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Nov & Dec
OWEN SET TO RETURN TO GOLDEN WAYS
December 5th 1999
Michael Owen
might have guessed his luck was going to turn a few hours before
he became the youngest ever winner of the BBC's Sports
Personality of the Year award this time last year. Owen arrived
at the glittering bash unruffled on the outside but angry with
himself for having had a penalty saved by Neil Sullivan a few
hours earlier as Liverpool slipped to a frustrating defeat at
Wimbledon. Looking back, maybe that fluffed spot-kick was an
omen.
Nearly 12 months on and Owen could be forgiven for thinking "good riddance" as he hands back the trophy next week. After all, it hasn't brought him the best of fortune in a year when hamstring injuries have blighted his career and his ability and even integrity have been questioned. When he did return from injury he was clearly ring-rusty. Suddenly fingers were being pointed and Owen was in unfamiliar territory for the first time in his brief but glittering career.
There was justified criticism for a reckless two-footed challenge on David Weir in the Merseyside derby when only referee Mike Riley's amazing leniency allowed him to stay on the pitch. Then after one ineffective game against Scotland, the kid feted as our finest footballing discovery for years found his ability to play at the highest level under intense scrutiny. On top of that, some ill-informed Liverpool fans wrote to their local paper in the build-up to the England-Scotland games questioning whether Owen was more interested in playing for his country than his club.
Then last week he was accused of "diving" on a miserable afternoon at West Ham when he missed a good chance, had a "goal" disallowed and was sarcastically cheered all the way to the bench by Hammers fans when he limped off with cramp. So now, nine days before his 20th birthday, England's golden boy is understandably feeling a bit tarnished, although he always knew this was likely to happen. After Robbie Fowler had damaged his cruciate ligaments back in February 1998 to wreck his World Cup chances, Owen said quite prophetically: "What has happened to Robbie sends a shudder down your spine.
One minute everything is going well for you, the next it can all turn sour. Everything has gone right for me so far, but I know one day there will be a downside. That is the way of things in football and I have to be ready for it." And Owen can rely on the support of Liverpool boss Gerard Houllier, who is convinced he can bounce back as a player while emerging from the "low" period a stronger person.
"Michael is only young but he is strong-minded and he will come through this," said Houllier. "These setbacks help a player mature. It happened to Robbie and and I'm sure it will be the same for Michael." Significantly, Owen will be back in harness with a fit-again Fowler, at least for some part of today's TV clash with Sheffield Wednesday at Anfield. It will be only the second time this season they have figured together because of injuries and Houllier is hoping it can be the launch pad for a great partnership. "We're nearly halfway through the season and yet Michael and Robbie have only played 60 minutes together," added Houllier. "And even in the hour they had together Robbie was not fit. They are my first-choice strike-force, it's been frustrating not to have them both, but I'm convinced they will come back to their best. "The only answer they can give to their critics is through their football. People wonder if they can play together, but I know they can. They have different assets but can blend well and lay on goals for each other. I prefer to have the two of them rather than one." Both Owen and Fowler will have special reasons for scoring this afternoon. Owen, who will be making his 99th appearance for Liverpool, hasn't managed a goal at Anfield since February 20 while Fowler needs one to chalk up his 150th for Liverpool.
OWEN TO LAND BIG BOOT DEAL
December
5th 1999
Umbro are
ready to kick rival sport companies into touch by giving Michael
Owen the first £1million-a-season boot deal. The Liverpool
striker has over two years of his current contract to run, but
advanced bidding has already seen two rival firms place lucrative
deals with his advisers, the Marquee Group. Umbro, who retain the
talents of Alan Shearer, also represented by the Marquee Group,
are expected to tie the Liverpool star to an extended seven-year
contract. Owen's planned Umbro deal will smash the British boot
record held by his Liverpool team-mate Robbie Fowler, who earns
£500,000 a season with Nike. Owen spent last week with his
sponsors testing out a revolutionary boot to be launched in
February next year.
TOP TEN
BRITISH BOOT DEALS
1) Robbie
Fowler (Liverpool) Nike...................£500,000
2) Alan Shearer (Newcastle) Umbro................£480,000
3) Ryan Giggs (Man Utd) Reebok...................£475,000
4) Dwight Yorke (Man Utd) Nike.....................£375,000
5) Andy Cole (Man Utd) Nike..........................£375,000
6) Roy Keane (Man Utd) Diadora....................£280,000
7) David Beckham (Man Utd) Adidas..............£250,000
8) Jamie Redknapp (Liverpool) Nike................£250,000
9) Michael
Owen (Liverpool) Umbro.................£250,000
10) Paul
Scholes (Man Utd) Nike....................£225,000
OWEN FOR ENGLAND?
19th
November 1999
The sidestep Michael Owen gave the Press corps in the Wembley
tunnel on Wednesday night was achieved to masterful effect. As he
came out of the England dressing-room, Owen adopted the posture
that has been his hallmark on the pitch - head down and with only
one target in his mind as he headed for sanctuary. His head did
not move, even as the waiting media bayed for a word with the boy
wonder. Nothing was going to distract him from his bid to get out
of Wembley as quickly as he could. The shame for Kevin Keegan,
England and Owen himself was that, for the second time in five
days, the Liverpool striker had demonstrated none of that
concentration of effort against Scotland.
When Keegan hauled him off after 63 largely ineffective minutes,
sending on Emile Heskey in his place, the dominant emotion was
one of pity rather than regret. Barely 17 months on from his
unforget-table goal for England and Argentina in Saint-Etienne,
which lit up France 98 and appeared to signal Owen's arrival as a
genuine force in the game, it was difficult to escape the feeling
that his game has gone worryingly backwards. Perhaps the problem
was one more of Owen's own making. So desperate was the 19-
year-old to play against the Scots that he declared himself fit,
despite having played just 90 minutes for his club in the
previous three weeks.
For all the bravado of youth, the insouciance that enabled him to
tell England coach Keegan face-to-face that he was ready, the
reality was that he was not. The possibility remains that he
never will be fully ready again. The hamstring which tore so
painfully and publicly at Elland Road last March is unlikely ever
to heal 100 per cent, as even Owen conceded last week.
Pressed on his general condition, he said: 'We diagnosed that my
hamstrings were doing a lot of the work to keep my body upright
and that the muscles around my pelvis weren't working properly.
So, when the hamstrings were asked to make me run, they were
already tired from doing overtime. 'Before and after training, I
spend half-an-hour stretching and strengthening the muscles. It's
a process that I'll do for the rest of my career.' That is a
long-term concern but there were short-term problems for Owen and
Keegan to address after the Wembley debacle. While Owen's pace
remains his major asset, speed over the ground is not in itself
sufficient
to take on and terrorise international defenders. One-trick
ponies do not win the gymkhana, no matter how clever that trick
might be.
Owen's personal adviser Tony Stephens, who also represents Alan
Shearer, has a justified reputation as an astute and sensible
businessman in an arena more customarily identified with rogues.
Yet, it has been claimed that since Stephens threw in Owen's lot
with the Marquee Group, he has perhaps taken his eye off the ball
a little and, while the youngster remains startlingly
level-headed for one thrust so early into fame and fortune, some
might suggest his time would be better spent improving the
footballing skills which make him so marketable. What is so
evident after Wembley is that - like too many of Keegan's squad -
Owen remains staggeringly one-footed and believes that pure
acceleration will be sufficient to unlock opposing defences.
Now what is needed is more guile, more craft, the unexpected
something that sifts the greats from the pretenders. At the
moment, for all that blistering turn of foot, Owen has become
predictable, particularly at the highest level. Hampden and
Wembley demonstrated that. Nobody would ever doubt that Owen is a
gem but he is still a rough diamond yet to be polished. There are
many who believe he will become truly priceless.
OWEN:"I'M UP TO THE JOB"
11th
November 1999
Michael Owen insists he is the man to partner Alan Shearer in the
Euro 2000 Battle of Britain. Liverpool's teenage star
says he is fully fit after a hamstring scare and ready to renew
his international strike partnership with the England captain.
The pair haven't started a game under Kevin Keegan but the
England boss dropped a hint that it was his number one
strikeforce - if Owen can prove he is match fit. Owen said: ''I
hope to be the one who partners Alan Shearer. I'm confident in my
ability to do it. I've played up front with Alan in the World Cup
and I certainly enjoy playing with him. It's a massive match and
one I'd hate to miss.''
Shearer and Owen have only started seven England games in tandem.
They were thrown together by Glenn Hoddle in
Switzerland before the World Cup and again towards the end of
France 98. But Howard Wilkinson was the last man to name them in
the same line-up, against France, in February. And, despite,
memorable moments from Owen in the World Cup, the duo have still
to prove they can forge a total understanding.
Owen said: ''We haven't played together many times but we were
reasonably successful in the World Cup against Colombia and
Argentina. I think we both looked dangerous in those games. So,
if those games are what we're judging by, I'd be reasonably
happy. I'd go into the game full of confidence.'' In fact, the
19-year-old, who was a supporter in the Wembley stands when
Shearer scored against Scotland in Euro 96, believes his own
style can dovetail nicely with the England captain. Owen said:
''A lot of people say you need a target man and a small player
who is quick and lively. He's a very good target man. He's
strong, good in the air and I'd like to think it would work.''
Andy Cole sparked a storm when he claimed England's other
strikers were vying for just one place alongside Shearer and Owen
admitted the England skipper couldn't be dropped on current form.
So Keegan must decide whether to risk Owen, who has started seven
games since mid-April and completed just three of them, or go
with Cole, who has been in terrific form for Manchester United
but missed training yesterday because of a kick on the calf.
''Maybe we are fighting for one position but it's a position well
worth fighting for,'' Owen said. If Keegan needs extra evidence
of Owen's suitability for a place in the starting line-up the
youngster will point him to his record against Scottish teams.
Owen scored for Liverpool against Celtic in the UEFA Cup in 1997
at Parkhead - an occasion which the teenager describes as the
best atmosphere he has ever witnessed in a match.
He scored against Scotland Under-16s and netted the goal he rates
as the best of his life against Scotland at Under-15 level. Owen
said: ''They had just scored to make it 1-1 and we needed to beat
them. Straight from the restart, Kenny Lunt, who now plays for
Crewe, tapped the ball to me and told me to run. I looked up at
them and half of the team were still celebrating on the
right-hand side of the pitch so there were only about five
players to beat. I ran through and whacked it in the top corner.
The camera shows me running from about 30 yards out but it was
actually from the half-way
line.''
FOWLER'S FINISHING BETTER THAN OWEN -
RUDDOCK
11th
November 99
Former Liverpool defender Neil Ruddock believes Robbie Fowler is
a better finisher than Michael Owen - and reckon's
Owen would probably agree with him. In five seasons at Anfield,
Ruddock watched the development of Michael Owen. He could be
named as Alan Shearer's strike-partner against Scotland at
Hampden Park on Saturday, if he can prove his fitness to Kevin
Keegan. Ruddock said: ''You could see Michael Owen was a player
going right to the top. I played in a reserve game with him when
he was 16 or 17 and you could see the talent. But I'm a great
admirer of Robbie Fowler. I think Robbie is a better finisher and
Michael would probably agree with me.''
Owen To Partner Shearer If Fit' Says Keegan
10th
November 99
KEVIN KEEGAN
has revealed that Michael Owen will partner Alan Shearer against
Scotland this weekend - but only if he can prove his
match-fitness in the build-up to the Euro 2000 play-off. Keegan
has never wavered from his publicly expressed conviction
following the World Cup that Owen and Shearer would be his
first-choice strike partnership. However, just as before
England's three previous games, a huge question mark still
surrounds Owen's match-fitness - and that could open the door for
in-form understudy Andy Cole, while Kevin Phillips also lurks in
the wings.
The dilemma is one of three major issues to be resolved before
the first leg at Hampden as Keegan attempts to play down the
hype, even though he admits that the historic fixture often means
more in Scotland than it does south of the border. The England
boss, who will not publicly name his line-up until just before
Saturday's kick-off, must also decide between David Seaman and
Nigel Martyn in goal as well as whether to play wing-backs or a
back four. Seaman keeping his place behind a back five appears to
be the most likely scenario but the situation is much less clear
over the identity of Shearer's strike partner.
Keegan said: ''It's really a case of if Michael's fully fit then
there has to be a place in the England side for him because he
gives you something. You saw what happened against Belgium.
Suddenly the defenders went back another five or ten yards
because they're scared about the pace he's got. That helps other
players.
''But you can't ignore the things that have happened either. You
have to keep it in perspective. What's happened between the
World Cup and now is that the lad has been out for a while, he
has missed a few games and he has gone out again. If you talk
about him being 100% by Saturday, then in himself, yes I think he
will be. He's a young lad and he's very fit. But if you're
talking about being match-fit then that's where your slight doubt
comes in because he hasn't played that many games.
"You could look at it two ways. You could say 'give us an
hour' or 'you're probably not match-fit enough to start, what
about coming on and giving us something like against Belgium that
you did for the last 35 minutes?' Let's look at the rest of the
training all week and judge it then, but he's certainly trained
fantastically this morning. He's always got a lot of enthusiasm
and that's never going to go. He always wants to play.'' Having
come back from four months out with a hamstring problem, the
Liverpool striker suffered the setback of a similar but unrelated
injury against Southampton last month. But Owen insisted that he
had only missed five days' training at his club and that, with
his confidence boosted by his dazzling display as a substitute
against Belgium, he was desperate to return to the England
starting line-up for the first time since February. ''I've got no
problems at all with my fitness. My hamstrings are totally
cleared up and I'm not getting any stiffness or problems
afterwards,'' said Owen. ''I'm confident in my ability to partner
Alan Shearer. I've played up front with him in the World Cup and
in all the games, so I certainly enjoy playing with him. It's a
massive match and one that I'd hate to miss.''
Indeed, the irony on the first day's training at the England camp
was that while Owen did take part it was Cole who missed the
session for treatment to a knock on his calf. Keegan nevertheless
remains confident that the Manchester United forward will be
training again by Thursday and said: ''Andy doesn't miss games if
you look at his record. When he gets kicked he comes back pretty
quickly.'' The England boss also maintained that Cole's recent
outburst against Shearer, when he expressed his frustration that
the England captain had been an automatic choice for the past
three national coaches, would not count against him. ''There's
not a problem there. I know that if I put the two of them in the
team together then they will play. That's the only thing that
concerns me,'' he said.
Cole was one of six players who did not take part in yesterday's
work-out, but Shearer, Jamie Redknapp and Martin Keown are
expected to train tomorrow while Tony Adams, who only completed
half the session, should also be fit for Saturday. Ray Parlour
and Steve McManaman must meanwhile prove their fitness by
Thursday evening, although Phil Neville and David Beckham would
appear the favourites to start as wing-backs anyway if Keegan
uses a back three. Even if he reverts to a back four, Keegan
realises that at least one player will have to be used out of
position and he accepted predecessor Terry Venables' words of
warning to that effect given the restrictions forced upon him by
injuries. The England boss said: ''I thought it was common sense.
I've sat where Terry is now and have done the same thing so I
can't turn round to him and say it's ridiculous.
''But I still think there's enough experience in there to ask one
player maybe to play in a position that is a little bit foreign
to him at club level. I'll not be asking him to do something he
can't do. Just because it hasn't worked in the past doesn't mean
to say that it won't work at Hampden. It's another game, another
opportunity.'' The one thing that Keegan will not be doing just
yet is fuelling the hype already surrounding the fixture, but
even though his comments were more guarded than usual there was
still room for just one minor note of controversy.''I sometimes
think in Scotland that it probably means more than it does down
here. I don't mean that to be unkind because they're big games to
play in but it's the Auld Enemy and that sort of thing, '' he
said.
LIVERPOOL 2-0 DERBY: HOULLIERS VIEW
8th
November 1999
Liverpool boss Gerard Houllier welcomed back Michael Owen after
the 2-0 win over Derby - and declared the Reds' season back on
track. Houllier said: "Michael did well considering he was
coming back from injury. I took him off in those final minutes to
avoid a repetition of the injury which can come at the end of
matches. "But he looked all right, more than all right
actually. He's fully match fit for England, he wouldn't have
started for me today if he hadn't been.
OWEN
FIT FOR ENGLAND DUTY
Michael
Owen was today declared fit for England action by Liverpool boss
Gerard Houllier. Owen made his comeback following a hamstring
problem in the 2-0 home win over Derby which elevated Liverpool
to fifth place in the Premiership. The teenage striker played 80
minutes of Liverpool's fourth successive home win before being
withdrawn from the fray. Houllier said: ''Michael did well
considering he was coming back from injury. I took him off in
those final minutes to avoid a repetition of the injury which can
come at the end of matches. But he looked all right, more than
all right actually. He's fully match fit for England, he wouldn't
have started for me today if he hadn't been.''
Houllier, who celebrates a year in solo control of Liverpool at
the end of the week, said of today's win: ''The virtue we showed
against Derby was patience. It was not our best performance but
it was a very, very good Liverpool performance. ''We had a fine
start with plenty of chances, but then the game went a bit dead.
In the second half we had to be careful but we never panicked or
hurried our football. In a game like that you need some
individual brilliance and that's what Danny Murphy provided.''
Murphy scored his first league goal for the club against a side
he could easily have joined earlier in the season when he was out
of the squad. Four minutes after Murphy's goal Jamie Redknapp
broke away to clinch the points.
The victory marked Houllier's year in charge and he pointedly
underlined the differences from his first match, a 3-1 home
defeat by Leeds last November. ''In that game we were 1-0 ahead,
some of our players were arguing in the penalty area and Leeds
broke away to score and go on to win,'' said the Frenchman.
''Maybe a year ago we wouldn't have been able to win a game like
this one against Derby, who are a much better side than their
position (fourth bottom) shows.''
OWEN: Club before Country
4th November 1999
Michael Owen has insisted that he is not putting his country
before his club. The striker, whose hamstring injury kept him out
of Monday night's win over Bradford, said: "I can't help
being injured for Liverpoolgames. I've also missed England games
through injury and I've never thought of England before a
Liverpool match. "The only thing on my mind now is our game
against Derby. We've got ourselves into a nice position in the
league and it will be very good if we can get another win before
we go away on international duty. "I have just scored my
50th goal for Liverpool and I have made my name with Liverpool.
I've been at the club since I was around nine years old. I am one
of the most Liverpool people and I can't believe I should have to
defend myself." His manager Gerard Houllier said:
"There are still a few days to go before the Derby game and
I will see how Michael shapes up in training. If does play I know
he will give the maximum as he always
does.
"Michael is a good professional who is fully aware of his
club commitments. But if he is questioned about the game against
Scotland then it is only natural that he gives a relevant answer.
"The England-Scotland matches are dominating press coverage,
so its hard for him to escape being asked about it. "But
everyone at this club knows what playing for Liverpool leaves to
Michael and he will continue to show it."