Emboldened by comparisons with Cristiano Ronaldo and
Lionel Messi, Wayne Rooney was in such a position of strength at
Manchester United in 2010 that he took on manager Alex Ferguson and won a
lucrative new contract.
At that time, Rooney was at
the peak of his powers, easily English football’s star player. He
seemed to believe he was too good for United, that the club wasn’t
matching his ambitions.
Less than three years later and the opposite may be true.
Ferguson’s
decision to drop Rooney now behind Robin van Persie in the pecking
order for Tuesday’s Champions League match against Real Madrid has left
some to question the striker’s future at Old Trafford.
Ten
years ago, David Beckham was snubbed by Ferguson for a big Champions
League match against Madrid and then left United for the Spanish team at
the end of the season. Ruud van Nistelrooy was left out of United’s
side for the 2006 League Cup final following an apparent rift with
Ferguson and wasn’t at the club the following campaign.
Rooney’s
plight missing out on arguably United’s biggest match since the 2011
Champions League final was overshadowed by the game-changing red card
awarded to Nani and the fact that Ronaldo scored the winner against his
former club on an emotional night at Old Trafford.
Yet,
it could well prove to be an intriguing side-issue for the rest of the
season, for Rooney will never be short of suitors. British bookmaker
William Hill has odds of 7-2 on Rooney leaving in the offseason, with
Manchester City the favourite to sign him.
The
reasons behind Ferguson’s selection must be galling for Rooney. The
coach suggested the player’s fitness was an issue “Wayne Rooney needs a
game or two” despite Rooney having played 90 minutes against Norwich on
Saturday, scoring a fabulous late goal and setting up two others in an
impressive display.
Ferguson also said Danny Welbeck
was the attacking player more suited to the defensive duties of
shackling Xabi Alonso, the deep-lying playmaker who starts many of
Madrid’s attacks.
“Big decisions have to be made,” United assistant manager Mike Phelan said.
And Ferguson has shown down the years he is not afraid to make them.
Until
Nani was sent off, the tactics worked perfectly. Welbeck was United’s
best player, stunting Alonso’s influence but also looking like his
team’s most dangerous player going forward.
Rooney,
brooding while sitting in United’s dug-out, came on as a 73rd-minute
substitute, all fired up. But couldn’t change the game, missing a good
chance when he hooked a close-range volley over.
As
United’s players trudged off the pitch aggrieved at a sense of injustice
by a refereeing call, Rooney could have been hurting for another
reason.
Rooney has had to accept he is no longer the
main striker at United since Van Persie’s arrival in August and his
contribution to United’s surge to the Premier League title has been
fleeting.
It’s getting to the stage where pundits
are applauding his determination and ability to track back to help his
defence more than his impact as a goal scorer. Rooney has been playing
on the left wing, behind the striker even in central midfield this
season and he surely sees himself as more than simply a glorified
utility player.
Rooney’s actions and body language are sure to be followed with increasing interest for the remainder of the season.
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