|
Alan Shearer OBE (born 13
August 1970 in Gosforth) is a
retired professional English
footballer who played as a
striker for the England
national team and Premiership
clubs, Southampton, Blackburn
Rovers and Newcastle
United.
During his career he enjoyed
successes at both club and
international level and also in
his personal life, becoming one
of the most prolific strikers
of all time. In total he scored
422 goals for club and country,
averaging 25 goals a season for
each of his 17 seasons as a
player. Shearer currently holds
the Premier League goalscoring
record with 260 goals. He
announced his international
retirement following England's
exit from Euro 2000 but
continued to play for Newcastle
United until 2006, when he
retired completely from
football.
Since 2006 he has worked a
football pundit for the
BBC.
Club
career
Southampton
(1988-1992)
As a 15-year-old schoolboy at
Wallsend Boys Club, Shearer was
rejected by Newcastle, with a
legendary trial as goalkeeper
(he has admitted he was only in
goal for a small part of a full
day), and instead signed as an
apprentice with Southampton. He
made his debut as a substitute
against Chelsea on 26 March
1988, before prompting national
headlines with his full debut
at The Dell a month later, on 9
April 1988, when he scored a
hat-trick against Arsenal. At
the age of 17 years and 240
days, he broke the record for
the youngest player to score a
hat-trick in top-flight
football, held for more than
thirty years by Jimmy
Greaves.
Despite this auspicious
beginning to his career,
Shearer was only eased
gradually into the first team,
making ten goalless appearances
for the club the following
season. In his early
Southampton career his prime
asset was his strength, which
enabled him to retain the ball
and generally lead a line in
which others (notably Rod
Wallace and Matt Le Tissier)
did the scoring. His
performances in the centre of
the Saints attack were soon
recognised by the fans, who
voted him their Player of the
Year in 1991.
He did not become truly
prolific for Southampton until
1992, when he scored thirteen
goals in 41 appearances.
Blackburn
Rovers
(1992-1996)
Taylor selected Shearer for his
squad for the finals, but he
only featured in one group game
- a goalless draw against
France - and England were
eliminated at an early stage.
However, his ability had been
noted by Blackburn Rovers
manager Kenny Dalglish who,
with vast funds at his disposal
from benefactor Jack Walker,
offered Southampton £3.3
million for Shearer, which was
accepted, and the transfer to
Blackburn was completed.
Shearer was also offered terms
by Manchester United but turned
them down.
Shearer became an England
regular the following season,
scoring his second goal in a
4-0 win over Turkey in a
qualifier for the 1994 FIFA
World Cup. His first season
with Blackburn was mixed - he
missed half of it (and more
World Cup qualifiers) through
injury, snapping his right
anterior cruciate ligament
against Leeds United on 26
December 1992, but scored
sixteen goals in the 21 games
in which he did feature. The
season ended sourly, however,
as England failed to qualify
for the World Cup.
At Blackburn, he scored 31
goals from 40 games in the
1993-94 season, as they
finished a close second in the
table behind Manchester United.
He also won the honour of the
Football Writers' Footballer of
the Year for that season.
Shearer added three more goals
to his England tally before
embarking on his most
successful domestic season as a
player at that time.
The arrival of Chris Sutton for
the 1994-95 season established
a strong attacking partnership
at Blackburn, with the duo
acquiring the nickname "the
SAS" - Shearer And Sutton. In
42 games, Shearer scored 34
goals, as Blackburn took the
Premiership title on the last
day of the season. This remains
the only club honour that
Shearer won in his career,
though he quickly followed it
up with a personal award,
winning the PFA Players' Player
of the Year.
In 1995-96 he scored 31 goals
in 35 games, although his
England strike rate completely
dried up, with no goals in the
eleven matches leading up to
Euro 96. England, now managed
by Terry Venables, were hosting
the event and therefore hadn't
needed a qualification
campaign.
Newcastle
United
(1996-2006)
After Euro 96, Shearer was
approached by Manchester United
with another offer to buy him
from Blackburn. However, Jack
Walker wouldn't allow the move
under any circumstances so he
joined Newcastle United,
managed by Shearer's boyhood
hero Kevin Keegan, who paid £15
million to secure his services,
making Shearer the world's most
expensive footballer at the
time.
Shearer continued to score
goals: 25 in 31 games in his
first season at St James' Park.
At the end of his first season
at Newcastle he picked up his
second PFA Player of the Year
award.
In the summer of 1997, Shearer
suffered an ankle ligament
injury in a pre-season match at
Goodison Park, an injury which
greatly restricted his number
of appearances. He still helped
Newcastle United (now managed
by his old boss at Blackburn,
Kenny Dalglish) to the 1998 FA
Cup Final, but Arsenal won the
game 2-0, although Shearer hit
the post during the match.
In the latter part of that
season, controversy surrounded
Shearer when he kicked Neil
Lennon in the head at Leicester
City during a Premiership
match. FA Chief Executive
Graham Kelly later claimed in
his autobiography that Shearer
threatened to walk out on the
World Cup squad if he was
punished by the FA. Shearer
denied this - and also claimed
the incident with Lennon was
entirely accidental - and he
was not punished.
Shearer announced that he would
retire at the end of the
2004-05 season, but, influenced
by then Newcastle manager
Graeme Souness, he decided to
continue playing in a
player-coach capacity until the
end of the following season.
During this time, he broke
Jackie Milburn's 49-year-old
record of 200 goals for
Newcastle United when he netted
his 201st strike in a home
Premiership fixture against
Portsmouth on 4 February 2006.
Some media sources have pointed
out that, including matches
played during World War II,
Milburn scored 238 goals for
the club. Discounting those
games and goals, however,
Shearer beat the record in five
fewer games than Milburn.
On 17 April 2006, with three
games remaining in his final
season as a player, Shearer
suffered a tear to the medial
collateral ligament in his left
knee after a collision during
the 4-1 win at Sunderland in
which he scored his 206th goal.
The injury caused him to miss
those final three games,
effectively ending his career
prematurely. On 22 April, 2006,
Shearer confirmed his
retirement as a player.
On 11 May 2006, Newcastle
United played Celtic at St
James' Park in Shearer's
testimonial match. Guest
ex-Newcastle players included
Steve Watson, Gary Speed, Rob
Lee and Les Ferdinand. Shearer
could not play in the
testimonial because of injury;
however, he initiated the
kick-off and scored a penalty
to win the game for Newcastle,
3-2. All proceeds from the game
went to North East charities,
including the NSPCC (for which
Shearer is a patron), and the
Bobby Moore Fund.
In 2002-03, Shearer and
Newcastle made a return to the
UEFA Champions League.
Newcastle lost their first
three matches in the first
group stage, but then won the
remaining three and managed to
qualify for the second
group-stage (the only club ever
to do this), where they were
finally eliminated.
After this, Newcastle would
have one more chance to enter
the Champions League proper in
2003, but were eliminated on
penalties by Partizan Belgrade,
with Shearer missing his
penalty.
Shearer was appointed an OBE
for services to Association
Football in the Queen's
Birthday Honours List in June
2001, and the Freedom of the
City of Newcastle upon Tyne was
bestowed upon him in March.
International
career
(1990-2000)
Having earned a regular place
in the England U21 team the
previous year, scoring thirteen
goals in eleven matches in the
process (including seven in
four games at the Toulon
tournament), this potent spell
by Shearer was noticed by
Graham Taylor, coach of the
senior team, and Shearer made
his debut against France in
February 1992. A month later he
made his one and only
appearance for the England B
team.
Like his full debut at club
level, his full debut in
international football was
successful: Shearer scored a
poacher's goal in the first
half as England won 2-0. The
other goal came from Gary
Lineker, who was retiring in
the summer after Euro 92 in
Sweden, leaving Taylor with the
job of finding a successor.
In the opening twenty minutes
of the inaugural group game of
Euro 96 against Switzerland at
Wembley, Shearer scored,
breaking his goal-drought.
After that game ended 1-1, a
victory against Scotland in the
next game was crucial. After a
tight and goalless first half,
Gary Neville swung over a
curling cross, and Shearer
stooped low to head home at the
far post. It set England on
their way to a 2-0 win, helped
by a penalty save from David
Seaman and a second goal from
Paul Gascoigne. England now
needed to avoid defeat against
Holland to be in the
quarter-finals, and Shearer and
his strike partner Teddy
Sheringham helped them win 4-1
with two goals each, with a
performance described as "Total
Football" by pundits.
In the quarter finals, England
were outplayed by Spain but got
through to a penalty shootout
after a goalless draw. Shearer
scored the first England
penalty, while the Spaniards
failed to score from two of
theirs, sending England into
the semi-final against Germany.
Shearer headed England into the
lead after three minutes, but
the Germans quickly equalised
and the match went to penalties
again. This time, Germany won
from the spot; although Shearer
scored, his team-mate Gareth
Southgate missed his kick and
England went out. Germany went
on to win the final. Shearer's
five goals made him the
competition's top scorer, and
together with team mates David
Seaman and Steve McManaman, was
listed in the official UEFA
Team of the Tournament.
He scored five times in
England's steady start to their
qualification campaign for the
1998 FIFA World Cup, and that
summer he was named as England
captain. Shearer scored
England's first goal of the
tournament, in a 2-0 win over
Tunisia, but that was his only
goal in the three group
matches. England faced
Argentina in the second round:
Shearer scored a first-half
penalty in a match that went to
penalties after a 2-2 draw.
Shearer scored again, but
colleagues Paul Ince and David
Batty missed, and England were
eliminated.
England's Euro 2000 qualifying
campaign did not start well,
and Hoddle departed the England
job, with Shearer's former
Newcastle boss Kevin Keegan
taking over and maintaining
Shearer's role as captain.
Newcastle, meanwhile, made the
1999 FA Cup Final - their
second consecutive - this time
with Ruud Gullit as manager.
Again they were defeated, by
Manchester United, 2-0.
In September 1999, Shearer
scored his first England
hat-trick in a qualifier
against Luxembourg. England
qualified for the European
Championships thanks to a
play-off victory over two legs
against Scotland. By now,
Shearer was approaching his
30th birthday, and he announced
that he intended to retire from
international football after
the Euro 2000 tournament.
Shearer did not score in
England's opening 3-2 defeat
against Portugal, but did so as
England defeated Germany 1-0 in
Charleroi, ensuring that
England beat their European
neighbours for the first time
since the 1966 World Cup Final.
To remain in the tournament,
England only required a draw
against Romania in the final
group match, and Shearer scored
a penalty as England went in at
half-time 2-1 up, but Romania
ultimately won 3-2. England's
tournament was over, and so was
Shearer's international career.
From his 63 caps, he scored
thirty goals, joint-fifth in
the England all-time
goalscorers list with Nat
Lofthouse and Tom Finney.
The
future
There has been much speculation
about Shearer's future in the
game, with many expecting to
see him in a
management/coaching role at
Newcastle. However, he has
stated that he will take some
personal time off to "enjoy
life" for the next couple of
years.
He spent the summer of 2006 as
one of the main pundits for the
BBC's coverage of the World
Cup. Shearer famously suggested
that Wayne Rooney would "stick
one on" Cristiano Ronaldo after
their much publicised incident
during the quarter finals.
Shearer currently works as a
pundit for the BBC's Match of
the Day. In July 2006 he turned
down a role with England,
although he has expressed his
desire to become a manager. He
still needs to gain the
required qualifications: he is
currently working on the UEFA
Pro Licence, required to manage
a team in European
competition.
Former Newcastle chairman
Freddy Shepherd announced that,
after Shearer finished the
2005-06 season as Newcastle's
caretaker assistant manager, he
would become the club's
"Sporting Ambassador" for
2006-07.
On December 4, 2006, Shearer
was awarded an honorary
Doctorate of Civil Law degree
by the Northumbria
University.
Source :
Some of the information on
this page came from a
Wikipedia
article and is
licensed under the GNU
Documentation License.
©2008
www.geneticmatrix.com.
|