In the blue shirt his goalscoring exploits from the centre of the park remain outstanding - and he outscores almost every striker in the Premier League.
His eye for goal, attacking influence and deadball ability make him one of the best midfielders around at domestic and European level.
Lampard first rose through the ranks at West Ham United with his father Frank Lampard Snr part of the backroom staff.
He made his debut for West Ham on the final day of 1995/6 aged 17.
The midfielder gradually became more important to the Hammers and by 1997/98 was a first team regular despite still being a teenager.
Lampard's performances gained the attention of the England coaching staff, and he made his full debut against Belgium in October 1999.
Lampard left West Ham in the summer of 2001 after his father, along with manager Harry Redknapp, had also departed. He moved across London to join Chelsea for £11million.
At the time many laughed at Chelsea's decision to spend such a vast amount of money on him. It would turn out to be one of the all-time bargains.
But after impressive start to the 2003/4 season he regained his place in the national squad and scored his first international goal as England beat Croatia 3-1 in a friendly at Portman Road in August.
It was that same season that Lampard truly began to come of age. He would win numerous plaudits for his energetic displays in the Chelsea midfield.
Amid the uncertainty caused by the influx of Chelsea's expensive summer signings after Roman Abramovich arrived at the Bridge it was Lampard who blossomed to be the only ever present in 2003/04.
Lampard bagged three goals in four games at Euro 2004 as England reached the quarter-finals, cementing a place for himself in the starting line-up.
That form was followed by a superlative 2004/5 season and earned him the Football Writers' Player of the Year Award.
And he underlined that by finishing second to Barcelona's Ronaldinho in both the European and World Player of the Year awards.
After helping Chelsea to consecutive Premiership titles, Lampard had a woeful 2006 World Cup from which his national reputation may never recover.
A club level, he will long remain a Chelsea idol, being the the top scoring midfielder in Chelsea's history.
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