These are the players we've picked and the impact they had on Leeds United and football as a whole:
1. Rod Wallace
Rod Wallace played a pivotal part in his first season at Leeds, helping the Whites go on to win the old First Division title and Charity Shield in 1992. The forward enjoyed seven years in West Yorkshire, making 257 appearances and scoring 65, one of which came against Tottenham Hotspur in April 1994 which won him the Premier League Goal of the Season. He then joined Glasgow Rangers in 1998.
2. Albert Johanneson
Albert Johanneson joined Leeds in April 1961 and was later promoted to the old First Division under Don Revie in 1964. The left-winger was a pioneer in the 1960s and helped United reach the FA Cup final in 1965, becoming the first player of African heritage to play in the prestigious match.
3. Lucas Radebe
Lucas Radebe joined Leeds in 1994 and enjoyed 11 years at Elland Road in which he made 238 appearances, scoring two goals, and playing an important part in the club reaching the Champions League semi-finals in 2001. The defender became a club legend, earning the nickname “The Chief” from Leeds supporters, who still sing his name. Radebe is the club's most internationally capped player with 69 caps for South Africa.
4. Tony Yeboah
Tony Yeboah only spent two memorable years at Leeds after arriving from Eintracht Frankfurt in 1995. He scored 32 goals in just 66 appearances, two of which were some of the best goals in Leeds United and Premier League history; a monumental volley against Liverpool, and a wonder goal against Wimbledon. He then returned to Germany in 1997, singing for Hamburg.
5. Jermaine Beckford
Jermaine Beckford was unknown when he signed for Leeds from non-league side Wealdstone in 2006, but the striker would go on to have an unforgettable career at Leeds United, playing an influential role in the club's promotion from League One in 2010, captaining the side and scoring the winning goal in their 2-1 victory over Bristol Rovers at Elland Road which sent the Whites up to the Championship, etching his name in the Leeds United history books. Supporters still sing Beckford’s name on the terraces, particularly about the winning goal he scored against rivals Manchester United at Old Trafford.
6. Max Gradel
Max Gradel initially joined Leeds on loan from Leicester City in October 2009 and was another key player during United’s League One promotion, resulting in him signing a permanent deal at the end of that season. He was named both Players’ and Fans’ Player of the Year in 2011, before moving on to French side Saint-Etienne.