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    Robbie Fowler Week

    (on the offical website)

    As Robbie Fowler Week continues on Liverpoolfc.tv, we've chronicled the great man's Anfield career in numbers.

    11,000,000 pounds, the amount David O'Leary paid to bring Fowler to Elland Road in 2001

    12,541 fans at Anfield to witness his 5 goals during his home debut in 1993 against Fulham in the Coca Cola Cup. Just 3 players had scored 5 in a single game for the Reds previously: Ian Rush, Andy McGuigan and John Evans

    1,519 days away from the club between November 2001 and January 2006

    712 friends on his unofficial myspace site, compared to 125 for Ian Rush and 20 for Michael Owen

    369 appearances for Liverpool

    273 seconds to score a hat-trick against George Graham's Arsenal in 94/95

    183 goals for Liverpool, putting him 5th in the club's all-time scorers' chart

    165 games needed to score 100 goals – one fewer than Ian Rush

    129 consecutive games between March 1994 and September 1996

    92 appearances for Man City, with 27 goals

    36 goals in the 95/96 season, Fowler's highest ever total

    33 appearances for Leeds United, with 14 goals

    29 League Cup goals for the Reds

    26 caps for England, with 7 goals

    23 appearances under Graeme Souness, the man who handed him his Reds debut

    23 was the first shirt number Fowler wore at Liverpool

    20 out of 26 penalties scored. One of those missed came in front of the North Bank at Highbury in 1997 when referee Gerald Ashby awarded a spot kick even though Fowler admitted David Seaman had not brought him down

    18 years old when he made his Liverpool debut against Fulham

    17 goals scored in the treble season 00/01

    14 European goals for the Reds

    14 goals against Aston Villa, Fowler's favourite opponents

    11 was the shirt number initially worn by Fowler on his return in 2006 until Djibril Cisse left on loan, vacating the number 9 shirt

    10 hat-tricks for Liverpool, the same as Michael Owen. Only Gordon Hodgson (17), Ian Rush (16) and Roger Hunt (12) have scored more

    9 is God's number

    8, or L8. Fowler is Toxteth's most famous son

    6 goals against Everton

    5 trophies won with the Reds: 2 League Cups, 1 FA Cup, 1 UEFA Cup and 1 European Super Cup. Fowler was cup tied during the 2006 FA Cup run

    5 fingers shown to United fans during the Manchester derby in 2005, a reminder of the number of European Cups won by his former club

    3 minutes to score his first goal for England Under-21s on his debut versus San Marino

    2 sendings off for Liverpool, both in 1997 against Everton and Bolton

    2 PFA Young Player of the Year awards

    1 Robbie Fowler
    "Let me say for the record, I am not a gangster and never have been. Im not the thief who grabs your purse. Im not the guy who jacks your car. Im not down with the people who steal and hurt others. Im just a brother who fight back."
    Tupac

    #2
    FOWLER WEEK: TONY BARRETT ON ROBBIE

    As Liverpool Football Club and Robbie Fowler officially part ways for the second time, liverpoolfc.tv pays tribute to a true Anfield legend with a week-long series of articles.

    The first time I set eyes on Robbie Fowler he was just 11-years-old and his surname wasn't even Fowler.

    As a kid he was Robbie Ryder and everyone involved in kids football in Liverpool had heard of him. There was a huge buzz about him. He played for a team called Thorvald - a team which no other team in the city could live with - and Robbie was the star player.

    I have to admit though that the first time I saw 'God' I was a non-believer. I was watching a mate of mine playing an under-11s game on Botanic Park and Thorvald were playing on the next pitch.

    At half-time in the game I was watching, I walked over to have a look at Thorvald. Just to see for myself if this Robbie Ryder kid was as good as people were saying.
    As usual, Thorvald were administering a hiding to some poor team who simply couldn't get near them. But it was their right winger, a lad called Franny Tierney whom I'd played with in Liverpool schoolboy trials, who really caught my eye.

    Franny was electric - probably the most talented young footballer I've ever seen - and as was always the case, he was pulling the opposition leftback to bits. Ryder, by comparison, wasn't doing much. He just seemed to be loitering in and around the box, not getting too involved in the build up and, at times, he looked too small and weak to make a big impression.

    Thorvald ended up winning 4-0 and Ryder got two. Both were tap-ins from about a yard and I can remember saying to my mate that I didn't think he was anywhere near as good as people were making out.

    Thankfully, Liverpool had scouts who knew quite a bit more about what makes a top class centre forward than I did.

    A couple of Sundays later I was back at Botanic Park and my mate's team were playing Thorvald. It turned out to be a massacre as Thorvald won 26-0. And that's not a misprint; they really did score 26 goals without reply.

    Ryder got 16 of them and my mate blamed me.

    "Thought you said he was no good?" he shouted at me as he trudged off the pitch.

    "He's alright," I replied. "But he doesn't get to play against you every week, does he?''

    I'm pretty sure Robbie was already training with Liverpool by this time and he was definitely a fixture in the Liverpool Schoolboys team. Clearly there were those who hadn't needed to see him score 16 in a single outing to realise what a class act he was.

    It would be another six years before I saw Ryder in action again and, by the time I did, he had become known as Robbie Fowler and he came with a very, very big reputation which had been forged with Liverpool schoolboys, England under-18s and Liverpool reserves.
    Graeme Souness picked Fowler for the Liverpool first team in a Coca Cola Cup tie at Fulham and those of us who made the trip to London on a cold night in autumn were given a taste of what was to come as the 18-year-old scored a typical poachers goal.~

    It was his performance in the second-leg which made the rest of the country sit up and take notice though. Fowler struck five times to leave the Fulham defence looking like a kids' team's back four on Botanic Park.~

    After that he was asked if he'd ever scored more than five and he said: "Yeah, I scored 16 once."

    The newspapers set out to find the team he'd scored 16 goals against and one of the Sundays ended up tracking down the lad who'd been in goal that fateful day. They got hold of him and took him down to Melwood to be reunited with Robbie. True to form, Fowler gave him a bit of stick when he got there, but he also gave him a load of training gear and made sure the newspaper looked after his 'victim' with a few bob for his troubles.

    It's impossible to overstate just how popular Fowler was with the Liverpool fans at this time. His love affair with the Kop was so intense that only the one with Kenny Dalglish stands comparison in the modern era.

    And it wasn't just down to his goals. There was a cheekiness about Fowler that most local fans could identify with and that endeared him to us even more. Even when he messed up, he did so for the right reasons. His infamous goal celebration against Everton may have been ill-advised but most Liverpool fans would love to do something similar given the opportunity. And his abuse of Graeme Le Saux may have been immature and out of order but at least he'd picked the right target to wind up.

    Then there was the time he scored against Brann Bergen in a Cup Winners Cup tie at Anfield and lifted his Liverpool shirt to show off a t-shirt displaying his solidarity with the sacked Liverpool dockworkers.

    True to form, he was fined by UEFA for his actions but it was a price well worth paying for Fowler as not only had he raised awareness of the disgraceful way 500 workers had been treated by their employers, it also inadvertently led to his status as a local folk hero being set in stone.

    It wasn't just about public displays either. Speak to dockers who manned the picket lines during their lengthy dispute and they will readily tell you about Fowler and his great mate Steve McManaman regularly helping them out with donations.

    Both Fowler and McManaman kept it quiet. They weren't doing it for publicity but Liverpool being the village that it is, word soon got out and they got the respect they so richly deserved for doing the right thing by their working class comrades and for not forgetting their roots.

    Another thing that endeared Fowler to Kopites was he was so hated by fans of our biggest rivals, largely because he had a knack of scoring against them and then celebrating in front of them. Even after he left Liverpool he was still doing it.
    Who can forget the five fingers he raised to Man United supporters in honour of Liverpool's quintet of European Cup wins when he scored for City in the Manchester derby? Or the head smacking celebration he did as he ran the length of the Bullens Road after scoring at Goodison?

    The more they hated Fowler, the more we loved him.

    Hero status can be too easily awarded in modern football but in Fowler's case he undoubtedly earned it - through his goals, his genius, his generosity and, not forgetting, his pranks.

    There are those who say Robbie Fowler is the greatest natural finisher they have ever seen and the highest tribute I can pay him is to say there is nothing to choose between him and Ian Rush.

    Had Fowler been lucky enough to play alongside Kenny Dalglish he would no doubt have added another 100 or more goals to his Liverpool total. He really was that good.

    In his prime, before injuries took their toll, he pretty much guaranteed goals. Right-foot strikes, left-foot shots, headers, volleys, scorchers from distance, tap-ins from a yard out and flukes off his backside - Fowler could do the lot.

    Not bad for a kid who started off on Botanic Park and didn't look that good!
    "Let me say for the record, I am not a gangster and never have been. Im not the thief who grabs your purse. Im not the guy who jacks your car. Im not down with the people who steal and hurt others. Im just a brother who fight back."
    Tupac

    Comment


      #3
      £11M, what a sale that was.
      Blank

      Comment


        #4
        God

        I'm normally not a praying man, but if you're up there, please save me Superman.

        Comment


          #5
          Fowler- my first Idol!

          Shame his injuries took away as much of his career as they did. In his youth Fowler was untouchable, better than any young "superstars" coming through today- he had everything. Rooney could watch a few videos of when Bob was a kid and could still improve 10-fold.

          Also part of the most exciting teams i've seen Liverpool have. 95-96 he was ****ing lethal and 96-97 (those ecru away shirts, when we bottled the league) he broke broke his 100 goal duck and was probably equally as clinical.

          Fowler 9. . . Legend
          Manchester. . . WANK WANK WANK

          Five Times Baby * * * * *

          "The match day experience between now and 25 years ago is worlds apart and deeply anaesthetised, with a large dollop of blatant "**** you" cynicism thrown at us for good measure."- Alunevans

          Comment


            #6
            Fowler was (and always will be) God to me.

            When I was a nipper I followed Liverpool because my older brother did... from the age of about 2 I shared a room with him that was decorated in the finest Liverpool gear available at the time - lampshade, posters, quilt covers etc.

            We lived in the States at the time and this was long before the internet etc. so we followed in name only really.
            When we moved to Ireland in the late 80s, though berated by my grandfather for following 'the english game' we kept it up... delighting in the steady flow of information... we could actually read about our team in the newspapers! The late 80s were wonder years for us supporting Liverpool - not only did other people know who were talking about when we told them who we supported but other people also supported them! (oh yeah and we were the best in the world, which helped)

            In the early 90s my brother moved out and I was still too young to be going out to the pub to watch games and though I kept an eye on the papers, gradually it went from an every day thing to a 'if I come across it' thing.

            That all changed with Robbie Fowler. To my young mind I'd never seen a kid who so embodied the heart and soul of everything it meant to be Liverpool. He brought me back to the fold full-time and I've never left since.

            his style and sense of humour about the game, the ease of his finishes and his ability to be in the right place at the right time... we will never see his like again.

            Only fitting for LFC to have a Fowler week, sure when he came back home I it made my Robbie Fowler Year!

            Robbie, wish you happiness in whatever club you choose and remember YNWA

            xkate

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by kitten_bar View Post
              Fowler was (and always will be) God to me.

              When I was a nipper I followed Liverpool because my older brother did... from the age of about 2 I shared a room with him that was decorated in the finest Liverpool gear available at the time - lampshade, posters, quilt covers etc.

              We lived in the States at the time and this was long before the internet etc. so we followed in name only really.
              When we moved to Ireland in the late 80s, though berated by my grandfather for following 'the english game' we kept it up... delighting in the steady flow of information... we could actually read about our team in the newspapers! The late 80s were wonder years for us supporting Liverpool - not only did other people know who were talking about when we told them who we supported but other people also supported them! (oh yeah and we were the best in the world, which helped)

              In the early 90s my brother moved out and I was still too young to be going out to the pub to watch games and though I kept an eye on the papers, gradually it went from an every day thing to a 'if I come across it' thing.

              That all changed with Robbie Fowler. To my young mind I'd never seen a kid who so embodied the heart and soul of everything it meant to be Liverpool. He brought me back to the fold full-time and I've never left since.

              his style and sense of humour about the game, the ease of his finishes and his ability to be in the right place at the right time... we will never see his like again.

              Only fitting for LFC to have a Fowler week, sure when he came back home I it made my Robbie Fowler Year!

              Robbie, wish you happiness in whatever club you choose and remember YNWA

              xkate
              Quality post
              "Let me say for the record, I am not a gangster and never have been. Im not the thief who grabs your purse. Im not the guy who jacks your car. Im not down with the people who steal and hurt others. Im just a brother who fight back."
              Tupac

              Comment


                #8
                He was my first player I idolised at the club too. Man of the people and a deadeye to boot.

                Where do we all reckon he will be playing next season?????

                I reckon Ipswich Town.
                Com ce, com ca.

                Comment

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