Liverpool superstar Mohamed Salah is looking to build on his stunning debut season in 2017/18 during which he took the Premier League by storm by scoring 32 goals and scooping the coveted Golden Boot ahead of Harry Kane, only three years after his disappointing stint at Chelsea.
Michael
Owen, Thierry Henry and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink have all held steady
after Golden Boot wins, scoring the same number of goals the following
season, although in those instances none actually retained the accolade
as another player overtook them.
After winning his third Golden Boot in 2004/05 with 25 goals, Arsenal hero Henry actually did improve the following season, scoring 27 goals in 2005/06, an improvement of 8%.
Can the Egyptian follow Kane's example and be an exception to the Golden Boot curse?
*indicates Golden Boot shared by multiple players
**indicates player left Premier League immediately after Golden Boot winning season
Such
was his incredible return that Salah has left himself little room to
improve in 2018/19, seeing as the vast majority of Golden Boot winners
in Premier League history experienced a drop-off in their goal numbers
the year after finishing at the top of the scoring chart.
Mo Salah, posing with all his rivals for the Golden Boot this season pic.twitter.com/ftjzLuWNMh— Mo Salah Facts (@MoSalahFacts) August 17, 2018
In the early 1990s, Teddy
Sheringham, Andy Cole and Alan Shearer all scored fewer goals the year
after winning the Golden Boot. Shearer won the award three times in a
row, but netted less often each time - it's worth pointing out that his
third drop was the result of a serious knee injury.
However, for many years, Manchester United
forward Dwight Yorke had been the only Premier League Golden Boot
winner to score more goals the following season. He took a share of the
1998/99 prize with 18 goals and went on to net 20 in 1999/00, improving
by 11% as a rampant United side won the league title by a
record-breaking margin.
Yorke's
improved tally of 20 didn't win him another Golden Boot, though, as
Sunderland's Kevin Phillips shocked the nation to score 30 goals and
take the honour instead. Phillips, incidentally, suffered a 53% drop off
after his big season.
The likes of Didier Drogba (twice), Cristiano Ronaldo,
Nicolas Anelka, Dimitar Berbatov and Robin van Persie have all suffered
similarly large drop offs the season after winning the Golden Boot,
ranging from a 42% fall up to an astonishingly high 65%.
Sergio
Aguero saw a minor 8% drop in his goal tally the season after winning
his only Premier League Golden Boot in 2014/15. But Harry Kane
has so far been an exception to the general trend, seeing a 16%
improvement on his 2015/16 Golden Boot winning season followed by a 3%
improvement on his second in 2016/17. It was only Salah that stopped him
winning a third.
Can the Egyptian follow Kane's example and be an exception to the Golden Boot curse?
Season | Golden Boot Winner | Goals | % Change Season After |
1992/93 | Teddy Sheringham | 22 | -41% |
1993/94 | Andrew Cole | 34 | -38% |
1994/95 | Alan Shearer | 34 | -9% |
1995/96 | Alan Shearer | 31 | -19% |
1996/97 | Alan Shearer | 25 | -92% |
1997/98* | Chris Sutton | 18 | -83% |
1997/98* | Michael Owen | 18 | 0% |
1997/98* | Dion Dublin | 18 | -22% |
1998/99* | Dwight Yorke | 18 | +11% |
1998/99* | Michael Owen | 18 | -7% |
1998/99* | Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink | 18 | n/a** |
1999/00 | Kevin Phillips | 30 | -53% |
2000/01 | Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink | 23 | 0% |
2001/02 | Thierry Henry | 24 | 0% |
2002/03 | Ruud van Nistelrooy | 25 | -20% |
2003/04 | Thierry Henry | 30 | -17% |
2004/05 | Thierry Henry | 25 | +8% |
2005/06 | Thierry Henry | 27 | -63% |
2006/07 | Didier Drogba | 20 | -60% |
2007/08 | Cristiano Ronaldo | 31 | -42% |
2008/09 | Nicolas Anelka | 19 | -42% |
2009/10 | Didier Drogba | 30 | -62% |
2010/11* | Carlos Tevez | 20 | -80% |
2010/11* | Dimitar Berbatov | 20 | -65% |
2011/12 | Robin van Persie | 30 | -13% |
2012/13 | Robin van Persie | 26 | -54% |
2013/14 | Luis Suarez | 31 | n/a** |
2014/15 | Sergio Aguero | 26 | -8% |
2015/16 | Harry Kane | 25 | +16% |
2016/17 | Harry Kane | 29 | +3% |
2017/18 | Mohamed Salah | 32 | ?? |
**indicates player left Premier League immediately after Golden Boot winning season
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