WTA Charleston – Family Circle Cup: Serena Williams beats Venus Williams 6-1 6-2 in semi-final

Serena shows big sister Venus tough love with straight-sets thrashing in Charleston

By
Steven Donaldson

PUBLISHED:

20:18 GMT, 6 April 2013

|

UPDATED:

20:54 GMT, 6 April 2013

Serena Williams demolished her older sister Venus 6-1, 6-2 in a one-sided semi-final at the Family Circle Cup in Charleston.

At times it was painful to watch, with Serena appearing uncomfortable with how she dismantled her sister – at one point not even challenging a ball that was called in when clearly wide – and the whole affair was over in 54 minutes.

Venus was constantly troubled by her serve, producing eight double faults, and it took until the third game of the second set for the former world No 1 to hold. Serena led applause for Venus after the match and chose to speak of her sister's return after a back injury which forced her withdrawal from March's Sony Open.

Thrashed: Serena Williams shakes hands with sister Venus after beating her 6-1, 6-2Thrashed: Serena Williams shakes hands with sister Venus after beating her 6-1, 6-2

Thrashed: Serena Williams shakes hands with sister Venus after beating her 6-1, 6-2

Speedy: Serena needed just 54 minutes to win on the clay in Charleston

Speedy: Serena needed just 54 minutes to win on the clay in Charleston

She said: 'It's really exciting…it's hard on our bodies. We're doing great and we were just excited that one of us was going to the final.'

It was the first time the sisters had faced each other since 2009 and while Serena has been in the ascendancy for some years, the first game gave no hint of the steamrollering to come.

Instead, Serena seemed to be going through the motions and her serve was not its usual formidable weapon, although the world number one held. A fierce cross-court shot gave Serena break point in the following game which had set the tone for the match with regards to Venus' serve, a double fault bringing up 2-0.

Outclassed: Venus had no answer to her younger sister and won just three games

Outclassed: Venus had no answer to her younger sister and won just three games

The younger sister was getting into her stride, a 110mph serve produced en route to 3-0 in contrast to Venus. Serena was quicker to everything and she moved to a 4-0 lead by passing Venus as she came into the net with a looping shot.

Venus finally got on the scoreboard in the fifth game when a fearsome forehand down the line gave Serena no chance.

However, Serena immediately broke back when Venus produced two successive double faults and she went on to win the set to love.

Rivalry: Serena and her sister faced each other for the first time since 2009

Rivalry: Serena and her sister faced each other for the first time since 2009

The crowd were urging Venus on but initially it had little effect as Serena took a 2-0 lead in the second. Venus held to the delight of the stands and she was certainly moving her sister around the court more, but the match was moving towards an inevitable conclusion.

The decisive break came in the seventh game as Venus netted with Serena going 5-2 up, and a long return saw her win to love.

Serena said: 'I felt great. I am really looking forward not only to tomorrow but the rest of the clay court season.'

Serena will meet Jelena Jankovic in the final after the Serbian beat unseeded Stefanie Voegele 6-4 6-7 (6/8) 6-2 in a match lasting two hours eight minutes.

Blackburn 1 Cardiff 4: Bluebirds stretch lead at the top

Blackburn 1 Cardiff 4: Bellamy dreaming again as Bluebirds stretch lead at the top

|

UPDATED:

23:22 GMT, 7 December 2012

Old boy Craig Bellamy enjoyed a
goalscoring return to Blackburn as Cardiff cantered four points clear at
the top of the Championship.

The Welshman edged his side back in front five minutes after Josh King had cancelled out Mark Hudson’s.

Four-star: Craig Bellamy celebrates scoring Cardiff's second

Four-star: Craig Bellamy celebrates scoring Cardiff's second

MATCH FACTS

Blackburn: Robinson, Henley, Grant Hanley, Dann, Martin Olsson, Formica (Nunes 70), Etuhu, Lowe, Markus Olsson (Kazim-Richards 46), King, Rhodes.

Subs not used: Kean, Givet, Pedersen, Rochina, Vukcevic.

Booked: Martin Olsson, Hanley, Lowe.

Goal: King 51.

Cardiff: Marshall, Connolly, Hudson, Turner, Taylor, Noone (Kim 69), Conway, Cowie, Whittingham, Bellamy (Mason 80), Helguson (Gestede 90).

Subs not used: Lewis, McNaughton, Gunnarsson, Lappin.

Booked: Hudson, Noone, Helguson.

Goals: Hudson 34, Bellamy 55, Mason 84, Kim 85.

Referee: Simon Hooper (Wiltshire)

Attendance: 12,460.

Latest Championship table, results and fixtures

Cardiff went on to make their ascendancy count with substitutes Joe Mason and Kim Bo-Kyung scoring in the final six minutes.

Bellamy, 33, said: ‘I was so fortunate to win a trophy with Liverpool last season but if I can finish my career by getting Cardiff to the Premier League with Cardiff it might be a dream come true.’

Cardiff were on top from the start and there was little doubt they would take their current run to 16 points from a possible 18 on offer. Their constant harrying of Rovers midfield ensured they quickly won back possession and they used it effectively once in control of the ball.

Defender Hudson gave them a 30th-minute lead by heading in his fourth goal of the season from Craig Noone’s cross.

King levelled at the start of the second half, converting a intelligent pass on the turn from substitute Colin Kazim-Richards.

But parity was short-lived. Bellamy, who had hit the bar in the first half, swapped headers with Heidar Helguson and angled a shot home.

Helguson grew increasingly influential and it was his work as a link man that set up Cardiff’s grandstand finish.

Flying high: The Bluebirds are now four points clear at the top of the Championship

Flying high: The Bluebirds are now four points clear at the top of the Championship

His header allowed Mason to run
through and shoot past Robinson before his square ball picked out
Bo-Kyung to fire into the corner.

The defeat extended Rovers’ poor form under new boss Henning Berg.

The Norwegian is yet to see his team
win at home in four attempts and one victory in eight games overall has
seen the side plummet down the table.

Berg admitted: ‘Cardiff were a better
all over. They had better finishing and defended better than us. The
way we used the ball in first half is way off where we want to be. We
can play better.’

Rout: Kim (left) completed the scoring

Rout: Kim (left) completed the scoring

India v England: Graeme Swann hits back after Virender Sehwag century

Swann haul keeps England clinging on to India's coat-tails after Sehwag blasts run-a-ball century to get hosts off to a flyer

|

UPDATED:

11:37 GMT, 15 November 2012

India v England pictures

We are unable to carry live pictures from the First Test in Ahmedabad due to a dispute between the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and international news organisations.

The BCCI has refused access to Test venues to established picture agencies Getty Images and Action Images and other Indian photographic agencies.

MailOnline consider this action to be a strike against press freedom and supports the action to boycott BCCI imagery.

Graeme Swann claimed a coveted piece of cricket history as he helped to claw England back into the reckoning after Virender Sehwag's destructive hundred in the first Test at the Sardar Patel Stadium.

Sehwag (117) began the four-match series with a memorable statement of intent for India, only for Swann to hit back with four wickets – the second of which took him past the great Jim Laker as England's most successful off-spinner.

Thanks to Sehwag and Cheteshwar Pujara (98 not out), India nonetheless finished in the ascendancy on 323 for four after a day when England did not always help themselves – putting down two catches and missing two other obvious opportunities to effect dismissals.

Spin king: Graeme Swann celebrates one of his four wickets on day one of the first Test at Ahmedabad

Spin king: Graeme Swann celebrates one of his four wickets on day one of the first Test at Ahmedabad

Sehwag dominated a century opening stand with Gautam Gambhir, and was then joined by Pujara for another partnership of 90 for the second wicket.

There was little cheer at that point for the tourists, after losing the toss on a pitch likely to increasingly favour spin.

India v England

Click here to see the full scorecard

Follow how the day's play unfolded here

Sehwag wasted no time in grasping an ominous initiative at the very start of the series.

On an especially slow surface, he made a nonsense of his last experience against England – two golden ducks at Edgbaston, in India's 4-0 defeat last year.

As if to encapsulate the difference 4,000 miles can make, back on home ground he seized mercilessly on any off-side width and angled runs expertly into gaps in a run-a-ball innings. The first hour gave England precious little encouragement; the second surely a chastening sense already of their undertaking as new captain Alastair Cook tries to lead his country to a first series win in India since the winter he was born.

What a start: Indian opener Virender Sehwag celebrates his hundred in Ahmedabad

What a start: Indian opener Virender Sehwag celebrates his hundred in Ahmedabad

On the attack: Sehwag blasts the ball to the boundary during his blistering innings

On the attack: Sehwag blasts the ball to the boundary during his blistering innings

The Indian openers were quickly in
cruise control, before Sehwag upped the ante – and by the first ball of
the 20th over, the total was already in three figures.

Sehwag
dispatched Tim Bresnan, on for James Anderson after eight overs, for
four, four and six in successive balls – past cover, wide of mid on and
back over his head – forcing Cook into more changes.

Early afternoon brought three let-offs for India, two of them costly.

Matt Prior dropped Sehwag on 80, down the leg side off Anderson, and in the next over missed a stumping chance when Gambhir overbalanced against Swann (four for 85).

The left-handed opener did not add to his score before Swann got one to skid on and bowl him on the back foot to end a stand of 134.

Big wicket: Indian hero Sachin Tendulkar reacts after holing out in the deep to Samit Patel (below)

Big wicket: Indian hero Sachin Tendulkar reacts after holing out in the deep to Samit Patel (below)

Big wicket: Indian hero Sachin Tendulkar reacts after holing out in the deep to Samit Patel (below)

But Sehwag soon reached three figures,
from 90 balls, with a 15th four lofted over mid on off Swann to go with
his six – his first hundred for almost exactly two years, against New
Zealand on this same ground.

Pujara was not dropped but nonetheless had fortune, and an England slip, on his side on eight when Anderson overcommitted himself at mid on and could not then reach a leading edge off Bresnan.

The No 3, who had given England a preview of his capabilities with an innings of 87 against them for Mumbai A two weeks ago, is not prone to making a second mistake on the same day.

So it was that he soon had a look of risk-free permanence.

/11/15/article-2233267-1609BF2C000005DC-818_634x419.jpg” width=”634″ height=”419″ alt=”Unbeaten: A half-century from Cheteshwar Pujara helped India edge toward a strong first innings total ” class=”blkBorder” />

Unbeaten: A half-century from Cheteshwar Pujara helped India edge toward a strong first innings total

First it brought Sachin Tendulkar to the crease, to the obligatory delight of the crowd.

But the veteran master batsman did not last long, holing out in the leg-side deep off Swann – who took two wickets for 11 runs in a four-over spell just before tea.

Afterwards, he continued to make progress slow for the hosts, Virat Kohli needing 30 balls to get off the mark – with a straight-driven four off Stuart Broad – and then dropped at slip on five by Jonathan Trott via a faulty cut at Swann.

After just four runs had come from seven overs immediately after tea, Kohli was undone by Swann anyway – bowled through the gate by a perfectly-pitched off break.

Pujara, meanwhile, was going nowhere fast.

After a 67-ball half-century, he ground to a near halt in the 80s – and the final session brought only 73 runs.

His longevity continued, however, and persuaded England to give Swann a break and their pace attack a second chance with a new ball – to no avail by stumps.

Novak Djokovic eases past Jo-Wilfried Tsonga

Djokovic dismisses Tsonga in straight sets and turns attention to Murray clash at O2

|

UPDATED:

22:43 GMT, 5 November 2012

Novak Djokovic will play Andy Murray on Wednesday at the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals after joining the Scot in winning his opening round-robin clash on Monday.

Murray defeated Tomas Berdych at London's O2 Arena on Monday and Djokovic celebrated returning to world No 1 by defeating Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7-6 (7/4) 6-3.

The Serb overtook Roger Federer in the rankings on Monday to reclaim top spot four months after last holding it, and he is guaranteed to hold onto it until next year.

Now watch video highlights of Djokovic in action at the O2 Arena

Hitting the target: Novak Djokovic beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in straight sets

Hitting the target: Novak Djokovic beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in straight sets

He was made to fight hard by seventh seed Tsonga, though, with the Frenchman in the ascendancy for much of the opening set.

He had three break points but could not take any of them and Djokovic capitalised in the tie-break, getting off to a fast start and not looking back.

The 25-year-old then grabbed the first break of the match in the opening game of the second set as Tsonga carried his frustration with him.

Not your day: Tsonga failed to move through the gears at the O2 Arena on Monday

Not your day: Tsonga failed to move through the gears at the O2 Arena on Monday

Powerhouse: Tsonga wasn't at his best in front of the London crowd

Powerhouse: Tsonga wasn't at his best in front of the London crowd

Djokovic had lost all four of his previous meetings with Tsonga on indoor courts but this was a seventh straight win over last year's runner-up for the top seed.

And it guaranteed a repeat of the US Open final in the next round of Group A matches, renewing the rivalry between Murray and Djokovic that has increasingly taken centre stage in recent months.

As well as their five-set classic in New York, the pair also played a brilliant three-set final in Shanghai, where Djokovic turned the tables, and the winner on Wednesday will have one foot in the semi-finals.

Round-robin: Djokovic will face Britain's Andy Murray on Wednesday in what promises to be a scintillating match

Round-robin: Djokovic will face Britain's Andy Murray on Wednesday in what promises to be a scintillating match

Sebastian Vettel beats rival Fernando Alonso in Indian Grand Prix practice

Title boost for Vettel as Red Bull ace beats rival Alonso in practice for Indian Grand Prix

|

UPDATED:

07:50 GMT, 26 October 2012

Sebastian Vettel continued his current dominance of Formula One by comfortably finishing top of the timesheets following first practice for Sunday's Indian Grand Prix.

Following a run of three successive victories, Vettel heads into the race at the Buddh International Circuit on the outskirts of New Delhi with a six-point cushion over Ferrari's Fernando Alonso.

It would appear, with just 100 points up for grabs from the remaining four races, that a title race so open-ended after the summer break less than two months ago has become a two-horse affair.

All smiles: Vettel topped the timesheets in Friday's first practice session

All smiles: Vettel topped the timesheets in Friday's first practice session

Vettel is in the ascendancy and has the momentum in a Red Bull that lapped the dusty 5.125km circuit, shrouded in smog come the start of the initial 90-minute session, in a time of one minute 27.619secs.

The usual suspects were left trailing, spearheaded by Jenson Button in his McLaren, the Briton 0.310secs adrift, followed by Alonso and Lewis Hamilton.

On track: The double world champion holds a six-point lead over Alonso ahead of Sunday's Indian Grand Prix

On track: The double world champion holds a six-point lead over Alonso ahead of Sunday's Indian Grand Prix

Alonso finished 0.425secs down on Vettel, with Hamilton a further two thousandths of a second behind, whilst Vettel's team-mate in Mark Webber was over half a second off the pace.

As for the remainder, there was a considerable gap between Webber and Mercedes' Nico Rosberg of three tenths of a second, with Felipe Massa in his Ferrari the only other driver to finish within a second of Vettel.

Under his umbrella: Hamilton is still in with a mathematical chance of winning this year's title

Under his umbrella: Hamilton is still in with a mathematical chance of winning this year's title

The soon-to-be-retiring-for-a-second-time Michael Schumacher was down in eighth in his Mercedes, but 1.374secs behind, the 43-year-old German followed by Toro Rosso's Daniel Ricciardo and Lotus' Kimi Raikkonen.

Further suggesting he is ripe for a race seat next season, Williams reserve driver Valtteri Bottas had the edge over Pastor Maldonado by 3.5secs, the duo 11th and 16th.

Rival: The Spaniard was 0.425 seconds adrift of Vettel

Rival: The Spaniard was 0.425 seconds adrift of Vettel

Force India's Paul di Resta was down in 12th, but just over two seconds down, narrowly finishing ahead of team-mate Nico Hulkenberg.

Another reserve in Caterham's Giedo van der Garde, taking the place of Heikki Kovalainen, was only 0.3secs behind Vitaly Petrov as they finished 18th and 19th.

Flying the flag: Button drives past a largely deserted grandstand

Flying the flag: Button drives past a largely deserted grandstand

At Sauber, in his first outing in a F1 car at a grand prix weekend, Esteban Gutierrez was 20th, 1.4secs behind Kamui Kobayashi.

The Mexican, replacing Sergio Perez who the team claim was left out due to a fever although the 22-year-old has tweeted he felt fine, survived one hair-raising moment when he came close to putting his car in the wall.

At the bottom of the field was HRT's Pedro de la Rosa, 5.2secs off of Vettel, and 0.7secs down on the only Indian in F1 in Narain Karthikeyan.

Watford 1 Peterborough 0 – match report

Watford 1 Peterborough 0: Late penalty condemns Posh to yet another defeat

|

UPDATED:

16:37 GMT, 20 October 2012

Matej Vydra stepped off the bench to give Watford a last-gasp win and condemn Peterborough to a ninth defeat in 11 npower Championship games this season.

Watford were troubled by their visitors in the opening exchanges, with attackers Emile Sinclair and Tyrone Barnett in lively form. Nevertheless, half-time was reached with neither goalkeeper overly extended.

Gianfranco Zola's Hornets assumed the ascendancy upon the resumption, but recalled forward Fernando Forestieri was wasteful when presented with opportunities.

Right direction: Watford pulled off a late win at home to struggling Peterborough

Right direction: Watford pulled off a late win at home to struggling Peterborough

MATCH FACTS

Watford: Almunia, Hall, Doyley, Hoban, Hogg, Pudil, Abdi (Vydra 72), Cassetti, Chalobah, Deeney (Geijo 86), Forestieri (Yeates 88). Subs Not Used: Bond, Murray, Anya, Thompson.

Booked: Deeney,Pudil,Almunia.

Goals: Vydra 90 pen.

Peterborough: Olejnik, Alcock (McCann 60), Brisley, Knight-Percival, Bostwick, Boyd, Rowe (Ntlhe 46), Ferdinand, Little, Barnett, Sinclair (Berahino 67). Subs Not Used: Richens, Zakuani, Swanson, Tomlin.

Booked: Knight-Percival, Ntlhe, McCann.

Att: 15,950

Ref: Geoff Eltringham (Tyne & Wear).

Click here for the latest Championship results, fixtures and table

The closest either side came to
breaking the deadlock before Vydra's late intervention was a strike from
Watford's Nathaniel Chalobah that went behind via the post.

But Kane Ferdinand infringed Daniel
Pudil in the 89th minute and Vydra, one of Zola's sizeable Udinese loan
contingent, kept his cool to leave Darren Ferguson's Posh rooted to the
foot of the table and five points from safety.

Lloyd Doyley and Forestieri returned to the Watford starting line-up in place of injured defender Piccoli Neuton and Vydra.

Peterborough were unchanged from the 1-0 home defeat to Nottingham Forest before the international break.

Ferguson's strugglers came flying out
of the blocks with Watford defender Pudil forced to divert an Emile
Sinclair cross behind for a corner inside the first 20 seconds, from
which Tommy Rowe headed over.

Almen Abdi and Marco Cassetti responded for the home side but their off-target efforts were no more than speculative.

Peterborough striker Tyrone Barnett
had a clearer chance midway through the half but headed Mark Little's
cross over Manuel Almunia's bar.

Fitz Hall might have done better from
Forestieri's corner as half-time approached but chances were proving
very hard to come by for Zola's men.

Ferguson made a defensively-minded change at the interval with Kgosi Ntlhe introduced in favour of Rowe.

Forestieri engineered space in the area but dragged his shot wide of the near post six minutes after the restart.

Watford came agonisingly close to
breaking the deadlock as the hour approached when Chalobah fired
goalward right-footed from the edge of the box and rattled the post with
Posh goalkeeper Robert Olejnik helpless.

Twice more Forestieri was wasteful from close quarters as the visitors were pushed onto the back foot.

But eventually the pressure told and
with less than 90 seconds of normal time to play, Ferdinand fouled Pudil
and referee Geoff Eltringham pointed to the spot.

Introduced as a 72nd minute
replacement for Abdi, Serbian striker Vydra fired home a low penalty to
send those among the Vicarage Road faithful who had not opted for an
early exit into raptures.

England 1 Ukraine 1: Lampard saves the day with late penalty as Gerrard sees red

England 1 Ukraine 1: Lampard saves the day with late penalty as Gerrard sees red

|

UPDATED:

20:54 GMT, 11 September 2012

A late Frank Lampard penalty salvaged a point for England at Wembley after Roy Hodgson's side were dominated by Ukraine for large periods in the World Cup qualifier.

Jermain Defoe's strike was chalked off for a foul in the build-up and Tom Cleverley missed two gilt-edged chances as England struggled to assert themselves against Oleg Blokhin's side.

And Yevhen Konoplianka hit the opener just before half-time with a stunning strike that stunned Wembley.

But Danny Welbbeck's effort was handled in the box late on, Chelsea star Lampard hit his third goal in two games to grab a share of the spoils before skipper Steven Gerrard was sent off for a second bookable offence in the closing stages.

More follows…

Unstoppable: Yevhen Konoplianka blasts Ukraine into the ascendancy, leaving Joe Hart no chance

Unstoppable: Yevhen Konoplianka blasts Ukraine into the ascendancy, leaving Joe Hart no chance

Unstoppable: Yevhen Konoplianka blasts Ukraine into the ascendancy, leaving Joe Hart no chance

Unstoppable: Yevhen Konoplianka blasts Ukraine into the ascendancy, leaving Joe Hart no chance

Match facts

England: Hart, Johnson, Jagielka, Lescott, Baines (Bertrand 73), Lampard, Gerrard, Milner, Cleverley (Welbeck 62), Oxlade-Chamberlain (Sturridge 69), Defoe. Subs not used: Ruddy, Walker, Cahill, Carrick, Livermore, Lallana, Sterling, Butland.

Booked: Defoe, Gerrard.

Sent off: Gerrard.

Scorer: Lampard (pen) 86.

Ukraine: Pyatov, Gusev, Khacheridi, Rakitskiy, Selin (Shevchuk 75), Tymoschuk, Rotan, Yarmolenko, Garmash, Konoplianka, Zozulya (Devic 90). Subs not used: Koval, Bezus, Mandzyuk, Nazarenko, Stepanenko, Butko, Dykan.

Booked: Selin, Garmash, Khacheridi.

Scorer: Konoplianka 39.

Referee: Cuneyt Cakir (Turkey).

Attendance: 68,102.

Disallowed: Jermain Defoe saw this effort chalked off after being adjudged to have fouled Andriy Yarmolenko

Disallowed: Jermain Defoe saw this effort chalked off after being adjudged to have fouled Andriy Yarmolenko

Kerry Hope loses middleweight belt to Grzegorz Proksa

No Hope for Kerry as Proksa regains middleweight belt in style

|

UPDATED:

22:55 GMT, 7 July 2012

Kerry Hope's reign as European
middleweight champion proved to be short lived as Poland's Grzegorz
Proksa gained emphatic revenge in Sheffield.

Hope, 30, upset the odds to claim
the belt by scoring a majority decision win over Proksa at the
Motorpoint Arena in March, but in the same venue the Welshman came up
short as a right hook in round eight from his opponent ended the
argument.

Proksa's professional record moves to 28 wins, with 21 inside the distance, and one defeat, while Hope falls to 17-4.

Hard hitting: Greg Proksa (left) outfought Kerry Hope

Hard hitting: Greg Proksa (left) outfought Kerry Hope

A sluggish display proved to be the 27-year-old Proksa's undoing as he was outworked by Hope in their first meeting and from the outset he seemed determined not to make the same mistake.March's contest was a blood-stained
affair and in the closing seconds of round one tonight a straight left
from Proksa opened up a cut above Hope's right eye.

Overwhelmed: Proksa celebrates victory

Overwhelmed: Proksa celebrates victory

A thudding overhand left drove Hope towards the ropes in round two but the Merthyr Tydfil man worked his way back in the next session, connecting with a left hook behind the challenger's ear.

A right hook into a left upper cut
marked Proksa's most eye-catching work of round four and began a
pleasing back and forth throughout the middle rounds as both men showed
scant regard for defence.

With little to choose between the
fighters halfway through the scheduled distance, Proksa assumed the
ascendancy in seven, landing a succession of clean headshots.

The end was spectacular when it came, Proksa bursting through Hope's defences with a vicious right.

The champion got back to his feet but referee John Keane correctly ruled he was in no position to continue on unsteady legs.

Michael Owen Interview: Manchester United striker talks about his football career and horse racing

Michael Owen: I've played for Liverpool, Real, Newcastle, Man Utd. I won 90-odd caps, scored 40-odd goals and don't need to work again – so I'm not THAT unlucky!

|

UPDATED:

23:03 GMT, 5 April 2012

Michael Owen runs a finger along the back of his right leg where a hamstring used to be and retraces a career path that changed one fateful night in Leeds 13 years ago.

April 12, 1999. Owen’s star was in the ascendancy after that goal against Argentina in the 1998 World Cup and a successful second season for Liverpool when the 19-year-old fell to the turf at Elland Road.

‘You’ve got three hamstrings and one was just totally ruptured,’ he says, raising his leg off the sofa to demonstrate the point.

Rare breed: Michael Owen is two weeks away from full fitness - and that could strike fear into the hearts of Manchester City fans

Rare breed: Michael Owen is two weeks away from full fitness – and that could strike fear into the hearts of Manchester City fans

‘It should be right the way down but one bit starts there, attaches there and the rest of it attaches there. I’ve got no hamstring in the middle. I’m basically running on two hamstrings on my right leg and three on the other.

‘That injury has probably changed my whole career. I’ve been compromised from the age of 19.

‘Every specialist says the same thing. It goes from one and then you compensate and it goes to the other one, and then to the groin, and then a double hernia and then on to this.’

Owen is referring to the thigh injury that has kept him out since early November. He has played only four games for Manchester United so far this season, but his three goals have kept up a very respectable strike rate of one in every three games (17 in 52 appearances, 34 of them off the bench) since Sir Alex Ferguson surprised many people by taking him to Old Trafford in 2009.

Owen arrived as a free agent that summer after circulating a brochure through his agents in an attempt to persuade clubs that he was not injury-prone.

Mersey master: Liverpool was the club where Michael Owen made his name

Mersey master: Liverpool was the club where Michael Owen made his name

A torn hamstring in the 2010 Carling Cup final, similar to the one he suffered a decade earlier, and his current five-month lay-off might suggest otherwise.

LIVERPOOL

Games: 297 Goals: 158

Analysing Owen’s career has never been easy. Great Without a doubt. He has played for some of the best clubs in the world, was voted European Footballer of the Year in 2001 and lies fourth in the list of England’s top goalscorers with 40, nine behind Sir Bobby Charlton.

But it could have been one of the greatest and Owen knows it.

‘If I’d still been in one piece from the World Cup and gone through my career, what type of player would I have been’ he asks rhetorically. ‘No doubt about it, if I hadn’t had as many injuries I would have been the all-time leading scorer for England.

Goal getter: Owen scored over 150 goals for Liverpool including one in the FA Cup final against Arsenal

Goal getter: Owen scored over 150 goals for Liverpool including one in the FA Cup final against Arsenal

‘I look back on my career like everyone with, “What if this or what if that”

‘There’s regret that maybe the medical care you’re getting now wasn’t available 14 years ago when I had my big injury. With United, I had it surgically repaired and it’s brand new. I wouldn’t even know I had an injury. Back then you just let it go.

ON INJURIES:

You've got three hamstrings and mine was totally ruptured…that changed my whole career

‘Some people will think I was blighted with injuries and that’s a matter for them. I think to myself that I was exceptional at a young age but I paid the penalty for that.

‘I was 15 and playing in the Under 18s for England, I was seven and in the Under 11s at county level, I was playing above myself all the time.

‘When me and Steven Gerrard were breaking through at Liverpool he was phenomenal at 14 but he just couldn’t stay fit. That was the biggest blessing in disguise for him. He couldn’t play so he grew into his frame and all of a sudden he plays a lot more than me in the latter part of his career.

‘I was just ready and as fast as anything, and as mentally strong as anyone out there. I was ready-made to do it when I was young but now I’ve had to pay the price.

‘Bloody hell, when Gerard Houllier said that I couldn’t play every game I remember saying I’ll rest when I’m 30. He was probably right, wasn’t he! Part of me thinks I’ve been the luckiest person in the world as well. I’ve played for Liverpool, Real Madrid, Newcastle, Man United, got 90-odd caps for England, 40-odd goals, don’t need to work again, got four great kids. I’m not that unlucky!

Making it on the world stage: Owen scored a wonder goal for England against Argentina as a teenager in 1998

Making it on the world stage: Owen scored a wonder goal for England against Argentina as a teenager in 1998

‘I got a hat-trick in the Champions League, scored against Aston Villa in the Carling Cup final, the winner versus Manchester City and the last goal of the season (against Blackpool) when we won the league. There have been great moments, but this season has been a bloody nightmare with the injury.’

REAL MADRID

Games: 40 Goals: 14

Owen is sat in the upstairs entertainment area of the Manor House Stables he co-owns with his business partner Andrew ‘Bert’ Black in Malpas, a picturesque village on the Cheshire border with Wales. It’s an idyllic setting, half an hour from

Northop where he lives with wife Louise and their young family.

A series of turns through the country lanes takes you to a long driveway, past the mile-and-a-quarter gallop and down to the house where trainer Tom Dascombe lives on site. Three dogs, German short-haired pointers, laze in the afternoon sun.

Among the racehorses poking their heads out from two sets of stables either side of a pristine lawn are Owen’s Ascot winner Brown Panther and Wayne Rooney’s horse Switcharooney.

Pain game: Owen has suffered with injuries throughout his career

Pain game: Owen has suffered with injuries throughout his career

Cuban Tash is owned by a syndicate of eight United players past and present, with Paul Scholes, Michael Carrick, John O’Shea and Tom Cleverley among the teammates who have bought a stake in some of the 90 horses resident there.

Ferguson too is a keen follower of the sport.

ON ENGLAND:
No doubt about it, I would have been the all-time leading England scorer

On one side a hostel has been built to accommodate 10 stable lads among a staff of 40, next to a veterinary area complete with hydro pool.

‘There wouldn’t be too many yards in Europe or the world with their own facilities on site like that,’ says Dascombe. If only this kind of medical care had been available to Owen when he needed it most.

The 32-year-old United star and Black have invested millions, but Owen isn’t in it for the money.

He loves the sport; loves horses and the personal involvement. It’s why a striker renowned for his clinical, cold-blooded approach to scoring goals wept when Brown Panther won the King George V Stakes at Ascot in June.

‘This was like my son or a family member doing something pretty special,’ says Owen. ‘It almost gets you inside as opposed to a scream of joy or excitement, like winning something or scoring a goal.

‘I think people were surprised because they didn’t realise what goes into it.

‘Nobody knows what it takes to get that horse there. I own the mother and we’ve got all the brothers at home. From a few hours old we’ve seen him being brought into this world. The ups and downs.

Galacticos: Owen joined stars such as Ronaldo and David Beckham at Real Madrid

Galacticos: Owen joined stars such as Ronaldo and David Beckham at Real Madrid

Breaking it in, putting the saddle on its back, chucking its jockey off, all the things you need to learn. And then to see it win on the grandest stage of all when I’ve had it as a pet.

NEWCASTLE UNITED

Games: 79 Goals: 30

‘People are spending millions and millions to get a Royal Ascot winner. But to breed one What I did there was a million to one. It’s impossible to do. I’m obviously just very lucky.’

Horseracing has helped bring out the other side in Owen. He can express himself more easily these days than the intense young man who used to distrust the world and snap at his family. He regularly airs his opinions on Twitter.

‘I’ve formed more friends out of this place than I ever have in my football career because you’re in a tight bubble,’ says Owen, speaking to mark the launch of Manor House’s three-year partnership with Trinity Elite, a tax, accounting and wealth management specialist.

‘You’re scared what you say because different things get out, but here you can relax and meet like-minded people.

‘If you look at anyone at the top of their profession, there has to be something a little bit different. Some of the top musicians are quirky aren’t they, to say the least. You have to be driven, cold, hard and mentally tough as iron.

No fun on the Tyne: Owen suffered relegation with Newcastle

No fun on the Tyne: Owen suffered relegation with Newcastle

‘My missus thinks I’m a bit weird. I’m cold and don’t have many emotions really. When Brown Panther won I had a tear in my eye but I don’t think I’ve cried in about 20 years.

‘When I was at the top, I had more quirks than now. My wife thinks I’ve mellowed. I was tough to live with a few years ago, she tells me.

ON RACING:
I've formed more friends in this sport than I ever have in my football career

‘On match days I was very on edge if there was anything said to me. She would go into a different room because I would spin things. I was so fired up and ready. I was a lot more volatile. Not physically, just in terms of what I said.

‘I thought I was reasonable but I’d take it out on the ones I love most. My mum used to get it in the neck as well. I never did that with my dad, maybe because I was trying to impress him most with my performances.

‘I was a bit sheltered in my early life because it’s very uncommon for someone so young to be in the spotlight. If you’re a goalscorer you have to have a certain attitude because not everyone can do it.

‘But there was no game face. That was me. I’m very serious. I’m a lot of things that people wouldn’t be able to understand.

‘You’re obviously conscious of being brash or big-headed but I always knew I was going to be a footballer when I was seven or eight. I didn’t just think I wanted to be one, I knew I was going to be one. Nothing ever surprised me really.

Surprise move: Owen joined Manchester United on a free transfer in 2009

Surprise move: Owen joined Manchester United on a free transfer in 2009

‘A bit like when I scored the goal against Argentina. I came back and it’s like, “What did you expect me to do” I expected to do that. If you don’t think you’re going to do something, then you’ll never do it.’

MANCHESTER UNITED

Games: 52 Goals: 17

Owen is as sensitive about his horseracing commitments as he used to be about his injury record.The last thing he wants is to be seen as an old pro serving out his career and picking up a salary while pursuing an expensive interest outside the game.

‘When I retire from football, I won’t do any more or less than I do now,’ says Owen, who has already started his coaching badges. ‘If it (his business) washes its hands and we have a nice profit out of it, that’s fine, but football is where I want to stay for the rest of my career.

‘I never intended it to be this grand. Once my partner bought in, we’ve taken it to the next level and now it’s something pretty damn special, but it still hasn’t changed my life in many ways.

‘Footballers are criticised for not planning for the future and getting depressed because they’ve nothing to get up in the morning for.

Familiar scene: Owen scoring against Israel at Wembley in 2007

Familiar scene: Owen scoring against Israel at Wembley in 2007

‘Then if you do this, the first question is, “Doesn’t this take your mind off football” so you can’t win whatever you do. Either you’re a dumb footballer not thinking ahead or you’re not concentrating on football enough. I still probably spend five per cent of my time here, 20 per cent with my family and 60 per cent training.’

ON RELATIONSHIPS:
My missus thinks I’m a bit weird. I’m cold and don’t have many emotions really

Dascombe sees a different side to Owen. They talk every day and meet at the stables every couple of weeks.

‘He always gets very excited,’ says the trainer. ‘Embarrassingly excited, even if we have any little winner, whether he owns it or not.

‘We had a launch day here two years ago in March and our first run from here won a big race down at Lingfield. He was stood here watching it on Sky and he was dancing around, hugging me. He loves his horseracing. He is absolutely so passionate about it. He feels that they’re all his.’

Another regular sight: Owen is forced to leave the pitch during Manchester United's Champions League game with Otelul Galati in November

Another regular sight: Owen is forced to leave the pitch during Manchester United's Champions League game with Otelul Galati in November

The United striker is two weeks away
from full fitness. It means he could feasibly play in the Manchester
derby on April 30, which should strike fear into the hearts of the City
fans still haunted by his injury-time winner in the 4-3 classic at Old
Trafford in September 2009.

Ferguson gave Owen a new one-year contract last summer. There is no guarantee of another.

ENGLAND

Games: 89 Goals: 40

‘I don’t think I’ll play until my late 30s like Giggsy,’ he says. ‘But I’d like to play more, probably for two or three years after this season.

‘I don’t wake up in the morning with sore knees or an achilles. It doesn’t take me half an hour to get out of bed as I hear from some older players. None of that resonates with me. When I get injured it’s sudden and a disaster for three or four months, never just a week.

Next step: Owen has moved into the world of horse racing and owns a number of horses including Brown Panther who won the King George V stakes at Royal Ascot

Next step: Owen has moved into the world of horse racing and owns a number of horses including Brown Panther who won the King George V stakes at Royal Ascot

‘As long as I’m wanted at a good level I
will play on, but part of that is in my hands and part isn’t. I’ll
wait to see what the manager says on that.

ON THE FUTURE:
I want three more years as a player and then spend the rest of my career in football

‘If it happens, great, we’ll talk about it. If not, I’ll try to stay at a high level. I wouldn’t drop out of the Premier League. I want to stay at the top level or look at other markets, but I have four children and they’re settled in school and that’s something to weigh up.

‘There are a couple of possibilities when I’ve finished and media might interest me. Gary Neville is a breath of fresh air and has almost encouraged me to do it. I get excited when it’s half-time now because he’s so intelligent and brings something new to it.’

The options are there but it is clear Owen is not ready to be put out to grass.

Daily Mail RBS U15 Vase: Sir Thomas Rich"s 5 Dauntsey"s 17

Daily Mail RBS U15 Vase: Sir Thomas Rich's 5 Dauntsey's 17

|

UPDATED:

12:10 GMT, 4 April 2012

A brace of first half tries from Toby Small enabled Dauntsey’s School to overcome fellow West Country side Sir Thomas Rich’s School and lift their first U15 Daily Mail RBS Vase.

Sir Thomas Rich’s started brightly and opened the scoring after only four minutes when lock Max Price burrowed over from close range, in the Twickenham sun.

Dauntsey’s responded strongly and exerted tremendous pressure on the Gloucestershire side’s try line, although they found dismantling a defence that had only conceded three tries in this year’s competition an arduous task.

Cheer: Dauntsey's delight in their victory

Cheer: Dauntsey's delight in their victory

Start: The Vase is the first final of the day

Start: The Vase is the first final of the day

But the miserly Thomas Rich’s defence
eventually cracked on 18 minutes, with impressive open-side flanker
Small evading two tackles to squeeze over for Dauntsey’s and restore
parity.

Small was soon responsible for the Wiltshire outfit seizing the
ascendancy as his powerful, swerving run from 45 metres left four
defenders trailing in his wake as he crossed in the corner.

And Dauntsey’s, containing three sets of twins in their starting
line-up, were in dreamland three minutes into the final play of the half
when imposing skipper and number eight Will Britton barged over for a
try, at full stretch following a number of phases in Thomas Rich’s
territory with Max Romer-Lee slotting an excellent conversion from out
wide.

On the way to victory: Toby Small from Dauntsey's bursts through to score a try

On the way to victory: Toby Small from Dauntsey's bursts through to score a try

Capture: William Rouse from St Thomas Rich's is surrounded by Dauntsey's players

Capture: William Rouse from St Thomas Rich's is surrounded by Dauntsey's players

Remarkably, that kick turned out to be the final score of a tense and
cagey affair, the second half of which saw Tommy enjoy the lion’s share
of possession but fail to make significant inroads into their opponents’
defensive rearguard.

Replacement James Foylan went closest for them during a rare period of
sustained pressure, but a combination of multiple handling errors and
unyielding Dauntsey’s defence, marshalled superbly by their back row of
Britton, Small and Sam New, meant that the trophy’s destiny was never
truly questioned.

Switch: Sam Tomloin throws the ball away from the scrum

Switch: Sam Tomloin throws the ball away from the scrum