A career that was launched into orbit by a stunning goal against Argentina in the 1998 World Cup will end meekly 15 years later after Michael Owen announced yesterday he will hang up his boots at the end of the season.
Michael Owen celebrates scoring against Argentina at the 1998 World Cup. |
The former England striker, who made his first-team debut for Liverpool as a 17-year-old and also played for Real Madrid, Newcastle United and Manchester United, has almost disappeared from view at Stoke City for whom he signed last September.
"I feel it is the right time to bring the curtain down on my career," the injury-prone Own said on his personal website. "I have been very fortunate in that my career has taken me on a journey that like many young players starting out, I could only have dreamt of."
Diminutive Owen had already shown his potential at Liverpool when he thrust himself onto the world stage with a sensational solo goal against Argentina in a 1998 World Cup second-round defeat in Saint Etienne.
A natural striker with a devastating burst of pace, Owen went on to make 89 international appearances, scoring 40 goals to sit fourth on the all-time England goalscorers' list. Another famous England performance came in the 5-1 World Cup qualifying win in Germany in 2001 when he scored a hat-trick.
"It's sad news for football that Michael Owen will retire. He's been a fantastic football player for all the clubs he played for and for England," Sven Goran Eriksson, his England coach from 2001-2006, told Britain's Sky Sports.
In 297 appearances for Liverpool he scored 158 goals, making him one of the most sought-after strikers in the world, voted 2001 European Player of the Year and twice winning the English Premier League's Golden Boot award.
In 2001 he helped the Reds win the FA Cup, with two late goals in the final to come back to beat Arsenal 2-1, as well as the League Cup and the UEFA Cup.
Owen joined a star-studded Real Madrid team in 2004 and despite starting mainly as a substitute, he managed to score 16 goals in his only season at the Bernabeu before moving to Newcastle.
The latter years of Owen's career have been marked by injury problems. After battling to recover from a broken foot to be fit for the 2006 World Cup finals, Owen suffered a serious knee injury in the first minute of a match against Sweden and missed almost a year.
Owen's free transfer move from Newcastle to Manchester United was a shock for fans of arch-rival Liverpool. And since joining Stoke he has made only seven appearances, six of them as substitute, scoring one goal.
"An emotional day," the 33-year-old said on his Twitter site yesterday.
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