Manchester United players need to fear someone: Rooney

LONDON (Agencies): Wayne Rooney believes Ole Gunnar Solskjær’s coaching team need to strike fear into those Manchester United players that have shown they are happy to hide.

After enjoying a remarkable caretaker stint when replacing José Mourinho late last year, things have gone awry in the last few months for the Norwegian.

United won only two of their 10 matches following Solskjær’s permanent appointment in March and the drop in performances has been as alarming as the results, with the 2-0 home loss to Cardiff a calamitous end to the season.

There are set to be numerous personnel changes at Old Trafford this summer but the club’s all-time top scorer believes the issues run deeper than that. A veteran of the Sir Alex Ferguson era, Rooney believes Solskjær needs to strike the balance between fear and respect to get the best out of the group.

“It’s a tough one because to watch Manchester United struggle is always tough,” the DC United forward said.

“When Ole came in, he did a fantastic job and you could see the players were given that bit of freedom and you could see they loved it and they earned the right to win game with how they were playing.

“But then all of a sudden, I don’t know whether it’s players being linked to other teams or players down-tooling … I don’t think it is that but for some reason they just didn’t perform the last seven, eight games of the season, which has cost them.”

Asked how United change it, Rooney said: “I think the players need to fear someone. They need to fear Ole Gunnar, they need to fear Michael Carrick – they need to respect them but fear them also.”

Rooney, a former teammate of Solskjær and the first-team coach Michael Carrick, was also in the dressing room with a number of the current crop and believes there is not enough accountability on the field or away from it.

“The way the game has gone has changed; the society has changed,” he said on the Wayne Rooney Podcast. “You’ve got social media. You’ve got players losing a game and then posting something on social media about their new clothing range or aftershave, whatever they are bringing out, which I find remarkable.

“So, when fans speak up on it and say ‘why are you posting that’, they always have the marketing people to blame. Take responsibility. They work for you. Them marketing people work for you. I have people who do similar stuff for me and they would never do anything without my instructions. If that’s what you’re doing, you’re sitting at the top of that business, you have to take responsibility for that.

“These players almost like to find someone to hide behind, whether that’s on the social media or on the pitch, and that’s what they’re doing.”