Michael Owen’s chance to prove critics wrong
I’ve always liked watching Michael Owen play football, ever since he broke in years ago as a youngster. Who can forget his memorable goal against Argentina in the 1998 World Cup, which made him the youngest ever player and scorer for England at the time?
It seems that Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson also remembers that goal and many others as he signed the now 29-year-old striker to a two-year contract on July 3rd.
Owen broke in the league with Liverpool as a 17 year old in 1996 and promptly scored 118 goals in 216 games for the reds, proving he knows where the net is. He has also proven time and time again that he can also score at the international level and looked to be well on his way to reaching Bobby Charlton’s record of 49 goals for England until injuries struck.
Owen now sits fourth all-time on the England scoring list with 40 goals in 89 games, 26 of them in competitive matches. He also played with Real Madrid and scored 13 league goals (18 total) in 2004-05, while it may not seem like a lot, Owen had the highest ratio of goals per-minutes played in La Liga. Let’s face it, he’s a natural scorer and has produced for every team he’s played for.
If newspaper reports are to believed, Owen’s contract will be heavily based on minutes played and goals scored. This is a good move by Ferguson, as it’s imperative that Owen stays healthy. He has been dogged over the past few years by various injuries, especially the hamstring, and that’s a big reason he has disappeared from the football radar screens, both domestically and nationally. Many fans and managers are under the assumption that he’s injury prone and/or he just isn’t that interested in playing for his pay cheque anymore. It seems to have gotten so bad that it’s rumoured only Hull and Stoke had shown any interest in signing him.
It didn’t cost Ferguson any transfer fee to sign Owen and with an incentive-laden contract he hasn’t really got anything to lose if Owen doesn’t produce or if he misses half the season through injury. It’s also unlikely that Owen will complain or sulk if he’s left on the subs bench the majority of the time, but then again it will be hard for him to hit the incentive levels if he isn’t given the chance to play.
Ferguson has painted himself into a corner slightly, by losing Carlos Tevez and Cristiano Ronaldo. It also appears there’s no chance of United signing David Villa this season, so he needs to get goals from somewhere. Yes, United signed Antonio Valencia earlier in the week, but he’s only going to score a handful of goals for you at the most, he managed three last season.
Owen, on the other hand, had a dismal season health-wise and still managed to bang in 10 goals for relegated Newcastle. Many fans believe Owen has lost it, but he can still produce and his numbers prove that. A move to United should give him a lot of incentive and the right stage to prove the naysayers wrong. If he plays enough, I can honestly see Owen score more league goals than Tevez (5) managed last season, and even Berbatov (9) for that matter.
Owen has been snubbed by England lately, especially since Fabio Capello took over the reigns and scoring a few goals for the Premier League champions will hopefully make the Italian take notice of one of England’s best-ever goal scorers. If Emile Heskey can somehow inexplicably get recalled to England after years on the sidelines, I’m sure somebody should realize Michael Owen definitely deserves another chance.
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