Skipper Rooney on the brink of England history

What you need to know:

  • Ahead of back-to-back Euro 2016 qualifiers away to San Marino, today, and at home to Switzerland, on Tuesday, Rooney needs two goals to surpass Bobby Charlton’s tally of 49, which has stood for 45 years.
  • But he goes into the games on the back of a 10-match league scoring drought — the longest of his Manchester United career — and facing questions as to whether he can still cut it as a top-level goal-scorer.

It is telling that although he stands on the verge of becoming England’s all-time leading goal-scorer, Wayne Rooney’s standing in the game remains a matter of debate.

Ahead of back-to-back Euro 2016 qualifiers away to San Marino, today, and at home to Switzerland, on Tuesday, Rooney needs two goals to surpass Bobby Charlton’s tally of 49, which has stood for 45 years.

But he goes into the games on the back of a 10-match league scoring drought — the longest of his Manchester United career — and facing questions as to whether he can still cut it as a top-level goal-scorer.

Aside from a well taken hat-trick at Club Brugge in the Champions League play-off round, Rooney has cut a sluggish figure in United’s campaign to date.

Obliged to lead the line alone in manager Louis van Gaal’s single-striker system, he has looked isolated and off the pace, his touch betraying him, his famous explosiveness diminished.

It has brought to mind the words uttered last year by Paul Scholes, Rooney’s former United team-mate, who said that Rooney’s premature emergence as a teenager means he may have reached his peak some years ago.

Rooney himself has dismissed suggestions that he is past his best and has pointed with justification to a historical record that shows his fallow periods are frequently followed by flurries of goals.

RAMPAGING BULL

And yet there is no escaping the fact that he is no longer the game-changing force of nature, the rampaging bull, that burst onto the scene with Everton at the age of 16, earning him the nickname ‘the White Pele’.

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger described him as “the biggest England talent since I’ve arrived in England”, but the true weight of his achievements remains hard to measure.

With United, who he joined from Everton in 2004, he has won almost everything, including five Premier League titles, two League Cups and the 2008 Champions League, and is the club’s third-highest scorer with 233 goals.

He has scored some of the modern era’s great goals, including a stunning overhead bicycle kick against Manchester City in 2011, and was voted England’s Player of the Year in 2010 by both his peers and the country’s journalists. But for all that, there lingers a sense of potential unfulfilled.