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Wayne Rooney

July 18th, 2013 by G Waldorf

There is little doubt about it, the biggest transfer story of the summer, certainly in the EPL centres around Wayne Rooney, and his potential / possible / probable transfer from Manchester United to Chelsea .

This saga started way back in March 2013 when Sir Alex Ferguson left Rooney out the starting line up for what was United’s biggest game of the season, the second leg Champions League tie against Real Madrid. By starting with Danny Welbeck, who was given the job of closing down Xabi Alonso (a role he did wonderfully until Nani was dismissed) Ferguson told the world that he didn’t trust Rooney for such an important game. Rooney, for all his bluster and effort, is not one to follow the manager’s brief. United fans will cheer when Rooney chases back to close down an attack, but that isn’t what he is in the team for. His card was well and truly marked.

Ferguson then played Rooney in an unfamiliar midfield role, in which he did a superb job, especially in the Aston Villa game, where his range of passing was displayed with spectacular results for Robin Van Persie. Rooney rightfully earned plaudits for his performance in that game, a game which United sealed the EPL title. Perhaps Ferguson was giving Rooney a chance to become the next Paul Scholes, and why not? His tackling is better than Scholes’s, his passing almost as good, he rarely gives the ball away and his first touch arguably better. Then there is his eye for goals, a perfect midfielder? Rooney could be the new Scholes, the problem is he doesn’t want to be.

Rooney is a player who craves to be ‘the big man’. He has to be the number one, and since the summer arrival of Robin Van Persie, Rooney has not been number one. He coped with playing second fiddle to Ronaldo for a couple of seasons because he knew Ronaldo was eventually headed for Real Madrid, but RVP is going nowhere, and Rooney doesn’t like it.

It is this ‘big man’ syndrome that means Rooney won’t like a shuffle back into midfield, which is ridiculous. Think of the best players over the last 20 years and many if not most have been midfielders. Zidane, Figo, Scholes, Kaka, Keane, Lampard, Gerrard, Xavi, Iniesta, Fabregas this list goes on. These players are heroes and Rooney could be among them.

The saga continued when Ferguson dropped Rooney entirely from his final few game squads, telling the world’s press that Rooney had submitted a transfer request. Rooney subsequently denied this, and in the last few weeks new United boss David Moyes has stated that he wasn’t party to the conversations, but that Rooney was training well and super fit. All seemed settled.

Chelsea’s Jose Mourinho, when asked by a journo stated that he can’t talk about a player at another club, but then proceeds to do just that saying “I like the player very much”. However, even at this point, all is calm, and even I assumed Rooney was staying at Old Trafford. Mourinho was however, doing his best to unsettle Rooney, it seems David Moyes is on Mourinho’s radar for mind games already. Will Moyes prove to be a soft target. No chance.

In early July the saga erupts again, with Rooney travelling home from United’s far east tour with a ‘sore hamstring’, as we all know the best thing to do when suffering with a hamstring pull is to get on a plane and fly 15 hours half way round the world, and David Moyes tells the press that Rooney is important for United should they get an injury to Van Persie, as he wants options. Was this a huge error on behalf of Moyes? Did he accidentally alienate a player he has known since he was 15 years old, was it a slip of the tongue? No.

David Moyes is a very careful and considerate speaker in front of the press. He is renowned for asking journos to rephrase questions, so he can be ultra clear in their intent. He is famed for always giving answers that cannot be interpreted any other way, there is no way he made a mistake. What he said about Rooney was calculated and deliberate, but why?

I have a strong feeling that Sir Alex Ferguson is still very much pulling the strings here, and between him, Moyes and United CEO Ed Woodward, are engineering a position where Rooney is forced to hand in a transfer request. They want rid of Rooney. It is simple, but in doing so they want to ensure that he is seen publically to be engineering a move himself. The reasons why will probably never be known, why not just negotiate a deal with Chelsea behind closed doors and sell the player?

It could stem back to 2010 when Rooney embarrassed United and Ferguson by publically demanding a transfer to neighbours Manchester City, at the time United had no plan B so talked Rooney round with increased wages believed to be £250,000 per week ($400,000) and the talk of bringing in world class talent. Ironically the arrival of two of those players has pushed Rooney down the pecking order. Van Persie has eclipsed Rooney as the first name on the team sheet, and proved his point by winning the EPL Golden Boot in his first season. In terms of goal scoring ability, RVP is a far better player than Rooney. However, it is also the arrival of Shinji Kagawa that has further threatened Rooney’s place. If Rooney isn’t playing up front, he’d play in the hole between midfield and attack. Kagawa is clearly United’s future in this position. Rooney is pushed further afield, literally.

It could stem from Rooney’s advisors approaching Chelsea, and prompting Mourinho’s “I like the player” quote. It could stem from United’s belief that Rooney is simply not the player he once was, and they don’t rate him as a player anymore.

Whichever the case, it is clear that United, despite public statement to the contrary, want rid of Rooney, Chelsea want to buy Rooney and Rooney wants to play at Stamford Bridge.

Chelsea have made one bid for Rooney, which United leaked was £10m ($18m) plus United’s choice of Juan Mata or David Luiz. This was rejected by United…well first bids always are. Chelsea denied any player swap was involved and this was United’s way of bettering Chelsea. You want to unsettle one of our players? We’ll raise you, and unsettle two of yours. Jose Mourinho-1 David Moyes-2.

If Chelsea had offered £10m plus Juan Mata, you’d have to assume United would have ripped their hand off.

Mourinho just last night stated that Rooney was his one remaining transfer target, and he had no second option. Chelsea will go all out to sign Rooney, and United appear to hold all the cards. They are happy to let Rooney see out the two years on his contract, have no desire to be openly seen to be selling England’s best striker to an EPL rival, and already have a superb strike force with RVP, Hernandez and Welbeck (maybe not Welbeck), plus have Kagawa to support. Chelsea on the other hand have the misfiring Torres, Ba and erm, that’s it.

Where will this end? Rooney will be at Chelsea come the start of the season and Chelsea will have paid a probable near British record fee to get him. Maybe not quite the utterly ludicrous £50m they paid Liverpool for Fernando Torres, but the deal be it cash only or cash plus Mata, Luiz, Hazard, Cech, Oscar and Denis Wise will be reported as being worth a lot of money.

Rooney can currently be backed at odds of $15.00 to finish as EPL top scorer with Sportsbet. This is a superb price. Don’t think of the price being Wayne Rooney at United, playing second fiddle to the virtuoso RVP, think of Rooney up front for Chelsea being fed by Hazard, Oscar and Mata (provided United don’t sign them all), he will score a hatful. 2014 is World Cup year, Rooney will want to ensure he is England’s ‘big man’.

Keep abreast (terrific word that) of all the latest transfer news, who has moved where and for how much with our excellent Transfer Watch feature.

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