The Independent on Saturday

ROONEY REAPS WHAT HE SOWS, THE FANS WILL NEVER LOVE HIM

- IAN HERBERT

IT WAS late afternoon last Saturday when Wayne Rooney walked out of the Manchester United dressing room and down the players’ tunnel with sons Kai and Klay, and a football. This has become a routine in these past few years when he has had the run of the place.

A kick-about with Kai and his mates in the Stretford End six-yard box has often ensued.

Considerin­g that the side had just demonstrat­ed in their 4-1 win over Leicester that Rooney, an 80th minute substitute, is dispensabl­e now, the way he rejected the request to stop and speak was gracious.

His demeanour in the dressing room pre-match impressed the players, too.

“He is often one of the most vocal and he was the same today,” said stand-in captain Chris Smalling.

“He’s still the same, in the changing room talking. That’s something that will never change.”

But Saturday felt like the beginning of an uncoupling between player and club. The brutality of sport resides in the speed of this process. One minute you are the totem, the next minute you are dust. Just ask Robin van Persie and Yaya Toure.

For Rooney, there will also come the realisatio­n that despite a quite extraordin­ary contributi­on over the course of 12 years – more United appearance­s than any player bar Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes and Gary Neville and a tally of 246 goals: three short of Sir Bobby Charlton as the club’s greatest – no-one is likely to be casting a bronze statue of him to sit alongside the Holy Trinity outside the stadium.

He won’t be mourned when he has left the place.

He is reaping what he sowed when he and his representa­tives have negotiated his two new contracts in the past nine years. Both were sought when he held all the cards: the first in 2010 when Ferguson was trying to wring the last drops out of his squad; the second four years later when David Moyes was desperate to keep Rooney, as Chelsea circled and Jose Mourinho tilted a skirt.

On neither of these occasions did the machinatio­ns flatter Rooney. There was the unforgetta­ble night before United played Bursaspor in the Champions League tie in 2010 when he issued a statement questionin­g the “continued ability of the club to attract the top players in the world” and “win trophies”.

Those words angered Patrice Evra, who said after the 1-0 win that “if one player does not trust the other players, that player should not play”.

Rooney said six months later: “You know, when you look at it now, how wrong was I.”

But he was £100 000-a-week richer by then, winning the contract. Study Alex Ferguson’s narrowed eyes in the images of him and Rooney marking the new deal. The manager never forgave him for the way he held United to ransom.

Moyes was just relieved to secure his own Rooney contract images, though it was not pretty in the summer of 2013. The player, keen to leave for Chelsea at the time, was “confused and angry” by the publicatio­n of several pieces stemming from interviews on the club’s pre-season tour, which he’d missed through injury. A simple telephone call would have told him his place was not at threat. In the end, money talked again and he stayed.

The new deals have created a rod for Rooney’s back. The attraction of letting a player go is far greater when he is earning £300 000-a-week.

If Rooney cannot fight his way back into the side with regularity for the significan­t games, losing him from the pay-roll would seem to have its attraction­s.

Supporters will also cut him less slack. Strikers deteriorat­e as day follows night. Charlton scored only 12 goals in each of his last two seasons before he realised the end was nigh during a 3-1 defeat to Birmingham City in March 1973.

“I chased and chased but there was nothing there for me and I lost that last belief that I could still be a United player.” But his commitment to the cause was never called into question.

The economics of the £5 billion Premier League make bronze statues harder to earn these days. Not even Thierry Henry and Alan Shearer – two modern recipients – had their agents challenge their loyalty to a club by telling them that a quarter of a million a week could be theirs if they agitated.

Smalling said Rooney would be back.

“Well, I think he’s a very experience­d guy and he’s played that many games that I think it’ll only be a matter of time before he’s back in there and firing again because he’s quality.”

But that assessment is questionab­le. The 30-year-old, one of the greatest players United have known, offers a salutary lesson for those who aspire to have their names sung through a stadium down the ages, when they are long gone. – The Independen­t

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WAYNE ROONEY

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