Rooney Hoping For Wembley Appearance

17 April 2009 07:09
Wayne Rooney is desperately hoping Sir Alex Ferguson lets him loose on old club Everton in Sunday's FA Cup semi-final.[LNB]Rooney has never played in an FA Cup-winning side, picking up losers medals against both Arsenal and Chelsea since his arrival at Manchester United in 2004.[LNB]In addition, the England striker was forced to pull out of United's triumphant Carling Cup encounter with Tottenham seven weeks ago after picking up a virus on the eve of the game.[LNB]So Rooney is keen to appear on the big stage again after his fine supporting role in the midweek Champions League victory over FC Porto.[LNB]"I missed the Carling Cup final when we last got to Wembley, so hopefully I will be part of the team that gets us to another final on Sunday," said Rooney.[LNB]The acrimony surrounding Rooney's £27million move to United followed by the abrupt downturn in relations with Toffees boss David Moyes has rather soured the forward's relationship with the Goodison Park faithful.[LNB]Yet as an individual, Rooney remains at heart the kid who learned his art in an Everton kit as he kicked a ball about in Croxteth, posters on his wall of heroes such as Paul Rideout, the man who scored the goal that beat United in the 1995 final.[LNB]Rooney was present at Wembley that famous day, cheering the men in blue on to victory.[LNB]This weekend he is on Ferguson's side.[LNB]"It still means something that it is Everton," said the England star. "It is the team I grew up supporting.[LNB]"It makes it a big day for me, although the most important thing is for United to reach the final."[LNB]Ferguson is set to make changes to the side that expended so much energy booking a European semi-final with Arsenal.[LNB]Ryan Giggs is one of those virtually certain to stand down, with Park Ji-sung in line for a start after not even making the bench on Wednesday.[LNB]Rooney can cope with the exertion though as his capacity for work appears almost inexhaustible.[LNB]Indeed, while Ferguson felt the need to offer a mild rebuke to Cristiano Ronaldo last weekend for not being enough of a team player, there have been times when United's long-serving manager has felt the need to demand his young forward becomes more selfish, a point reinforced by England coach Fabio Capello.[LNB]It is an inescapable fact however that when Ferguson needs a specific job doing, on Wednesday it was protecting John O'Shea in defence while being an effective performer at the other end of the field, it is to Rooney United turn, the trust rewarded so often.[LNB]"I have no problem with where I play," he shrugged.[LNB]"If it helps the team get results I will do it. The plan was in place - and we stuck to it."[LNB]

Source: Eurosport