
1994 Pardaugava
17 games and 3 goals
1995 Skonto Metals 16 games and 4 goals
1995-1998 Skonto FC 85 games 44 goals
1999 2006 Southampton 137 games 43 goals
2006 Anorthosis Famagusta
Latvia 69 games 15 goals
Born in Chernobia (Černovoļa)[2] in Ukraine of Latvian
parents, Marian grew up supporting Spartak Moscow. When he was
about 8 years old, Yuri Andreev, a coach from Skonto Riga
visited his school, as a result of which Marian decided to
play football. Andreev was to have a major influence on
Marian's football career. At 18 he signed for Pardaugava Riga
moving on to Skonto Metals and then into the Skonto Riga
first-team in 1995. He started playing as a midfielder,
usually on the wings, before moving into a striker’s role. His
best goal ratio came in 1995 when he scored 8 in 9 games,
which he followed up with 12 in 28 games the following season,
as he became a regular in the Latvian national team.
He broke into the Latvian national team at the start of 1996,
and made his debut on 12 March 1996 in a 1-0 friendly defeat
away to Cyprus. His first goal for his country came in his
ninth match at home to Poland in a 3-2 defeat also in a
friendly on 17 February 1997. In the 1998 season he scored 19
goals in 26 games for Skonto, and his progress was attracting
attention from bigger clubs; he had trials with Salernitana
(Italy), Werder Bremen (Germany), and Casino Salzburg
(Austria), but he was recommended to Southampton’s manager
Dave Jones by Gary Johnson, the manager of the Latvian
national team. He had a trial in a reserve team match against
Oxford United on 10 February 1999 in which he scored a classic
hat-trick - a header and a goal with each foot in a 7-1
victory.

Saints agreed a fee with Skonto of around £800,000 and despite
difficulties in obtaining a work permit and objections from
the PFA, these problems were overcome and he joined the Saints
in March 1999, thus becoming the first Latvian to play in the
English Premier League. He finally made his debut as a 70th
minute substitute away to Coventry City on 5 April 1999, with
his home debut at The Dell coming on 17 April, when he came
off the bench to score the crucial equaliser - and almost got
a winner - against Blackburn Rovers in a 3-3 draw. At this
time Saints were desperately trying to survive in the Premier
League and had gone in to the final game of the season needing
a win to guarantee their place for a further season. Pahars
scored twice in the 2-0 win over Everton at the Dell, thus
securing Saints’ status in the Premiership for the following
season.
He made 33 appearances during the 1999-00 season finishing as
the club's top scorer with 13 goals. By now, Dave Jones had
been replaced as manager by Glenn Hoddle, who decided to move
Pahars to a wide position, with the theory that he could scare
the opposition, with his dribbling and pace, and provide for
others as well as score himself. After an impressive start to
the 2000-01 season - finding the net 6 times as a striker, he
returned to a deeper role, and his form slumped as a result.
He was still a threat providing his team mates with
opportunities, but his form was patchy and inconsistent and he
only found the net 3 more times to take his tally for the
season to 9 goals.
After an indifferent start to the following season, he came
off the bench to score the winner away to Bolton Wanderers on
15 September 2001. He scored at a regular rate over the next 3
months including the winner in a 1-0 victory over Charlton
Athletic on 24 November - Saints first win in their new St
Mary's Stadium. Despite Latvia not qualifying for the World
Cup Finals they did have success in June 2001 when they beat
Estonia and Lithuania, to lift the Baltic Cup, with Marian
scoring in both games. Marian was then named Latvian
Footballer of the Year for a third successive year in November
2001. Unfortunately, after the New Year the goals dried up
again but he finished the season with his best total for the
Saints of 16 goals in League and Cup. Marian's 16 goals and 14
from strike partner James Beattie meant that the duo had the
second best strike rate in the Premiership.
In the summer of 2002, Marian required a hernia operation,
which forced him to miss the whole of pre-season and although
he scored a penalty in a 1-0 home win over Everton on 11
September he never fully recovered from his injury. His early
season was rather stop-start and was not helped by the
suspension for receiving a red card at home to Manchester City
on 5 October. He then severely injured an ankle in November
2002, which kept him out for most of the rest of the season
with another operation on the eve of the FA Cup Final to round
off a miserable 2002-03 season. The start to the 2003-04
season was again hampered by injury and comebacks for the
reserves were ruined by injury recurrences. He did manage to
play the closing minutes as Latvia claimed a place in the
European Championships in 2004 with a 2-2 draw in Turkey on 19
November 2003. With that as an added incentive to get himself
fully fit he found himself back in the Saints starting line up
for 3 successive games which all ended in victories. His first
goal of the season - and in more than a year - came at home to
local rivals Portsmouth on 21 December 2003 in a 3-0 home win
when he curled a superb right footer in to the bottom right
corner.
He
again struggled for full fitness before scoring his first goal
for Latvia in a 3-1 friendly win over Kazakhstan on 18
February - his first international goal since May 2002. With
so many injury problems over the season he was a substitute
for all three of 2004 UEFA Latvia's group games in Euro 2004,
although he did taste the championships by coming off the
bench in all three games. After recovering from injury, he was
then injured in 2004-05 pre-season, which ruled him out of the
early part of the season. Comebacks for the reserves were
promising until problems flared up again causing him to miss
the whole of the season in frustrating circumstances as Saints
were relegated after 28 years in the top flight of English
Football.
His 2005-06 season was another frustrating one with injury
after injury once again seeing his comebacks ruined. He did
make 10 appearances during the season scoring one goal, but it
wasn't enough to save his Saints career and in May 2006, after
7 years with 156 appearances and 45 goals for the club, it was
announced that his contract with Southampton would not be
renewed for the following season. After the final game of the
season, on 30 April 2006 Marian took part in a 'lap of
appreciation' by the Saints players around the St. Mary's
pitch., in an emotional goodbye for the player and many of the
Southampton fans present. He is remembered fondly by all of
the Southampton fans and widely acknowledged as one of the
best players the club has seen in its long history. He will
always be remembered as a symbol of the team's lost
Premiership status and wll always be sorely missed.
On September 2, 2006 he returned to the Latvian national team
for a match against Sweden. As of April 2007 he has played 69
times and scored 15 goals for Latvia. In his early days in
England, he was often introduced as "the Latvian Michael
Owen". While successful at Southampton, and adored back home
his numerous problems with recurring injuries meant that his
full potential could not be realised. |