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Benitez Considering to Get Owen Join Liverpool
by iqrashawan on Jul.12, 2009, under Football

Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez has revealed he considered signing Michael Owen this summer, but came to the conclusion that he would not command a regular first-team place.
The 29-year-old spent eight successful seasons at Anfield at the start of his career, scoring 158 goals in all competitions.
However that has not stopped the striker joining the Reds’ fiercest rivals Manchester United on a free transfer from Newcastle this summer.
Benitez told The People: “We had contact with different people and were analysing the situation.
“But if you want to play Torres and Gerrard there is not always a lot of space for other players.
“When I brought back Robbie Fowler it was a different situation. We were looking for someone who could understand his role clearly and he was a good finisher.
“But we have a World Cup coming up and all the top players want to play. In his position it would be hard for Owen to play every week at Liverpool.”
The Spaniard is also confident he already has enough squad depth at his disposal to cope with any injuries to his preferred front pairing.
“We are confident in (Dirk) Kuyt, (Ryan) Babel, (David) Ngog and (Andriy) Voronin for next season. We have players with quality,” he added.
“People say I might need another striker but I remember signing Robbie Keane and everyone was saying good things.
“Then after I sold Robbie people were saying I was short of strikers but we scored more goals than anyone in the Premier League.”
Why Signing Michael Owen Is A Really Good Idea
by iqrashawan on Jul.04, 2009, under Football
The Republik of Mancunia website has responded to the most remarkable bit of transfer news this summer with an article titled ‘God No, Not Michael Owen’. F365 makes the case for why United signing Michael Owen would be a really good idea…
* United require another attacker. To start the season with just two youngsters as support two recognised top-class strikers would be a risk too far. In comparison, signing Michael Owen on a free transfer is no risk at all. A proven goalscorer who is presumably joining United in the knowledge that he will start the season behind Wayne Rooney and Dimi Berbatov in the pecking order, Owen is the perfect fit for what United require.
Not incidentally, it was mostly from the bench that Owen scored his 13 La Liga goals during his single season at Real Madrid, ending the campaign with the league’s highest ratio of goals scored to number of minutes played.
* Signing the 5ft 8 Owen would balance United’s attacking options. Berbatov, Danny Welbeck and Macheda are all big ‘uns while Rooney is the only little ‘un. True enough, Owen and Rooney failed to dovetail convincingly on England duty but that potential problem may be irrelevant: Ferguson probably has no intention of playing them together.
* If it is true that he has agreed a pay-as-you-play deal with a series of performance-related bonuses attached then Owen has passed the first, pivotal test. With Everton reputedly ready to offer him a far-superior weekly wage of £65,000, Owen’s willingness to accept the incentivised deal on offer at Old Trafford indicates that he still has the required ambition and hunger to succeed.
Furthermore, Owen has not only proved himself to the club’s manager but also made his transfer a risk-free venture for the board to approve. Nor can the club’s owners dissent: By joining on a Bosman free on knock-down wages, Owen’s arrival would not conflict with the reported age limit of 25 imposed on new purchases.
* If those performance-related clauses aren’t incentive enough, then the proximity of next summer’s World Cup should be sufficient to a player who has lost part of his name. England’s Michael Owen will be desperate to reclaim his place and his recall will only be possible if he makes a success of his first year at Old Trafford.
* Ahh, yes, the injuries. Don’t you think that Sir Alex might be aware of them as well, though? Before signing, Owen will first have to sign a medical that is being universally described as ’stringent’. That should help allay a few of the doubts. Moreover, it is not as if Owen’s body is fundamentally broken; he is not in recovery from a career-threatening knee injury or leg break. Instead, his career has been blighted in recent years by a series of annoying, inconvenient happenstance injuries - he missed the start of last season, for instance, with the mumps. And if there is one medical department in the world that is likely to put him on the road to recovery then it is in residence at Old Trafford.
* There are few more potent goalscorers in world football, never mind England. Even at Newcastle he continued to be prolific: the stat his critics fail to include when remarking disdainfully that he only started 58 league games for Newcastle is that he also managed to score 26 goals in that time.
* And that was when playing for a struggling team, sometimes in midfield, and as a poacher.
The retort to the argument that Owen’s pace has gone is that it was going even before he joined Real Madrid and it is precisely because Owen has morphed into a penalty-box predator that he is such a viable acquisition for a leading club. In a side near the bottom of the table, a predator is a luxury because he has so little to feed on. In a side challenging for the title, as United inevitably will be, he is in his element.
* A former European Footballer of the Year with the experience of playing for Real Madrid, Liverpool and England, Owen will not be overawed by the pressure of playing for United. And as a native of the north-west, he’ll have no problems settling in either.
* United have previously enjoyed bountiful success by signing strikers at the finale of their career - and the precedent set by Henrik Larsson and Teddy Sheringham will undoubtedly have been an encouragement to Sir Alex.
* The arrival of an Englishman will also be useful if FIFA succeed in bringing forward their plan to introduce a ’six plus five’ quota.
* Owen loves the horses. In other words, he’ll be the perfect companion for Sir Alex on the team bus.
* Liverpool fans are going to hate it if he joins United. Especially as the Law of Returning Players means he is absolutely guaranteed to score against them next season.
Pete Gill
Owen Moved to Manchester United: Fergie Captured a Goal Machine Without a Transfer Fee
by iqrashawan on Jul.03, 2009, under Football

Michael Owen has sealed his shock move to Manchester United, signing a two-year contract to keep him at Old Trafford until June 2012.
Michael Owen has moved to Manchester United after his contract ended with New Castle United he has joined Manchester United for a free transfer.
The former Liverpool, Real Madrid and England striker completed a series of stringent medical tests this evening and has signed a two-year deal with the Barclays Premier League champions.
Owen, 29, had earlier spent the day at United’s Carrington training complex as the terms of his free transfer were thrashed out, after he lapsed out of contract with Newcastle at the end of last month.
Speaking on the club’s website, Sir Alex Ferguson said: “Michael is a world class forward with a proven goalscoring record at the highest level and that has never been in question. Coming to Manchester United with the expectations that we have is something that Michael will relish.”
Owen himself admitted that the move had come ‘out of the blue. “I had just begun to talk to other clubs when out of the blue Sir Alex phoned me on Wednesday afternoon, invited me to have breakfast with him the next morning during which he told me that he wanted to sign me. I agreed without a moment’s thought,” he said.
“This is a fantastic opportunity for me and I intend to seize it with both hands.
“I am now looking forward to being a Manchester United player and I am fortunate that I already know so many of the players here. I missed pre-season last year and am pleased that I will be starting at Carrington from day one.
“I want to thank Sir Alex for the faith he has shown in me and I give him my assurance that I will repay him with my goals and performances”
Owen had undergone a medical examination yesterday to assess the troublesome knee which had sidelined him for much of his stay at St James’ Park.
Despite his previous injury problems the deal represents little risk to Red Devils boss Sir Alex Ferguson, who has been a long-time admirer of the 29-year-old.
“Michael is a world class forward with a proven goalscoring record at the highest level and that has never been in question,” said the United boss.
“Coming to Manchester United with the expectations that we have is something that Michael will relish.”
It is believed Ferguson has struck a pay-as-you-play deal which will involve a basic weekly wage enhanced by bonuses.
The player has taken a significant pay cut from the £110,000 he was reported to be on at Newcastle, for whom he scored 10 goals as they were relegated to the Coca-Cola Championship last season.
But it is the lure of playing for the champions, with the promise of Champions League football again, which excites Owen now as he tries to force his way back into the reckoning with England coach Fabio Capello.
Owen admitted United’s approach came as much as a shock to him as it did the rest of football.
“I had just begun to talk to other clubs when out of the blue Sir Alex phoned me on Wednesday afternoon, invited me to have breakfast with him next morning during which he told me that he wanted to sign me,” he said.
“I agreed without a moment’s thought. This is a fantastic opportunity for me and I intend to seize it with both hands.
“I am now looking forward to being a Manchester United player and I am fortunate that I already know so many of the players here.
“I missed pre-season last year and am pleased that I will be starting at Carrington from day one.
“I want to thank Sir Alex for the faith he has shown in me and I give him my assurance that I will repay him with my goals and performances.”
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