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3rd November 2016
10:44am GMT

"But then again Alan Shearer used a lot of brute force and power. He was a different type. Not everyone finishes the same way. "Look at (Mesut) Ozil from last night (his goal against Ludogorets). He was so cool, calm and collected but others go for pure power." "Vardy does contribute to the team with his running into the channels and his closing down. But he's in the team to score goals and we've seen a contrast from last season.https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/790105996618268672
"He's the type of centre forward or type of finisher that is very much head down and hit it. He goes for power a lot. He's not necessarily a real cute, classy type of finisher. "He doesn't once lift his head. He almost hits it through goalkeepers. To be a finisher like that you need a lot of luck – sometimes you'll have it, sometimes you won't. "This season it's been very different. He goes for power a lot of the time. Last year he was having a little bit of luck and would sometimes almost go through goalkeepers. "When you are a power finisher and go for that over accuracy then you have to accept that sometimes your luck's in and sometimes it's out."https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/791987632330899456 While Owen was a great striker for most of his career, who scored 222 goals in 482 games, his analysis of Vardy seems harsh. Not all the Leicester striker's goals last season were hit and hope efforts. He scored a brace against Arsenal last September with two precise, clever finishes. He scored with a powerful, sharp finish against Newcastle United last November, and another composed finish against West Brom. Very few, if any, of his goals last season could be classified as "lucky" and arguably only the goal against Manchester United could be regarded as going "through the goalkeeper."
The problem with Owen's analysis is also that he doesn't specify exactly what qualities a "natural" finisher possesses.
Vardy's conversion rate from last season match-up with Harry Kane and Sergio Aguero, two players, especially the Manchester City striker, most would consider to be "natural" finishers.
Vardy, like Leicester, hasn't carried his form into this season and he's enduring a dry spell in front of goal that all strikers experience at some point.
He might not even score goals at the rate he did last season, but that doesn't mean those goals were as a result of "luck," as Owen seems to be claiming.
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