Last updated: 19th August 2008
Following Fabio Capello's decision to name John Terry as England's permanent captain, skysports.com take an in-depth look at the defender's career to date.
1980 - December 7: Born in London.
1998 - October 28: Makes Chelsea debut against Aston Villa.
2000 - Has a two-month loan spell at Nottingham Forest.
2002 - May 4: Loses in FA Cup final to Arsenal.
2003 - June 3: Makes his England debut against Serbia and Montenegro, coming on as a half-time substitute.
2004 - June 24: Penalised for foul on Portugal goalkeeper Ricardo, denying Sol Campbell a winner in the European Championship quarter-final.
August 15: Appointed Chelsea skipper for the start of the season, succeeding Marcel Desailly.
2005 - April: Chelsea win Premiership.
2006 - April: Plays in the final game of title-winning season - a 3-0 win over rivals Manchester United.
July: England are knocked out of the World Cup at the quarter-final stage.
August 10: Chosen as new England captain by head coach Steve McClaren to replace David Beckham.
August 16: England beat Greece 4-0 in a friendly in Terry's first game as captain. The centre-half also scores the first goal of the new era.
October 11: Terry suffers his first defeat as England skipper, losing 2-0 in Croatia in a Euro 2008 qualifier.
November 5: Sent off for two bookable offences as Chelsea lose 2-1 at Tottenham. Terry later claims referee Graham Poll had given him conflicting reasons for his second yellow card. Poll subsequently denies this claim.
November 30: Terry charged with improper conduct by the Football Association for his comments about Poll.
December 17: Misses the 3-2 win over Everton at Goodison Park because of a back injury.
December 26: Manager Jose Mourinho admits he has "no idea" when Terry will be back for the champions.
December 28: Chelsea confirm the England captain has successfully undergone surgery on his back in France.
2007
January 8: Withdraws request for a personal hearing and admits charge over comments about Poll. He is fined £10,000 and reprimanded by the Football Association.
February 25: The Chelsea skipper is knocked unconscious during the Carling Cup final victory over Arsenal when Abou Diaby's foot accidentally connects with his head but is able to return to the Millennium Stadium within two hours of being rushed to hospital.
June 1: Scores the first senior England goal at the new Wembley in the 1-1 draw with Brazil.
July 27: Ends speculation over his future by signing a new five-year deal with Chelsea.
September 29: Suffers a broken cheekbone in a match against Fulham.
October 19: Undergoes surgery on a knee injury - suffered in training - which rules him out of England's crucial Euro 2008 qualifiers against Estonia, Russia and Croatia.
December 16: Leaves the Emirates Stadium on crutches after a challenge from Arsenal's Emmanuel Eboue.
December 17: Chelsea confirm he has broken three bones in his foot.
2008
February 16: Returns from injury in 3-1 FA Cup defeat of Huddersfield, having missed England's first match under new manager Fabio Capello, against Switzerland on February 6.
March 8: Slams their FA Cup quarter-final exit at the hands of Barnsley as an "unacceptable result and performance".
March 25: Loses out as Rio Ferdinand is named England captain for friendly against France.
May 11: Dislocates elbow in early stages of final game of the Premier League season - a 1-1 draw with Bolton. Miss out to Manchester United in title race by two points but leads his side on a lap of honour.
May 21: Misses penalty which would have won Chelsea the Champions League. Manchester United win the shoot-out and Terry later admits he will be "haunted forever" by the kick.
May 27: Named England captain for England's friendly against the USA.
August 12: Claims Manchester United have "peaked" ahead of the start of the new season and backs new Chelsea coach Luiz Felipe Scolari to lead them to glory.
August 17: Helps Chelsea to a 4-0 win over Portsmouth in the opening game of the new Premier League campaign at Stamford Bridge.
August 19: Named as permanent captain of England by coach Fabio Capello ahead of their friendly against Czech Republic at Wembley.
Skysports.com remembers a year to savour for the 2008 Ballon d'Or winner.
London and Manchester served up derbies to remember but the North East failed to deliver.
Skysports.com looks back at some of the more memorable responses to New Zealand's haka