Wayne Rooney: Harry Kane backs former England captain's return for United States friendly

Rooney, Kane’s predecessor as England captain, will come out of international retirement for the final minutes of the game

Jack Pitt-Brooke
Wednesday 07 November 2018 07:28 EST
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Rooney's England career in numbers

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Harry Kane has thrown his weight behind Wayne Rooney’s return to the England fold for next Thursday’s Wembley friendly against the United States.

Rooney, Kane’s predecessor as England captain, will come out of international retirement for the final minutes of the game that is now being dubbed the ‘Wayne Rooney Foundation International.’

That game will act to raise awareness for Rooney’s foundation, promoting their gala dinner at Wembley next year, as well as raising money through bucket collections.

Despite criticism in some quarters for the gesture, which has been seen as “devaluing” the international game, Kane said it was “great” to have Rooney back.

Rooney won 119 caps and scored 53 goals for England – the most ever – over a 14-year international career. He represented England in six major tournaments. And Kane was delighted to have him back.

“I think it’s great,” said Kane. “It’s a really good thing for everyone to be a part of. Wayne was one of our greatest ever England players. He’s our greatest goalscorer. And so why not give him the send-off he deserves? Everyone should get right behind it. It will be a great send-off.”

Kane has also offered to give the England captaincy back to the man who held it from 2014 to 2017, so Rooney can wear the armband one final time. “Yes of course, he deserves it,” Rooney said. “He was a great captain for us. He was the captain when I first got into the squad. If he plays, of course he’ll be the captain.”

Rooney was Kane's predecessor as England captain
Rooney was Kane's predecessor as England captain (AFP/Getty Images)

Kane is 34 goals behind Rooney’s England record and if he keeps up his scoring rate then focus will move to whether he can one day make the record his own. “There’s still a long way to go,” Kane said. “But hopefully I can keep fit and healthy and score a few more goals. And we’ll see in a few years how close I am.”

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