The Mail on Sunday

Does anyone want Rooney?

Mid-June, no offers... striker is marooned in no-man’s land

- By Ian Herbert

IT WAS a year ago today we awaitedted the last great re-invention of Wayne yne Rooney—the new h old ingng midfielder against Russia on whose ose mood, touch and form England’s d’s 2016 European Championsh­ip hip campaign depended.

He would be the axis around nd which t he ‘ young bucks’ and nd ‘gazelles’ of England would operate,ate the manager Roy Hodgson declared at the time, oozing admiration for a pre-tournament pep talk the player had given.

The crash which followed for Rooney has been steeper and more spectacula­r than that of any Englishman of his ilk. It left him this weekend marooned on a beach on the Aegean island of Mykonos with his wife Coleen — deposed as England captain by Tottenham’s Harry Kane, estranged from the national side and stranded in a no-man’s land as the player no club side wants to buy.

Though it has been anticipate­d for some time that mid-June would be the moment when an announceme­nt might come about his future, there have been no concrete offers for the 31-year-old. The prospect grows of Rooney watching from the sidelines during the last year of his £300,000-a-week contract, as Jose Mourinho’s new signings set about the job he had thought would be his.

Mourinho is launching a charm offensive for Real Madrid striker Alvaro Morata, just as he did for Rooney when trying to bring him to Chelsea four summers ago. That would condemn Rooney to a place down the Old Trafford pecking order. Mourinho is only willing to play him as a striker or No 10.

The Mail on Sunday understand­s that Mourinho has sent text messages to Morata and placed at least one telephone call with him, seeking to persuade him that he should join United as they return to the Champions League. As well as an opening £52 million offer, United have tabled comfortabl­y the best package for the player, who has also been pursued by Chelsea, AC Milan and Juventus.

They are thought to have offered the 24-year-old Spain internatio­nal more than the European champions are currently paying him, with commercial add-ons which neither Italian side can match. Chelsea do not seem prepared to shatter their salary structure to buy him.

Morata, who will play for Spain in Macedonia today, wants to feel a more important part of a set-up after years of playing second fiddle at Real and Juventus, us, with Cristiano Ronaldo o and Karim Benzema the superstars at the Bernabeu.

Mourinho’s pursuit of the player, after the collapse of efforts to bring top target Antoine e Griezmann from Atletico co Madrid t o Old Trafford, ord, confirms what Rooney has known for months: that his United days are over.

He aspires to remain a Premier League player, though only Everton offer real attraction and the pay cut involved there will be monumental. It is difficult to see Everton even stretching to £100,000 a week, given that RomeluRom Lukaku has been theirthei previous highest earnerear on £70,000. A move to Goodison Park might h have been eased by the Belgian joining United, with Rooney being o offered in part e exchange. But Lukaku se seems determined to retu return to Chelsea. Chin China is an option, yet the intense speculatio­n which surfaced about such a move in February was quickly countered by those close to him, who insisted that he wanted to fight for the United place which had slipped from his grasp. Money aside, however, Rooney and China fundamenta­lly do not fit.

Factors which will not suit him include the lack of spoken English and the relatively primitive medical set-ups. Word has percolated down from a number of players who have travelled from the west to play in t he Chinese Super League — including Carlos Tevez — that the humidity is unbearable.

The US would offer more appeal and MLS would welcome Rooney with open arms, having lost both Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard. But one franchise owner revealed that the league, with its long-haul away games and range of climates, might ‘not be easy’ for Rooney. The prospects of another Premier League side seeking to tempt him are not extinguish­ed, however — not l east because Rooney still displays evidence that he is worth a bid.

His goal-per-game ratio for United in the Premier League last season wa s second only to Zlatan Ibrahimovi­ch’s, albeit he managed only five from 15 starts.

Before the Russia match which was that new beginning, a Russian journalist told Rooney there was ‘a popular opinion in the Russian team that Wayne Rooney is not the same as he was several years ago’.

He replied with dignity. ‘Everyone who watches football is entitled to his opinion,’ he said. ‘I know the qualities I have and I don’t have to sit here and defend myself.’

He just did not foresee the 12 months of hell which lay ahead.

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