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- đ Michael Owen's apple
đ Michael Owen's apple
Plus: The (Short) Story of Marco Boogers and His Caravan
GM football fans. Route One here, the football newsletter which makes football news sound like a bedtime story, minus the sleeping part.
Todayâs briefing is a ~5 min read:
Michael Owenâs apple đ
The (Short) Story of Marco Boogers and His Caravan đ
Extra time: the end of âFergie timeâ â°
Morning Brief đď¸
Spurs are now leading the race to sign English winger Samuel Iling-Junior from Juventus. Newcastle are also interested in signing the 20-year-old.
Manchester United have offered to double the wages of Barcelona defender Ronald Araujo, who is not interested in a January move to Bayern Munich.
Chelsea and Liverpool are keeping tabs on Inter Milan midfielder Hakan Calhanoglu.
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has invited legend Dennis Bergkamp to return to the club as part of their academy coaching staff.
Manchester United midfielder Scott McTominay insists there is no toxicity at United and that the players support the manager Erik ten Hag.
MICHAEL OWEN IS RUTHLESS đ
Picture this: youâre watching TV on the sofa. The bin is around six meters away from you. Apple in hand. The lights dim. You throw the apple.
Swish.
Youâre the chosen one. The only one brave enough to dare. The crowd is cheering your name.
Well⌠thatâs the image that Michael Owen had in his head when he was a kid.
In a recent podcast, Owen admits to having the âbraveryâ to throw an apple into a bin. He was so daring that he didnât mind missing and leaving a âstainâ on the wall.
Wow.
Thatâs what sets elite athletes apart from any ordinary bloke on the street⌠apparently.
No, seriously. Weâre not joking.
In case you havenât seen it, hereâs the clip.
Owen has said some questionable things, here are some of our favourites:
âIf thereâs a bit of rain about, it makes the surface wet.â
âFootballers these days often have to use their feet.â
âWhichever team scores more goals usually wins.â
âWhat a feeling it is to be a manager and bring someone on.â
But we think this clip tops it.
Look, we tried to take a good message away from this one. Heâs a Ballon dâOr winner at the end of the day.
But, we struggled to see past this one.
THE (SHORT) STORY OF MARCO BOOGERS AND HIS CARAVAN đ
Marco Boogers is the most notorious Premier League player with fewer than five appearances.
He ticked every box that puts him at the top of almost every worst footballer poll: he barely played, had a moment of infamy, and has a funny foreign name. Hereâs the story of one of the Premier Leagueâs greatest forgotten footballers and his caravan.
Our story starts in the 1990s when the English top flight had just rebranded to become the Premier League. At that time, there was a small contingent of non-British players.
But, by the mid-1990s, Premier League clubs began to import foreign talent, including David Ginola, Ruud Gullit and Dennis Bergkamp. The face of English football was changing and foreign players grew in popularity.
West Ham wanted a slice of the pie and began to look abroad for untapped European talent. Harry Redknapp was in charge at the time, the perfect manager to find an under-the-radar talent abroad with a cheap price tag.
And with Dutch players in vogue, Redknapp knew exactly the market to look into to find the Premier Leagueâs next big thing.
He asked to see VHS tapes from talents in the Dutch league. After one watch of Sparta Rotterdamâs striker Marco Boogers, the Hammerâs gaffer thought he had struck gold.
Too bad the West Ham scouts didnât do their due diligence. Boogers had only three goals in 14 league games and was suffering from an eight-game goal drought.
Regardless, from the VHS highlight reel, Redknapp saw potential and his strategy to buy low was in full swing as he signed the Dutch striker for ÂŁ1 in 1995.
While expectations werenât high, no one predicted that Boogers would perform below his price tag.
His debut for West Ham started on the bench against Leeds. Redknappâs side were 2-1 down after a stunning left-foot volley from Tony Yeboah in the 57th minute.
It was Boogerâs time to silence his critics and prove that he could match the Dutch players that came before him.
It turned out to be an uneventful appearance. Leeds stood their ground and the game ended 2-1. But, as with any player, Boogers needed time to find his feet in a new league.
Four days later, West Ham faced Sir Alex Fergusonâs Manchester United side. The Hammers had a lot going for them: United had sold proven winners Kanchelskis, Hughes and Ince and Eric Cantona was banned from football.
When they were 2-1 down, Redknapp rolled the dice and brought Boogers on at left wing in the 72nd minute. It was his time to shine.
But, when Gary Neville received the ball, Boogers jumped with both feet into what The Sun labelled a âsickening horror tackleâ into the right-backâs standing leg.
Boogers was sent off and given a 4-match ban.
With the pressure of the British press mounting on Boogers, he asked Redknapp if he could serve his suspension in Holland with his pregnant wife.
âPretty soon after he arrived I realised he wasnât quite right⌠[he didnât] speak a word of English and after a month Marcoâs wife was crying, sheâs missing her mother and we canât understand any of it,â Redknapp later admitted.
The press got wind of Boogerâs âdisappearanceâ and a reporter called West Hamâs press office. Upton Parkâs PA announcer, Bill Prosser answered the phone and informed the journalist that Boogers had âprobably gone by car again.â
The reporter misheard the sentence and The Sun produced a notorious back page headline âBARMY BOOGERS LIVING IN A CARAVAN.â The British public believed the Dutch striker had a mental breakdown and was hiding in a mobile caravan.
Boogers would return to West Ham, though with little success after two more cameos from the bench in heavy defeats to Aston Villa and Blackburn.
Now, Boogers lives a much simpler life. With his wife, Patricia, he started a logistics company with four branches in Holland with 140 employees. Theyâve secured a big multi-year contract with DHL so allâs well that ends well.
EXTRA-TIME âąď¸
Ever heard of Fergie Time? Well, itâs about time we call it Kloppage Time⌠The Liverpool boss now has more injury-time winners (17) in the Premier League than Sir Alex Ferguson.
Thereâs nothing better than seeing Jose Mourinho passing written notes to players on the field. Roma were down to 9 men at home, needing a draw to stay in the top 4, so Mourinho wanted to make sure his players were aware of this.
Who knew Sunday league football was becoming tactical? Hereâs a 200 IQ set-piece play that left the opposition scratching their heads.
Spursâ goalkeeper Vicario is living rent-free in Callum Wilsonâs head. With Spursâ dominant performance versus Newcastle, Vicario didnât hold back with the English striker.
Our favourite Twitter (X) thread of the week. Lionel Messi humiliates the most expensive players in the world.