Henry retains PFA crown](BBC SPORT | Football | Henry retains PFA crown)
[thumb=H]henry1326_5656879.JPG[/thumb]
Henry has scored 29 goals in 33 Premiership games this season
Thierry Henry has won the PFA Players’ Player of the Year award for the second successive year.
The Frenchman’s influence on Arsenal’s title-winning campaign made him the outstanding candidate.
He won ahead of fellow nominees Frank Lampard, who was second, Steven Gerrard (third), Alan Shearer, Jay-Jay Okocha and Patrick Vieira.
Chelsea midfielder Scott Parker was the surprise choice for young player of the year, beating his captain John Terry.
Henry’s honour came just hours after Arsenal clinched the championship following a 2-2 draw at Tottenham.
He became only the third player to win it twice - after Mark Hughes and Alan Shearer - and the first to win it two years running.
Arsenal had six players in the PFA’s Premiership Team of the Year, which also included Vieira, Robert Pires, Sol Campbell, Lauren and Ashley Cole.
“I am quite lucky to play in a special team,” Henry said. "The strikers grab the headlines but I have special players around me.
He has been tremendous when we needed someone to do something special
Patrick Vieira on Henry
"We play as a team and we are willing to fight for each other, and you need that ability.
“It’s like we are a family, willing to do things together and fight for it.”
Gunners captain Vieira praised Henry’s contribution to the their success, particularly in recent weeks.
“He will tell you it is a team game but he has been tremendous in the last two games when we have been a little bit tired and needed someone to do something special,” Vieira said.
Parker’s emergence as a player with international potential was confirmed in January when he joined Chelsea in a £10m move from Charlton.
He is not yet a fixture in the Blues line-up but started both legs of the Champions League quarter-final against Arsenal.
Parker said: "This is very pleasing for me and it rounds off a brilliant season, although there are a couple of things that could still go my way in the summer, such as the Champions League and the European Championship.
"It has been a tough year for me but a brilliant year. It was always going to be tough leaving Charlton because I had not known anything else since the age of nine.
“It was always going to take a bit of time to settle in at Chelsea but I am happy with the way things are going.”