Wayne Rooney insists Manchester United need look no further than Michael Carrick and believes his former teammate has to become the club’s next permanent boss.
The ex-United midfielder has settled into his spell as interim head coach rather nicely, winning seven of his first ten matches in charge.
Carrick’s interim tenure has had echoes of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s period at the helm. The Norwegian initially took over on a temporary basis and injected a sense of fun and freedom back into a team that would eventually finish as runners-up to Manchester City in his first full season in charge as permanent boss.
Solkjaer was eventually sacked after falling short the following season, but Rooney fears the fate of one of his former teammate’s should not have a bearing on the future of another of his ex-colleagues.
He said: ‘100% he should [get the job]. I have said this. I knew this was going to happen with Michael Carrick.
‘I know him very well. I know his character, his personality. It needed a calm head, but someone who knows the place and the players needed some love, and he has given them that.
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‘We have seen the players play with more quality, more together as a team, and they look like a very strong team. For me, why would you change?
‘He has got the best winning percentage of any Manchester United manager after that many games. For me, he has to get the job.’
Rooney’s former United teammate Michael Owen is in agreement, insisting he is baffled by the suggestion Carrick should not continue as manager next season.
‘I’d be firmly in the camp of Carrick keeping the job,’ Owen told the Manchester Evening News, via Casino.org.
‘They have tried virtually everything. And after a dozen years of trying and failing, you land on somebody, that’s getting a tune out of the players, they’re winning games and looking progressive, some of the players are playing the best football they’ve played in years.
‘Imagine if you got rid of Michael Carrick, just imagine it, and you brought in whoever, I don’t care who it is, a born winner, they’ve already had that type of manager. Imagine if things start going poorly again. I mean, the ownership would get absolutely lynched.
‘I mean what a stupid… how on Earth anybody can say that he shouldn’t continue. What’s the worst that can happen? You give him a couple of years’ contract, what’s the worst that can happen? He starts the next season for the first three or four months, he loses every game and he’s useless. You can part company. It’s not like you’ve got to stick with someone for 10 years.’



