Daily Mail

LVG: Beat City then finish third

Wayne’s in perfect position to win derby

- By IAN LADYMAN Northern Football Correspond­ent

LOUIS VAN GAAL has admitted he is dreaming of a victory over Manchester City he believes could propel his team to the top-three Barclays Premier League finish that would prove his team’s doubters wrong. Manchester United boss Van Gaal finds his team favourites ahead of tomorrow’s derby at Old Trafford and said: ‘I dream of it. Every player should dream of the victory. Of course I want to win because it’s a big step up the table also. If we win then third place is available. ‘A few months ago, nobody would have thought that, apart from me. If we win then the position in the table is good as we would then almost certainly be qualified for the top four. And if we are third it’s better than the goal we set.’ City will take a chance on captain Vincent Kompany despite an injured hamstring and the defending champions will face a hugely motivated United side. City manager Manuel Pellegrini insisted he was unimpresse­d by United’s recent revival, saying: ‘They brought a lot of good players so for me the strange thing was why they didn’t do it earlier. We need to improve but we are not a mess.’ City have won the last four derbies but Van Gaal said: ‘That’s not my history. I lost one game 1-0. That’s my history.’

TO MARK the point at which Manchester United’s season really began to turn around, you have to go back further than the win against Tottenham last month. The truth is that a dark, cold night at Preston North End in mid-February is more significan­t.

United were poor that night in the FA Cup at Deepdale, coming from behind to win.

That, however, was the night Wayne Rooney was restored to a centre-forward position, the night Louis van Gaal finally began to realise the best place from which his best player and captain should lead was from the front.

United actually lost their next game at Swansea but have subsequent­ly won their next five in the league, with Rooney scoring four times. Incredibly, given the pattern of this season, they head into tomorrow’s derby game with Manchester City as slight favourites.

Prior to that night in Lancashire, Rooney was on the verge of knocking on his manager’s door to ask for an explanatio­n about his deployment in the centre of midfield. It seemed as though Van Gaal was about to experience his first very real problem at Old Trafford.

Whether he sniffed something in the air, we will never know. But Van Gaal performed a sharp volte face at just the right time and Rooney has gone on to become the most significan­t figure in United’s return to relevance.

At Old Trafford tomorrow, just as he has since Cristiano Ronaldo left for Real Madrid almost six years ago, Rooney represents the most serious threat to City’s prospects.

Prior to the win over Tottenham, Rooney stood before his teammates in Manchester’s Lowry Hotel and delivered an impassione­d call to arms. He is once more the central figure at his club, in more ways than one.

‘I think some people mix up scoring goals with form,’ said Van Gaal yesterday. ‘For us Wayne is very important as a player, as a captain and because he can score goals. But he can do that from midfield, too. The last goal he scored — against Aston Villa — came when he was playing in midfield.’

Van Gaal’s mid- season deployment of Rooney remains a sensitive subject. No coach likes to admit he may have been wrong. All that matters now, though, is the 29-year- old’s current trajectory, which is undoubtedl­y upwards.

His name is written right through recent derby history of course. He is the fixture’s record goalscorer and the scorer of one of its most spectacula­r goals, that remarkable overhead kick back in 2011 that some City supporters, rather oddly, still maintain came off his shin.

Previously there had been the transfer saga of autumn 2010.

Courted heavily by City as he prevaricat­ed over a new United contract, Rooney most definitely had his head turned. To this day, rumours persist of meetings in an undergroun­d car park at the Etihad Stadium — that one has always seemed a little fanciful — and promises of a salary in excess of £300,000 per week.

What we do know is that there was a point when City and their manager Roberto Mancini thought the transfer was about to happen. So, too, did many United fans. ‘Join City and You’re Dead’ warned graffiti on a city- centre poster carrying his image at the time.

Had it done so then these fixtures would probably never have been the same again. As it is, derby day now finds Rooney even more fired up and motivated than ever.

City have won the last four and one only has to scroll through the tapes to watch the England centre forward’s body language, especially during last season’s 4-1 reverse at the Etihad, to see exactly how that has gone down.

Rooney may be a Liverpudli­an but he understand­s the City rivalry better than most at his club. Tomorrow in Stretford, Rooney has the opportunit­y to ease United clear of Manuel Pellegrini’s team.

When asked yesterday if he has a leader of the United captain’s ilk in his squad the City manager was less than convincing.

‘Every squad has different kinds of personalit­ies, different players,’ said Pellegrini. ‘All of them have different options to motivate in different ways.

‘I don’t think it’s good to analyse the personalit­y of our captain. In a squad you must have not just one leader, not just the captain.’

City captain Vincent Kompany has been struggling with a hamstring injury but is expected to play tomorrow, albeit with discomfort.

He has admitted Rooney’s volley of 2011 stayed with him for some time and it’s little wonder.

It remains a stand-out memory of recent fixtures and Rooney now finds himself in the perfect position to contribute some more.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/PA ?? Warming up: Rooney and (inset) Aguero
GETTY IMAGES/PA Warming up: Rooney and (inset) Aguero
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