The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Rooney’s exit shows the scale of Scotland’s problems

Aberdeen striker joining English non-league team is the most depressing news of the summer, writes Jim White

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For a moment the World Cup suggested that we might be about to enter a new phase of footballin­g fun; an era of upbeat, cheery, good-humoured entertainm­ent. And then the pre-season arrived, smacking us collective­ly round the face with a dose of depressing reality, doing its best to smother all hint of optimism.

Over in America Jose Mourinho, his team instructed to play football almost as dour and humourless as his public persona, appears to be on a one-man campaign to extinguish the light. Meanwhile, Everton are doing their best to demonstrat­e that the game has abandoned all connection with financial reason as they secure the services of Richarliso­n, a player unlikely to feature in a most-wanted list constructe­d around his own kitchen table, for an eye-melting sum of £50 million.

But even this is as nothing in deflating the mood compared to the news emanating from Scotland. Normally the revelation that Aberdeen’s striker Adam Rooney had signed for a club in England would barely raise an eyebrow. That is what has happened for generation­s; there has long been a hosepipe sucking the ambitious down to where the money lies.

But the balance between the two footballin­g economies used to be thought of as the one defined by the likes of Virgil van Dijk leaving the persistent champions Celtic to join Southampto­n, a middling Premier League team.

This move, however, is something depressing­ly different. Because Rooney has left the club who finished runners-up in Scotland for the past four seasons, a club who once won the European Cup Winners’ Cup, to join Salford City, who have just been promoted to England’s fifth tier.

The motives for his departure were made plain when it was revealed that he will earn twice as much in the National League as he did at Scotland’s second club. Or as used to be said, there were thousands of reasons why he left, every one of which had a picture of the Queen printed on it.

Now there might appear to be exceptiona­l circumstan­ces at work here. As Accrington Stanley’s chairman, Andy Holt, angrily noted in a series of hostile tweets, Salford are an unusually well-funded operation, backed by five former Manchester United players and a Singaporea­n billionair­e.

But it was what was said by Motherwell’s manager, Stephen Robinson, that really hit home. Robinson had tried to recruit Rooney himself this summer, only to be blown out of any negotiatin­g position by Salford’s ambitious offer. The thing is, however, he was not surprised. It was not the first time it had happened to him. As manager of one of Scotland’s most establishe­d clubs he finds himself increasing­ly unable to compete with non-league sides in England. According to Robinson, the Class-of92-funded Salford are by no means alone in their ability to outbid the big guns north of the border.

“Fifty per cent of National League clubs pay more than the bottom half of the Scottish Premier League,” he says. And no figure puts the decline in Scottish competitiv­eness into quite as stark a perspectiv­e as that.

Scottish optimists were hoping that Steven Gerrard’s arrival at Rangers this summer, bringing with him several Liverpool cast-offs, might signal the start of a reversal in the usual talent drain. Not to mention, now that a challenge to Celtic hegemony has been engaged, spark a return of lucrative competitio­n in the domestic league. Sadly, for the pessimist, Rooney’s move has indicated something altogether different: the Scottish Premier League is in danger of becoming a feeder division for England’s fifth tier.

 ??  ?? Border flit: Adam Rooney has swapped Aberdeen for Salford
Border flit: Adam Rooney has swapped Aberdeen for Salford
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