Alan shearer

Football's not just about scoring goals - it's about winning.

If you take the money away, a lot of the footballers would still be playing football. So, the money has nothing to do with it.

The FA Cup means a lot. There is a real passion here for the competition which you don't get elsewhere. It's a love affair. It's part and parcel of living up here. People might think I'm daft, but I'm not wrong; I'd rather win the Cup than the League.

This is the better one. It's identical.

I made no secret of the fact I'd love to stay in football and to do that, you need badges. I'm starting them and that's the next step for me - to continue this next season.

There is another side to me which people don't often see, but it's very hard for me to show that. When I do interviews, I'm talking to people I don't know and when you speak to a stranger you don't open up, do you? In my position, people are always looking for something to say about me. And anything I do say, given half-a-chance they'll turn it round into something spectacular so I've got to be very careful. That's why it's only my friends and family who know the real me. Now my wife, Lainya, she could tell you a few stories.

When I was a young boy I wanted to play for Newcastle United, I wanted to wear the number nine shirt and I wanted to score goals at St James' Park. I've lived my dream and I realise how lucky I've been to have done that.

Yes, I do like to be in control. I do like everything to be laid out, to know what I'm doing. I'm very impatient. I like things done yesterday, which is probably a fault of mine. I like things to be neat and tidy and organised. I say what I want and show what I want and I keep things private.

You never get fed up scoring goals.

My motto in life is 'if you give 100 per cent then no one can ask any more'.

If you ask footballers to pick out the player they most admire, so many of them will pick Paul Scholes.

I would play in any number shirt for Newcastle United, but the No 9 at Newcastle is something very special and I've always wanted to wear it. I mentioned it to the manager, he mentioned it to Les and Les has been very kind and given it to me.

The managers are getting paid very well by their respective clubs to do a job for their clubs not the country they are working in.

I didn't watch cartoons, I was too busy playing football.

I always dreamed about scoring at St. James' Park. I fancied my chances and the ball flew into the net. I was ecstatic.

You only get one chance of an England debut.

Any change of my style, the way I've played for 10 years, will not be a drastic one. Yes, I've always given as good as I've got; as a forward you have to do that because, if you don't look after yourself, you might find yourself being thrown in a hole and buried.

Newcastle fans never cease to amaze me. If there was a trophy for best supporters this lot would win it hands down every year.

I always practise penalties, but what people don't understand is that you can never recreate that pressure situation that you're under.

I want to be around when Newcastle win a trophy because I want to see this place lift off. It will be one hell of a party for a long time.

People are very proud of Newcastle, very proud to come from here. This is a working class City and they just want to enjoy themselves and live life to the full. They work all week, pick their wages up at the end of the week and they spend it over a weekend by having a good time and watching the football. That's our life.

Defeat is not worth thinking about.

Basically, a manager is a father figure to 20 or 25 blokes. It's about trying to get the best out of them and creating team spirit.

Sometimes going in for a hard tackle generates a louder cheer than a great pass.

If people don't like my style, then I can't do anything about that. I have been like that since I first entered into the game and it hasn't done me bad in the past, so I am not going to change now.

When I go home every night, I can look in the mirror and say I have given 110 per cent for Newcastle United. If people aren't happy with that, I can't give any more.

If people are going to write bad things about me because it makes news, I can brush it aside because I've had this for 10 years. I'm big enough and strong enough to cope with it. It's what comes with being Alan Shearer.

One of the biggest fears of players in a shootout is letting your teammates down.

I'm lucky and I appreciate that. I love every minute of every day.

We go there with confidence, but we know there is a very fine line between success and failure in this game.

It does not bother me that some say I'm dull and boring because the people that do know me will tell you a different story. It is very difficult to be open with people you don't know. There is nothing I can do about the fact that the real me does not get across and it is probably difficult to know the real me.

I've got a great life that I really enjoy. But there is something chewing at me inside: that adrenaline rush from football, I miss that.

At times they don't like you to kick them and they feel you're not allowed to kick them.

One accusation you can't throw at me is that I've always done my best.

If you want to have a great party at Wembley, don't invite the Germans.

I still get butterflies when England are playing.

I don't know what I'd have become if I hadn't been a footballer; I wrote down 'dustbin man' on a careers questionnaire at school till my dad made me change it to 'joiner'.

I've never wanted to leave. I'm here for the rest of my life, and hopefully after that as well.

For me, Paul Scholes has been the best midfield player in the Premier League. By a mile. He has the lot. He scores and creates goals, he can pass the ball, he can head it, and rounds all this off with a competitive streak.

I'd like to play for Newcastle United before I retire. The club is in my blood.

I've turned down Barcelona, Inter Milan, Juventus and Manchester United to play here. I hope everyone already knows how much it means to me to play for Newcastle United.

No money in the world can buy a white England shirt.

First is first. That's the way I was brought up. Second or third are nowhere.

You have to go out onto the pitch feeling good about yourself. That can give you that extra 30 per cent.

I have always said that the best feeling in the world is scoring a goal. Don't tell my missus that, but it is. When that ball hits the back of the net, it is fantastic.

There's no way the future's over for Martin Keown, Tony Adams or David Seaman.

I've got two girls. I like to play golf. Apart from that there's not a lot goes on in my life. So I am boring, aren't I?

Lampard picks his head up and knocks it out to the wing.

There was a big possibility that I would have had to leave Newcastle had Ruud Gullit stayed as manager.

Andy Carroll will cause anyone problems and I don't see a problem in that

I don't watch a lot of TV, to be honest. With three kids I have my hands full.

If you ask footballers to pick out the player they most admire, so many of them will pick Paul Scholes. His passing and shooting is of the highest level and he’s the most consistent and naturally gifted player we’ve had for a long, long time.

I spend time with my family. I have got two daughters who are too young to know their Dad's a footballer. They just want to play with their Dad. I like to play golf, too, but apart from that, that's me, I'm afraid.

People say he doesn't score a lot of goals with his head, but does he really have to with the ability he has in his feet? He makes spectacular goals look easy. His technique is fantastic. (on Thierry Henry)

Nothing's black or white in our country - you're either brilliant or you're hopeless

I have never wanted to go abroad before but you can never say never in football.

As a kid I always wanted to be a centre-forward. I wanted the buzz and thrill of scoring goals from an early age.

You should always give 100%. If you do that then no-one can ask any more of you. Someone once said to me when I was a kid: 'If you're asked to do ten sprints, by all means do 11 but never do nine because you're only cheating yourself'.

I like the tag of being the world's most expensive player. It's an honour and a privilege.

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Alan Shearer: Biography and Life Work

Alan Shearer was a notable Football pundit. The story of Alan Shearer began on 13 August 1970 in Newcastle upon Tyne, England.

Alan Shearer (born 13 August 1970) is an English football pundit and former professional player who played as a striker . Widely regarded as one of the best strikers of all time and one of the greatest players in Premier League history, he is the league's record goalscorer with 260 goals. He was named Football Writers' Association Player of the Year in 1994 and won the PFA Player of the Year award in 1995. In 1996, he came third in both Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year awards. In 2004, he was named by Pelé in the FIFA 100 list of the world's greatest living players. Shearer was one of the first two players inducted into the Premier League Hall of Fame in 2021.

Legacy and Personal Influence

Personally, Alan Shearer was married to Lainya Shearer.

Philosophical Views and Reflections

The middle of 2005 saw Shearer reverse his decision to retire, after persuasion from manager Graeme Souness . He decided to continue playing in a player-coach capacity until the end of the following season . and he returned for one more season in the 2005–06 season . This last season saw him break Jackie Milburn 's 49-year-old record of 200 goals for Newcastle United (not including his 38 World War II Wartime League goals) when he netted his 201st strike in a home Premier League fixture against Portsmouth on 4 February 2006, becoming the club's highest-ever league and cup competition goalscorer with 201 goals altogether. 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 a 4–1 win at Sunderland in which he scored his 206th and final goal in what was his 395th appearance for the club. The injury caused him to miss those final three games, effectively bringing forward his retirement. Shearer finished his final season with 10 goals in 32 league games.

On 26 July 2009, Shearer played and scored in the Sir Bobby Robson Trophy match , a charity match held at St James' Park in tribute of Bobby Robson and in aid of his cancer charity the Sir Bobby Robson Foundation . It proved to be Robson's last public appearance, as he died five days later. On 15 October 2009, Shearer became the new patron of the Sir Bobby Robson Foundation.

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