Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho
is under pressure to drop Wayne Rooney, with the captain’s clanking
performances emblematic of the team’s struggles.
United have lost their last three
matches and there is clamour among supporters and journalists for Rooney
to be removed from the starting XI.
In an online poll by the United fanzine Red Issue, over 99 percent of respondents called for him to be axed.
“Where do you want Wayne Rooney to play?
Or should he be playing at all?” former England captain Alan Shearer
wrote in The Sun after United’s 3-1 defeat at Watford on Saturday.
“Not on yesterday’s performance, it is fair to say.”
Despite United winning their first three league games, Rooney’s lacklustre displays meant his place was already under scrutiny.
With United having since lost to
Manchester City, Feyenoord, in the Europa League, and Watford, the calls
for him to be dropped are getting louder.
Rooney, 30, was rested for last Thursday’s trip to Feyenoord, but he has started all of United’s other games under Mourinho.
It was a similar story during Louis van
Gaal’s two-year tenure as manager. The Dutchman sidelined Rooney only
once, for a 2-0 defeat at Stoke City on Boxing Day last year.
David Moyes, Van Gaal’s predecessor, was similarly faithful to the United number 10, whose career he launched at Everton.
But Alex Ferguson lost patience with the England captain towards the end of his storied tenure.
Ferguson claimed Rooney had asked to
leave the club for a second time in 2013 and he disappeared from view in
the dying days of the Scot’s 26-year reign.
Mourinho, whose side host Leicester City on Saturday, has said he would have no qualms about dropping Rooney.
“I can take him out. No problem for me
to take him out,” Mourinho said following United’s last-gasp 1-0 win at
Hull City last month.
– Pogba stifled –
As has been the case for much of his career, debate continues to rage about Rooney’s best position.
Never quite a true number nine, but not a
classic number 10 either, Rooney was deployed in central midfield by
Roy Hodgson during England’s calamitous Euro 2016 campaign.
Rooney has said he is open to the idea of moving into midfield as his career progresses.
Mourinho appeared to nix that ambition, in the short term at least, prior to the season.
“For me, Wayne will be a number nine or a
number 10 or a number nine-and-a-half,” Mourinho said. “But with me he
will never be a number six, not even a number eight.”
Yet in the loss at Watford, Rooney
started the game in a midfield three alongside Marouane Fellaini and
record signing Paul Pogba.
Once again he looked off the pace, even after moving into a number 10 role behind Zlatan Ibrahimovic in the second half.
A ‘highlights’ video flagging up his sloppy touches and wayward passing circulated widely on social media.
“I think playing him as a number 10 is holding back United,” former Arsenal defender Martin Keown said in the Daily Mail.
A knock-on effect of Mourinho’s
deployment of Rooney as a number 10 is that several of his team-mates
have been prevented from playing in their preferred positions.
Teenage striker Marcus Rashford, last season’s breakthrough star, started on the left wing against Watford.
Juan Mata and close-season signing
Henrikh Mkhitaryan, both more conventional number 10s, have had to
content themselves with wide roles or places on the bench.
Perhaps most worryingly, in using a
4-2-3-1 system to accommodate Rooney at number 10 Mourinho has been
fielding Pogba as a holding midfielder, denying him the freedom to
attack that he thrived upon at Juventus.
“Until they find the right balance, you won’t see the best of Pogba,” said Liverpool midfielder turned BBC pundit Danny Murphy.
Rooney needs only four goals to surpass
Bobby Charlton’s United scoring record of 249 goals, but his first-team
status is more fragile than ever.
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