Thứ Tư, 23 tháng 9, 2015

Wayne Rooney: 'Manchester United team watch boxing together'

Manchester United captain Wayne Rooney has revealed that he and his teammates watch boxing showdowns together.
The England skipper, who is a passionate boxing fan, has claimed that there are many players within the team who are interested in the sport.
"Ashley Young, Michael Carrick, Victor Valdes are into their boxing too," Rooney told the Daily Star. "When it is on and we all get a chance to watch it we huddle round a laptop and watch it."
Rooney added that there were mixed feelings in the camp when Carl Froch beat fellow Brit George Groves in their first bout in 2013.
"When Froch went down, half the lads were jumping up and half the lads were gutted," said Rooney. "That was a good fight to watch with the whole team."
Rooney is friends with the boxing Smith brothers Paul, Stephen, Callum and Liam.

Measuring Wayne Rooney's ever-growing legacy

Having recently secured the title of England’s all-time leading scorer, and closing in on a similar feat with Manchester United, how will history treat Wayne Rooney?

Wayne Rooney’s footballing career may become the acid test in future for measuring just how good sports fans’ memories really are.
Rooney’s career has gone through ups and downs unlike those of many of his contemporaries, and it might be fair to simply see that as the by-product of a career that was tipped for superstardom since he broke on the scene as a 16-year-old.
Yet opinions remain divided on whether Rooney ever really fulfilled the promise that he showed back in his early days at Everton, or even upon his arrival at Manchester United.
That’s a particularly steep yardstick to be measured against though. How can anyone realistically be expected to live up to a professional debut that was marked in such truly spectacular fashion?

Then, how can you follow on from arriving at one of the world’s biggest clubs only to score a debut hat-trick in the marquee club competition in world football?

Rooney has gone on from those fresh-faced highlights to build a career that, on the whole, has been outstanding for both club and country. Yet his detractors have more than enough ammunition to build a case against him still.
His attitude and motivations could easily be called into question too. The 29-year-old has struggled with fitness throughout his career, as his weight often fluctuated with his performance levels. That’s not to mention his habit of losing his temper as well.Rooney has never been the picture of consistency, and as a result his goals come in patches. Long droughts are followed by spates of red-hot form in a seemingly never-ending cycle.
On top of that, Rooney has at times been accused of being particularly susceptible to the influences of those around him, in particular his long-term agent Paul Stretford. There can be no argument that Stretford has done a stellar job for his client financially, but has it always been to the benefit of Rooney’s play on the pitch? Well, that’s a different debate.
During the most recent international break, Rooney scored his 50th international goal with a penalty kick against Switzerland, allowing him to overtake Bobby Charlton as his nation’s all-time leading goalscorer in the process.
Being placed in the company of strikers like Jimmy Greaves, Gary Lineker, Alan Shearer and Michael Owen is one thing, but standing at the forefront of that group is even more impressive.
For his club, England’s all-time leading scorer faces even stiffer competition on his path to achieving history though.
At the top of Manchester United’s goalscoring charts, once again standing in Rooney’s way is the legendary Charlton, although he is also yet to pass Dennis Law too.
In the rear view mirror in the total goals picture for United, Rooney has seen off the likes of George Best, Ruud Van Nistelrooy, Cristiano Ronaldo, Ryan Giggs and Dennis Viollet.
Yet is it a result of his ability, or the fact that he has managed to combine it with great longevity that he has achieved such heights on both fronts?
For England, Charlton may have played in 106 games compared to Rooney’s 108, but there was only one other player in the top 20 scorers to surpass 100 appearances, and that was midfielder Steven Gerrard.
At United, Rooney’s 484 games doesn’t look quite as out of place in the context of their great goalscorers, yet there are still plenty of notable names who scored at a similar rate to Rooney during their time in Manchester.
Rooney has averaged a goal every 2.07 games with the Red Devils, a ratio that is not too dissimilar to many of his striking peers in the club’s modern era.
Andy Cole scored 121 goals with the Old Trafford club, good enough for a ratio of a goal every 2.27 games. Ronaldo notched up 118 goals, one every 2.47 games, a mark he’s improved incredibly to a goal every 0.96 games at Real Madrid. And then you have Van Nistelrooy who came in at a goal every 1.46 games at Old Trafford too.
Rooney needs five more goals to overtake Law into second place, and only 17 to seal the top spot in his club’s history. In other words, with a contract until 2019 it’s an inevitability.
So how will he be remembered after a career where he broke so many records?As long as he hits no injury speed bumps along the way, it should be a mere formality for Rooney.
For England, up until this point anyway, Rooney will unfortunately be associated with failure. A member of the so-called golden generation that never even came close to performing to the peak of their abilities at a major tournament.
He may have the goals, but as of right now, Rooney still doesn’t have the World Cup medal that Bobby Charlton claimed. That matters.
It hasn’t been smooth sailing between Rooney and England by any means either. Moments like these won’t be easy to overlook.
There was the impetuous sending off which contributed to England’s downfall against Portugal at the 2006 World Cup.

And then four years later in South Africa while heading up an underachieving team, Rooney voiced his displeasure with England’s traveling fans after a crushing 0-0 draw with Algeria.

Now, he’s the captain of his country, as well as their leading goalscorer, yet that evidence still leaves a lot for England’s fans to look past in the bigger picture.
It’s no different for Manchester United either, in fact it may even be more difficult.
When Rooney scores in front of the Stretford End, the crowd still erupts as vociferously as they have always done for their no. 10, but deep inside there’s a history that has to rankle with United fans.
Not once, but twice, Rooney has reportedly handed in transfer requests at Manchester United (2010 and 2013). There aren’t many ways quicker to burn your bridges with a core of loving sports fans than to proclaim that you wan’t to leave them to play elsewhere. Yet on the occasions when Rooney did it, it was under the shadow of him potentially leaving for hated rivals like Chelsea and Manchester City.
On both occasions Rooney made his demands, got significant pay rises, and eventually backed down. In a sport where the club badge is supposed to mean everything, how can a player be forgiven so easily for using the club he represents as leverage?
Right now, these are the sort of stains that leave their mark on Wayne Rooney’s legacy. They may not be long-lasting though.
Whether it’s 20, 30, 40 or 50 years from now, eventually we’ll reach a point where it will become harder to remember the specifics of Rooney’s play style, or the minutiae away from the game that impacted his work on the pitch.
When that day comes, luckily for Rooney his numbers will speak for themselves.

Thứ Sáu, 4 tháng 9, 2015

Wayne Rooney: True great, or great talent unfulfilled?

Wayne Rooney: True great, or great talent unfulfilled?

Ray Hall was the manager of Everton’s academy for almost a quarter of a century and, if there is one moment he will never forget, it was the first time he saw Wayne Rooney. Everton’s Under-Nines were playing against Manchester United.

“Picture the scene,” says Hall. “About 150-200 parents on one side of a small field, the coaches of Manchester United and Everton on the other. Eight against eight. The ball comes across about head height and I’m looking at Wayne thinking, ‘He’ll head this’ but he didn’t. He turned his back on it and made a bicycle kick. The ball went straight into what was a small-sided goal.

“There was silence. No one had seen that before from an eight-year-old boy. Suddenly somebody started to applaud. After that, everybody clapped and the coach from Manchester United looked down the line as if to say, ‘What have we just seen?’”

What they had just seen was a young boy who would continue to make the jaws drop of even the most hardened football coaches and is now poised to break Sir Bobby Charlton’s all-time record for England goals. Yet amidst all the applause, should Rooney score the two against San Marino tomorrow night to surpass a landmark that has stood for 45 years, we would also be compelled to reflect. Rooney turns 30 next month; he has played in an era where competition for the England centre-forward position has been limited and when the country’s impact in the major international tournaments has been fleeting. Has this really been the fulfilment of an extraordinary talent?

There was a time, after all, when Rooney breaking Charlton’s record was not expected to be the crowning moment of his career but a footnote en route to global greatness. Rooney, remember, was reckoned good enough by Walter Smith to play for Everton when he was 15. By 16, Hall regarded him as the best senior player at the club and, after he scored a spectacular first Premier League goal past David Seaman, Arsene Wenger described him as the best English talent he had ever seen. Two years later, Sven-Goran Eriksson was comparing Rooney’s impact at Euro 2004 to that of Pele in the 1958 World Cup.

Few at Manchester United back then would have said that Cristiano Ronaldo was the superior 18-year-old. “Rooney was the better all-around player,” says Rio Ferdinand. “He was a more mature footballer who could bring the rest of the team into the game and could score and make goals.”

Fast forward to their supposed peak years and Ronaldo has scored more than 50 club goals in each of the past five seasons. Lionel Messi has managed more than 40 six years in a row. Rooney has only ever been past 20 three times in his 11 seasons at United, while his international record at the final stages of major tournaments still stands in the shadow of Charlton.

“There is a little way to go when you make comparisons as players,” Sir Geoff Hurst says. “If you’re making comparisons, Wayne is a front player, whereas Bobby Charlton scored 49 goals as a midfield player. It’s not only their ability, it’s what they achieved in the game, and of course Bobby Charlton was the member of a World Cup-winning team.”

None of this is to deny Rooney’s fabulous career, just to acknowledge how our hopes have had to be recalibrated. Perhaps they were always unrealistic — and maybe Rooney is a victim here of simply being an unusually early developer — but listen also to some of those who have worked with or played against him and you do wonder. There is a common theme. It is essentially the suggestion that Ronaldo has looked after his body rather better and lived the life of an elite athlete 24/7. They are observations that could apply to English players beyond Rooney.

Why Wayne Rooney needs 49 goals against San Marino to become England's ACTUAL greatest goalscorer

He might be approaching Bobby Charlton's all-time record for goals scored, but he's way behind in another sense...

Something for Wayne to ponder here...
When we look back at Wayne Rooney's England career, we'll surely say that he was up there with some of the best.
He only needs two strikes against San Marino in the Three Lions' next Euro qualifier to surpass Bobby Charlton's all-time tally of 49 goals for his country. Few are backing against him - he seems set to become an England record holder.
For comparison, here are the nation's top 10 goalscorers. It should be said that this only takes into account post-war tallies, so apologies to all the 19th-century footballers we've ignored.

England's top 10 scorers - goals only

Bobby CharltonWAYNE ROONEYGary LinekerJimmy GreavesMichael OwenTom FinneyNat LofthouseAlan ShearerFrank LampardDavid Platt01020304050
But is it really fair to judge a goalscorer purely on the number of goals he's scored?
Bobby Charlton got 106 caps and Wayne Rooney currently has 105 - and yet their goal totals are only just ahead of Gary Lineker (80 caps) and Jimmy Greaves (57).
Wouldn't it be fairer to judge each of the top 10's international careers on a goals-per-game basis?
Here's what happens if we take these 10 England legends and do just that…

England's top 10 scorers - goals per game

Nat LofthouseJimmy GreavesGary LinekerAlan ShearerBobby CharltonWAYNE ROONEYMichael OwenDavid PlattTom FinneyFrank Lampard0.00.20.40.60.81.0
Post-war players only
Yes, the top man is Nat Lofthouse, the 1950's legend who scored 30 goals in 33 games and once scored by shoulder-charging a goalkeeper into the net (ask your dad).
But look at the full goals-per-game table. Doesn't this seem a little more accurate as a list of greatest English goalscorers? You'd struggle to find an expert who would disagree with a list topped by Nat Lofthouse, Jimmy Greaves, Gary Lineker and Alan Shearer - it just feels right.
As you can see, Rooney sits down in sixth on this version of the top 10. So what would he need to do to get the No1 spot during the San Marino game?
Well, he'd need to better Lofthouse's goals per game ratio of 0.91.
Rooney currently has 48 goals in 105 games. To get his ratio that high, he would need to be on 97 goals after his 106th appearance.
So (quick bit of maths) - that would mean Rooney would need to score 49 goals against San Marino to top our ACTUAL list of top England goalscorers.