously donned his mullet at the 1994 World Cup and took it to a fourth-place finish with his team.
As they go it was a good effort, but nothing more. Little bit scraggly at times, but something you'd see these days at a bar where only independent brewed pints are sold and be in awe of.
Standards have dropped.
Look, Mesut, we see the vision and when one is as creative as yourself, we can't exactly judge. But it didn't quite come off, did it?
While the silky German became the assist king with his refined style as he matured, young Schalke Ozil was trying to pair a party in the back with a mohawk on top and highlights that looked like they'd been done in the dark.
It's chaotic and we love it, but it faces stiff competition in this list.
No, seriously.
Long before his days as a manager in Europe, Big Ange wowed with a pretty bloody good mullet. Never mind business in the front, party in the back – this is just all party.
Perhaps too much party, if anything.
Back in the glory days of the mid-2000s, when Total 90 boots ran the show and all was good with the world, a young Torres was trying his best to revive the
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