Owen’s own move to Real Madrid marked the beginning of a complex relationship with Liverpool fans. While his time in Spain was brief, his later transfer to Manchester United in 2009 further damaged his standing among the Reds faithful. Reflecting on these moments, Owen admitted: “I get it, I'm not stupid. Someone would say, 'But he (Alexander-Arnold) won't go to Manchester United or he won't do this or he won't do that', but I didn't expect to either."
He also addressed the sentimental nature of football fandom, noting that players with limited contributions to the club often enjoy greater adoration than those with significant achievements.
"Circumstances will dictate how people are viewed," he added. "I can go back to Anfield and listen to the crowd, the Kop singing for players that played 10 games and were pretty average for Liverpool, but because they've got a catchy name, they get sung to all the time and people have this assumption that they are great for the club.
"All of us ex-players are baffled and actually giggle at certain things like that. Listen, football can be so much as what happens on the last bloody game of your career. You can go throughout your life and be absolutely extraordinary and do everything for a club, but the one little moment, people half remember that. It's pathetic in many ways, but that's it, isn't it? That's life."