Lee Bowyer (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Lee Bowyer" in English language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank English rank
8th place
10th place
203rd place
129th place
1st place
1st place
12th place
11th place
36th place
33rd place
low place
7,941st place
30th place
24th place
1,936th place
1,210th place
low place
low place
2,706th place
1,496th place
2,545th place
1,765th place
1,741st place
1,103rd place
197th place
356th place
414th place
253rd place
56th place
42nd place
2,405th place
1,356th place
42nd place
60th place
1,411th place
804th place
331st place
294th place
912th place
756th place
168th place
114th place
723rd place
555th place
6,543rd place
4,527th place
5,842nd place
3,348th place
715th place
512th place
8,268th place
4,901st place
238th place
159th place
181st place
135th place
20th place
30th place
3,996th place
2,236th place
low place
6,518th place

11v11.com

barryhugmansfootballers.com

  • "Lee Bowyer". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 8 June 2019.

bbc.co.uk

news.bbc.co.uk

bbc.co.uk

bbc.com

bcfc.com

birminghammail.co.uk

cafc.co.uk

eadt.co.uk

efl.com

espn.com

  • Dickinson, Matt (23 November 2002). "The trials and tribulations of Lee Bowyer". The Times. London. Retrieved 8 July 2009 – via NewsBank. The Leeds player must have a hide as thick as a hound's to have produced the best football of his career in between visits to Hull Crown Court
    McNally, Brian (1 June 2003). "Football: Signing Lee's my biggest gamble ever says Freddy Shepherd". Sunday Mirror. London – via NewsBank. The lad was under intense pressure, but he never allowed it to affect his football. In fact, he played some of the best football of his career when the heat was really on.
    Spellman, Damian (29 December 2005). "Bowyer launches red card appeal". The Independent. London. Retrieved 8 July 2009. Bowyer's time on Tyneside has rarely seen him reach the heights he attained during the peak of his spell at his previous club, Leeds, where he helped David O'Leary's side reach the semi-finals of the Champions' League with the best football of his career despite his well-documented off-the-field troubles.
    Butler, Jeremy (13 October 2006). "Bellamy set to play on during assault trial". ESPN. Reuters. Retrieved 8 July 2009. In 2000/2001, when at Leeds United, Bowyer produced some of the best football of his career while on trial during an assault case and won the club's player of the year award.

espnfc.com

eurosport.com

au.eurosport.com

fifa.com

guardian.co.uk

observer.guardian.co.uk

independent.co.uk

leeds-live.co.uk

newsbank.com

docs.newsbank.com

  • Dickinson, Matt (23 November 2002). "The trials and tribulations of Lee Bowyer". The Times. London. Retrieved 8 July 2009 – via NewsBank. The Leeds player must have a hide as thick as a hound's to have produced the best football of his career in between visits to Hull Crown Court
    McNally, Brian (1 June 2003). "Football: Signing Lee's my biggest gamble ever says Freddy Shepherd". Sunday Mirror. London – via NewsBank. The lad was under intense pressure, but he never allowed it to affect his football. In fact, he played some of the best football of his career when the heat was really on.
    Spellman, Damian (29 December 2005). "Bowyer launches red card appeal". The Independent. London. Retrieved 8 July 2009. Bowyer's time on Tyneside has rarely seen him reach the heights he attained during the peak of his spell at his previous club, Leeds, where he helped David O'Leary's side reach the semi-finals of the Champions' League with the best football of his career despite his well-documented off-the-field troubles.
    Butler, Jeremy (13 October 2006). "Bellamy set to play on during assault trial". ESPN. Reuters. Retrieved 8 July 2009. In 2000/2001, when at Leeds United, Bowyer produced some of the best football of his career while on trial during an assault case and won the club's player of the year award.

premierleague.com

si.com

skysports.com

soccerbase.com

standard.co.uk

telegraph.co.uk

thefa.com

theguardian.com

watfordobserver.co.uk

web.archive.org

whufc.com

wikipedia.org

en.wikipedia.org

  • Some media sources reported that the booking received on 5 March 2011 made him the first player to reach 100 yellow cards in the Premier League, although the Premier League recorded it as his 99th.[46][47][48] As clarified by ESPNsoccernet statistician Norman Hubbard, although Bowyer had been shown 100 yellow cards, official statistics "do not count games in which two bookings led to a sending-off", so by standard definitions, he had only 99 that counted as yellow cards.[49] As of August 2014, no player has reached 100 Premier League yellow cards.[46]

yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk

yorkshirepost.co.uk