Owen Morrison

John Owen Morrison (born 8 December 1981) is a former professional footballer.

Owen Morrison
Personal information
Full name John Owen Morrison[1]
Date of birth (1981-12-08) 8 December 1981
Place of birth Derry, Northern Ireland
Height 5 ft 0 in (1.52 m)
Playing position(s) Winger
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1997–1998 Derry City 3 (0)
1998–2003 Sheffield Wednesday 55 (8)
2002Hull City (loan) 2 (0)
2003 Sheffield United 8 (0)
2003–2004 Stockport County 23 (1)
2004–2006 Bradford City 36 (2)
2006–2008 Dunfermline Athletic 34 (2)
2008 Derry City 16 (4)
2009 Sligo Rovers 25 (1)
2010 Portadown 11 (0)
2011 New York 13 (1)
2011–2012 Derry City 18 (0)
2014–2015 Letterkenny Rovers
National team
Northern Ireland U-21
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Morrison played in the League of Ireland for Sligo Rovers and had three separate seasons for his hometown club Derry City. He also played for English sides Sheffield Wednesday, Hull City, Sheffield United, Stockport County and Bradford City, as well as Dunfermline Athletic in Scotland.

Career

After playing as a youth with Derry City in the League of Ireland, he began his senior career with Sheffield Wednesday during which he had a loan spell with Hull City. After 55 league appearances and eight goals in just under five seasons with the club he joined their rivals Sheffield United in 2003.[2] He departed Sheffield United just five months later after refusing to sign a new contract after playing only eight league matches and joined Stockport County.[3]

He left Stockport after just over a year and joined Bradford City after an initial loan period.[4] However, Morrison fell out of manager Colin Todd's plans and made only 32 league appearances for the club before being sacked in May 2006 due to breaches of discipline[5]. He did though endear himself to Bantams fans by scoring a last gasp winner against former club Sheffield Wednesday in a Yorkshire derby in February 2005 that kept the club in the play off hunt before ultimately falling short [6]. Morrison joined Dunfermline Athletic in July 2006 after a successful trial[7] and scored his first goal for the club in a 1–1 draw with Rangers in August 2006[8]

He has been capped by Northern Ireland at Under-21 level and was last called up to the senior team in 2001 but was not capped.

Morrison completed a week-long trial with Chinese side Qingdao Zhongneng in February 2007 and was offered a contract.[9] The move was cancelled and Morrison was initially offered a new one-year extension but rejected this.[10] Morrison signed a new contract extension with The Pars a month later.[11]

After almost two years with the Pars, Morrison was returned to Derry City by manager Stephen Kenny, whom he played under while at Dunfermline.[12] However, in September 2008, only a few months after his return to the Brandywell, Morrison was released from his contract by mutual consent.[13]

In 2009, Owen Morrison was unveiled as one of two new players, the other being Stephen Parkhouse, joining Sligo Rovers upon the return of Paul Cook to the club. He scored his first goal for the Sligo in a 2–2 draw away to Drogheda United. He was released at the end of the season.

On 18 January 2010, Morrison signed for Portadown until the end of the IFA Premiership season.[14]

Morrison signed with F.C. New York of the American USL Pro league on 18 March 2011,[15] He scored his first goal for New York against Orlando City on 30 April 2011 to tie the game 1–1 but they eventually lost 2–1,[16] on 28 June 2011, in the third round of the US Open Cup against the New York Red Bulls, he opened the scoring with a wonderful shot from a 30-yard strike that blasted into the top of the net to give FC New York the lead, but they lost 2–1.[17]

Morrison left F.C. New York and rejoined Derry City for the remainder of the 2011 season. He was later released during the 2012 League of Ireland season.

On 23 February 2015 Morrison was charged with possessing a class A drug with intent to supply and possession of cocaine. He was also charged with handling a car stolen in the Republic of Ireland, with no insurance and no licence.[18]

gollark: ```pythonimport requestsimport randomimport fileinputdef weighted_choice(choices): total = sum(weight for choice, weight in choices) r = random.uniform(0, total) upto = 0 for choice, weight in choices: if upto + weight >= r: return choice upto += weight assert False, "Shouldn't get here"def get_rhymes(word, extra_params={}): default_params = { "rel_rhy": word, "max": 20, "md": "pf" } return requests.get("https://api.datamuse.com/words/", params={**default_params, **extra_params}).json()def get_frequency(word_object): for tag in word_object["tags"]: if tag.startswith("f:"): return float(tag[2:]) return 0def get_rhyme(word, params): options = get_rhymes(word, params) options = list(map(lambda word_object: (word_object["word"], get_frequency(word_object)), options)) if len(options) == 0: return word return weighted_choice(options)last = Nonefor line in fileinput.input(): line = line.replace("\n", "") if last != None: print(line + " " + get_rhyme(last, {})) last = None else: last = line.replace(".", "").split(" ")[-1] print(line)```
gollark: My automated rap generatorIs far superior to puny human rappers laterIt is backed by the entire resourcesOf this random online dictionary and word relation query API resource isTechnically it still relies on human interventionTo produce the input text to turn into rap intentionAnd due to the limitations of current natural language processingIt is unable to significantly transform the input text reprocessingThis is because spoken human languagesAre mostly not designed with machine-parseability language isor ease of understandingas major goals expandingand were we using better-designed languages, automated rapwould surely be much easier. app
gollark: Does that even rhyme?Um... BLIME!
gollark: This is totally a rapA rap is what it is chap
gollark: I made an automatic rap generation programIt works by appending an unrelated word which rhymes with the end of the previous line amTo every second lineThis totally counts as rap mineVery valid rap indeedI win esolangs now speed

See also

References

  1. "Owen Morrison". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  2. "Blades swoop to capture Morrison". BBC South Yorkshire. 21 February 2003.
  3. "Morrison signs for Stockport". BBC Sport website. 22 July 2003.
  4. "Morrison signs Bradford contract". BBC Sport website. 20 December 2004.
  5. "Morrison sacked by Bradford boss". BBC Sport website. 11 May 2006.
  6. "Sheff Wed 1-2 Bradford". 12 February 2005.
  7. "Pars sign Morrison and De Vries". BBC Sport website. 21 July 2006.
  8. "Dunfermline Ath 1–1 Rangers". BBC Sport website. 13 August 2006.
  9. "Morrison hoping for China switch". BBC Sport website. 10 February 2007.
  10. "Morrison clan split at East End". BBC Sport website. 7 June 2007.
  11. "Morrison stays on at Dunfermline". BBC Sport website. 5 July 2007.
  12. "Morrison added to squad". Archived from the original on 19 February 2008. Retrieved 14 February 2008.
  13. "Owen Morrison Released from Contract". Retrieved 2 September 2008.
  14. "Ports snap up Morrison". Archived from the original on 28 January 2010. Retrieved 18 January 2010.
  15. F.C. New York Adds Irish Duo Archived 10 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  16. Orlando City at FC New York 2:1 Archived 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  17. Rooney, Hertzog leads Red Bulls over FCNY
  18. Former Wednesday and United player in court over drugs charges Archived 23 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine
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