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#1 (permalink) |
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Reserve Team Player
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Good Rooney article
Rooney must rediscover selfish side
By Norman Hubbard Manchester United head to Monaco on Friday, hoping for silverware from the European Super Cup to accompany the recently acquired Community Shield and, more prestigiously, the Premier League and the Champions League trophies. At 22 and the owner of 43 England caps, Wayne Rooney has already achieved more than the majority of players do in their entire careers. Wayne Rooney: Must emerge from the shadows at Man United. Yet the more he wins, the greater the enigma Rooney becomes. In 2005/06, he was magnificent while Manchester United were, by their standards, mediocre. A one-man source of optimism about the club's future, his coruscating brilliance was the highlight of their season. In a side that seemed to have too few, he was the principal match-winner. If both and United's and England's hopes seemed to rest with a player barely out of his teens, it was entirely understandable. Last season, however, the most startling statistic about Rooney's campaign is that his goals only yielded one Premier League point, in April's draw at Middlesbrough; mathematically, United could have won the title without him. Such a strict mathematical analysis ignores his overall contribution indeed, it is telling that their defeats tended to occur in his absence; nevertheless, the comparable figure for Cristiano Ronaldo, who superseded him as the club's resident superstar and points-gatherer in chief, is 19. That illustrates the difference between 'R' 'n' 'R'. Moreover, in the Champions League final, it was Rooney who was replaced while Ronaldo and the tireless Carlos Tevez remained on. In contrast, 12 months earlier, he produced a fine double against AC Milan in the semi-final to accompany an outstanding display against Roma in the previous round. If that suggests Rooney is at his best in an unsuccessful cause, that is an impression that the 2005 FA Cup final, where the shootout defeat to Arsenal followed a forceful individual display, reinforces. Rooney's international career, meanwhile, is one of diminishing returns. It has only brought two goals in competitive games since Euro 2004 and Fabio Capello, like Steve McClaren and Sven-Goran Eriksson before him, is already accused of failing to get the best from the only world-class attacker at his disposal. Rooney is far from the only international underachiever in the current England squad and an overall record of 14 goals in 43 caps is more than respectable, but different standards are applied to him. And so they should be. While there is an obvious temptation to hype every youngster, he is, along with Steven Gerrard, England's foremost talent. Too much can be expected at too young an age, and growing up has its perils for child prodigies, but Rooney is in danger of underachievement. Not just for the national team, where the majority of his team-mates struggle to replicate their club form, but for Manchester United. Ronaldo, once the junior partner in their alliance, has surged ahead of Rooney. Tevez is at his most destructive alongside the Englishman but it is the Argentine who forged the reputation last season for delivering the vital goals. Rooney, the odd metatarsal difficulty notwithstanding, has 41 goals in two seasons. Once again, it is a record that would induce envy from most strikers, but then the majority lack his ability. It is true, too, that his talents extend beyond goalscoring; United's slick football, their fluid movement and interchangeable attacking would not be possible without his blend of creativity and industry. Yet there is a reason why, in pre-season, Sir Alex Ferguson stated the need to use Rooney in his proper position, to grant the No.10 the role and responsibilities the shirt often entails. Wayne Rooney: Man United striker is struggling to rediscover form for England With an unselfishness that is alien to Ronaldo, Rooney tracked back diligently in the Nou Camp as an orthodox right-sided midfielder. He has often, especially in Europe, been delegated duties on the left flank, taking him further from goal. The situation is complicated by Rooney's roaming or, as Ferguson termed it, 'overdoing it in the wrong areas of the pitch'. Far from operating five yards behind the principal striker, his first two appearances of the season were notable for the supposed striker dropping far deeper. It is a sign of a willingness to involve himself in the game and provide inspiration when the midfield cannot, but for Manchester United against Newcastle and for England versus the Czech Republic, he was ineffective. If Ronaldo, in contrast, is vain enough to channel his efforts towards individual glory, it can be beneficial, as 42 goals last season suggest. Rooney, however, appeared the superior player in 2006, but has not advanced to such a degree. Perhaps the realisation of that leads to the dissent and mis-timed tackles that characterise a frustrated Rooney. The team ethic that he possesses takes him further from goal and, at times, into trouble, depriving him of tap-ins and leaving others, less talented and less qualified, to take up the striker's position. At 22, he has time on his side. Yet for the past two years, we have been waiting for him to produce career-defining performances, as his fellow Liverpudlian Gerrard did in Istanbul, or to become the ruthless, relentless destroyer Ronaldo has morphed into. A willingness to roam everywhere on the pitch should not obscure Rooney from the fact he is most dangerous in the final third. Perhaps the paradox is that too many footballers are too selfish; Rooney is a rare example of one who should act with self-interest in mind more often. Few others would be charged with being Manchester United and England's talisman, but few others have his potential. Wayne Rooney is picking up the medals, but now it is time to challenge for the individual honours as well. http://soccernet.espn.go.com/columns...t&lid=tab2pos3 |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Youth Team Player
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Q: What's the difference between a Chelsea fan and a vibrator? A: A Chelsea fan is a real dick.
Posts: 144
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Some reasonable points raised in the article.
I really hope that Rooney has a massive season, not just for the club but also for England. Of all the current members of the club, Rooney's number one in my list in terms of players that deserves to be recognized as a truly world-class player (somehow Ronaldo beat him to that last season) and among the very greats. His recent performance has not helped in giving pundits more reason to doubt him, but he has the tenacity, drive, and more importantly, technical ability and ingenuity to break out of this "slump" that he's in and start banging in the goals for club and country. |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Spam Alert!
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Californication
Posts: 21,222
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I'll say it right now, and I can guarantee it is the best post in this thread, Wayne Rooney is the most underrated player on Manchester United. Just watch games when he doesnt play, United arent United, sure Ronaldo is the best attacker, Rio the best defender, Scholes the best midfielder, but in every match Rooney plays he is the lifeblood. Also, it seems as though clubs have a lot harder time nullifying Rooney than Ronaldo, that said Ronaldo will score with one chance where as Rooney usually wont, I think it comes down to broken foot(s) for Rooney once he gets the full confidence back in the shooting I reckon he hits 30 goals, I reckon that to be this year.
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#7 (permalink) |
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Reserve Team Player
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 1,063
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Not sure what Rooney practices in training, but he seems to find it harder to dribble past opposition players than he did when he 1st appeared on the scene at Everton. Maybe it’s a case of opposition players giving him more respect and not getting sucked in but he doesn’t seem to have that same flair we usually attribute to foreign players. It obvious he has improved his around games and link up play but I for one would like to see him regain that flair and punish the opposition in the last 3rd. We don’t need him at left back, right back, midfield as we have players more specialized in those areas and like any skill, the less you use it, the harder it become to regain. I once said, with his strength, skill and a little shooting practice he could become a world-class (muller’esk) striker.
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#8 (permalink) |
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Im rude and disprespectful to the ladies of the forum,though Im happy to cruise Jason and Suresh
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Entertainment Fourm: Winding up the Gaming Gimps
Posts: 13,488
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Selfishness: Stick to the attacking position and read the game, not running in to blind alleys or wandering around trying to cover every inch of the pitch. Rooney if he aspires to become the best in the world should cut down some needless running.
United have changed, we are no more the team that were before three or four years. We no more have a Evertonesque midfield like Miller, Smith or Fletcher and it gives an inside forward nuff space to run deep from the midfield and spary the ball around. We play possesion football with the only on ball retention and forwards are expected hit the right pass than blindly running around like Gerrard. |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Reserve Team Player
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Singapore
Posts: 1,360
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Nothing is good enough for this journalists.All those tracking back and etc is part of Rooney's game.When Rooney scores lots of goals this season,the same journalist will again be finding faults in his game and be writing another unneeded article next season.
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