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Nothing bigger than the Shearer factor
Michael Walker
Wednesday August 31, 2005
The Guardian
From whatever
perspective, near or far, it did not seem possible that Alan Shearer
could be a more influential presence at Newcastle United than he is
already.
Bigger than the chairman Freddy Shepherd and the manager Graeme Souness,
Shearer's status as an old-fashioned yet here-and-now hero is
incontestable. Yesterday, however, Shearer became even more significant.
As Souness said yesterday morning: "Michael met Alan Shearer and that
clearly helped our cause. He has obviously been phoning Michael a lot
and he has been able to paint a very attractive picture of Newcastle
United for Michael."
In being the key figure in persuading Michael Owen to spurn Liverpool
and join Newcastle from Real Madrid, Shearer has flexed managerial
muscles for the second time this summer and the ripples will be felt
every time Owen finds the back of the net.
On the second weekend in June while on holiday in Portugal, Shearer met
Scott Parker over a drink to sell him the idea of leaving Chelsea for
Tyneside.
Parker, already softened up by Shearer's friend and predecessor as
captain Robert Lee, heard what Shearer had to say and on June 14 he
joined Newcastle. Tottenham, the club Parker and his father supported,
also wanted him but a combination of money and Shearer means that Parker
is now Newcastle's No17.
Now Shearer has done it again with Owen, who will be given the No10
shirt that was worn by a certain Craig Bellamy not so long ago.
Last Friday Shearer admitted to endless telephone calls to Madrid
telling Owen not only what great potential the club has but about the
city's fascination with it and also the Northumberland countryside. Owen
likes his rural idyll in Flintshire and it was no coincidence that when
he arrived for talks on Monday he was taken to near Morpeth rather than
St James' Park.
Owen and Shearer share more than an agent in Tony Stephens: they own
horseflesh, play golf at the drop of a tee and have a common-sense
approach to their lives and careers. Both players also know their market
worth and it will not have gone unnoticed by Owen that Newcastle's
salary trumped the provisional one Liverpool had to offer.
Now Shearer and Owen must not disappoint each other, though given Owen's
liking for St James' - 14 goals in 11 appearances there for Liverpool -
that is unlikely. His first appearance in a black and white shirt will
be at home to Fulham on Saturday week.
After that it is Manchester City, Sunderland and Birmingham City at
home, Blackburn, Portsmouth, Wigan and West Brom away. Newcastle will
now be viewing those fixtures with a different sense of anticipation.
Owen is joining a club yet to score a Premiership goal this season but
then at Newcastle United feast often follows famine. Only for another
famine to come along. Jog back to last season and Newcastle went from
January 1 to April 2 losing only one of 17 matches. An FA Cup semi-final
had been reached, a Uefa Cup quarter-final too. Then on the afternoon of
April 2 Lee Bowyer punched Kieron Dyer and Newcastle won only two of
their remaining 12 games to finish 14th, their worst Premiership placing.
Shearer looked distraught and proclaimed the Uefa Cup exit at Sporting
Lisbon to be the worst night of his professional life. He had retracted
his decision to play on for another season and felt the Uefa Cup finally
had offered him an opportunity to win silverware with Newcastle.
Given that and the way he has been starved of chances this season, it
would be entirely understandable if Shearer was regretting that change
of mind.
Yesterday's developments should give him more to ponder, such as Jackie
Milburn's record of 200 Newcastle goals but also the question of him
becoming Newcastle's next manager.
A theory has arisen that Shearer wants to take a couple of years off
from full-time dedication to football and play golf and work for Match
of the Day. But the signings of Owen and Parker, though not solely down
to Shearer, must make him and others realise the calibre of players
Newcastle could attract with him as manager.
It was being said last night that Nolberto Solano was on his way back to
Newcastle to supply the crosses for Shearer and Owen. It was also being
said that the man calling Solano was Alan Shearer.
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