Wayne Rooney may have been absent when Wolfsburg drove the final nail
into Manchester United’s Champions League coffin on Tuesday and also
missed the previous defeat at PSV in the opening group fixture, but that
makes him no less culpable for the embarrassing early exit which has
left everyone at Old Trafford reeling.
The rigid style of play demanded by Louis van Gaal has certainly done
nobody any favours, but Rooney’s complete lack of form this season has
had a defining impact on United having lost much of their edge, even
though he has been afforded countless allowances as the club’s captain
and icon.
Save for his hat-trick against a disappointing and increasingly
desperate Club Brugge in the Champions League play-off tie, Rooney has
regularly failed to create any sort of danger for opponents whether
playing as a main striker or off the shoulder of the front man as a
No.10.
He is constantly on the back foot whenever a 50/50 ball is there to
be competed for, suggesting the extra yard of pace lost in the body has
not been sufficiently compensated by a sharpness in the mind. If Van
Gaal is pinning his hopes on the 30-year-old to help United through
their difficult patch, as currently appears to be the case, then it
would seem he is backing the wrong horse.
Rooney has netted a total of 237 goals for United, but the days when
fans filling local pubs before matches at Old Trafford would chant his
name long and loud, comparing him to Pele, have long gone. Look for
videos of such instances on YouTube and you’ll find they are anything
between four and eight years old.