First Name
|
Andy
|
Surname
|
Carroll
|
Squad Number
|
9
|
Position
|
Forward
|
Height
|
1.91m
|
Weight
|
76 kg
|
D.O.B.
|
6 Jan 1989
|
Town of Birth
|
Gateshead
|
Country of Birth
|
England
|
Nationality
|
England
|
Total Appearances
|
56
|
Total Goals
|
11
|
Andy Carroll is an England centre-forward who became Liverpool's record
signing in January 2011.
At
hometown club Newcastle he established himself as a hard-to-handle, often
explosive frontman - and now he is aiming to become an Anfield legend wearing
the No.9 jersey vacated by Fernando Torres.
Carroll
knows all about playing in a pressured environment having worn Alan Shearer's
legendary shirt in front of the Toon Army.
Liverpool's
scouts first become aware of his abilities having seen him at close hand during
the FA Youth Cup semi-final in March 2007. Although Newcastle were well beaten,
Carroll scored in the first leg at St James' Park and was a real handful
throughout.
Liverpool
and Newcastle legend Kevin Keegan once described Carroll as 'probably in the
top three headers of a ball I have ever seen in football'.
After
graduating through the Toon Academy, he became Newcastle's youngest ever
European debutant when he played against Palermo during a 1-0 UEFA Cup win in
2006 at the age of 17.
The
striker scored his first senior goal against Juventus in a friendly on July 29,
2007. After the game the Juventus 'keeper Gianluigi Buffon tipped Carroll to
have a big future.
Despite
Newcastle's relegation from the top flight in 2008-09, they made an instant
return after a Carroll-inspired season in the Championship. Defences were sick
of the sight of this marauding hitman as he hit 19 goals.
Carroll
was also recognised by his peers when he was included in the PFA Championship
Team of the Year.
His performances
back in the Premier League caught the attention of England manager Fabio
Capello, who offered the big man a debut in a friendly with France on November
17, 2010.
It was
turning out to be quite a season for the young forward, who would make his Liverpool
bow as a substitute in a 3-1 victory over Manchester United on March 6, 2011.
Three
weeks later, on March 29, there was another special moment: a first England
goal in a friendly against Ghana at Wembley.
Full of
confidence, he returned to open his Liverpool account with a double against
Manchester City on April 11.
The next
year would be spent adapting to life at one of the world's biggest clubs, and
though it wasn't always easy, his quest to win medals with
Liverpool was off to a fine start as he helped secure a Carling Cup final
victory over Cardiff City.
By the
end of 2011-12, Carroll's form alongside Luis Suarez ensured his name was being
sung on the Kop.
A late
winner at Ewood Park in April 2012 marked the start of a special few weeks for
the striker, who wrote his name in Merseyside derby history with the winner in
our FA Cup semi-final against Everton.
Carroll
then came off the bench in the final against Chelsea, inspiring the previously
languid Reds as they tried to overturn a 2-0 deficit. He scored one and had
another cleared off the line but, although it wasn't to be for Liverpool, his
own reputation had been greatly enhanced.
A month
later he travelled to Poland and Ukraine for Euro 2012, where he featured three
times and scored one goal - a picture perfect header against Sweden in the
group stages. Sadly Carroll could not prevent England again slipping out
of a major competition on penalties, this time in the quarter-finals versus
Italy.
#WECOMENOTTOPLAY
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