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Enough is Enough, It's Time to Welcome Michael Owen Home - by Chris Smith

The thing I’ve enjoyed most about Jamie Carragher’s podcast is the incredible forthrightness of the interviews. The shared context, friendship and experiences with his guests provides an incredible platform for honest conversations – far exceeding the cookie cutter Q&As we hear in the vast majority of interviews conducted by actual journalists. 
 
Carra’s standing, and aversion to sugar-coating anything, enables him to frame questions in a way that would be downright insulting coming from a reporter. It’s what made the recent episode with Michael Owen such a startlingly brutal and uncomfortable listen. 
 
If you came out of that interview still unwilling to bury the hatchet with Michael Owen and finally welcome him home, then I’d advise you to contact someone with a stethoscope.
 
Michael’s story, as told on The Greatest Game, sounded like the clichéd sports movie, charting the incredible highs, then the depths of despair. It was set-up for the final act – the inevitable, uplifting redemption, but in Owen’s case, there is no feel-good ending. If the Robbie Fowler story could draw comparisons to Rocky, Owen’s could be likened to the end of Raging Bull.
 
Put it this way: Michael Owen, who scored 158 goals for his club and thrice tried to get back home after his initial departure, now feels intimidated when he walks into Anfield. “Any Liverpool fan has the power to break my heart,” he said. Jesus, I don’t know about any of you, but hearing that just about broke mine. 
 
It’s not right. Owen brought as much joy to the old stadium as any individual in the last quarter century; that much is indisputable. Yet, as Carragher brutally pointed out, Owen gets no love, his career and contributions are glossed over. Or, to use Carragher’s word “dismissed”. 
 
I’ll be honest with you. Michael was my guy. At the time I’d have argued “Michael over Robbie” with anyone. My best mate and I still joke about it to this day (how lucky were we to have those two to playfully argue over by the way?). 
 
I’d never really resented him for leaving, but it did break my heart. I never hated him for signing for Newcastle because I was privy to information he desperately wanted to come home and was distraught to be going there. I wasn’t among those screaming “where were you in Istanbul?” in his face, because what was the point?
 
It wasn’t even as if I felt signing for United was unforgivable given his predicament. For me, a fissure tore into a gaping crevasse the day he scored the winner in that Manchester derby (as unreal a finish as it was). I hadn’t seen him celebrate quite so exuberantly in a decade. I hadn’t seen that joy since he was a teenager and, as he raced behind the Stretford End goal, hadn’t seen him run that fast either. How could he be that happy doing that, there, for them? At the time when we were in the utter depths of the Gillet and Hicks era, with Rafa’s tenure coming to an end, it was an absolute sickener. 
 
For many, it confirmed what they had felt all along. It was the first time I believed it too – that Michael Owen cared only about Michael Owen. It didn’t matter which shirt he was wearing. On that day he was happy for himself, not for Man United. And now, in the context of his interview with Carragher, it’s a little bit easier to see why.
 
Many will still feel like Owen got what was coming, that he made his own bed and thus doesn’t deserve to be mentioned in the same breath as other Liverpool greats. That’s fine. But there’s also a staggering hypocrisy here that’s bothered me for decades. It seems you can be terrible, as a man and a footballer, but as long as you’re pushed out of the door, rather than leave on your own terms, you’re welcomed back to Liverpool with open arms.
 
The ovations afforded to a returning David James down the years, for example. Here’s someone that made an absolute mockery of us, his manager and the entire club, quantifiably costing us a title during his time on his PlayStation, or modelling, or whatever else he was doing while flailing around between the sticks. James and Owen both broke my heart. Michael for leaving us when he did, James for being abjectly terrible at his job and causing us to lose football matches.  
 
One of the two feels intimidated walking into Anfield for fear of abuse, the other would probably get a standing ovation if he turned out for one of those Liverpool Legends games.
 
More recently, the reverse is somehow true. It seems a player can force his way out in the most egregious manner and still be remembered fondly. His recent roasting at Anfield aside, the esteem in which Luis Suarez is held absolutely staggers me. Carra mentioned this too. Some of my best mates have him in all-time Liverpool five-a-side teams. I can’t scream this loud enough, but to Hell with Luis Suarez. 
 
This bloke went on strike to force a move to Arsenal (to Arsenal), bit opponents and racially abused others. Our reputation is yet to fully recover from our association with that ‘loveable little scamp,’ as evidenced by the recent, long overdue apology to Evra and the coverage it received. I feel ashamed for supporting him at the time. 
 
Between Owen and Suarez, which is the club annually falling over itself to wish a happy birthday? Here’s a clue: It’s not the one who ran himself into utter physical degradation before his mid-20s, while wearing the red shirt. Nor is it the one who won a Ballon D’Or in the same year he helped us to a cup treble. 
 
Owen’s contribution to the modern history of Liverpool far eclipses Suarez’s season or so of giving a damn. Even Stan Collymore enjoys a higher standing than Michael Owen among some Liverpool fans on social media. Seriously.

 

 

 

Even the aversion to Fernando Torres has faded these days. Everyone seems alright with him again with the club often commemorating his contribution more and more often. I promised myself I’d never love another footballer again after he went to Chelsea; then Klopp’s lads came along and now I’m besotted with the lot of them, but that’s beside the point.
 
Speaking of Chelsea, remember when Steven Gerrard tried to force a move there? If Gerrard’s explanation for how that situation came to pass (Papa Rafa didn’t show him enough love, etc.) is understood then why can’t Michael’s reasons for heading to Real Madrid, when all along his plan was to just “do a Rushie” and come back after a year? The answer’s rhetorical, if we’re honest with ourselves. 
 
After developing an Alan Shearer-like reputation for bland, guarded interviews during his playing career, Michael has been an open book since his retirement. Especially regarding his injuries and his self-professed rapid decline. We’ve had a window into Owen the person. Maybe that’s what has me warming to him again? The fact that, away from his horses, his millions and his media career, he’s a guy with insecurities, with regrets, with fears and apprehension. It’s a great leveller. 
 
I don’t know how the current impasse changes. Maybe it starts with the club affording him the same respect it does to other, less deserving folks, through its constant content output? If they can get off Suarez’s lap for five minutes that is. For all their talk about the “LFC family” they aren’t half choosy about who is treated as such. 
 
People shouldn’t need reminding just how good Michael Owen was, but if that’s what needs to happen, it should. There’s no reason for this continued antipathy or, perhaps even worse, utter apathy. 
 
That might be the hardest thing about this for Owen. Right now, he doesn’t matter. He’s not loved, nor particularly hated. Just irrelevant. Some will say that’s his punishment. After listening to his side of the story, I’d counter by saying, “for what exactly?”
 
Carragher brutally pointed out that, while he finished his career with a guard of honour and a Kop mosaic, Michael went out coming off the bench for Tony Pulis’ Stoke. Wasn’t that punishment enough? 
 
Enough is enough. It’s time to recognise Michael Owen’s contribution for what it was. On the stat sheets, to the numbers on that increasingly-active “Wall of Champions” and in our mind’s eye. 
 
“One-nil down, two-one up, Michael Owen won the cup.” Remember that? 
 
Like many others, the story isn’t straight forward. There are complications. But Michael Owen is unquestionably a Liverpool great and deserves to be spoken of as such. It’s time to end the story in the right way. 

 

Chris Smith

@ByChrisSmith

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29 minutes ago, Chris said:

 

Did read it. Backed him to the hilt at the time. Have realised I was wrong to since.

I also backed him to the hilt and felt his explanation about the word Negrito did explain things, believed him 100% until he bit Chiellini was it in the world cup and came out with some bollocks about his teeth falling on him. It's not now that I believe Evra or Suarez, but his version of events certainly can't be trusted any more.

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24 minutes ago, Jennings said:

His own analogy was that he went off to have an affair.

 

And it wasn't just the FACT that he did it, it was the WAY he did it.

 

 

BTW - I don't hate him. I just don't hold him in the esteem that I hold Carra et al.

 

 

Yeah, I don't expect people to love him but not treating him with the same respect afforded to other great players who have played for us just seems a bit small time to me. And I'm disappointed with whoever it was at the club who decided to make an exception and blank him on his birthday.

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The official LFC Twitter wishing Suarez a happy birthday was absolutely fucking cringe worthy. 

 

Got no problems with Owen personally. He was a great player for us and helped win us trophies. Don't really care that he played for Man Utd. I do think he's got a bit of a strange personality though - probably cos he's from the wrong side of the river. 

 

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20 minutes ago, johnsusername said:

The official LFC Twitter wishing Suarez a happy birthday was absolutely fucking cringe worthy. 

 

Got no problems with Owen personally. He was a great player for us and helped win us trophies. Don't really care that he played for Man Utd. I do think he's got a bit of a strange personality though - probably cos he's from the wrong side of the river

 

"The little Welsh twat" as a lad I used to work with always called him. And this was from a Liverpool season ticket holder when Owen was scoring goals for fun!

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5 hours ago, The Guest said:

Why does he need to apply it to his own life?  Owen was a multi millionaire and made a decision to join a football club who’s fans sing about the deaths of “his” teams fans along with all the other shite they get up to every week.  This is not like working for Tesco and then leaving to work for Sainsbury’s and shouldn’t be treated as such.  I can’t believe people come out with this shite.  This is not some mercenary or foreign player who doesn’t understand this.  He literally grew up at the club and witnessed it himself.  He can go there if he wants but don’t expect people to treat you like Gerrard, Carra or God.

 

He’s not remorseful about going there either.  He’s remorseful about fucking up his legend status by going to Real Madrid and failing whilst we won the European Cup on the greatest night in the clubs history.

 

After making all these decisions which he was completely entitled to make he now wants everyone to love him as well because he wants back in to the boys club at Anfield.  Well he can fuck off.  

 

Well for one it might give some sort of perspective and empathy towards his situation.

 

I'm not 100% on Owen's side here, but I can't understand the vitriol being thrown at people who think that perhaps he deserves some understanding and sympathy. 

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10 minutes ago, Karl_b said:

I'm not 100% on Owen's side here, but I can't understand the vitriol being thrown at people who think that perhaps he deserves some understanding and sympathy

He can have that, what he can't have is what he wants and what he will never have because his own actions.

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6 hours ago, The Guest said:

Why does he need to apply it to his own life?  Owen was a multi millionaire and made a decision to join a football club who’s fans sing about the deaths of “his” teams fans along with all the other shite they get up to every week.

Sums it up really.

 

He refers to them as "us". He can't do that and be "one of us", if that made any sense.

 

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11 hours ago, Karl_b said:

Apply Owen's situation to your own life. Would you turn down a job on more money, with better prospects in the right area of the country where your family would be happy for a crappy one, just because that company had a rivalry with one you used to work for? We might not like it and we might expect every single footballer to think with their hearts but that's completely unrealistic. 

 

I don't hate Owen. He left in poor circumstances and he made poor choices subsequently but he seems genuinely remorseful and was responsible for some of my best memories of supporting the club.

 

I also echo the point about his punditry, he seems like an intelligent fella with good insight and he should show it more.

I see what you mean but these people earn so much money you cannot compare to real people like us.

I really feel he’s trying to impose his truth. He fucked up totally, he made the wrong choices like 3 or 4 times on a row, his carrer peaked at 21 in 2011. That’s sad but he’s the only one to blame. Pretending to be as big a red as Carr’s is funny, so ridiculous to be true.

 

The only red in fifty years to join the mancs. Sad. Miserable. Pitoyable. 

 

 

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All of the Carra pods were brill (loved Merson’s), but this one was...odd. I can’t forget the sight of him in a Utd shirt, or the fact he fucked off to Real (Question: would we have won number 5 had he stuck with us? Who knows). But at the end of the day he was fucking brilliant for us and the numbers on the wall of Champions would fairly different but for him. So yeah, odd feelings on this one. I can’t say I hate any ex players....except that cunt Diouf of course, I’d have that fucker on the back of the truck in a heartbeat! 

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Did Carragher ask him if he considered re-signing with Newcastle? Given that they'd just been relegated, and he'd taken them for 23 million pounds while scoring 30 goals for them over 4 seasons?

 

An unrealistic expectation, perhaps, but no more unrealistic than expecting Liverpool supporters to welcome him back with open arms after he signed with fucking United.

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Seen Dave mention the podcast in his weekly roundup and thought I'd give it a listen and then the OP posted this a day or so later so definitely thought i'd give it a go.  At the end of it all he couldn't give a straight answer to why he didn't sign a new contract before 2004 (Sabbatical bollocks) and then couldn't give a straight answer to why he didn't just say no to Newcastle (despite saying he knew Real wanted to sign Ramos with the cash). 

 

Think i'll stay well away from the Suarez racism debate though.

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I’ve not listened to this and have no intention of doing so. However, from what I’ve read, it would seem that Owen just repeated the stuff he said in his interview for Simon Hughes’ book, Ring Of Fire.

 

I was disappointed when he left in 2004, but didn’t really begrudge him, as a professional footballer, wanting to test himself at Real Madrid. I wanted us to resign him in 2005 and was disappointed when it didn’t happened. I was past caring by the time he signed for Manchester United. The 2001 cup

final was fantastic.

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Trying to equate Owen with Suarez is nonsense. Suarez never came up through the ranks and he was never considered one of us in the way that Owen was.

 

As an aside, he isn’t a racist (I’ll leave AoT to reiterate all the nonsense and stupidity by the club that allowed Evra off the hook) and I didn’t recall him going on strike to get a move to Arsenal. He made no secret of wanting to move but as a punishment he was made to train by himself, and once the business end started he was fucking phenomenal in the effort he put in which nearly propelled us to the league. He is a bit bitey though, I’ll give you that.

 

Owen on the other hand did come up through the system, was considered one of us, but never courted the adoration he seems now to want, clearly preferring England. I could understand him going to Newcastle given we wouldn’t cough up the money, but United?

 

That said I’ve mellowed towards him these days so I’m not that arsed one way or the other. He’s just there.

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On 12/02/2020 at 12:26, Remmie said:

I also backed him to the hilt and felt his explanation about the word Negrito did explain things, believed him 100% until he bit Chiellini was it in the world cup and came out with some bollocks about his teeth falling on him. It's not now that I believe Evra or Suarez, but his version of events certainly can't be trusted any more.

Pretty much where I was/am now on the Suarez thing. I think with hindsight Suarez disrespected the club far more than Owen did .

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Disagree on Suarez - he was what he was. We bought him while he was serving a ban FFS.

His best year was his last - probably the best individual performance ever in the league - he buckled down and delivered - and we made nearly 40m on his transfer.

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38 minutes ago, deiseach said:

No discussion of Graeme Souness and his, ahem, distance from the club?

 

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Souness is the guest I would most like to listen to on Carra’s podcast.

 

The difference between Souness and Owen is that, whilst what Souness did was far worse, he completely owns it and, since leaving the club, has repeatedly apologised with no excuses.

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1 hour ago, Oscar_the_Grouch said:

Souness is the guest I would most like to listen to on Carra’s podcast.

 

The difference between Souness and Owen is that, whilst what Souness did was far worse, he completely owns it and, since leaving the club, has repeatedly apologised with no excuses.


Nice of you to stop by, Graeme. 

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