Wayne Rooney and Cesc Fàbregas can carry their teams to greatness - 7M sport

Wayne Rooney and Cesc Fàbregas can carry their teams to greatness



Posted Sunday, January 31, 2010 by theguardian.com

Wayne Rooney and Cesc Fàbregas can carry their teams to greatness
Wayne Rooney and Cesc Fàbregas are in the scoring form of their lives for Manchester United and Arsenal.

It is usually once in a generation that a player comes along capable of hoisting a team on to his shoulders and ­carrying them towards the light.

Diego Maradona elevated Napoli in 1987, delivering Serie A as if it was a ­personally wrapped gift. Nearly two decades later Eric Cantona was the ­catalyst for Manchester United's 1996 Double. It is said that a player is only as good as the team-mates around him. But ­occasionally, a player is simply so good he makes ­everybody around him look better.

A showdown in north London this afternoon brings together two ­players who are having that kind of effect. ­Chelsea are entitled to wonder whether the Premier League trophy would already be half way to the engravers were it not for the mesmerising feats of Wayne Rooney and Cesc Fábregas.

They make their team's heart beat, taking on as much responsibility as they can ­physically absorb. They are in the scoring form of their lives. They evidently see the game unfold quicker than anyone else on the pitch ("like having people in your head," as Rooney brilliantly put it). And they are still so very young to be so very important.

Rooney is 24, Fábregas just 22. Both Maradona and Cantona were in their late 20s when they had their most influential club campaigns. Perhaps the most notable feature of their progress this season is the way they have become ­powerful ­leaders. That was not exactly on the cards.

Rewind to last summer, and there were questions about whether Rooney was able to fill a significant portion of the gap left by Cristiano Ronaldo, and how he would handle being the main man up front. Fabio Capello was not the only one to note that the ­Manchester United front man needed to exercise his considerable stamina in an area closer to the penalty area.

Now, it is worth noting that Rooney's goals per game ratio (an exceptional 19 from 22 in the league) is identical to Ronaldo's at the same stage of his World Player of the Year season in 2007-08. Over at the Emirates there were mutterings about whether Fábregas was the right type of captain. Initially he ­seldom showed anything on the pitch other than his normal game. There was no extra cajoling or organising, no ­notable shakes of the fist or words in the ear.

The other debate concerned the absence of an obvious partner to bring out the best in him. But this season's tweaked formation, with Alex Song excelling as the anchor and neat ball players positioned around him, ­Fábregas is in his element. The captain's voice, as well as his game, has rocketed. A total of 11 goals and 11 assists from 18 league starts is a staggering return from midfield.

Among the top leagues in Europe, Fábregas and Rooney lead the way in "goal involvement" (a ­combination of goals and assists) along with ­Barcelona's Lionel Messi. It is the sheer force of ­personality and desire, as well as ­technique, that makes them the best in their position.


Wenger remembers when he first felt the force of Rooney. For days afterwards he could not get this player out of his head. He was excited – even though the boy had damaged Arsenal with a thunderbolt in the last minute of a game at Goodison Park. "He caught my eye because he scored that goal," Wenger recalls. "He caught the eye of David Seaman."

And how. The Frenchman loved his carefree approach to football, the way he just pulled on his shirt, did not bother about warming up, and went out to pull the opposition to pieces.

Similarly, Sir Alex Ferguson was always aware that Fábregas had ­distinctive gifts. "Fábregas seems to give ­Arsenal confidence, I think he is their talisman," Ferguson observes. "He's ­definitely their main player. We were aware of him when he was still in Spain, we signed Gerard Piqué from Barcelona at the same time, but Arsenal managed to get in first with Fábregas.

"He's been there five years now and he's been important to them in that time, because he has been a constant in a period of change. It's not easy for a team to lose players of the quality of Thierry Henry, Robert Pires and Patrick Vieira, and that's a situation that needs ­managing. So having someone as consistent as ­Fábregas has helped. When good players go it usually takes time to get the show back on the road.

"He and Rooney are two of the best players in the Premier League and they are both in a run of form. The consistency Arsenal have shown in climbing to the top of the table recently is probably down to Fábregas being back from injury and playing well."

For real football lovers, such as ­Ferguson and Wenger, the quality of out-of-the-ordinary players enables them to overlook the less savoury aspects.

Wenger's regard for Rooney is high despite the harm the player has caused his team over the years. Ferguson admires Fábregas despite the fact the Spaniard's name has often been linked to the so called "battle of the buffet", when pizza was thrown at Ferguson's suit.

That maelstrom followed a feisty game in 2004, when Rooney showed his precociousness by winning a disputed penalty and clinching a vital game with a late strike on his 19th birthday. A 17-year-old Fábregas sat on the bench, an unused substitute, and seethed at the sight of one of his team-mates and compatriots, José Antonio Reyes, being hustled out of the game with more brute strength than he felt was justifiable. Rooney, a ­regular scourge of Arsenal over the years, ­certainly has more happy memories of this fixture than Fábregas, whose best moment probably amounts to a key role in providing Emmanuel Adebayor with a match­winner at Old Trafford in 2006.

Fábregas will doubtless feel it is about time for him to make a bigger imprint on this weighty opponent. But even then, can he trust his vulnerable defence to restrain Rooney? Even the likes of ­Maradona and Cantona would be advised to watch with interest.



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