Ireland Robbie Keane (2000-2002)

Ireland Robbie Keane (2000-2002)

Position: Forward | DOB: 08/07/1980 | Apps: 56 | Goals: 19
Debut: 23/12/2000 - Aston Villa (H)
Pos: Forward | DOB: 08/07/1980
Apps: 56 | Goals: 19
Debut: 23/12/2000 - Aston Villa (H)
Robbie Keane features at number 60 in our 100 Greatest Leeds players ever.
Keane started his football career with South Dublin schoolboy side Crumlin United where his talent was recognised at an early age. As an Under-ten schoolboy he was paid just fifty pence a goal, and was soon being watched by scouts from a number of English professional clubs, including EPL side Liverpool. However, he turned down Liverpool to join Wolverhampton Wanderers reasoning that he had a greater chance of breaking into the first team at the First Division side. Keane progressed through their youth ranks and made his professional debut aged seventeen on 9th August 1997, and he scored twice against Norwich City. He went on to be the club's leading scorer in the following season as his profile rose. Just weeks into the 1999-2000, he was sold to EPL team Coventry City for £6m, a then-British record for a teenager. He scored twenty-nine times in eighty-seven appearances for Wolves.After a successful season at Coventry, where he scored twelve goals in thirty-four games, he had become one of the hottest properties in English football, and was being courted by many of the biggest clubs in football. In the end, he was signed by Marcello Lippi of Inter-Milan for £13 million, where he teamed up with the likes of Ronaldo and Christian Viera. He had scored twelve times in thirty-four games for the Sky Blues. However his dream move to Italy soured when Lippi was sacked soon after Keane arrived, and Lippi's successor, Marco Tardelli, deemed Keane surplus to requirements. He failed to score in the six games he had with Milan. Keane's ambition refused to let him stagnate in Italy, and, in December 2000, he was loaned out to Leeds United, in preference to West Ham United, Chelsea and Charlton Athletic. His Leeds career got off to an impressive start, scoring nine goals in fourteen starts before the Leeds manager, David O'Leary, made his loan deal permanent in May 2001 at a cost of £12 million. The following season was not so bright, and he found himself dropping down the pecking order. His form suffered and he only managed ten goals in thirty-six appearances. Meanwhile, Leeds's financial troubles were forcing the club to sell many of its players, and, after turning down a move to Sunderland, Keane joined the exodus when he was sold to Tottenham Hotspur just before the 2002-03 transfer deadline for a fee of £7 million. On signing him for Tottenham, manager Glenn Hoddle said that Keane was ideally suited to Tottenham and could make White Hart Lane his "spiritual home" for years to come. He repaid this faith with some outstanding displays, earning the club's Player of the Year awards in his first two seasons at Tottenham. He bagged thirteen and sixteen goals respectively in those first two seasons for Spurs. His third season, 2004-05, was more frustrating. Despite finishing with his highest return of goals in a season for Tottenham, seventeen, he played second-fiddle to Jermain Defoe for much of the season. The frustration culminated in Keane storming from the dugout towards the end of a game against Birmingham City in April 2005 after all the substitutes had been used, meaning he would not get a chance to appear. He was fined £10,000 and forced to train with the reserves after the outburst and his future at the club was thrown into doubt. He knuckled down after this incident but the 2005-06 season started as the previous one had ended, with Defoe being preferred to partner Mido in Tottenham's strikeforce. However, Defoe's strike-rate continued to disappoint and Keane's persistence paid off in November when manager Martin Jol eventually gave Keane a chance to replace Defoe and stake his claim. He grabbed the chance with both hands, started playing some of the best football of his career and by March had overtaken Mido as the top goalscorer at the club. Keane would go on to finish the season with sixteen League goals, making him the EPL's joint fourth top goalscorer that season. He had also been made the vice-captain, taking the captaincy on those occasions when Ledley King was not available. A firm fans' favourite, he is regarded as a great professional. Hoddle once said of Keane's personality, "He's such a bubbly lad that anyone who meets him loves him." Edgar Davids and Keane were involved in a training ground fight in December 2005, but the pair subsequently made up publicly and were seen encouraging each other on the pitch. Davids claimed that this incident inspired Tottenham into a new togetherness, firing their push for European qualification, though the volatile Davids subsequently left Spurs, after apparently falling out with Manager (and fellow Dutchman), Martin Jol. In February 2006, Inter's owner and president, Massimo Maratti, admitted his regret at letting Keane go some five years earlier, saying Keane was now playing "perfect" football. Keane signed a new four year contract in March 2006, keeping him at the club until 2010. Keane had a slow start to the 2006-07 season which was further set back by a knee ligament injury that Keane suffered against Middlesbrough on 5th December 2006. His return from injury marked the beginning of a return to form and a lethal partnership with Dimitar Berbatov. Keane and Berbatov were jointly awarded the FA Premier League's Player of the Month Award for April 2007. Keane finished the season with a total of twenty-two goals in all competitions, the highest ever season tally of his career, scoring fifteen goals in his last fifteen appearances of the season. Keane started in his two hundredth appearance for Tottenham in the final game of the 2006-07 season against Manchester City scoring the first goal in a 2-1 victory that saw Tottenham secure fifth place in the League. He signed a new five year contract with Tottenham on 28th May 2007 that will keep him at the club until 2012. On 26th December 2007, he became only the thirteenth player in the history of the League to score one hundred EPL goals. 2007 proved to be a remarkable year for the striker with a total of thirty-one goals and thirteen assists from just forty starts. His tally of nineteen League goals in the calendar year was the highest of any player in the EPL throughout 2007. He scored his one hundredth competitive goal for Tottenham in the 2-0 win against Sunderland on 19th January 2008. He is the fifteenth Tottenham player to achieve this feat. He also won his first senior honour, the Football League Cup. The 2007-08 season was the most fruitful of his career as he set a career record of twenty-three goals in a season. His consistency and strike-rate attracted the attention of Premier League rivals Liverpool. Despite initial resistance to the sale and accusations of misconduct, Tottenham agreed to a £20.3 million deal for the player, allowing Keane to join the team he supported as a child, although he had pledged his career and love to Spurs just one month earlier. Liverpool publicly announced their interest in Keane on 1st July 2008. Amid accusations that Liverpool had unsettled the player, Tottenham Hotspur filed a complaint to the EPL regarding the club's conduct. However, on 28th July 2008, Tottenham confirmed the sale of Keane for £19 million (plus a potential £1.3 million in performance based compensation). Keane agreed terms with Liverpool shortly afterwards, signing a four year contract with the club. Following the transfer, Tottenham withdrew their official complaint against Liverpool after the club made a donation to the Tottenham Hotspur Foundation and apologised for their behaviour prior to the deal. Tottenham Chairman Daniel Levy publicly stated his dissatisfaction, saying he had been forced into transferring the player due to Liverpool's interference. In his first six year stay at White Hart Lane, Keane scored eighty League goals in one hundred and ninety-seven games of which thirty-nine were as a substitute. He also scored eleven goals in nineteen F.A. Cup games, of which four were from the bench, seven goals in fourteen starts and five games from the bench in the League Cup and nine goals in nineteen other games, in European and other Competitions, of which four were as a substitute. He moved to Liverpool in July 2008 but he spent only six months at the club and soon returned to Tottenham, where he was made first team captain. In his time at Anfield he scored five League goals from nineteen appearances, of whicg three were as a substitute. He started one F.A. Cup game but failed to score, but netted twice in other games in Europe and other competitions from six starts and one game from the bench. Keane rejoined Tottenham on 2nd February 2009, signing a four-year contract for a basic fee of £12 million, potentially rising to £19 million with add-ons. The deal meant that the cumulative transfer fees paid for Keane over his career amounted to around £75 million. Keane was one of three players to make returns to Tottenham during the transfer window, along with Jermain Defoe and Pascal Chimbonda. He was also made Tottenham vice-captain a week later, often deputising for Ledley King. Keane scored his first goal since his return to the club on 4th March 2009, opening the scoring in the crucial 4-0 home victory against Middlesbrough. He followed this up by scoring another vital goal, this time a last-minute equaliser, away to Sunderland in a 1-1 draw on 7th March 2009.On 31 July 2009, Robbie captained Tottenham to winning the Premier League Asia Trophy in a pre-season competition in China. He scored twice in the 3-0 win over Hull City inside Beijing National Stadium. On 26th September 2009, Keane scored four goals in a 5-0 win over Burnley. Despite his good form he lost his place in the Spurs team and was confined to the bench as Crouch and Defoe were given a chance to forge a partnership. Harry Redknapp was conscious of the need for Keane to have as many games as possible to maintain his edge and so he allowed Keane to fulfill a dream by joining his boyhood favourite team. He was loaned to Celtic from 1st February 2010 until the end of the season and scored twelve goals in sixteen League games, one of which was as a substitute. He also scored four times in two starts and one game as a substitute in the Scottish Cup. He was chosen as Celtic's "Player of the Year" by the Celtic fans. He went on loan to West Ham United from 31st January 2011 to the end of the season where he scored twice in five starts and four games from the bench in the League and made one substitute appearance in the F.A. Cup, without scoring. In his second stint with Tottenham Hotspur he scored eleven times in thirty-one starts in the League, and ten games from the bench, and once in one start and one substitute appearance in the F.A. Cup and three in two starts and two games from the bench in the League Cup, and made five substitute appearances in European games without scoring, before leaving to join L.A. Galaxy on 15th August 2011 for £3.5 million. He made his debut on 20th August 2011, scoring in the twenty-first minute against San Jose Earthquakes. He scored twice in three starts and one game from the bench in the 2011 season in the MLS then scored once in three in the Play-offs and once in two starts in the CONCACAF Champions League. He was loaned to Aston Villa on 12th January 2012 until 26th February 2012 and scored three goals in five League starts and one from the bench and also started one F.A. Cup tie without scoring. In 2012 he had scored four goals in twelve starts in the MLS. In November, Keane stated that he would be leaving LA Galaxy after his contract expired at the end of the season, but that he would not be retiring. In total, he scored one hundred and four goals in one hundred and sixty-five appearances during his six seasons with the club with his last game being the MLS Cup Playoff penalty-shootout defeat to Colorado Rapids on 6 November 2016. A proven goalscorer, Keane has scored more than two hundred and fifty goals for club and country in a career that began in 1997 at the age of just Seventeen and has seen him become one of the most lethal forwards of his time. Since joining the LA Galaxy in 2011, Keane has been one of the most prolific and dangerous strikers in the league, with seventy-three goals in one hundred and eight regular-season appearances. He also netted nine goals in eighteen playoff appearances, helping the Galaxy to MLS Cup wins in 2011, 2012 and 2014. He was the league and MLS Cup MVP in 2014 and was also selected four times in the annual selection of best players in each position. Keane had already achieved much in the international arena. He was part of the "Golden Generation" of Republic of Ireland youth football of the late 1990s. Under the guidance of Brian Kerr, the unfancied Republic won the UEFA Under-Sixteen and Under-Eighteen European championships in 1998, and he was part of the victorious Under-Eighteen side. In 1999, he played at the World Youth Cup in Nigeria, where the Republic reached the quarter-finals before going out on penalties to the hosts. He made his first senior appearance for the Republic of Ireland against the Czech Republic in Olomouc in March 1998, scoring his first senior goal against Malta in October that year. He won his seventieth Cap in the Republic's 5-0 defeat of San Marino, scoring a "Hat-trick" along the way. Keane became the Republic's top goalscorer at international level; when his twenty-three goals in fifty-six games easily surpassed Niall Quinn's previous record of twenty-one in ninety-two games, when he scored twice against the Faroe Isles on 13th October 2004. He was part of the 2002 World Cup campaign in South Korea and Japan, scoring three goals in the Republic of Ireland's four games. His most famous goal to date is arguably the injury-time equalizer against Germany in the 2002 World Cup (the only goal to be scored against Germany in the competition until the final), although his last-minute equaliser against Spain from the penalty spot was equally as dramatic. Although the Republic of Ireland failed to qualify for the 2006 World Cup, Keane scored four goals in the Republic's eight matches and remains their most prolific goalscorer. Following Steve Staunton's appointment as the manager of the Republic of Ireland, Keane was appointed Captain. In their first game under Staunton, Keane scored the second goal in the 3-0 victory against Sweden at Lansdowne Road, and celebrated the final match at the Lansdowne Road stadium, against San Marino, with a hat-trick. As captain Keane led Ireland to the 2010 World Cup Finals in South Africa by finishing second in their qualifying Group to Italy. He scored his fortieth goal for Ireland on 5th September 2009 in a 2-1 win over Cyprus in Nicosia. He gained his one hundredth Irish cap on 11th August 2010 in a 1-1 draw with Argentina in the first game played at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin. He scored his iftieth goal for the Republic on 4th June 2011, with the first of two goals he scored against Macedonia in the UEFA Euro 2012 qualifiers. He had scored sixty-eight goals in one hundred and forty-five starts and one game as substitute at the end of October 2016.

Content by Tony Hill from Leeds United FC History
For more recent players this content may be out of date. We are working to update all player profiles

Player Record Apps Start (Sub) Unused Sub Goals
League 46 28 (18) 9 13
FA Cup 2 2 (0) 0 0
League Cup 2 2 (0) 0 3
Europe 6 6 (0) 2 3
TOTAL 56 38 (18) 11 19

Season by Season Apps Start (Sub) Unused Sub Goals
2000-2001 20 14 (6) 1 9
League 18 12 (6) 1 9
FA Cup 2 2 (0) 0 0
2001-2002 33 24 (9) 10 9
League 25 16 (9) 8 3
League Cup 2 2 (0) 0 3
Europe 6 6 (0) 2 3
2002-2003 3 0 (3) 0 1
League 3 0 (3) 0 1

Appearances Date Score
Match Events
Aston Villa
Premier League
H 23/12/2000 1 : 2 (L)
Newcastle United
Premier League
A 26/12/2000 1 : 2 (L)
Middlesbrough
Premier League
H 01/01/2001 1 : 1 (D)
Barnsley
FA Cup 3rd Round
H 06/01/2001 1 : 0 (W)
Manchester City
Premier League
A 13/01/2001 4 : 0 (W)
Newcastle United
Premier League
H 20/01/2001 1 : 3 (L)
Aston Villa
Premier League
A 24/01/2001 2 : 1 (W)
Liverpool
FA Cup 4th Round
H 27/01/2001 0 : 2 (L)
Coventry City
Premier League
H 31/01/2001 1 : 0 (W)
Ipswich Town
Premier League
A 03/02/2001 2 : 1 (W)
Everton
Premier League
A 07/02/2001 2 : 2 (D)
Derby County
Premier League
H 10/02/2001 0 : 0 (D)
Tottenham Hotspur
Premier League
A 24/02/2001 2 : 1 (W)
Manchester United
Premier League
H 03/03/2001 1 : 1 (D)
Sunderland
Premier League
A 31/03/2001 2 : 0 (W)
Southampton
Premier League
H 07/04/2001 2 : 0 (W)
Liverpool
Premier League
A 13/04/2001 2 : 1 (W)
West Ham United
Premier League
A 21/04/2001 2 : 0 (W)
Chelsea
Premier League
H 28/04/2001 2 : 0 (W)
Arsenal
Premier League
A 05/05/2001 1 : 2 (L)
Southampton
Premier League
H 18/08/2001 2 : 0 (W)
West Ham United
Premier League
A 25/08/2001 0 : 0 (D)
Bolton Wanderers
Premier League
H 08/09/2001 0 : 0 (D)
Charlton Athletic
Premier League
A 16/09/2001 2 : 0 (W)
Maritimo
UEFA Cup 1st Round 1st Leg
A 20/09/2001 0 : 1 (L)
Derby County
Premier League
H 23/09/2001 3 : 0 (W)
Maritimo
UEFA Cup 1st Round 2nd Leg
H 27/09/2001 3 : 0 (W)
Ipswich Town
Premier League
A 30/09/2001 2 : 1 (W)
Leicester City
Worthington Cup 3rd Round
A 09/10/2001 6 : 0 (W)
Liverpool
Premier League
A 13/10/2001 1 : 1 (D)
Troyes
UEFA Cup 2nd Round 1st Leg
H 18/10/2001 4 : 2 (W)
Chelsea
Premier League
H 21/10/2001 0 : 0 (D)
Manchester United
Premier League
A 27/10/2001 1 : 1 (D)
Troyes
UEFA Cup 2nd Round 2nd Leg
A 01/11/2001 2 : 3 (L)
Tottenham Hotspur
Premier League
H 04/11/2001 2 : 1 (W)
Sunderland
Premier League
A 18/11/2001 0 : 2 (L)
Grasshoppers
UEFA Cup 3rd Round 1st Leg
A 22/11/2001 2 : 1 (W)
Aston Villa
Premier League
H 25/11/2001 1 : 1 (D)
Chelsea
Worthington Cup 4th Round
H 28/11/2001 0 : 2 (L)
Grasshoppers
UEFA Cup 3rd Round 2nd Leg
H 06/12/2001 2 : 2 (D)
Everton
Premier League
H 19/12/2001 3 : 2 (W)
Chelsea
Premier League
A 30/01/2002 0 : 2 (L)
Liverpool
Premier League
H 03/02/2002 0 : 4 (L)
Charlton Athletic
Premier League
H 24/02/2002 0 : 0 (D)
Ipswich Town
Premier League
H 06/03/2002 2 : 0 (W)
Blackburn Rovers
Premier League
H 17/03/2002 3 : 1 (W)
Manchester United
Premier League
H 30/03/2002 3 : 4 (L)
Tottenham Hotspur
Premier League
A 01/04/2002 1 : 2 (L)
Sunderland
Premier League
H 07/04/2002 2 : 0 (W)
Aston Villa
Premier League
A 13/04/2002 1 : 0 (W)
Fulham
Premier League
H 20/04/2002 0 : 1 (L)
Derby County
Premier League
A 27/04/2002 1 : 0 (W)
Middlesbrough
Premier League
H 11/05/2002 1 : 0 (W)
Manchester City
Premier League
H 17/08/2002 3 : 0 (W)
West Bromwich Albion
Premier League
A 24/08/2002 3 : 1 (W)
Sunderland
Premier League
H 28/08/2002 0 : 1 (L)
Unused Sub Date Score
Match Events
Charlton Athletic
Premier League
A 17/03/2001 2 : 1 (W) Unused Sub
Arsenal
Premier League
A 21/08/2001 2 : 1 (W) Unused Sub
Fulham
Premier League
A 02/12/2001 0 : 0 (D) Unused Sub
Blackburn Rovers
Premier League
A 09/12/2001 2 : 1 (W) Unused Sub
Newcastle United
Premier League
H 22/12/2001 3 : 4 (L) Unused Sub
Arsenal
Premier League
H 20/01/2002 1 : 1 (D) Unused Sub
Middlesbrough
Premier League
A 09/02/2002 2 : 2 (D) Unused Sub
PSV Eindhoven
UEFA Cup 4th Round 1st Leg
A 21/02/2002 0 : 0 (D) Unused Sub
PSV Eindhoven
UEFA Cup 4th Round 2nd Leg
H 28/02/2002 0 : 1 (L) Unused Sub
Everton
Premier League
A 03/03/2002 0 : 0 (D) Unused Sub
Leicester City
Premier League
A 23/03/2002 2 : 0 (W) Unused Sub


Match database and line-ups are still in beta, there may be some discrepancies between appearances and goals. If you see any issues please contact us