London - When 17-year-old Wayne Rooney became the youngest player to
score for England in a Euro 2004 qualifier, he looked destined for a
long and illustrious international career.
Now poised to win his
100th cap and just six goals behind Bobby Charlton's all-time England
scoring record of 49 goals, the bare statistics suggest he has achieved
that.
But the strong suspicion remains that he has rarely delivered in an England shirt when it has really mattered.
The
29-year-old Manchester United striker hinted at some dissatisfaction
himself before he reaches the 100-cap milestone in a Euro 2016 qualifier
against Slovenia on Saturday.
"I could sit here saying I've got
200 caps and 100 goals for my country, but the ultimate is to win a
trophy and that's what we all want to do," Rooney said.
"To be
England's greatest ever goal scorer would be massive. The record has
stood for so many years, there have been plenty of players who haven't
been able to break it."
Rooney has developed a reputation as
soccer's equivalent of a flat-track bully, regularly plundering the
likes of San Marino, Andorra and Liechtenstein but rarely finding the
net against the world's best sides.
He failed to score in a major
tournament between Euro 2004 and a 1-0 win over co-hosts Ukraine in Euro
2012, his only goal against high-profile opposition on the biggest
stage coming in a 2-1 defeat by Uruguay in theis year's World Cup which
condemned England to an early exit.
Rooney has been England's pack
leader for some years but that role underlines both the team's
shortcomings against top-drawer opponents and his own failings when
asked to trouble the world's best defences.
His best performances
and the bulk of his trophies in a Manchester United shirt came when he
played alongside Cristiano Ronaldo, whose superior skill and ability so
often gave Rooney the space he rarely creates for himself in big games.
Rooney
has, however, fully deserved the unreserved faith of his managers at
club and international level for his work rate and selfless readiness to
play in less preferred positions for the greater good.
Asked to
accommodate Ronaldo, Ruud van Nistelrooy before him and Robin van Persie
in the current United team, Rooney has often been moved out wide or
asked to bolster the midfield.
His present England role also
requires that kind of personal sacrifice with young lions Daniel
Sturridge and Danny Welbeck staking their claims up front, while the
gifted Raheem Sterling looks like a natural number 10, a position Rooney
is often deployed in.
With such talent and a relatively easy
qualifying group also including Switzerland, Estonia, Lithuania and San
Marino, England's qualification for Euro 2016 is almost a foregone
conclusion.
But once there, Roy Hodgson's men will have to be a
different team if they are to have a shot at glory and Rooney must
rediscover the spark of his early international days if he is to earn
his place among the country's true greats.
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