Former West Ham United, Leeds United and Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand has been named as the latest member of the Premier League Hall of Fame.
Ferdinand was selected by fans worldwide through an online public vote, and the Premier League awards panel from a shortlist of 15 players.
He joins legendary managers Arsène Wenger and his former Red Devils boss Sir Alex Ferguson who have already been announced as Hall of Fame inductees for 2023. An event celebrating the Class of ’23 will be held in London this evening.
READ MORE: Declan Rice hints at West Ham decision as Joe Cole makes 'all around Europe' transfer claim
Ferdinand became a six-time Premier League winner with Manchester United, first lifting the trophy in 2002/03 after breaking the British transfer record in joining the Red Devils from Leeds United.
He was part of the Manchester United team which retained the Premier League title in 2006/07, 2007/08 and 2008/09 and secured his sixth title in 2012/13, reclaiming the title from neighbours Manchester City in Sir Alex Ferguson’s final season at the club.
After making his debut as a 17-year-old for Harry Redknapp’s West Ham side, Ferdinand played in 504 games across 20 Premier League seasons, keeping 189 clean sheets in the competition.
Ferdinand said: “As a defender, I'm not used to celebrating personal glory - we leave that to the midfielders and strikers! When you start your career, you never dream of how well things could turn out.
“I remember all those long journeys on trains and tubes; all the training, cleaning players’ boots and taking care of the kit. I remember going back to my estate and seeing my friends who were all desperate to know what it was like.
“It’s a great feeling to be recognised by my peers as well as the fans. To be inducted into the Premier League Hall of Fame alongside such a high calibre of players and to be able to say that I achieved my dream is special. The Premier League is the holy grail, and I just can’t believe I made it.”
All inducted players receive a medallion engraved with their name and the year of their induction, with a £10,000 donation made by the Premier League to a charity of their choice.
READ NEXT
'We have to' - Lukasz Fabianski sets West Ham Premier League goal amid relegation struggles
'Two poor decisions' - Chris Sutton highlights incidents which could cost West Ham relegation
Ex-Tottenham midfielder makes bizarre Declan Rice transfer claim amid Arsenal and Chelsea links
West Ham's remaining fixtures compared to Leeds United, Nottingham Forest, Leicester and Everton
Pep Guardiola reveals Kevin De Bruyne injury with midfielder potential doubt for West Ham clash