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Terry Owen

English footballer


Summary

English footballer

FieldValue
nameTerry Owen
fullnameLeslie Terence Owen
birth_date
birth_placeLiverpool, England
death_date
height
positionForward
youthyears11965–1966youthclubs1 = Everton
years11966–1970clubs1 = Evertoncaps1 = 2goals1 = 0
years21970–1972clubs2 = Bradford Citycaps2 = 52goals2= 6
years31972–1977clubs3 = Chestercaps3 = 176goals3 = 41
years41977clubs4 = Cambridge Unitedcaps4 = 1goals4 = 0
years51977–1979clubs5 = Rochdalecaps5 = 83goals5 = 21
years61979–1980clubs6 = Port Valecaps6 = 18goals6 = 3
years71980–1981clubs7 = Northwich Victoriacaps7 =goals7 =
years81981clubs8 = Oswestry Towncaps8 =goals8 =
years91981–1983clubs9 = Colwyn Baycaps9 =goals9 =
years101983–1984clubs10 = Caernarfon Towncaps10 =goals10=
years111984–1985clubs11 = Prestatyn Towncaps11 =goals11=
totalcaps332totalgoals = 71

Leslie Terence Owen (born 11 September 1949) is an English former footballer who played as a striker. He is the father of former England international striker Michael Owen.

He began his career at Everton before signing with Bradford City in June 1970. He was sold to Chester in June 1972 for a fee of £1,000. He helped the club to promotion out of the Fourth Division in 1974–75, as well as a semi-final appearance in the League Cup and a fifth round appearance in the FA Cup. He joined Rochdale via Cambridge United in 1977 before moving on to Port Vale in 1979. The next year he entered the non-League scene with Northwich Victoria, Oswestry Town, Colwyn Bay, Caernarfon Town, and Prestatyn Town.

Career

Owen came through the ranks with Everton under Harry Catterick and made two First Division appearances for the "Toffees" in the 1967–68 season. However, he failed to add to his league appearances at Goodison Park and moved to Bradford City in June 1970. Jimmy Wheeler's "Bantams" finished just two places and one point above the Third Division relegation zone in 1970–71, but were relegated to the Fourth Division after finishing in last place in 1971–72 under new boss Bryan Edwards. Owen scored six goals in 47 league appearances for Bradford and was sold to Chester in June 1972 for a fee of £1,000.

He made his "Seals" debut in a 1–1 draw with Cambridge United in August 1972. He bagged 41 league goals in 199 appearances in one of the most successful periods in the club's history. A 15th-place finish in the Fourth Division in 1972–73 was followed by a seventh-place finish in 1973–74. Ken Roberts's side achieved promotion in 1974–75 by securing the fourth automatic promotion place with only a slender higher goal average than fifth place Lincoln City. More remarkably, Chester reached the semi-finals of the League Cup, beating Leeds United and Newcastle United along the way. Owen scored in the 2–2 first-leg draw with Aston Villa at Sealand Road, and played in the return game as Chester narrowly lost 3–2 at Villa Park to deny Owen an appearance at Wembley Stadium. Owen finished as the club's top league scorer during the campaign, with 14 goals to his name. He managed double-figures again in 1975–76, as Chester retained their Third Division status. Another mid-table finish was achieved in 1976–77 under player-manager Alan Oakes, and Owen also featured in the FA Cup fifth round defeat to Wolverhampton Wanderers at Molineux.

Owen left Chester in the summer of 1977. He played just one Third Division game for his next club, Cambridge United, against Chester, before returning to the north-west with Mike Ferguson's Rochdale. The Spotland club finished bottom of the Football League in 1977–78 with just 24 points from 46 games. They managed to then finish one place and two points above the re-election zone in 1978–79. He scored 21 goals in 82 league games for "Dale".

He joined Port Vale in summer 1979, as one of Dennis Butler's last signings as manager. His first goal for the "Valiants" came against former club Rochdale, in a 5–1 win at Vale Park on 29 September. He finished the 1979–80 campaign with three goals in 19 appearances, as Vale recorded the lowest league finish in their history – 20th in the 24 team Fourth Division. He was then given a free transfer to Northwich Victoria of the Alliance Premier League. He scored twice in eight league games in 1980–81, before moving into Welsh football with Oswestry Town. In 1981, he signed with Colwyn Bay, before joining Caernarfon Town of the North West Counties League. The "Canaries" finished 14th in the First Division in 1983–84. He then returned to Welsh non-League football with Prestatyn Town.

Career statistics

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupOtherTotalDivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsTotal5262031577Total1764110112219844Total832122208723Career total3327114320336677
Everton1967–68First Division20000020
Bradford City1970–71Third Division2841011305
1971–72Third Division2421020272
Chester1972–73Fourth Division3542030404
1973–74Fourth Division2982100319
1974–75Fourth Division371410524316
1975–76Third Division401130104411
1976–77Third Division3542030404
Cambridge United1977–78Third Division10001020
Rochdale1977–78Fourth Division421012004312
1978–79Fourth Division411110204411
Port Vale1979–80Fourth Division1830020203

Honours

Chester City

  • Football League Fourth Division fourth-place promotion: 1974–75

References

References

  1. Rollin, Jack. (1980). "Rothmans football yearbook". Queen Anne Press.
  2. Chas Sumner. (1997). "On the Borderline: The Official History of Chester City 1885–1997".
  3. (5 January 2008). "Great Merseyside tradition of semi final drama". Liverpool Echo (see match 2).
  4. Kent, Jeff. (1996). "Port Vale Personalities". Witan Books.
  5. 'Where are they now?', Chester City v. Bradford City matchday programme; 6 February 1993; pg. 20
  6. "JockBio: Michael Owen Biography".
  7. Michael Owen. (2004). "Off the Record:My Autobiography". CollinsWillow.
  8. Michael Owen. (2004). "Off the Record:My Autobiography". CollinsWillow.
  9. (22 June 1999). "Partridge wings in for Blues". Liverpool Echo.
  10. Michael Owen. (2004). "Off the Record:My Autobiography". CollinsWillow.
  11. {{ENFA
Wikipedia Source

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