Last Tuesday night three Englishmen scored at the Jämtkraft Arena, a ground where Galatasaray, PAOK Thessaloniki and Hertha Berlin were beaten and Athletic Bilbao were held in the Europa League last season. The efforts of the young Ytterhogdals IK players were in vain as home side IFK Ostersund won 4-3 to progress in the Swedish Cup. All but five of the Ytterhogdals squad are British. Having come through at Liverpool, Preston North End, Leyton Orient, Grimsby Town, Fleetwood Town, Manchester United, Sunderland and Wolves, they now live together in a hostel in a village 100 miles from the nearest town. They train twice a day and play in the Swedish fourth tier for one of Europe’s strangest clubs. So how come 3% of the people living in an isolated Swedish village are professional footballers? Crowds at Ytterhogdals average around 250 – almost half the village – yet the players are paid enough to survive in an expensive country thanks to funding from wealthy farmers in the area. Yorkshireman Adie Costello, who managed Hull City Ladies, York City Ladies and Garforth Town before moving to Sweden, says: “There is no pressure or expectation, other than to not get relegated and bring…