Malta Independent

Manchester United face Ajax in Stockholm final

●Tonight’s final could be Rooney’s last match for Red Devils ●Justin Kluivert has a chance to follow dad’s footsteps

- Justin Kluivert

Wayne Rooney could finish his Manchester United career by hoisting a European trophy, surrounded by jubilant teammates and with fireworks exploding around him.

Still, it wouldn't be quite the end he would have envisioned after 13 years at the English club.

Rooney is set to be a substitute for United today in the Europa League final against Ajax in Stockholm, a role which the club's captain and record scorer has become increasing­ly accustomed to this season. Depending on the situation in the match, he might not even come on.

That's how it's been for most of this season, watching from afar at a club where he was once the main man.

Talk about United's key players ahead of a final that means so much to the English club, and many would say Marcus Rashford or Paul Pogba or Henrikh Mkhitaryan. Few would say Rooney. That's the reason why this game might be his last for United despite having two years left on his contract, why he has been linked for much of the past few months with a return to former club Everton, a move to MLS in the United States, or a short spell in the Chinese league.

United is moving on under Jose Mourinho and Rooney is being left behind. Speculatio­n grows that James Rodriguez will be moving to Old Trafford from Real Madrid, adding to the list of attackers who will be ahead of Rooney in the pecking order next season.

There was a symbolic moment Sunday on the final day of the Premier League season. Rooney was one of the few senior players picked for a virtually meaningles­s match against Crystal Palace — Mourinho rested most of his Europa League starters — and he was replaced in the final minutes by 16-year-old attacking midfielder Angel Gomes, who became the first player born this millennium to play in the Premier League.

Rooney applauded all corners of Old Trafford and walked off with his head down. Was he saying goodbye to the stadium he has played at since 2004, when — at 18 — he made a spectacula­r debut by scoring a hat trick in a Champions League game against Fenerbahce?

Since then, he has racked up 253 goals for United to surpass Bobby Charlton's longstandi­ng club record. He is also England's record scorer with 53 goals, again overtaking Charlton.

He has won the Premier League title five times, the FA Cup once, the League Cup three times and the Champions League once. That last trophy came in 2008 when he was part of the famous frontline containing Cristiano Ronaldo and Carlos Tevez.

Rooney is no longer the force of old, unable to influence matches in the same way or tear around the field harassing opponents. Games can pass him by and there is the fear that, after 15 years in the spotlight of the soccer world, he is simply burnt out.

In his last appearance at a news conference, prior to the second leg of the Europa League semifinals against Celta Vigo, Rooney said his priority at this stage of his career was to "play football." When asked if that meant at United, he added: "Of course."

He will end this season likely having started 25 of United's 64 games. Often, he was an unused substitute.

Mourinho said he would not sell Rooney against his wishes, so it is for the player to decide if Wednesday is the last time he dons a United jersey.

Whether he actually makes it onto the field remains to be seen.

It was a late winner from an 18year-old Patrick Kluivert that gave Ajax a 1-0 win over AC Milan in the 1995 Champions League final.

Justin Kluivert, who just turned 18, might have a chance to follow in dad's footsteps today when Ajax faces Manchester United in the Europa League final.

But although they are both forwards, these Kluiverts are not identical.

"My father was a bit taller, and he was a central attacker. And I am more on the side," said the diminutive winger, who is never afraid to take on a defender and can deliver accurate crosses for teenage teammate Kasper Dolberg in the center of Ajax's threeman front line.

Like his father in Vienna the last time Ajax won a European title, Justin is likely to be a substitute, with Bertrand Traore and Amin Younes favored to start on the flanks.

If he needs inspiratio­n for how to turn a match, Kluivert only needs to look on YouTube.

"Of course, you see lots of videos of him ... and the goal," Kluivert said of his dad's decider, a toe-poke finish with his left foot that forced the ball under goalkeeper Sebastiano Rossi just before veteran defender Franco Baresi could make a tackle. "One touch with the foot. It is nice to see."

Like his father before him, Justin Kluivert has risen through the ranks of the Ajax academy, breaking into the first team in the second half of the season after starting in the under-19 team.

After his goal in the Champions League final, Patrick Kluivert went on to play for teams including AC Milan and Barcelona. He also scored 40 goals in 79 appearance­s for the Dutch national team.

Justin is regularly in touch with his father, a technical director at Paris Saint-Germain this season, for advice and tips.

"We talk a lot and I learn from him," Kluivert said.

With just a handful of starts for Ajax, Kluivert can only dream of a future career to emulate his father. For now, his focus is purely on Stockholm and the chance to at least match his dad's final feat.

"One more thing and that is the toe poke," Justin said. "Or just to score."

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