Monday, 29 September 2014

ROONEY APOLOGY

Wayne Rooney was shown a red card at Old Trafford
Wayne Rooney apologised to his Manchester United team-mates for his reckless lunge on Stewart Downing and has no plans to appeal the red card which he admits he fully deserved.


Louis van Gaal's second win as Manchester United manager against West Ham was overshadowed by Rooney's dismissal, which came in the second-half of an ill-disciplined match at Old Trafford.
In an incident which was not seen by the officials at the time, Luke Shaw was allegedly headbutted off the ball by Diafra Sakho, who may now face retrospective punishment, and referee Lee Mason struggled to keep a lid on tensions at times in the second half.
The biggest decision the referee made came in the 59th minute when he sent off Rooney for cutting down West Ham midfielder Downing as he sprinted down field.
West Ham manager Sam Allardyce branded the foul "crazy and irresponsible" while Rooney had no complaints about his dismissal.
Rooney was glad United held on for a 2-1 win and after the final whistle the captain apologised to his players in the dressing room.
"Yeah, of course I did (apologise)," the United striker said.
Rooney now looks set to miss United's games against Everton, Chelsea and West Brom through suspension.
When asked whether he would appeal against his ban, the England skipper said: "No. I understand it (the punishment).
"I knew at the time that I misjudged it.
"It is a red card and I don't it will benefit anyone to appeal against the decision.
"It was probably the right decision. I saw the West Ham player making a counter-attack and I tried to break-up the play, but I just misjudged it.
"I think everyone knew (I was in the wrong), so I am just grateful that the lads were able to hold on."
Rooney had a reputation as something of a hot head in his early years, but this was the first time he had been sent off for United in five-and-a-half years.
The 28-year-old, whose dismissal came the day before the 10th anniversary of his United debut, is aware questions about his temperament will be raised again following the sixth red card of his career.
"I expect people to say that, but at the end of the day, I was trying to break up the play," he said.
"It was a dangerous situation in that they were trying to break on us and I have just misjudged it, simple as that, but I have no complaints."
When asked whether he felt the need to apologise to Downing, Rooney said: "No. I haven't absolutely volleyed the lad.
"I have tried to trip him up and, to be fair to him, he got further away from me and that is why my leg is straighter than it should have been.
"As he pushed the ball away, my leg has straightened out and that is obviously why the referee has deemed it as a red card."
Rooney started off the match in fine fashion, clipping the ball past Adrian from a Rafael cross to put United ahead.
Robin van Persie then doubled United's lead before Sakho headed in a goal for West Ham to put the home fans on edge.
Rooney will play for England in next month's Euro 2016 qualifiers against San Marino and Estonia, but he will not turn out for United until the first weekend of November, when United play bitter rivals Manchester City.
Rooney is not looking forward to watching United from the stands.
"That's the most disappointing thing," said the striker, who has scored three times for the club this term.
"Obviously we got away with it today by getting the win, but I am really gutted that I am going to be missing the next three games.
"It is hard to take.
"It helps that the England games are coming up, but the training here is really good.
"It is tough and it is getting my fitness up there, so I just have to make sure I train well and be ready for when I come back."
Shaw, who left Old Trafford with a black eye following the alleged elbow by Sakho, thinks Rooney should have stayed on the pitch.
''We have actually had a lot of bad luck, especially with Wazza's red card as I would say there was a handball before that but the referee didn't stop play,'' said the 19-year-old, who was making his United debut.
West Ham captain Kevin Nolan was unhappy with linesman Andrew Garratt for flagging him offside when he turned in Carl Jenkinson's cross in the 89th minute.
''I know he has definitely gambled on it because he can't have seen it, because if he had seen it he wouldn't have given it offside,'' Nolan said.

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