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Owen ready to rekindle English passion
NEWCASTLE, England: Michael Owen is eager to return to Premiership action following his transfer from Spanish giants Real Madrid to Newcastle.
"I wanted to get back to the Premiership," the 25-year-old Owen said on Wednesday, after signing a four-year contract. "I wanted to play football. I wanted to get that passion back in my game. "The Spanish league is fantastic, but it has not got the passion the English Premiership has got." Owen arrived in the north east to a hero's welcome as some 15,000 Newcastle fans gathered at the club's St James' Park ground to welcome the England striker. Not even the admission that a return to Liverpool was his first choice destination could dull the enthusiasm of the Newcastle faithful who believe Owen can single-handedly revive a team that is currently second-from-bottom in the table. "The bottom line is I wanted to come back and play in the Premier League again and wake up on a Saturday morning and really fancy getting out there and playing in front of this fantastic support, scoring goals and enjoying football," he added. "And then when you hear a manager and a chairman and supporters on the television all making it known that they really want you, then that is certainly a nice thing to hear as well. He added that the support was important. "The players currently here realize it is a very big club and an even bigger club waiting to happen." Meanwhile, Owen said he'd spoke to England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson to make sure his international career would not be hurt by a lack of European football in the build-up to next year's World Cup in Germany. "The England manager has never put any pressure on me," Owen insisted. "OK, it is a World Cup year and it is nice to be playing and playing in England, but if it was not a World Cup year, I would still have had the drive to come back and play in English football." Like fellow former Liverpool striker Ian Rush, who spent a season at Italian powerhouse Juventus, Owen has made a quick return to England after a brief spell abroad. But Owen insisted he did not regard his 8 million pounds move to the Bernabeu as a failure. "I am quite an inquisitive person, so as soon as I knew of Real Madrid's interest, I thought: 'If I live the rest of my life without playing in Europe and playing for a team which is one of the most famous in the world....', it is a fantastic opportunity. You might like it, you might not." He added that whatever happens, he has no doubts about his decision. "It was a great experience, and hopefully it has made me more rounded as a person, more rounded as a player, and I can bring that back with me," said Owen, who cost Newcastle some 17 million pounds. Newcastle manager Graeme Souness, himself a former Liverpool captain who subsequently played in Italy for Sampdoria, said he always hoped things might not go according to plan for the striker in Spain. "When I spoke to Michael at about Christmas time, the way it was panning out in Spain -- without wishing to wish him bad luck -- I was secretly hoping it would not work out for him in Spain, I have to be honest. "I felt that we were one of the few clubs around that could excite Michael, and that is how it has turned out."
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