ENGLAND'S World Cup football captain Steven Gerrard might boast a £3.9 million mansion but it is a far cry from the modest home he grew up in on a tough council estate in Liverpool.

The contrast in house prices on streets of Stevie G’s namesake is equally stark. Gerrards Lane in Merseyside and Gerrard Street in London might both share a name with one of the top 10 richest footballers who played in the World Cup in Brazil but that is where the similarities end.

The average terrace in England and Wales is now worth £123,487 but the average terrace in the Merseyside borough of Knowsley, where Gerrards Lane is located, is just £83,599.

Around 200 miles south, Gerrard Street in Soho is at the heart of the property bubble. The average price of a terrace in the City of Westminster is £2,845,587 - 34 times more than a terrace in Knowlsey.

Looking at the increase over the past 10 years and the difference is even more dramatic. Prices of terraces in Westminster have soared 252 per cent over the past 10 years while terraces in Knowsley have increased by 62 per cent.

The annual salary required for an 80 per cent mortgage on the average terrace in Knowsley is £19,108 but in Westminster you would need to be earning £650,420 to buy an average terrace. That is equivalent to what Steven Gerrard makes in just over a month.

Gerrard’s two-acre property in Merseyside boasts a two-storey gym, swimming pool, children’s playground and putting green. For the same price he could only stretch to a 1,872 ft flat in Soho Square.

The situation is similar on other roads which share a name with an England footballer. Derbyshire, Newcastle-upon-Tyne and Harrow all have a Welbeck Road but while the average price of a terrace in Derbyshire is just £78,399, a terrace in Newcastle can fetch £117,683 and a terrace in Harrow will set you back £297,943.

Ruth Davison, director of policy and external affairs at the National Housing Federation, said: “Unless you are lucky enough to earn a footballer’s wage, the chances of being able to buy your own home are becoming ever more slim.

“Our housing market has long been weakened by the lack of new houses being built, which are forcing up house prices, leaving millions of people struggling to get on the property ladder.

“Unless the Government address the chronic under-supply of homes, an entire generation are at risk of being locked out of the housing market.

“Our ambition is to solve the housing crisis in a generation but the only way to succeed is to say yes to more of the right homes in the right places at the right price.”