Meeting Benitez didn’t convince Owen to stay

Real Madrid players David Beckham, Michael Owen and Ronaldo, 2005.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Michael Owen left Liverpool in August 2004 to join a Real Madrid side full of ‘Galacticos’ including David Beckham (left) and Ronaldo (right)

A year before the Gerrard transfer saga, the future of another Liverpool youth product had dominated the headlines.

Striker Michael Owen had also come through the academy but – like Gerrard – had become disillusioned with life at Anfield.

Gerard Houllier had been sacked as manager in the summer of 2004 after the Reds finished 30 points behind champions Arsenal.

When Benitez was hired as his replacement, his first task was to convince his two best players to stay.

He flew to Portugal to meet Owen, Gerrard and Carragher, who were with the England squad at the European Championship. What followed was not quite the charm offensive some might have expected.

“He was on me tactically,” says Gerrard. “‘I don’t want this, I don’t want that. You can’t play in this team unless we trust you.’ It was intense. And I was thinking to myself, ‘I guarantee you, you’ll need me before I need you.'”

Carragher says Benitez told Owen, who in 2001 had won the Ballon d’Or, he needed to learn to “turn on the ball quicker”.

“That’s absolutely what I was probably the best in the world at, at the time,” says Owen, 46. “He certainly didn’t go any way to convincing me to stay, put it that way.”

In August 2004, Owen joined Real Madrid for £8m.

But Benitez’s impression of that first meeting differs.

“You can see when you talk with someone if he’s happy with the conversation,” he says. “I think they were quite happy.”

Benitez’s ‘weird’ training methods

As he reflects on Benitez’s time in charge, Carragher says the manager’s training methods were “a bit weird”.

“There’s no ball and there’d just be cones all around the pitch,” says the former England defender, 48.

“Rafa would say, ‘right the ball’s at cone A, the ball’s at cone D, the ball’s at cone F’ and then we’d all have to run to where we should be.”

Benitez acknowledges he likes to go into detail in his coaching.

“I like to analyse things,” he says. “Just one centimetre higher or lower – that is the difference between success sometimes and defeat.”

And that attention to detail paid off during the penalty shootout in Istanbul.

Jerzy Dudek says Benitez had kept extensive notes on where Milan’s players liked to put their spot-kicks.

“We had a code,” says the former Poland goalkeeper. “The goal was divided into six squares. He shared this information: ‘Andriy Shevchenko likes one and four.'”

Dudek saved two penalties, including the decisive one from Shevchenko.

Half-time was ‘chaotic’

Liverpool midfielder Dietmar Hamann fights for the ball with AC Milan forward Andriy Shevchenko, whilst Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso chases behind - 2005 Champions League final.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Dietmar Hamann’s half-time introduction helped turn the game

Part of the folklore around the 2005 Champions League final centres on what happened in the Liverpool dressing room at half-time.

The Reds scored three goals in six second-half minutes after Benitez brought on midfielder Dietmar Hamann for defender Steve Finnan.

With that came a switch from four at the back to three, with Hamann and Xabi Alonso as holding midfielders and Gerrard given more freedom to go forward.

Carragher describes the 15 minutes at half-time as “chaotic”.

Djimi Traore was initially told he was being substituted before Benitez learned Finnan was injured.

Hamann describes heading for a warm-up while his team-mate went into the showers, then returning to find him back in his full kit.

“I went back to the dressing room and the first person I saw was Djimi,” he says.

“I reported: ‘I’m coming on, who’s coming off?’ He reported: ‘I don’t know. Got no idea what’s going on.'”

Benitez says the final taught him a lesson.

“I started to realise that while it’s important to play with your head, you must never forget to play with your heart,” he says.

Related topics

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  • Liverpool

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