I think Sheringham was on a totally different level to the other 3. The trouble was, in those days, it was very common for English teams to play 442, often with 2 out and out strikers and 2 wingers feeding them. Technically and in terms of a football brain, Sheringham was on another planet to the other 3 and had football been played, as it largely is now, with one striker and 2 wing forwards, I think we'd have appreciated him far more. I think similar could be said of someone like Peter Beardsley. But this was a time when people were clamouring for an England pairing of Owen and Shearer. It would be like playing Kane and Vardy, through the middle together, and have Sterling and Sancho a wingers crossing balls in.