Capello weighs up whether to leave Rooney out of his squad

 

Sam Wallace
Friday 14 October 2011 05:00 EDT
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Fabio Capello is now weighing up whether he will include Wayne Rooney in his squad for the European Championship next summer after the Football Association was hit with the calamitous news yesterday that England's best player will be banned from all three group games.

The England manager (below) and his camp were of the mind to wait until they see Uefa's official reasons for its judgement on giving Rooney a three-match ban for kicking out at Montenegro's Miodrag Dzudovic before they decide whether to appeal. In a brief statement yesterday, Uefa described Rooney's actions on Friday that led to his red card as an "assault".

In the aftermath of the decision from Uefa, the original position in the Capello camp that leaving Rooney behind was not even a consideration has now shifted. Capello has more than seven months and three friendlies before he names his provisional squad for Euro 2012 but it is understood that leaving out Rooney is now an option on the table.

Chief among Capello's concerns will be that, if Manchester United do not make it to the Champions League or FA Cup final, then Rooney could well go from his club's last Premier League game against Sunderland on 13 May, to the quarter-finals of Euro 2012 which begin on 21 June, potentially without starting a game. The two friendlies before the tournament starts will be crucial for Capello to try out different formations.

Over the last year, Capello has frozen out Peter Crouch, the only striker with a comparable goalscoring record to Rooney. Andy Carroll has failed to live up to early expectations. Darren Bent has scored four in the last five internationals and looks the most likely to be asked to step up. As for Michael Owen, the England manager has not picked him since his second game in charge in March 2008.

The three-match ban was far more severe than the FA anticipated and they face the real possibility that England could be out of the tournament before Rooney has even played. Before the announcement there was optimism at the FA that it had put together a strong case for leniency.

Having originally planned to appeal if the ban was more than the minimum one game, the FA is now reconsidering that strategy. The governing body was last night investigating the possibility that the player could be punished with an even longer ban if Uefa rejects the appeal.

The FA expects to receive Uefa's "written reasons" for the judgement within the next two days. Once it is in receipt of these it has three days to decide whether to lodge an appeal.

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