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Author Topic: Aurtis Whitley vs Wayne Rooney  (Read 5481 times)

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Offline Solo

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Re: Aurtis Whitley vs Wayne Rooney
« Reply #30 on: January 02, 2006, 08:09:50 AM »
I fail to see the point about Rooney being overrated! ;D See below. Underrate him at your own peril.

Exquisite Rooney gives hope to United and England
Daniel Taylor at Old Trafford
Monday January 2, 2006
The Guardian


"Goodbye and good riddance to Manchester United's annus horribilis." So says the front cover of the latest United We Stand fanzine, a publication that displays about as much seasonal goodwill to Sir Alex Ferguson as a snowball in the face. Ferguson will be glad to see the back of December, never mind 2005, although it would be wrong to say nothing has gone right when Wayne Rooney's family must be running out of scrapbooks to contain all the cuttings.

It is difficult for United's supporters to be too melancholic when in their midst lurks a player who by rights should have been sitting beside Ronaldinho at Fifa's global awards night, a footballer opposition fans taunt as fat but who in full flight looks as though he would not make footprints in snow.
Rooney, perhaps, is the single reason why the fans on Sir Matt Busby Way can regard 2006 with a modicum of optimism. He makes robust centre-halves look flimsy. He does things on a football field that cannot even be found on a computer game.

On New Year's Eve it was the turn of Bruno N'Gotty and Tal Ben Haim to feel the force. Ben Haim, an old foe, was substituted at half-time. N'Gotty traipsed off the pitch at the final whistle with the expression of a vegetarian walking out of TGI Fridays.

Sam Allardyce, the Bolton manager, shook his head as he floated the possibility that he might never have seen such a more capable demonstration of the centre-forward's trade. Rooney had bewitched United's opponents with a performance brimming with pace, strength, anticipation, guile and craft. Everything, in fact, apart from a goal. "He terrified us," Allardyce reflected. "I think I've just seen one of the most outstanding young players I've ever seen."

Bolton are no Barcelona but there was still something exhilarating about the way Rooney elevated himself to a different level. "It bodes well for England in 2006," said Allardyce. "He not only frightened us with his skill but his work-rate and his physical attributes. He was brushing off our players and some of his touches were just magnificent. You can plan all you want but when a player of his ability is in that sort of mood what can you do?"

Rooney has become so influential that opposition managers have started giving serious consideration to deploying a man-marker to stick to him like a tick. Bryan Robson of West Bromwich Albion was the first to use such a method only for Rooney to conjure up a 3-0 victory once his designated shadow, Paul Robinson, had left the field with concussion.

"We contemplated it too," said Allardyce. "But the truth is we didn't think we had a player capable of doing it. The concentration needed to man-mark a player of Rooney's talent for 90 minutes would be absolutely mega. We would effectively be asking someone not to get involved in the game when we were in possession and there isn't a player in our camp with the self-discipline and concentration for that sort of job."

One suspects there will be a distinct lack of raised arms should other managers ask for volunteers. Bolton's defenders were so flustered they began to make uncharacteristically simple errors. N'Gotty deflected Kieran Richardson's cross into his own net when it should have been a routine clearance. Gary Speed equalised with Bolton's first effort on goal but Ben Haim promptly sold Jussi Jaaskelainen short with a back-header and Louis Saha re-established United's lead. From that moment Old Trafford sat back and basked in the Rooney Show, supplemented by Cristiano Ronaldo's most productive match for longer than he would care to remember.

There was a kaleidoscope of moments to choose from but none more exquisite than the way Rooney bulldozed a route into the penalty area to set up Ronaldo's first goal. After the strength came the subtlety. Which other player in English football would have had the awareness and ability to flick the ball to the far post, using the outside of his right boot, when there was an orthodox left-foot shot on? Some observers were so dumbfounded they initially presumed he must have miscued his shot. It turned out to be the pass of a genius.

Ronaldo added a final flourish as the game went into stoppage time, drifting inside N'Gotty to score with a left-foot drive, but long before then Rooney had established a sense of harmony inside Old Trafford that has not always been there this season.

Flick through any United fanzine or log on to any chat-room and the criticism of Ferguson is unrelenting. It is difficult, indeed, to find anyone who is willing to advocate that he should stay beyond the end of the season. Yet the crowd serenaded him here with a chorus of Happy Birthday followed by "Sixty-four? You're having a laugh".

Convincingly beating Bolton does not mean United have eradicated the shortcomings that were so obvious during the wretched string of performances that passed as their European campaign. It does not make up for the fact that their season has, in all probability, descended into a contest with Liverpool for second place and automatic qualification for the Champions League. And it will not have United We Stand's editorial team fretting that they have gone over the top with their latest edition. Yet Ferguson, like Sven-Goran Eriksson, is blessed with a player whose very presence offers hope. If 2006 is another annus horribilis, it will not be Rooney grazing in the scapegoats' paddock.


Offline Observer

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Re: Aurtis Whitley vs Wayne Rooney
« Reply #31 on: January 02, 2006, 08:21:48 AM »
I eh no Rooney fan but to say he overated is showing no respect. He is a handful at all levels, the Euro prove that.
Personally Rooney is more of a concern than Crouch.
To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead
                                              Thomas Paine

Offline saga pinto

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Re: Aurtis Whitley vs Wayne Rooney
« Reply #32 on: January 02, 2006, 10:01:11 AM »
All this talk about rooney,crouch etc,leh we talk about we boys more nah after all we are all trinis to de bone and while I respect everyones choice to express there opinion on a particular player other than one of our local boys,there's renewed optimism about T&T football right now and we should be talking more about who we have as threats to take them apart in attack and defense,just my take and  observation.I've said it many times on this site many of our boys are members or guest on this forum and certain post that relates to a foriegn players strenghts and abilities could have a negative effect on our players whether we consider it reality or not,especially with the likes of whitley,spann,birchall etc,I honestly believe they already know what's the task at hand,and it's a difficult one I'm sure but check this example:   
Against England Whitley will probably see more of Lampard or John Terry etc instead of Rooney if he plays attacking.  Nobody from our team will be able to man-mark Rooney in a world cup game to any great effect. We do not have an Essien in the squad so forget it. Rooney is not only too athletic but also capable of taking shots from anywhere. The best thing to do is try to cut off the supply to him than man mark him.

Here's another example :For Rooney. this is his first World Cup we talking about dred. Playing for England turns him into an animal. Did you see him in his first international competition in Euro 2005? The boy was in devastating form then and I expect that he will be a much bigger menace in de WC.

Now here's the flipside to this what does'nt hurt me will only make me stronger,and if better can't be done let the worse continue. 
       
« Last Edit: January 02, 2006, 10:04:58 AM by saga pinto »

Offline Solo

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Re: Aurtis Whitley vs Wayne Rooney
« Reply #33 on: January 02, 2006, 04:30:48 PM »
Dont take it so Saga, just like any coach would tell you you have to discuss and evaluate the opposition strengths and weaknesses. It is fair to discuss the good things anyone said about an opposition player but also fair to discuss how to netralize him. I said and continue to say so many good things about Whitley and dem all year even before we make de WC.

Another point is that our players are all professional and most play in Europe, there is nothing that we can discuss on this site that they dont see every day on TV and newspapers about the English opposition. They live with it. They play it. They already know how to handle this. I doubt whether any player would come on this site, read this discussion and because of some negative effect they get scared of Rooney, or Lampard or Terry. You really believe so?

 

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