Experts say the huge sums invested in the country's top players have failed to alleviate their violent, working class horridness.
Professor Johnny Vegas

"Even someone like Steven Gerrard, who once had the makings of a gentleman, is unable to resist the lure of sticky suburban nightlcubs frequented by DJs and fitness instructors and moderately successful plasterers.
"And yes, Wayne Rooney does have an impressive wine collection, but only so his dreadful, inarticulate friends will have nice, heavy bottles to smash each other over the head with."
He added: "Remember those nasty boys in school who were gratuitously violent, foul mouthed, disruptive and cruel? Now imagine them with an annual budget of £5 million."
The Institute has proposed a block release system where footballers would spend eight weeks a year at Cambridge learning to use George Bernard Shaw quotes instead of stamping on someone's forehead.

An educated, middle-class footballing trend did emerge in the late 1980s when Everton winger Pat Nevin was seen enjoying 'Doonesbury' in the Guardian but ended in 1993 when Blackburn and England full-back Graeme Le Saux was branded a homosexual for using the word 'eclectic' in a post-match interview.
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