Watch Video – How Wayne Rooney Got Emotional At His Farewell….

It ended with Wayne Rooney doing what he often did in the good days and the bad for England, which was taking matters into his own hands and roaming for whatever chances he could find – a fitting tribute, in many ways, to the national team he knew than any number of presentations.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiTeJdVjz4E

There was no sign-off goal No 54 for Rooney as he finally walked away into the Wembley night, a man who might look back and say he was born at the wrong time for England – which is, of course, assuming there will ever be a right time. Even so, it seems that already the old regrets and recriminations are being buried and in front of a sparse Wembley crowd he thoroughly enjoyed the moment, joined beforehand by his wife Coleen and their four sons, and welcomed back with love and appreciation.

On so many Wembley nights over the years the chance would present itself and Rooney would bury it but by the end of this game it hardly seemed to matter that it was not going to finish that way for one last time. As the final whistle drew close he was smiling and joking with team-mates and opponents which was not something we saw often with Rooney in an England shirt. His job was already done, and at last he was enjoying the occasion – which is no less than he deserved.

https://twitter.com/NewsDay_com/status/1063322237548355585

 

All told it was a very mediocre United States team facing the most inexperienced England side – just 94 caps between the XI that started – fielded in 38 years. There were debuts for Lewis Dunk and Callum Wilson, who scored on his big night, as well as goalkeeper Alex McCarthy and a first start for Jadon Sancho. When at last Rooney came on with 32 minutes of regulation time left the US had failed to do much at all, and their one achievement might have been stopping England’s record goalscorer from notching one final time.

 

As Spain’s Nations League tie against Croatia tipped one way and then the other, ending in defeat for Luis Enrique’s side, one was reminded why the international game chose largely to turn its back on friendlies like this against the US, played at half pace and a mismatch of quality. England can win their Nations League group if they beat Croatia on Sunday although the stakes are high – a scoring draw at Wembley will see England relegated to the second tier League B.

 

For Southgate a remarkable year could yet see his team on their way to another finals next summer if they can beat Croatia, their World Cup semi-final conquerors – a game for which Wembley will be sold out. Overcoming Luka Modric et al in front of their own crowd will feel like evidence of further progress, one more sign that this is a team that can win big games after the Russia adventure and then victory over Spain in Seville last month. It would certainly be going out with a bang.

 

Southgate referred to the US as “a good level of team” against which to test his young players which was just him being polite. The visitors barely touched the ball in the early stages and when they did they coughed up possession very easily. Southgate had selected this side with Sunday in mind, he said afterwards, and it was effectively the B-team he picked albeit including Dele Alli who may not be sure of a start on Sunday.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *