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Is Our Wayne Better Than Yours?


Tooj
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Our Wayne" Is Better Than Yours.

 

I am still haunted by Wayne Rooney. Even now, sitting in my exile in the rust-belt of the Midwest, his short Everton career boomerangs back into my mind again and again. I was there in the Park End the day Wayne scored that goal. Sat there, in what - looking back - felt like a Royal box seat for Rooney's coming-of-age - I wasn't sure exactly what I was witnessing. Was Wayne going to be another false dawn like Danny Cadamarteri, the dreadlocked 17-year-old who came into the world of football feet first and hit the ground running, like a precocious young chess champ seemingly intent on playing a pickup game of speed chess with the Grand Masters.

 

We all remember what happened the day Rooney came on against a bulletproof Arsenal side. Little snapshots flicker back into my memory. Wayne's goal; looping over Seaman like a vandal's brick, a Krakatoan eruption at Goodison, my dad letting off a minute long ecstatic scream at the final whistle, and listening to the feverish hoarse voices at the train station talking about "our Wayne". The rest of this fairy-tale remains unwritten; Wayne didn't go on to drag us into a golden age, instead he left for Old Trafford. But as long as I live in the U.S. - 3,300 miles away and sheltered from his successes with Man Utd - Wayne will occupy a strange limbo in my heart. Everton were of course compensated with millions of pounds for letting him leave, but the Wayne I knew, the bullish mercurial street-fighter, I wouldn't swap him for a wilderness of millions.

 

No matter how much dirt emerges about Wayne Rooney, no matter how much the Scouse genius runs roughshod over his "Once a Blue, always a Blue" oath of fealty with obnoxious and hypocritical badge kissing, I will always regard him as a footballing God.

 

To get over Rooney's departure to Old Trafford, I treated the new version of him as a different player - and it wasn't to hard to do. Sir Alex Ferguson has straitjacketed some of his wilder tendencies, turning his feral flair and atavistic aggression into the more controlled player he wanted him to be. Whilst at Goodison, Rooney notched up 15 goals in 67 appearances, a record that - on the face of it - is inferior to his goalscoring rate at United, where he has scored 52 goals in 124 league appaearances, but that isn't taking into account Moyes' softly softly approach. Of those 67 games for Everton, 27 of them were as a substitute, and the Everton side of that time doesn't hold a torch to the current United squad.

 

When watching Wayne now you see an awe-inspiring and excellent player; but I think that he could have become even better. The early Rooney - bursting past defenders, ruthlessly direct and blinkered, known to taunt defenders by putting his hands on his hips in mock boredom, who like a belligerent matchmaker, never ceased to revel in introducing the ball to the back of the net - won't be seen at Old Trafford.

 

Say what you want about your Wayne, but OUR Wayne had it all and in many ways was uncoachable. The glorious trajectory predicted by many for Rooney hasn't quite panned out and although he is the jewel in England's crown, he is overshadowed by others such as Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Kaka, players who should have been his peers in the high altitude world of top class football.

 

Even Wayne's performances for England have suffered since he moved to Manchester. As an Everton player, Rooney scored nine goals in 17 games for England - but now he is playing under Sir Alex, his tally for England is a far more modest five goals in 25 games. Reading through the match reports during his time with Everton, you are struck by the fact that he was lauded by the press for his finishing and "killer instinct" - two things that have been removed in the lobotomised talents of the United version of Rooney.

 

Sir Alex Ferguson got it very right when trying to coach out Cristiano Ronaldo's showboating flair, but he got it wrong with Wayne, as the young Scouser's direct early self was more akin to the Brazilian Ronaldo at Barcelona - a footballing egomaniac, and a lighting rod for every attack - attributes that no longer are present in Rooney.

 

Manchester United's millions bought a star, but by separating Rooney from his boyhood club, they never got the legend.

 

Love this vid btw.

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I don't know if Rooney was ever a clinical finisher but while he is a fantastic player with the odd moment of brilliance who would walk into any of the Top 4's side I certainly think he has been overhyped. Look at all the players that people are talking about for player of the season, he isn't one of them and really hasn't ever been.

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articles spot on , roony misses so many chances now its crazy . defo not the tough clinical finisher he once was .

 

In the match against us at Old Trafford he could've had about 4/5 but didn't get one, I suppose he was a bit unlucky like.

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articles spot on , roony misses so many chances now its crazy . defo not the tough clinical finisher he once was .

 

In the match against us at Old Trafford he could've had about 4/5 but didn't get one, I suppose he was a bit shite like.

FYP

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Quality player still imo but I agree with the article, if he still had the arrogance and anger in his game that he used to have he'd be much better than his current level.

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articles spot on , roony misses so many chances now its crazy . defo not the tough clinical finisher he once was .

 

Not saying you are wrong but "not the clinical finisher he once was" sounds so funny when talking about someone so young ;)

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Look at all the players that people are talking about for player of the season, he isn't one of them and really hasn't ever been.

He should be though... He's had a very good season. ManU have been a noticeably poorer side when he's been missing. Rooney is exception when it comes to English players, the hype is justified imo.

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Look at all the players that people are talking about for player of the season, he isn't one of them and really hasn't ever been.

He should be though... He's had a very good season. ManU have been a noticeably poorer side when he's been missing. Rooney is exception when it comes to English players, the hype is justified imo.

Been better than Gerrard who always seems to get a mention regardless. Probably suffers from being overshadowed by C. Ronaldo at the same club though in regard to this.

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He was that ace to start with he was never going to live up to the hype. A hatrick in his champions league debut, unstoppable in euro 2004. If he was that good at 17/18 I thought he would be better than Maradona by the age of 21!!!

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