FIFA began its end-of-year rankings in December 1992
      and its regular periodic rankings in August 1993.  For the first few
      years, FIFA published the rankings 10 times a
      year.  Beginning in 1999, FIFA released a new ranking list every
      month, although no ranking was posted in June 2002 because the World
      Cup final tournament occupied the entire month.
      The first ranking in December 1992 put England in
      fifth place as a result of a fairly successful run under manager 
       Graham
      Taylor.  By the end of the following year, however, England had failed to qualify for the
      World Cup 1994 final
      tournament, were awaiting appointment of a new manager in the wake of
      Taylor's resignation, had
      dropped six places in the rankings and were no longer a top-10 team.
      England sank to their lowest-ever
      ranking, 27th, in February 1996 under Taylor's successor, national team
      coach 
      Terry
      Venables, as they
      neared the end of a 30-month period in which they played 20 consecutive friendly matches, including three in the minor 
      Umbro
      Cup International Challenge Tournament in 1995.  This long break
      in competitive play occurred because of England's failure to qualify for the 1994 World Cup finals and,
      primarily, their automatic qualification as host nation for the European
      Championship 1996 final tournament. 
      The decline in the rankings came not because of England's results under
      Venables, but because FIFA's
        ranking calculations place a higher value on competitive matches than on
        friendly matches.  Immediately after England resumed competitive
        play in the European Championship 1996 final tournament, where they reached the
        semi-finals, their ranking leaped from 24th to 13th.
      England attained their highest ranking, 4th, in
      December 1997 under Venables' successor, manager 
      Glenn Hoddle,
        after a highly successful
        World Cup 1998 qualifying campaign.  For 13 ranking periods over 15
      months in 1997 and 1998, Hoddle's England remained a top-10 team.  Following their round-of-16 exit
        from the World Cup 1998 final tournament, their ranking dropped five places, from 5th to
      10th, and, after their shaky start in the European Championship 2000
      qualifying campaign, to 11th in September of that year.  For the remaining few months of Hoddle's tenure, England 
      placed 9th, 10th or 11th, hovering on the fringes of classification as one
        of the world's best teams.   They remained in 11th place
      following the one-match stint caretaker manager 
      Howard
        Wilkinson put in after Hoddle resigned under pressure, a 2-0 friendly loss at home to France in February 1999.
      But over the next 18 months, under manager 
       Kevin
      Keegan,
        England slipped well into the second tier in the world football
        hierarchy, dropping from a high of 10th in April 1999, to a low of 15th
        in July 2000, when they lost three places following their elimination
        in the group stage at the European Championship 2000 final tournament.  After a
      brief rally up to 13th in August 2000--the product of other teams'
      decline since England did not play in the interim--England sank to 14th in
      the September ranking, despite the 1-1 friendly draw away to France, to 15th in
      the October ranking as a result of the World Cup 2002 qualifying loss at
      home to Germany that led to Keegan's resignation, to 16th in November after the
      lacklustre goalless qualifying draw in Finland under Wilkinson, in charge
      for a single match as caretaker manager for the second time, and
      to 17th in December following the 1-0 friendly loss in Italy under another
      temporary manager, 
       Peter Taylor. 
      They remained in that place in the first two rankings of 2001, which
      reflected a period in
      which they had no matches.
      Restoration to ranking respectability began
      promptly on 
       Sven-Göran Eriksson's appointment as head
      coach in early 2001.  England reeled off five straight victories, and by September were back in
      the top 10 for the remainder  of the year.  Although they
      hovered on the fringes of the top level in the first few months of 2002,
      they have retained top-10 status since their 6th place quarterfinal showing at the
      World Cup 2002 final tournament.  
      The 6th place rankings England reached in October
      and November 2002, again in September and October 2003 at the close of
      their successful qualifying campaign for the European Championship 2004
      final tournament and yet
      again in March 2004 were the highest achieved
  under Eriksson, approaching the Hoddle team's high points, the 4th and 5th place rankings of late
      1997 and early
      1998.  Their 7th place in December 2002 was the third highest
      end-of-year ranking they had achieved, behind only 1992's 5th place and
      1997's  4th place.  Their
      8th place in December 2003 marked the first time they had achieved an
      end-of-year top-10 place for three straight  years, eclipsing the
      two-year streak attained under Hoddle in 1997 and 1998, just before his
      resignation.
      England finished in the top 10 in six of the 12 end-of-year
      rankings released since the rankings began in 1992.  They achieved
      that feat only three times in the rankings' first nine years.  They
      did it another three times in the first three years Eriksson was in
      charge, a remarkable improvement.  They were ranked among the top 10 teams for
      22
      straight months, by far their longest top-10 streak, and appeared well  on  the way to entrenching themselves once again as one of the world's top-ranked
      teams and becoming one of the elite top five teams.
      But in the April 2004 ranking, after a 1-0 friendly match
      loss to Sweden in late March, they dropped four places to 10th and fell out
      of the top 10 to 12th in the May ranking, reflecting a period in which
      they did not play.  They sank to 13th in the June ranking following
      the 1-1 draw with Japan and the 6-1 drubbing of Iceland in the FA Summer
      Tournament.  But their quarterfinal penalty kicks shootout
  elimination at European Championship 2004 in Portugal was sufficient to push them back up to 8th in the July
      ranking and to 7th in the August ranking.  They remained there in the
      September ranking following their 3-0 home friendly victory against the
      Ukraine.
      more to follow....
        Further Information
         The
        FIFA
        website contains the complete world rankings from their inception
        and a description of the method by which the rankings are calculated.