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Michael Owen's Perfect XI: Which former Arsenal man would he have paid to watch?

Goalkeeper: Peter Schmeichel

Of all the keepers I have played against, Peter was easily the best - an all-round great. You can’t be a great by just being a good shot-stopper, you have to have it all – and he did.

Right-back: Cafu

I played against Brazil a couple of times and he and Roberto Carlos were just awesome. They changed the way full-backs played. People thought a full-back should just defend, but in today’s game it’s important for full-backs to be good on the ball as well, and Cafu led the way in this respect.

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Cafu
Cafu

Centre-back: Marcel Desailly

When he came to Chelsea, he was a ‘proper’ player. With some defenders you think “he’s not strong”, “he’s not so quick” or whatever and try to play against that weakness. But Desailly was virtually impossible to play against. He was strong, quick, and good on the ball. People question whether he just played well in the big games, but I tried kicking him once and hurt my foot – which shows what sort of game I had against him!

Centre-back: Paolo Maldini

Just look at his trophy cabinet! To play for a team like that for as long as he did at the highest level says it all. A great left foot, and while he maybe lost a yard as time went on, defenders like that never get done for pace because they’re so intelligent. People tell me Bobby Moore was like that, John Terry is like that – and so was Sami Hyypia at Liverpool. Maldini knows his body and is very clever.

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Paolo Maldini
Paolo Maldini

Left-back: Roberto Carlos

Like Cafu, he made people re-think the role of a full-back in a team. Great on the ball, made good runs – but also great dead-ball delivery. Fantastic.

Right midfield: Cristiano Ronaldo

He’s not done it for as long as the rest of my team, but you’re a fool if you don’t think he will continue on the up. Has great skill, speed, strength, scores goals and creates goals – what more can you say? A great player who will get even better.

Centre midfield: Steven Gerrard

The ultimate modern-day player. Has a big engine and strength plus great size and long legs – he’s one of the best at intercepting passes and reading the game. And when he has the ball, he is equally fantastic. One of the best passers, a great shot, quick and can beat players. You could play him in any position and he’d get in most teams.

Centre midfield: Roy Keane

If I was a manager I’d play 4-4-2 with two tough players in the middle who people hated playing against, and two flair players on either side. Who better than Gerrard and Roy Keane? Both are good passers but in different ways. Keane kept it simple, yet had a great engine and could run box to box all day.

Roy Keane, Michael Owen
Roy Keane, Michael Owen

Left midfield: John Barnes

I was fortunate enough to play with him a couple of times before he retired. He was a great player who didn’t get the credit for England despite winning loads of caps, but I watch videos of Liverpool playing and 99% of goals come from Barnes beating five players and passing to Ian Rush to tap in! It was mind-boggling how skilful he was. I never saw him give the ball away and he used to caress it around the pitch. A joy to watch.

Forward: Thierry Henry

He took the Premier League to a new level. We’ve had some good imports – Gianfranco Zola and Dennis Bergkamp among them – but he’s been the best. He beats players, he creates goals and he scores them. I’d pay to watch him.

Forward: Alan Shearer

Scored goals at every level and even when he was out injured for months on end, he always seemed to be top scorer. You get a lot of flair players, but nobody was as mentally tough as Alan, who got the most out of his body for such a long time. Probably the greatest Premier League player ever.

Alan Shearer, Michael Owen
Alan Shearer, Michael Owen

Substitutes (OK, so he didn't share a pitch with all of these)

Neville Southall

I was an Everton fan in the 1980s, and I thought he was the best goalkeeper in the world.

Jamie Carragher

No squad is complete without him. And he’d kill me if he wasn’t in this!

Graeme Souness

Just watch him run the show in those European Cup finals for Liverpool in the early ’80s.

Graeme Souness, Michael Owen
Graeme Souness, Michael Owen

Zinedine Zidane

I was lucky enough to play with him. A magician.

Ronaldo

But for knee injuries, he would be the best player in the world right now.

Manager: Sir Alex Ferguson

The most successful in the present era and continues to win things even as football evolves. He has also produced some of the great players.

This feature first appeared in the September 2007 issue of FourFourTwo magazine. Subscribe!

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