This article is part of Football League World's 'Fan's Voice' series, where we gather original opinions from those closest to the clubs concerned on matters surrounding their team and share them with a wider audience...

Huddersfield Town have had their fair share of ups and downs in recent years, with the club now playing their football in the Championship. 

The Terriers are sat 16th in the second-tier standings, and will be keen to put together a positive run of results heading towards the potentially season-defining festive period.

Football League World's Huddersfield Town fan Graeme Rayner gave us his top-ten Huddersfield Town players of all-time. Do you agree with his list though?

Find out who kicks is off at number ten, on the next page....

Disclaimer: The views cast from various supporters in the Fan's Voice series do not represent those of Football League World.

Apart from possessing one of the finest names in football (like something out of a comic book, isn’t it?) Glazzard was probably the first terrace hero in Town’s post-war years.

He spent the first ten years after the war leading Town’s attack, scoring 142 league goals in 299 league games, including 4 headers in one game Town’s 8-2 victory over Everton. Glazzard 154 goals in all competitions has him 2nd in Town’s all-time top scorers list.

Smith is 4th in Huddersfield's all-time goal-scorers list with 126 goals in his career, which spanned over 2 decades between 1913 and 1934 and a massive 574 appearances (the most by any player). Smith scored Huddersfield's winning goal in the 1922 FA Cup Final against Preston North End at Stamford Bridge.

He was also the first person ever to score directly from a corner in England. Top pub trivia: His son Conway also briefly played for Town (scoring 5 goals in 37 league games) and they became the first father and son pair to score 100 league goals each.

George Brown is another player from the thrice champions era and is Town’s all-time top scorer with 159 goals from 229 games, and in his eight years with the club, he won a number of trophies, including the Division One title on three occasions.

Ray Wilson is the Town player most capped by England. He has 266 Town appearances and left in 1964. He won the world cup in 1966, the same year as winning the FA Cup with Everton, and is the first player to make my top ten based on their whole career, rather than solely their time at the club.

Clem Stephenson makes the list for a few reasons – he’s another player from the team that won the league title three times in a row. He also finished runner up in the league three times with Town (twice as player, once as manager). Before joining Town he had finished runner-up three times as a player with Aston with Villa.

Clem also won 1 FA Cup with Town, 2 with Villa, and was FA Cup runners up three times (1 as player, 2 as manager) with Town.

As I’ve indicated, he was manager at Town after he finished playing, and is the club’s longest serving manager, having led the club for 13 years, a record likely to stand given our current habit of changing manager every few months.

Frank Worthington is a club legend as much for his personality as his ability, but both were fantastic. He was what used to be called a “mercurial” talent in the era of the likes of George Best and Rodney Marsh. He started his professional career at Town as a teenager and between Town and his next club, Leicester, played arguably the best football of his career.

He won the Second Division with Town in the 69/70 season and won the old First Division’s Golden Boot with Bolton in the 78/9 season, including one truly world class goal against Ipswich. Frank remains a club legend to this day.

“Boothy” is probably the main legend for many fans of my kind of age, and had two spells at the club. As a youngster his partnership with “Rocket” Ronny Jepson was barnstorming. In his first full season (93/4) he scored 29 goals including two hat-tricks as Town won promotion via the play-offs to the First Division (now the Championship).

In 1996 he moved down the M1 so Sheffield Wednesday and was their top scorer in his first season as they finished 7th. He briefly went on loan from Wednesday to Spurs in 2001 before returning to Town.

His second spell was also successful in terms of goal scoring, but the club were in a poor period generally, with two relegations in three seasons seeing the club drop to the old Third Division. He stayed loyal, and helped town secure another promotion in Cardiff in 2004.

Beautifully, with two games left in his final season at the club before retiring he stood on 148 goals for the club, and scored a goal in each of those two to finish on 150 goals – he’s 3rd in the all-time top scorer list and 4th in the all-time appearances list, and remains at the club today as an ambassador.

Another player who, like Ray Wilson, makes the list for their career as a whole. The Lawman played 91 games for Town having started his career with the club as an awkward, pasty ginger teenager from north of the border in 1956. He scored 19 goals in this games, before being sold to Man City for £55k, then a British record fee. Famously, the club spent this money on floodlights, known as the “Denis Law Lights” by fans.

His career took in Man City and Torino (making another record fee, £110k which was the most at that time paid for a British player) and most famously Man Utd (for a new British record fee of £115,000).

At United, he formed one third of the most feared attack of the era, with George Best and Bobby Charlton, scoring 237 goals in 404 games (narrowly behind only Charlton and Wayne Rooney in their all-time top scorers list with significantly fewer appearances) and in two league titles, an FA Cup and the European Cup (United being the first English club to win the trophy).

He also played 55 games for Scotland, scoring 30 goals. He won the Ballon D’or in 1964.

Selfishly I had to include the most naturally talented player I’ve ever seen in a Town shirt. Mooy signed for the club on loan from Man City, for whom he never played a match. He had just signed for them from Melbourne City in his native Australia, and Town fans were not sure what kind of player we were getting.

One of arguably the two most important signing of the all-too brief David Wagner era, Mooy’s midfield partnership with Jonathan Hogg led the club to promotion via the play offs. To be fair, anyone whose first goal results in a one-nil victory away to Leeds is going to become a legend almost immediately, but he was superbly consistent. Town made his move permanent after season promotion, and the highlight of our first season in the Premier League was almost certainly the club’s 2-1 win at home against José Mourinho’s Man Utd side.

Mooy bagged the first goal of the game and it will live long in the memory. Town were sadly relegated the season afterwards, and many point to a period during which he was injured – he had just masterminded a victory away at Wolves that many Town fans saw as the start to a recovery, scoring both goals in a 2-0 victory.

Mooy was injured in the next match which was the first in a run of 14 matches without a win (which only saw one draw). It may seem crass to say “if he hadn’t been injured Town may have stayed up” but he really was that good, that important. He moved to Brighton the following season and now plies his trade in China earning stupid amounts of money.

Christopher Schindler is my favourite current player and had to make the list (pun intended). Signed by David Wagner for a then club record fee of £1.8m in 2016, he formed a cornerstone of our back line with fellow Germans Chris Lowe and Michael Hefele (who almost made this list on personality alone).

Currently the club captain, Schindler remains at the club in what is his fifth season. By Huddersfield Town standards, on his day, Schindy is a Rolls-Royce of a defender, able to read the game well and calmly lead the back line. He has had his dips in form during two difficult seasons (our relegation from the EPL and our first season back in the Championship) but if his natural ability and his pure loyalty warrant him a place in this list.

I’m certain most Town fans at Wembley that day, with the penalty score at 3-3 with just one Town penalty left, would have been curious to see Schindler walk forward when the likes of winger Rajiv Van La Parra, young attacker Kasey Palmer or cult hero striker Collin Quaner had not yet taken one.

He calmly slotted the ball home, and later revealed he never took penalties but felt he owed the club for the faith shown in him as record signing.