Jump to content
TLW
TLW

Fowler: I was a better striker than Owen in every aspect

Robbie Fowler has no doubt that he was a better all-round striker than his former Liverpool teammate Michael Owen.

 

Affectionately referred to as ‘God’  by the Reds faithful, Fowler scored 183 goals in 369 appearances across two separate stints.

 

In a golden era of strikers in the Premier League through the mid 90s, Fowler was right at the top echelon, the only disappointment being that  his personal brilliance did not lead to team success with Liverpool being a greatly inconsistent team at that time.

 

image.png

 

A few years down the track and another extremely talented striker started to emerge through the Liverpool ranks in Owen. With Fowler suffering from a career threatening knee injury, Owen began to claim top mantle.

 

The treble winning season of 2000–01 is a memory that still sticks with a large majority of Reds fans today, and the two strikers combined for 41 goals across all competitions during that campaign.

 

But a continuation of that partnership was not to be as Fowler was sold to Leeds in late November 2001.

 

In a refreshingly honest reflection, Fowler spoke on the Up Front Podcast (Per The Mirror), and firstly addressed his own career compared to Owen.

 

“In all honesty, I’ve always thought I was better than Michael Owen. He was quicker than me, but in every other element of being a striker, I genuinely think I was better than him. He could say the exact opposite but that is just my opinion and my self-confidence – I was better in every aspect of being a striker.‌

 

“Michael wasn’t the best player at Liverpool when I played, but I remember him coming through at the club and you could see that he was different class. At the time I was upset not to be playing as much as him for England, but I didn’t want Michael to fail or play badly.

 

image.png

 

“Of course, I wanted to play, but I didn’t want him to not succeed. I think Michael just thought more of England than he did of his club, whereas I thought more of Liverpool than England.”

 

In terms of England, Fowler played 26 times scoring seven goals but once again feels that he compared more than favourably to his contemporaries at the time.

 

“I’d scored nearly 100 goals before I was called up to England – that to me is extraordinary, today I’d be in the England squad in an instant with the way I was playing back then.

 

"England had the likes of Alan Shearer, Teddy Sheringham, Ian Wright, Les Ferdinand and Andy Cole, but I genuinely would back myself to be better than all of them. In terms of goalscoring, I was probably the best at that time."

 

User Feedback

Recommended Comments



Outside of Shearer he was the best around for about 3 seasons. Robbie between 18-21 was about as good as I've seen. Sad that he never really looked the same post the knee injury, even if his numbers where still good. 98 goals in his first 216 games is some going. 

 

You have to winder just how good he would have become. 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

At the time when he broke through, I honestly thought he was the best striker around. 

 

He was never the same after his first big knee injury though. Unfortunately......... 

 

I actually listened to that podcast he did with tut floppy haired prick only yesterday. 

 

You do wonder why he never gets a chance in the the UK for a managers job though. Every other knobhead gets one. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He was technically far better than Owen but I wonder if you gave both players an injury free 12 -14 year career (and everything else stayed the same) if Owen would have gone on to have a better career 9 times out of 10.

 

Owen always gave the impression that we was more dialled in and focused on his career and where it was going at every step.

 

We would have always loved Fowler more than Owen because if it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Paul said:

If Fowler had stated fully fit he’d have gone on to be one of the best players in the world, if not the best. 


He said he thinks he was better than Shearer.

 

Thoughts?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, BeefStroganoff said:

Fowler was extraordinary. Never seen a striker hit a ball the way he did, both feet and he could head too.

Yeah he definitely had more talent than Owen, and I can see where he’s coming from with saying he thinks he was better than Shearer too. Shearer obviously had better physical attributes, which made him a better striker as a whole, but Robbie could stick the ball in from anywhere.

Probably Raul was the closest playing comparison to Fowler, or someone like Romario, just an absolute talent of putting the ball in the net.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 minutes ago, BeefStroganoff said:

Fowler was extraordinary. Never seen a striker hit a ball the way he did, both feet and he could head too.

Very little back lift and his heading was pure precision and timing. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Jose Jones said:

Yeah he definitely had more talent than Owen, and I can see where he’s coming from with saying he thinks he was better than Shearer too. Shearer obviously had better physical attributes, which made him a better striker as a whole, but Robbie could stick the ball in from anywhere.

Probably Raul was the closest playing comparison to Fowler, or someone like Romario, just an absolute talent of putting the ball in the net.

Gerd Muller.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Jose Jones said:

Yeah he definitely had more talent than Owen, and I can see where he’s coming from with saying he thinks he was better than Shearer too. Shearer obviously had better physical attributes, which made him a better striker as a whole, but Robbie could stick the ball in from anywhere.

Probably Raul was the closest playing comparison to Fowler, or someone like Romario, just an absolute talent of putting the ball in the net.


 

He had this crazy ability like you say of finding the corners from distance.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 minutes ago, Dicko said:

Shearer thinks Fowler was better than him as well.


Mate, Fowler was an absolute phenomenon.

 

That’s not in dispute, nobody is debating that, but putting himself ahead of Shearer who was such a great striker and scored all those across every competition for so long.

 

I’m not necessarily disagreeing, just not convinced Robbie should be saying so or it’s cut and dried.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To be fair Shearer could score from anywhere too and was technically brilliant.  But Robbie just had magic in his feet, there's not many you can say that about.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Lack of self awareness from Robbie again. The fact he thinks the only thing Michael had over him is pace explains why he never had the career he should have.

 

How about professionalism, dedication, single mindedness to be the absolute best and to squeeze out every last drop of talent?

 

Fowler had much more talent than Owen (and pretty much anybody else I can think of for that matter, he was a genius), but only one of them won a Balon d'Or and shone on the world stage. 

 

If Robbie had the same professionalism and determination to be the absolute best that Michael had then there'd have been nobody to touch him, he'd have been the greatest. Unfortunately he chose to be out in town every weekend. Not that you'll ever hear him acknowledge that.

  • Upvote 11
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, dave u said:

Lack of self awareness from Robbie again. The fact he thinks the only thing Michael had over him is pace explains why he never had the career he should have.

 

How about professionalism, dedication, single mindedness to be the absolute best and to squeeze out every last drop of talent?

 

Fowler had much more talent than Owen (and pretty much anybody else I can think of for that matter, he was a genius), but only one of them won a Balon d'Or and shone on the world stage. 

 

If Robbie had the same professionalism and determination to be the absolute best that Michael had then there'd have been nobody to touch him, he'd have been the greatest. Unfortunately he chose to be out in town every weekend. Not that you'll ever hear him acknowledge that.


Aye, fair play to him.

Link to comment
Share on other sites




Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Add a comment...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...