Date of Birth
11 Jan 1978
Birthplace
Leicester
Nationality
England
Signed for LFC
2000
LFC Debut
11 Mar 2000
LFC Appearances
223
LFC Goals
60
International Caps
62
International Goals
7
Emile Ivanhoe Heskey made his Premiership debut as a 17-year-old for Leicester City against QPR in March 1995 and was Liverpool's record signing when Gerard Houllier signed him in 2000.
Leicester City were relegated that spring but under the guidance of new manager Martin O'Neill went straight back up to the top division. Heskey scored 10 goals in 35 games in his first whole season in the Premier 1996/97. England manager Glenn Hoddle introduced Heskey to the England set-up the following season, suggesting he had a bright future. But Heskey was struggling in front of goal scoring only once in 21 games, although he was starring with the England Under-21 side. Heskey's agent had already started to complain about Leicester's lack of ambition and predicted that Heskey would at best stay there until he was 22-years-old. Liverpool's name was linked constantly with him in the press. Roy Evans has since gone on record to say that he had wanted to sign him around this time.
Heskey's contract was due to expire in the summer of 1999, but O'Neill managed to convince the player to sign up for one more year. O'Neill had immense faith in Heskey and he repaid it by scoring at will and halfway through the 1998/99 season he had scored nine goals compared with the 10 goals he had scored in the whole of the season before. But Emile had scored his last goal of that 1998-99 season. He complained of back problems and was forced to be substituted in many games because of his condition. Leicester slid down the table. Heskey was back to his best in April after hours of strengthening his back muscles in the gym and Leicester started getting some better results. Kevin Keegan gave Heskey his long-awaited England debut and despite intense speculation about his future another year was added to his club contract.
Heskey began the 1999/2000 season strongly, scoring four goals in five games. It seemed to be an open secret that Liverpool would buy him before the season was over. He made his full England debut on the 22nd of February 2000 and was voted man-of-the-match against Argentina. A few days later he won the Worthington cup for the second time in his Leicester career. He scored his 8th goal of the season against Sunderland on the March 5, and signed a contract with Liverpool a few days later, becoming their most expensive player at £11 million pounds. Emile played 194 games with Leicester and scored 46 goals.
Houllier remembered seeing Owen and Heskey play together up front with the England Under-18 team in France and there's no denying that Heskey was clearly a favourite of Houllier's. Emile played superbly in his first full season, contributed 22 goals from 56 matches in the historic "Treble" season, but after that he struggled to score goals for Liverpool at the same rate.
He was sold to Birmingham City in the summer of 2004 and was one of their best players during 2004-05 but the following season the Blues were relegated.
A move to Wigan Athletic followed in July, 2006. Two seasons with Wigan brought him nearly as many league goals as he had managed during two seasons with Birmingham.
Heskey was a regular in England's senior international squad during his Liverpool days and is still a key figure of Fabio Capello's squad today.
Heskey has played nearly 450 league appearances for the four English clubs he has represented, for whom he has in total scored well over a century of goals.
Other Clubs:
Leicester City, Birmingham City, Wigan Athletic, Aston Villa