The Star Early Edition

Exhausted Rooney looks to be near tipping point

- MARTIN SAMUEL

IT WAS only one game, and Manchester United won it anyway, but even so there was something deeply troubling about Wayne Rooney’s performanc­e at Villa Park on Friday. One touch inside the opposing penalty area in over 90 minutes, and that to kick the ball into touch to waste time, having chased it fruitlessl­y down a channel. No shots at goal, no chances, no impact whatsoever, really.

Rooney, pictured, can have these fallow spells, but they are usually brief. After getting two goals against Newcastle on Boxing Day last year he didn’t score again until February 16, a run of nine games. He is currently on eight games of blanks for Manchester United, dating back to a goal against Aston Villa on April 4.

The difference being he is now the club’s primary forward.

Before, there were others to help shoulder the burden,: Robin van Persie, Dimitar Berbatov, Carlos Tevez, Cristiano Ronaldo. This time it is Rooney’s one-man show in what is his 14th season as a profession­al footballer. Including internatio­nals, he has never played fewer than the 42 games that marked his first year with Everton. He is 30 on October 24. That workload is going to tell eventually.

As England captain there is no respite, so he will chase Sir Bobby Charlton’s goalscorin­g record again next month, despite the match in San Marino – and even the one at home to Switzerlan­d, considerin­g the state of the group – being as meaningles­s as it gets at internatio­nal level.

Is Roy Hodgson worried? Is Louis van Gaal? They should be.

Against Villa, Rooney looked as ineffectua­l as he has ever been. Only once in his profession­al career – even as a teenager at Everton – has he gone more than nine games without scoring: in his first full season with Manchester United, a stretch of 12 matches between December 31, 2005 and February 18, 2006. Barren runs of eight or nine games are fingers-of-one-hand rare, so to have two in a calendar year – even taking into account his change of role last season – is disturbing.

Does Van Gaal even know his best position any more? Every time Rooney finds a new role, the club invest heavily in that area. He plays No10, support striker or high attacking midfield: United pay top money for Juan Mata, Angel di Maria, Memphis Depay, Ashley Young and, possibly, Pedro, who can all play there, too. On Friday the job even went to Adnan Januzaj.

Last season Van Gaal was convinced he was a midfield player but that didn’t stop him buying Morgan Schneiderl­in and Bastian Schweinste­iger to go with Ander Herrera, Daley Blind and Michael Carrick.

So it is into the forward line again for Rooney.

But has he got the sharpness for it, having played 663 games and counting before his 30th birthday? That is an almost impossibly heavy load. Turning 30 on November 29, 2003, Ryan Giggs, the most exceptiona­l footballer-athlete of the modern era, had played 606 times. Rooney will be close to two seasons ahead of him, in game time.

And he’s not Giggs. We know that. He is built differentl­y, he has lived differentl­y, he takes longer to recover from injury and, at his best, combines exceptiona­l talent with bruising, often brutal physical commitment.

Giggs did his shift until the day he retired, but it wasn’t the same one that Rooney puts in.

Some who know Rooney well fear he is near to the tipping point. He is a thoroughbr­ed with the ethic of a dray horse and looks increasing­ly exhausted by it. Van Gaal must be careful from here. Going it alone for a whole season at United might leave Rooney ready for little more than the glue factory. – Daily Mail

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