1 With Jamie Carragher the latest footballer to turn pundit, talkSPORT look at how the Premier League's clubs are 'represented' across live television coverage in England

Sky have unveiled Jamie Carragher as the star signing ahead their live Premier League coverage next season, meaning it's three Liverpool men against one Red Devil, as Carra joins Jamie Redknapp, Graeme Souness and Gary Neville as part of the team. That got us thinking: which teams are most represented when it comes to TV coverage of Premier League, Champions League, Europa League and FA Cup matches, taking into account the clubs they represented during their playing days? Using programme line-ups from UK television (regular pundits from live and highlights shows) and only taking into account teams currently in the Premier League, take a look at the results…

Everton – Two pundits

The Toffees can only muster up two pundits, with the BBC's Gary Lineker and Martin Keown both representing them at one stage in their respective careers.

Aston Villa – Four pundits

Villa prove they still have big-club gravitas with four former players in the punditry business. Martin Keown (BBC), Paul Merson (Sky), Andy Townsend and Gareth Southgate (both ITV) are all former Villa players.

Newcastle – Five pundits

ESPN's Kevin Keegan, Chris Waddle and John Barnes, plus the BBC's Alan Shearer and Les Ferdinand all wore their famous black and white stripes at some stage.

Manchester United – Five pundits

Surprisingly, given their dominance over the past 20 years, Man United are only able to scrape five pundits formerly from their ranks. The BBC's Gary Pallister and Garth Crooks (yes, he played for the Red Devils on loan!), Sky's Gary Neville and Ray Wilkins, plus ITV's Roy Keane all donned the red shirt, though with varying degrees of success.

Chelsea – Five pundits

ESPN's Craig Burley, Sky's Ray Wilkins, Glenn Hoddle, Ruud Gullit and ITV's Andy Townsend complete the Blues' spread.

Arsenal – Five pundits

The Gunners have significant representation among TV pundits. Charlie Nicholas, Niall Quinn and Alan Smith are all former Gunners working for Sky, while ITV boast Lee Dixon and Martin Keown pops up on the BBC.

Tottenham Hotspur – Six pundits

Garth Crooks, Gary Lineker and Les Ferdinand of the BBC, along with Jamie Redknapp and Glenn Hoddle of Sky, plus ESPN's Chris Waddle all ran out for the Lilywhites.

Liverpool – Ten pundits

England's most successful team in Europe are also the most successful team in the TV punditry stakes. Kevin Keegan, Steve McManaman and John Barnes give their thoughts to ESPN, while Graeme Souness, Jamie Redknapp, Phil Thompson and Jamie Carragher (at least from next season) are all contracted by Sky. Alan Hansen and Mark Lawrenson are the faces of BBC's Match of the Day, and Jim Beglin does commentary for ITV. That's virtually a full team – and Robbie Fowler has started popping up as a pundit every now and then – and a better one than Liverpool's current side, might we add.

Is Liverpool's dominance of TV's punditry fair, or would you like to see a wider spread? Let us know below…