British South Asians in football: Team of the Season 2025/26
It has been another breakthrough campaign for British South Asians in football, but who makes it into the 2025/26 Team of the Season?
It has been another breakthrough campaign for British South Asians in football, but who makes it into the 2025/26 Team of the Season? This report com
Read Full Story at Sky Sports →Why This Matters
The recognition of British South Asians in football’s 2025/26 season underscores a quiet but profound shift in the sport’s cultural DNA. Beyond individual achievements, this wave of talent challenges the long-standing stereotype of South Asian players as peripheral figures, proving their centrality to the game’s future. It also signals a commercial and social awakening: clubs are increasingly betting on diversity as a competitive edge, not just a diversity quota.
Background Context
British South Asians have historically faced systemic barriers in football, from underrepresentation in academies to cultural biases in coaching pipelines. The 1980s and 90s saw clubs like Leicester City and Bradford City become hubs for South Asian communities, but progress stalled as structural racism persisted. Today, initiatives like the FA’s Asian Inclusion Plan and grassroots programs in cities like Birmingham and Manchester have finally begun to bear fruit, though the glass ceiling in top-tier management remains unbroken.
What Happens Next
With several British South Asian players now first-team regulars at Premier League sides, the question shifts from *if* they’ll break into the first team to *when* they’ll secure leadership roles—whether as captains, managers, or boardroom decision-makers. The next 12 months will reveal whether this season’s momentum translates into enduring institutional change, or if the cycle of fleeting progress repeats itself. Watch for clubs’ willingness to back South Asian coaches in senior roles beyond the "tick-box" appointments.
Bigger Picture
This season’s breakthrough reflects a broader trend in global football: the erosion of monolithic talent pipelines in favor of multicultural, multilingual teams that mirror the game’s fanbase. It also highlights the intersection of sport and social mobility, where representation in elite squads can reshape generational aspirations. Yet the story is far from over—if anything, it’s a reminder that diversity on the pitch must be matched by equity in the dugout and the boardroom.

