Bristol Post

Football Rooney is ‘levels’ above Kane, says Joey

- Sam FROST sam.frost@reachplc.com

ENGLAND captain Harry Kane became his country’s leading goalscorer last week, surpassing Wayne Rooney in the process, but Bristol Rovers manager Joey Barton believes his fellow Evertonian retains the status as the better player at their respective peaks.

Kane scored from the penalty spot against Italy in Naples on Thursday as the Three Lions beat the Azzurri away from home for the first time since 1961, and the Tottenham Hotspur star followed that with an instinctiv­e finish in a 2-0 win over Ukraine at Wembley on Sunday as Gareth Southgate’s side made a strong start to their Euro 2024 qualifying campaign.

Those goals took Kane’s tally to 55 in an England shirt, two clear of his predecesso­r as captain, Wayne Rooney. Naturally, the changing of the guard atop the scoring chart has stoked some debate about the two players, and Barton - who represente­d England against Spain in 2007, weighed in on social media.

“People comparing Wayne Rooney and Harry Kane?” Barton tweeted. “WR in a completely different stratosphe­re. Levels and levels and levels above.”

Barton’s tweet was accompanie­d with a screenshot of another user’s post, which played down Kane’s record by highlighti­ng some of the sides he scored the majority of goals against including San Marino, Panama, Andorra... and Scotland.

Rooney (who found the target twice against Scotland and five in matches with San Marino) made 120 appearance­s for his country, scoring 53 times. His best moments in an England shirt were probably at Euro 2004, when the then-Everton phenom burst on to the internatio­nal stage with glittering performanc­es before being cruelly forced off in the quarter-finals with a broken foot.

From that moment, his performanc­es in tournament­s were underwhelm­ing by the huge standards he set himself in a Manchester United shirt in the Premier League, although he was admittedly hampered by injuries in the lead-up to both the 2006 and 2010 World Cups. His career ended with just one World Cup goal, scoring the equaliser against Uruguay in the 2014 group stage before Luis Suarez’s late winner that effectivel­y eliminated Roy Hodgson’s side.

Kane, however, has been more productive in tournament football. He failed to produce at Euro 2016, but he starred in England’s runs to the 2018 World Cup semi-final and the Euro 2020 final, winning the golden boot in the former. The 29-year-old scored twice in the 2020 World Cup in Qatar in December, but he missed the decisive penalty as England were eliminated in quarter-final against France.

Ultimately, comparing two very different strikers is a difficult task. Very few players had comparable peaks to Rooney, but Kane’s longevity as one of the best strikers in the world for several seasons, delivering 12 major tournament goals in the process, makes it an intriguing conversati­on.

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 ?? Pictures: Getty Images ?? Wayne Rooney during an England internatio­nal in 2014 and Harry Kane with the trophy presented to him on Sunday after becoming England’s record goalscorer
Pictures: Getty Images Wayne Rooney during an England internatio­nal in 2014 and Harry Kane with the trophy presented to him on Sunday after becoming England’s record goalscorer

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