
Britain has produced no shortage of sporting icons, but only a few get immortalised in bronze. Rank the legends you reckon most deserve a permanent spot on the concrete.
Put the items in your preferred order.

Sir Andy Murray
Two Wimbledon titles, an Olympic gold and decades of carrying British tennis on a metal hip. If anyone has earned a plinth outside SW19, it's him.
Dame Jessica Ennis-Hill
Heptathlon gold on Super Saturday made her the symbol of a summer that genuinely changed how Britain saw itself. Sheffield should have ordered the bronze years ago.
Sir Mo Farah
From Mogadishu to the top of the podium, Farah's distance running dominance defined a generation. The Stratford skyline still feels incomplete without him.

Sir Bradley Wiggins
The first Briton to win the Tour, followed by Olympic time trial gold a week later. Cycling's transformation in this country owes him an enormous debt.
Sir Kenny Dalglish
Player, manager, and the steady hand Liverpool leaned on after Hillsborough. His legacy stretches far beyond goals and trophies.
Drag the photo to reorder
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