The 00s were yet another decade of excitement and drama throughout football; it was also a decade for superb strikers.
From unselfish support players to clinical finishers who racked up the goals, FourFourTwo has turned the clock back to pick out the finest centre-forwards from the 21st century's first decade.
Here are the best 32...
32. Emile Heskey
Remarkably selfless, the reliably robust Emile Heskey put in the hard yards and did the dirty work to enable Michael Owen to thrive alongside him in a successful Liverpool front two under Gerard Houllier.
Not that the England international – who scored the fifth goal in the Three Lions' historic 5-1 win over Germany in 2001 – didn't chip in with a fair few goals of his own, though: he found the net 22 times in all competitions as the Reds completed a 2000/01 treble of FA Cup, League Cup and UEFA Cup.
31. Lionel Messi
Yes, ok: Lionel Messi wasn't a striker for most of the 00s – but Pep Guardiola's decision to deploy him as a false nine from 2009 represented such a seismic shift for football as a whole that we have to include him.
In any case, it truly unlocked the prolific side for which we've all come to know the Argentine icon: beginning with a brace in his first outing in the false nine role – in a 6-2 thrashing of Real Madrid at the Bernabeu no less – he had scored 18 goals by the end of 2009, including his famous header (really) as Barca beat Manchester United in the Champions League final.
30. Mario Gomez
Mario Gomez become progressively more prolific with Stuttgart at the end of the 00s: the German international bagged 16 goals in 2006/07 – helping his side to the Bundesliga title – 28 in 2007/08, then banged in 35 in 2008/09.
That form earned Gomez – who earned the first of his 71 caps, and notched the first of his 31 goals, for Germany in 2007 – a summer 2009 move to Bayern Munich, where he carried on scoring for fun.
29. Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink
A joint Premier League Golden Boot winner for the 1998/99 season, Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink won the award outright in 2000/01 – scoring 23 goals for Chelsea, having returned to England after a one-season stint with Atletico Madrid.
Blessed with a seriously powerful shot and excellent free-kick ability, the Dutchman matched his 2000/01 tally the following campaign – when he came within one goal of 30 in all competitions.
28. Ali Daei
One of the greatest Asian footballers of all time, Iranian icon Ali Daei held the record for the most goals in men's internationals for almost 20 years – until Cristiano Ronaldo broke it in 2021.
The former Bayern Munich man found the net 108 times in 148 appearances for his country, featuring at the 2006 World Cup before retiring from international duty.
27. Robbie Keane
Robbie Keane's cartwheel-cum-forward roll is among the most recognisable goal celebrations of the Premier League era – and the Republic of Ireland great had plenty of opportunity to perform it.
Having underwhelmed at Leeds, Keane enjoyed a thoroughly consistent six-season spell with Tottenham – scoring 107 goals for the North London club – before leaving for Liverpool in July 2008 (only to return to Spurs six months later!).
26. Adriano
Profoundly affected by the loss of his father, Adriano's prime was all too short – but the brilliant Brazilian did more than enough in that period between 2003 and 2006 to earn himself a spot on this list.
Having made a name for himself at Parma, the six-foot-two frontman joined Inter Milan midway through the 2003/04 season – and his near-unstoppable combination of strength, pace and explosive left-footed finishing made him one of the best strikers to watch on the planet at the time.
25. Jan Koller
Towering over the rest of the players on the pitch at a veritably gigantic six-foot-eight tall, Czech Republic legend Jan Koller was the definition of a defender's nightmare.
In 91 caps for his country between 1999 and 2009, Koller scored 55 goals – while also striking 79 times in five seasons at Borussia Dortmund, who he joined in 2001 off the back of two 30-plus goal campaigns for Anderlecht.
24. Dimitar Berbatov
A natural goalscorer in Germany and England throughout the 00s, Dimitar Berbatov hit the 20-goal mark in consecutive Bundesliga campaigns for Bayer Leverkusen before joining Tottenham in 2006.
And two seasons of 23 goals in all competitions prompted Manchester United to pay more than £30m for the Bulgaria legend on deadline day of the 2008 summer transfer window – signing him from under the noses of bitter rivals Manchester City.
23. Nicolas Anelka
A versatile striker with a knack for scoring crucial goals at crucial times, Nicolas Anelka represented four Premier League clubs during the 00s – and he enjoyed his best form with Manchester City and Chelsea (the others were Liverpool and Bolton Wanderers).
As a Blues player, the French international won the 2008/09 Golden Boot – and earned himself inclusion in that season's PFA Team of the Year.
22. Hernan Crespo
Argentina's premier number nine of the 00s, following Gabriel Batistuta's international retirement after the 2002 World Cup, Hernan Crespo averaged better than a goal a game for his country.
All but seven of his 35 Argentina goals came between 2000 and his own international retirement in 2007 – while he enjoyed strong club campaigns with Parma, Lazio and both Milan clubs (as well as picking up a 2005/06 Premier League winners medal at Chelsea).
21. Jermain Defoe
Jermain Defoe never scored more than 18 goals in a league campaign – but his consistency was such that he is one of the highest scorers in Premier League history.
Spending most of his career with Tottenham – who he first joined from West Ham in 2004 – Defoe found the net 93 times in the English top flight during the 00s – including an incredible five-goal haul in Spurs' 9-1 demolition of Wigan Athletic in 2009.
20. Henrik Larsson
Perhaps the best striker ever to play in the Scottish top flight, Henrik Larsson had already amassed 69 goals in his first three seasons after joining Celtic from Feyenoord in 1997.
But the Swedish great was to scale considerably more prolific heights after the turn of the century: in 2000/01, he netted a sensational 53 times in 50 appearances in all competitions, following that up with 35-, 44- and 41-goal campaigns before leaving for Barcelona.
19. Fernando Torres
When Rafael Benitez's Liverpool won the race to sign Fernando Torres from Atletico Madrid in 2007, El Nino arrived as one of the most prodigious attacking talents in Europe.
Having averaged 15 goals a season during his last five years in La Liga, Torres took to the Premier League immediately – striking 24 times in his first campaign at Anfield (and 33 times in all competitions), before making himself a national hero by getting the goal that saw Spain win Euro 2008.
18. Christian Vieri
Italian great Christian Vieri was among Serie A and Europe's deadliest marksmen in the early 00s, scoring 52 goals across the 2001/02 and 2002/03 campaigns for Inter Milan.
In the middle of all that, Bobo found the net four times in four appearances as Italy's lone striker at the 2002 World Cup (although he did miss a golden chance in the Azzurri's shock last-16 exit to South Korea).
17. Pauleta
Portugal's top striker of the early 20th century, Pauleta scored freely for club and country – peaking with 35- and 30-goal seasons for Bordeaux in 2001/02 and 2002/03 respectively.
One of Europe's best centre-forwards in his prime, Pauleta – who would go on to register over 100 goals for PSG – belongs to an elite group of players to have scored a World Cup hat-trick – doing so as Portugal beat Poland 4-0 in the 2002 group stage.
16. Alan Shearer
Alan Shearer racked up a whopping 260 Premier League goals across 14 campaigns in the competition – and a sizeable chunk of those came between 2000 and his retirement in 2006, all for Newcastle.
A three-time back-to-back Golden Boot winner in the mid-90s, Shearer – who, by this time, had retired from England duty and could focus solely on club football – bagged 23 Premier League goals to help Sir Bobby Robson's Newcastle finish fourth in 2001/02, and 22 as they came fifth two seasons later.
15. Francesco Totti
Adept in the role of main striker, second striker, or as an attacking midfielder or winger, there's no doubt that Francesco Totti is one of Italy's greatest players of all time.
A one-club man, Totti famously spent his entire 24-year career with hometown club Roma – captaining them to the Scudetto in 2000/01 (his best scoring season came in 2006/07, when he top-scored 26 Serie A goals – and struck 32 times in all competitions).
14. Luca Toni
A naturally clinical finisher with more than 300 career goals to his name, few Italian players have been as prolific as Luca Toni – who was at his best between 2003 and 2008.
Having fired Palermo to promotion from Serie B with 30 goals in 2003/04, Toni instantly made his mark with 20 goals in Serie A the following season – earning himself a move to Fiorentina, where his continued impressive form saw him snapped up by Bayern Munich in 2007.
13. David Villa
Among the finest strikers of his generation and one of the greatest Spanish players of any generation, David Villa was integral to his nation's success in the latter half of the 00s.
Golden Boot winner as Spain triumphed at Euro 2008 (with three of his four goals a hat-trick against Russia), Villa banged in 130 goals in 225 appearances for Valencia between 2005 and 2010 – when Barcelona swooped to sign him.
12. Miroslav Klose
One of the most legendary goalscorers in World Cup history, German poacher extraordinaire Miroslav Klose found the net on 16 occasions across four editions of the tournament.
Klose – who did the Bundesliga and DFB-Pokal double with Bayern Munich in 2007/08 – opened his World Cup account with five goals in 2002, where he showed off his famous front-flip celebration, and hit a hat-trick in Germany's 8-0 drubbing of Saudi Arabia.
11. Michael Owen
Hamstring problems prevented Michael Owen from enjoying the career he ought to have done – but he was one of the best young players on the planet during the early 00s.
In fact, the technically gifted, utterly clinical Owen was one of the world's best players of any age – as recognised with his 2001 Ballon d'Or win, which came after his first of three consecutive 20-plus goal seasons for Liverpool (24 in 2000/01, and 28 in both 2001/02 and 2002/03).
10. Ruud van Nistelrooy
Ruud van Nistelrooy scored 96 Premier League goals during a scintillating five-year stint at Manchester United – and just a single one of them came from outside the box.
An absolute predator in the penalty area, the Dutchman was close to unstoppable at his best – winning the 2002/03 Golden Boot with 25 goals in 34 games (out of a superb 44 in 52 outings in all competitions) as Sir Alex Ferguson's United regained the title.
9. Raul
One of the greatest goalscorers the Champions League has ever seen, Raul was a three-time champion of Europe with Real Madrid – with two of those triumphs coming in the 00s (1999/2000 and 2001/02).
In the 2000/01 season, Raul enjoyed the most prolific campaign of his career as he netted 32 times in all competitions – and he left Real in 2010 among the leading scorers in the club's history, registering 323 goals in total.
8. David Trezeguet
A French hero at Euro 2000 when he scored the all-important golden goal against Italy in the final, David Trezeguet joined Juventus that summer – and went on to score for fun in a Bianconeri shirt.
His return of 15 goals in his first season at Juve was somewhat underwhelming – but he burst into the life the following campaign, registering 32 times in all competitions as he won his first of two successive Scudetti (he racked up more than 150 goals for the Turin giants before the decade was out).
7. Didier Drogba
Without a doubt one of the finest African footballers of all time, Didier Drogba joined Chelsea from Marseille in 2004 – and left eight years later a bona fide Stamford Bridge legend.
The first African player to score 100 Premier League goals, Drogba was the ultimate target man and excelled in the lone striker role – winning the first of his two Golden Boot awards in the 2006/07 season.
6. Andriy Shevchenko
Having broken out at Dynamo Kyiv in the late 90s, Andriy Shevchenko got a big move to AC Milan – and Ukraine's greatest player of all time only went from strength to strength with the Rossoneri.
During his first Milan spell, Shevchenko rattled in 173 goals in 296 outings – winning the 2002/03 Champions League and 2003/04 Serie A title, and setting a new record for the most goals scored in the Derby della Madonnina against Inter (14).
5. Samuel Eto'o
Among the finest centre-forwards in world football during the 00s, Samuel Eto'o is Cameroon's greatest player of all time – and one of the best strikers ever to grace La Liga.
A complete player in that position, Eto'o impressed at Real Mallorca before making a €24m switch to Barcelona – where he scored goal after goal between 2004 and his departure in 2009, finishing with a total of 130 in 199 games for the club he helped to 2005/06 and 2008/09 Champions League glory – scoring Barca's first goal in both finals.
4. Zlatan Ibrahimovic
Somehow, Zlatan Ibrahimovic never won the Champions League – and that's always rather hard to believe given how he scored so freely everywhere he went during his otherwise trophy-laden career.
Between the 2001/02 and 2008/09 seasons alone, the famously stern Swede scored 140 club goals across spells with Ajax, Juventus and Inter Milan – winning the title with all three of them – and was on target at the Euros of 2004 and 2008.
3. Wayne Rooney
Wayne Rooney's stunning debut goal for Everton against Arsenal in October 2002 was one of the Premier League's great 'Remember where you were when...?' moments.
From then on, Rooney's career continued on a markedly upward trajectory: an England international aged 17, he was a Manchester United player by 2004 – and he struck just shy of 100 times for Sir Alex Ferguson's team between then and the 00s – none more notable than his outrageous volley at Old Trafford against Newcastle in 2005.
2. Ronaldo
The 'original' Ronaldo revolutionised the role of the centre-forward during the 90s, and the all-time Brazilian icon remained one of the best players on the planet into the 00s – if not the best.
Prior to scoring 104 goals in five seasons for Real Madrid, O Fenomeno inspired his country to victory at the 2002 World Cup – where he clinched the Golden Shoe by bagging both goals in Brazil's win over Germany in the final (before capping a career-defining year by scooping his second Ballon d'Or.
1. Thierry Henry
The Premier League has never seen another striker quite like Thierry Henry – an inimitably classy weaver of footballing magic who remains arguably the biggest foreign superstar ever to light up the competition.
Ballon d'Or runner-up in 2003 and 2006, in each campaign from 2001/02 until 2005/06, Henry scored at least 24 league goals for Arsenal (and at least 30 in all competitions) – famously starring in the Gunners' 2003/04 Invincibles title triumph – and won the Golden Boot an incredible four times.