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'How wrong was I?' – Wayne Rooney regrets trying to leave United

After questioning Manchester United's ambition last autumn the striker has been made to look daft by their form recently



  • Wayne Rooney rarely indulges in self-analysis but admits he felt he owed it to the fans to make up for trying to leave last year. Photograph: Jamie Mcdonald/Getty Images

    The expression on Wayne Rooney's face was bordering on embarrassment. He shifted on his feet a little. Then he blew out his cheeks, shook his head and, in four words, tried to sum up the lingering sense of awkwardness. "How wrong was I?" he said, and no one listening to him could have been mistaken: this was a statement rather than a question.
    These are the moments when Rooney can look back at the troubled times last autumn and shudder when he thinks of the potential glories he might have missed had he not pulled himself back from leaving Manchester United – or, to borrow Sir Alex Ferguson's line, realised that the cow in the next field might not be any better than the cow he already milked.
    "Big trouble" are the words Patrice Evra uses to recall that chilly October night against Bursaspor when Rooney went public with his grievances and United's supporters demonised the Liverpudlian with spiteful banners ("Coleen forgave you, Wayne, we won't" and "Who's the ***** now, Wayne?"). Evra remembers "everyone was criticising Manchester United that night, everyone was saying it was the end of the empire".
    That was Rooney's fault, the nadir of a season that has endured some excruciating lows to go alongside the exhilarating highs that culminated in Schalke being out‑passed, out‑thought, outfought and eventually outclassed in Gelsenkirchen. It has been a wild graph of ups and downs but, as Rooney boarded flight TK3671 from Dortmund to Manchester on Wednesday, this was a man contemplating an uncommon form of job satisfaction and just glad – relieved, if we are being truthful – that he was given the opportunity to change his mind.
    "I made a mistake," he volunteered and, up close, you could detect he felt uncomfortable with all the self-analysis – maybe even a little foolish. "You know, when I look back at it now, I'll say it again, how wrong was I? I'm willing to admit that. I've apologised and ever since then I have wanted to try to prove myself again to the fans. I feel I am doing that now."
    Everything is coming together. Rooney had doubted the club's transfer policy after a summer in which they had recruited the unheralded Javier Hernández, Chris Smalling and, most perplexing of all, Bébé. Now the team he suspected would fall short have authentic hope of following up the near-certainty of a record 19th league title with the third European Cup of Ferguson's reign.
    Rooney has seen enough of Hernández to proclaim him as "the buy of the century" and, after looking like someone who was falling out of love with the sport as the leaves started falling from the trees, the man United's supporters serenade as "the white Pelé" has scored 12 times in the 21 games since the turn of the year.
    "I'm delighted with my form at the minute and I'm grateful to the fans for supporting me through it [his transfer demands]," he said, nursing a cup of coffee and noticeably relaxed compared with the player who had concluded that Old Trafford was a place where his career would stagnate rather than flourish. "I hope I've repaid the fans now. I certainly feel vindicated [for changing my mind]. It's going to be a great end to the season if we can get to Wembley and win a Champions League final as well as the league."
    It has been a long road to redemption and everything was so fraught at one stage there will always be some United supporters who consider there is a difference between being a great football player and a great football man. Yet the volume has been turned down on the conspiracy theorists who suspected United had tied Rooney to a new contract purely to hike his transfer price in the summer. "I'm 100% committed to this club," the player said, and this time he deliberately made eye contact.
    Rooney spent much of his spare time in Gelsenkirchen telling the 280,000 followers he has recruited in his first week on Twitter of his love for the Beatles and the Stereophonics, answering fans' questions and swapping the kind of lovey-dovey messages with his wife, Coleen, that suggests he is repairing the damage that has been done in his private life.
    The mere fact that @wazzaroon08 has felt comfortable enough to register on the social network site where supporters can tell him exactly what they think – Darron Gibson was hounded off within hours this week – is another reason in itself to consider he is putting the traumas of 2010, his annus horribilis, behind him.
    At the same time there is clear evidence that his relationship with Ferguson is fully healed, from the photographs of them braying with laughter during training at the Veltins Arena on Monday to the manager's affectionate references to "Wazza" in his post‑match interviews.
    "It's been a lot different [in the second half of the season]," Rooney said. "I am a lot happier in my life, a lot happier with the way I'm playing. It's almost been like having to settle down again and I've done that now."
    The lesson of history is that controversies will always attach themselves to Rooney for as long as he is playing. But for now at least Wayne's world, once again, feels like a happy place to be.

 
Manchester United must beware 'wounded' Arsenal, warns Patrice Evra

• United play third-placed Arsenal at Emirates on Sunday
• Evra: 'It is all or nothing for them so that is a danger'



  • Press Association
  • guardian.co.uk, Thursday 28 April 2011 09.54 BST <li class="history">Article history Manchester United's Patrice Evra challenges Schalke's Alexander Baumjohann. Photograph: John Peters/Man Utd via Getty Images

    Patrice Evra has warned Manchester United to beware the wounded animal at the Emirates Stadium on Sunday.
    With a place in next month's Champions League final at Wembley virtually assured following their win over Schalke, United's main focus is now on regaining the Premier League title. They lead the table by six points ahead with four games to go and still have to play their closest challengers, Chelsea, so much now rests on this weekend's match.
    Arsenal have all but blown their own title hopes having taken just two points from their past three games, but Evra said: "You have to fear the wounded animal. It is all or nothing for Arsenal so that is a danger. They will want to show they can still win the title."
    Arsenal's sudden collapse appears to bear out Evra's controversial statement earlier this season that manager Arsène Wenger needs to decide whether he is managing a football club or a finishing school for young players. However the 29-year-old has warned against United believing Sunday will be easy.
    "We have a good record at Arsenal but statistics can change so quickly. Everyone used to say how Arsenal kept losing to Chelsea and then they beat them. We kept losing at Stamford Bridge but won there in the Champions League.
    "Our record at the Emirates will hurt them and they will want to do something about it."
    He added: "Sunday is a massive game for us. It is a great opportunity. There is still a lot of pressure on us. If we lose and Chelsea have beaten Tottenham on Saturday, they will only be three points behind and they have to come to Manchester. That is what we have to think about now."

 
Cristiano Ronaldo unhappy with José Mourinho's defensive tactics

&#8226; Ronaldo criticises coach's approach to semi-final first leg
&#8226; And Messi had it easy: 'I'd like to play against 10 men too'



  • Sid Lowe in Madrid
  • guardian.co.uk, Thursday 28 April 2011 13.25 BST <li class="history">Article history Cristiano Ronaldo says he was frustrated by Real Madrid's negative tactics against Barcelona. Photograph: Andres Kudacki/AP

    Cristiano Ronaldo has revealed he was unhappy with José Mourinho's defensive tactics against Barcelona, while implying that Real Madrid would have settled for a 0-0 draw at the Bernabéu.
    Asked if he liked the kind of football Madrid had played in the turbulent 2-0 defeat in the Champions League semi-final first leg, the £80m winger said: "No, I don't like it but I have to adapt to what is asked of me." He added: "This is the way it is. We have a strategy."
    Ronaldo cut a picture of frustration. Having initially been asked to play as a lone striker he was seen imploring his reluctant team-mates to get forward and support him. When he was then switched to the right to take on Carles Puyol, who was being played out of position at left-back, he found himself starved of the ball as Mourinho's side pursued their policy of containment.
    "Being honest, it is true that we did not have a shot on target when it was 11 against 11 but 0-0 is not a bad result at home. We could have gone [to Camp Nou] and scored. We didn't play well but the game was under control."
    Before the match the talk was of a head-to-head with Leo Messi over who could lay claim to being the world's greatest player but in the event the Portuguese winger found himself overshadowed.
    "Messi?" he replied, when asked about the Argentinian's two goals. "It's easier against 10 men. I would like to play against 10 men too, like he does. It is no excuse but they always play against ten men.
    "I don't understand why this always happens. I couldn't talk to the referee because if I had I would have got a card for sure. The ref sent off Pepe: what more can I say? Every year is the same.
    "I feel bad for us and for Mourinho &#8211; because it always happens to him. Barcelona are a great team but these guys have a lot of power off the pitch too. Chelsea, Inter, Arsenal. It's always the same. Is that a coincidence?"

 
Cristiano Ronaldo unhappy with José Mourinho's defensive tactics

• Ronaldo criticises coach's approach to semi-final first leg
• And Messi had it easy: 'I'd like to play against 10 men too'



  • Sid Lowe in Madrid
  • guardian.co.uk, Thursday 28 April 2011 13.25 BST <li class="history">Article history Cristiano Ronaldo says he was frustrated by Real Madrid's negative tactics against Barcelona. Photograph: Andres Kudacki/AP

    Cristiano Ronaldo has revealed he was unhappy with José Mourinho's defensive tactics against Barcelona, while implying that Real Madrid would have settled for a 0-0 draw at the Bernabéu.
    Asked if he liked the kind of football Madrid had played in the turbulent 2-0 defeat in the Champions League semi-final first leg, the £80m winger said: "No, I don't like it but I have to adapt to what is asked of me." He added: "This is the way it is. We have a strategy."
    Ronaldo cut a picture of frustration. Having initially been asked to play as a lone striker he was seen imploring his reluctant team-mates to get forward and support him. When he was then switched to the right to take on Carles Puyol, who was being played out of position at left-back, he found himself starved of the ball as Mourinho's side pursued their policy of containment.
    "Being honest, it is true that we did not have a shot on target when it was 11 against 11 but 0-0 is not a bad result at home. We could have gone [to Camp Nou] and scored. We didn't play well but the game was under control."
    Before the match the talk was of a head-to-head with Leo Messi over who could lay claim to being the world's greatest player but in the event the Portuguese winger found himself overshadowed.
    "Messi?" he replied, when asked about the Argentinian's two goals. "It's easier against 10 men. I would like to play against 10 men too, like he does. It is no excuse but they always play against ten men.
    "I don't understand why this always happens. I couldn't talk to the referee because if I had I would have got a card for sure. The ref sent off Pepe: what more can I say? Every year is the same.
    "I feel bad for us and for Mourinho – because it always happens to him. Barcelona are a great team but these guys have a lot of power off the pitch too. Chelsea, Inter, Arsenal. It's always the same. Is that a coincidence?"
 
Roo request was a 'mistake'


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Updated Apr 28, 2011 9:44 AM ET
Wayne Rooney is still "trying to prove himself again" to Manchester United's fans after accepting he made a mistake in requesting a transfer.
The 25-year-old England striker looked to be on his way out of Old Trafford after confirming in October he wanted to leave the club after claiming chief executive David Gill had failed to give him assurances about United's ability to attract top-class talent in the future.

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Blackburn vs. Bolton
Blackpool vs. Stoke City
Sunderland vs. Fulham
West Brom vs. Aston Villa
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Chelsea vs. Tottenham
Sun., May 1
Birmingham vs. Wolves
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Man City vs. West Ham
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Rooney made a swift U-turn and within days had signed a lucrative new deal with United, and after playing a key role in the club's challenge for Champions League and Premier League success he has admitted he is driven by a desire to right the wrongs of October.
"I made a mistake," Rooney told the Guardian.
"You know, when I look back at it now, I'll say it again, how wrong was I? I'm willing to admit that. I've apologised and ever since then I have wanted to try to prove myself again to the fans. I feel I am doing that now."
Rooney has scored 12 goals in 21 games since the start of 2011, the latest coming in the 2-0 win over Schalke in Gelsenkirchen which has put United within touching distance of the Champions League final at Wembley on May 28.
"I'm delighted with my form at the minute and I'm grateful to the fans for supporting me through (the transfer demands)," he added.
"I hope I've repaid the fans now. I certainly feel vindicated (for deciding to stay). It's going to be a great end to the season if we can get to Wembley and win a Champions League final as well as the league."
"I am a lot happier in my life, a lot happier with the way I'm playing. It's almost been like having to settle down again and I've done that now."
 
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  • Report Abuse BF7_CFC
    • 4/28/2011 8:37:19 AM
    He's a bum.
  • Report Abuse PhiladelphiaHotSpur
    • 4/28/2011 8:32:15 AM
    LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL Covert........

    Karlos: R.I.P. after that one.......

    But, interesting to see Rooney's reason for the stance he took..............lets see what happens in the STW.
  • Report Abuse DynamoGunnerReborn
    • 4/28/2011 7:19:58 AM
    "hammered in the dumper". lol

    I'm adding that to my lexicon of euphemisms. you learn something new everyday.
  • Report Abuse RedDevilz
    • 4/28/2011 7:03:49 AM
    I agree, he's played his part in no small measure in 2nd half of the season. With him the team is much better than without. At least he now sees (hopefully) what this team can achieve.
  • Report Abuse Covert74
    • 4/28/2011 6:55:50 AM
    Good point RD. There is no doubt that Rooney has not conducted himself very well. Asking for the transfer was a stupid thing to do. However I do not think United would be where they are in the CL and PL without him. His form over the last couple of months has been better and better. If he is not scoring goals then he is helping to create them. He has been a big help in masking United's midfield problems.
  • Report Abuse RedDevilz
    • 4/28/2011 6:37:40 AM
    I see what karlos is saying but this is also a SLAP in the face to rooney. This is the same team he called 'not good enough'. And this team virtually has 1 foot in yet another CL final and couple of good games away from yet another PL title.
  • Report Abuse Covert74
    • 4/28/2011 6:03:05 AM
    Whats pathetic is the way you continue to let yourself get hammered in the dumper by the false promises of Wenger. Six years of getting hammered. Ah but you like it don't you.
  • Report Abuse karlosthejackal
    • 4/28/2011 4:06:19 AM
    Yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawn.

    Fergie and Man Utd let themselves get bent over and hammered in the dumper by this lout.

    Pathetic.
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Man United can close in on 19th title at Arsenal






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Updated Apr 28, 2011 9:03 AM ET
What was shaping up to be the title decider for Manchester United and Arsenal is now a chance for Alex Ferguson's side to all but secure the Premier League trophy while compounding the hosts' disappointing end to the season.
United goes to Arsenal on Sunday nine points ahead of third-place Arsenal and six in front of Chelsea with four games remaining.
Arsenal has won just one of its last seven matches while United has produced four victories in that time to raise the prospects of a record 19th English title next month.
Chelsea remains the biggest threat to United's ambitions after a recent revival, but Carlo Ancelotti's side will have to beat Tottenham on Saturday to maintain the pressure.
 
Dalglish won't take Carroll risk


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Updated Apr 28, 2011 6:29 AM ET
Liverpool striker Andy Carroll will be given every chance to prove his fitness ahead of Sunday's visit of former club Newcastle.
The Reds' £35million record signing missed the 5-0 win over Birmingham with a knee injury but will be keen to recover in time to face his hometown club - whom he left in January - at Anfield this weekend.

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Boss Kenny Dalglish was guarded on the England international's current state of fitness but stressed they would not take a risk if he was not 100%.
"It's only Thursday and there's a few days to go yet," said the Scot.
"I don't think nature knows it is Newcastle so if he's not fit, he's not fit.
"For Andy it is a poignant game but if he's not fit we can't do anything about that."
 
Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola refuses to respond to Mourinho tirade

&#8226; José Mourinho furious over 'plot' to put Barca in final
&#8226; Guardiola focused instead on 'incredible' Lionel Messi



  • Press Association
  • guardian.co.uk, Thursday 28 April 2011 09.37 BST <li class="history">Article history Real Madrid coach José Mourinho, right, shakes hands with Barcelona's Pep Guardiola before the match. Photograph: Sergio Perez/Reuters

    Pep Guardiola hailed playmaker Lionel Messi's starring role in Barcelona's Champions League semi-final first leg win over Real Madrid, but refused to respond to allegations made by José Mourinho against his side.
    Messi scored both goals in the 2-0 victory at the Bernabéu, the second of which was a brilliant individual effort, to take his tally to a remarkable 52 in all competitions for Barça this season.
    It also moved him up to third in Barça's all-time list of record scorers with 179 goals, leaving him behind only César Rodríguez (235) and Ladislau Kubala (194).
    Guardiola said of Messi and his memorable second goal: "It's not the first time he's done that, he has a wonderful ability to take players on. He's become the club's third highest goalscorer at just 23 and at a 100-year-old club, it's absolutely incredible. We are lucky to have him."
    But Guardiola, who would not comment on Mourinho's comments claiming bias in Barcelona's favour, is not assuming the tie is already over heading into next week's second leg.
    "We are a step away from the final, but we will carry on respecting Madrid, very, very much. If we start to believe we are already through, Madrid can punish us. We don't believe we are already there."

 
Reds chief hails Cole attitude


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Updated Apr 28, 2011 6:37 AM ET
Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish has praised Joe Cole's commitment and said that his weekend goal could turn out to be very important.
Cole has endured a difficult first year with Liverpool, having hoped that his move to Anfield last summer would rejuvenate a career that had stagnated following a couple of injury-plagued seasons at Chelsea.

Wed., Apr. 27
Fulham 3-0 Bolton | Recap
Sat., Apr. 30
Blackburn vs. Bolton
Blackpool vs. Stoke City
Sunderland vs. Fulham
West Brom vs. Aston Villa
Wigan vs. Everton
Chelsea vs. Tottenham
Sun., May 1
Birmingham vs. Wolves
Liverpool vs. Newcastle
Arsenal vs. Man Utd
Man City vs. West Ham
BPL Scores | Table | Fixtures


He has struggled to find his best form for the Reds and, after falling down the pecking order under Dalglish, speculation had started to surface over a possible summer departure.
However, the 29-year-old offered a reminder of his qualities with a late cameo in Saturday's 5-0 victory over Birmingham that he capped with a goal.
Dalglish has shrugged off suggestions that Cole's last-gasp strike did not make a huge amount of difference and instead believes it could prove to be a significant turning point.
"Joe's goal wasn't a little contribution, it could be massive for him," said the Liverpool manager.
"He has not had as many opportunities as he'd have liked because of injuries and suspension.
"Joe has had a difficult time here, so great credit to him for the way he has been training and working every single day.
"He hasn't let that affect him and that's all I can ask for - when anyone gets their chance, to go and do their best.
"And to his great credit, he is fantastic in training. He plays everything right and there isn't a problem."
Dalglish maintains that he has been highly impressed by the attitude of Cole but has urged the midfielder to keep working hard to earn more opportunities.
He added: "Joe is like Maxi Rodriguez and others who are out of the team, in giving themselves the best chance.
"They are so committed and determined in training.
"Everybody has to work hard to get anything and Joe is no different from anybody else.
"But he has done that, he has waited for his chance, and that could be very important for him."
 
Henry back at Arsenal for preseason tournament






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Updated Apr 28, 2011 7:59 AM ET
Thierry Henry is returning to Arsenal this summer when the New York Red Bulls play a preseason match against the Premier League team in the Emirates Cup tournament.
The former France striker's impressive eight-year spell at Arsenal ended in 2007 when he joined Barcelona, and he remains a revered name at the London club.
Henry will be up against his former club on July 31, when Arsenal and the Red Bulls meet on the second day of a weekend tournament also involving Argentine side Boca Juniors and French team Paris Saint-Germain.
Arsenal chief executive Ivan Gazidis says, ''I'm sure all Arsenal fans will be looking forward to welcoming back Thierry Henry - a true Arsenal legend.''
 
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