Skip to main content

Phillip Cocu impressed with Derby skipper Wayne Rooney’s debut

Derby boss Phillip Cocu was pleased by Wayne Rooney’s debut and revealed he will remain as permanent captain.

Rooney had a hand in both goals in a 2-1 victory over Barnsley at Pride Park on Thursday night.

Asked after the game if Rooney would now remain as captain, Cocu said: “Yes, he is the captain. I spoke with Curtis this week and he understands.

“When someone with the experience of Wayne Rooney comes in – a former captain of the national team – then it makes sense that he is the captain.”

“Maybe he surprised everybody by staying on for 90 minutes, but at half-time he said he felt good. So I said ‘if nothing changes, you stay on’,” said Cocu.

“We have to be careful and build up his resistance and endurance but we will take a look at how he recovers and make a decision for the next match on Sunday.”

Rooney set up the opening goal for Jack Marriott and was involved in Derby’s second scored by Martyn Waghorn, providing a pin-point diagonal pass, either side of Elliot Simoes equalising for Barnsley.

His debut coincided with the Rams winning back-to-back matches for the first time this season, having also beaten Charlton 2-1 at Pride Park on Monday, and Cocu thinks Manchester United and England’s record goalscorer underlined his value to the team.

“Wayne Rooney was important today,” said Cocu. “Jack Marriott got the first (goal) from his free-kick then Martyn Waghorn got the second, which came from Wayne’s magnificent cross-pass to Andre Wisdom.

“I am happy to see he did well. He played the full game and he made a positive contribution.”

Barnsley boss Gerhard Struber felt the Rooney factor did not work in his team’s favour.

“It was not enough for a point. The energy from the opponent with Rooney for the first 30 minutes gave us a lot of problems in the game and we couldn’t find control. In many situations we could have been better,” said Struber.

“It is not so easy because our situation is difficult and we need points,” said Struber.

“We need to play like we did in the second half from the beginning. We need to focus and concentrate better for the whole match, from the beginning.”

FourFourTwo was launched in 1994 on the back of a World Cup that England hadn’t even qualified for. It was an act of madness… but it somehow worked out. Our mission is to offer our intelligent, international audience access to the game’s biggest names, insightful analysis... and a bit of a giggle. We unashamedly love this game and we hope that our coverage reflects that.