Wednesday, October 10, 2007

McClaren dismisses Owen row talk


McClaren (left) says he is liaising with Allardyce

England v Estonia
Wembley Stadium

Saturday, 13 October
Kick-off: 1500 BST
England coach Steve McClaren has played down reports of a row with Newcastle boss Sam Allardyce over Michael Owen.

The 27-year-old striker returned for Newcastle last Sunday after surgery and Allardyce is worried about Owen playing in England's Euro 2008 qualifiers.

But McClaren said: "People talk of a conflict between Newcastle, Michael and us - nothing is further from the truth.

"No risk will be taken but Michael is a very important player to us and if Michael is fit, Michael will play."

McClaren said constant liaison with Allardyce and the medical staff over Owen's fitness.

The striker had surgery on his stomach and an abductor muscle nine days ago but came on as a substitute and scored as Newcastle beat Everton 3-2 at the weekend.

McClaren is aware of the importance of Owen for the Euro 2008 qualifiers against Estonia on 13 October and in Russia four days later.

Owen scored three goals in wins over Israel and Russia in a double header of qualifiers last time out.

And the surgeon who carried out Owen's surgery, Dr Ulrike Muschaweck, insists the risk of further injury is minuscule.

"The only thing stopping a quick return can be some pain which will keep the player off the field for some further days. The risk of the injury re-occurring is 0.1%," she said.

McClaren retained Paul Robinson for the games in Tel Aviv and Wembley and, despite concerns over the keeper's form, the England boss will keep faith with the Spurs stopper.

"He has never let us down and Paul Robinson is in.

"Sometimes players go through a bad spell and have bad games but you have got to have belief and faith and trust in your squads," said McClaren.

"Everyone is human and everyone makes mistakes but ultimately it is my decision. I trust Paul Robinson. I wouldn't play him otherwise."

Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard is back after a thigh injury and made his comeback in his side's win over Bolton.

He is vying to replace Gareth Barry, who was one of England's most impressive performers against Israel and Russia, as Steven Gerrard's partner in central midfield.

England are second in the group and just two points ahead of Russia.

"You want your best players available for big games like this and make no bones about it these are big games," said McClaren.

"We have put ourselves in pole position, it's up to us to make sure we do the business on Saturday, get the three points and then move on.

"He (Lampard) has been a great servant. I think he was our man of the match against Germany (in a friendly) but unfortunately he has not played since then.

"But he comes back in, he's had 90 minutes and he's looking good in training and we'll see how he is."

McClaren said he wanted the team to play in the same style they used when they beat Russia and Israel last month to put their qualifying campaign back on track.

"I want to see again the performance, the English style of playing, high tempo, front foot mentality and that gets the crowd behind us," he said.

"We showed against Isreal and Russia that teams struggle to handle us when we play games like that and we have to do the same again. That is the standard we have to try and attain everytime we go out and play.

"We have the same determination to get the same two results as last time."

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